Female orgasm while exercising
What a
Workout! Women Report that Exercise Triggers Sexual Orgasm
Up to 15% of women apparently experience orgasm as a fringe benefit of
physical exertion. Crunches, anyone?
By BONNIE
ROCHMAN | March
21, 2012 | 8http://healthland.time.com
Here’s one way to make workouts more palatable: combine exercise with
orgasm.
It sounds like a pornographic fitness flick: women, sweaty from physical
exertion, climaxing at the gym. But researchers at Indiana University say it
really happens — independent of sex or fantasies. They’ve even got a name
for it: “coregasm,” named thusly because abdominal exercises tend to spark
the sensation.
In a survey distributed via the Internet, researchers asked women if they’d
ever experienced exercise-induced orgasms (EIO) — 124 responded yes — or
exercise-induced sexual pleasure (EISP); 246 had. Women were questioned
about the types of exercises in which they were engaged at the time of
orgasm, if the phenomenon happened repeatedly and whether they could control
it, among other things.
Since there’s next to no scientific literature about orgasm while
exercising, researchers prompted survey respondents to provide as much
detail as possible. They learned quite a bit, according to lead author Debby
Herbenick, co-director of the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at Indiana
University.
Some women said they couldn’t help but make sounds during orgasm, which
added to their feelings of self-consciousness. One woman wrote about biking
strenuously uphill when she felt an orgasm coming on; embarrassed, she tried
to hide it from her biking partner. According to the study:
“I had to really grind into the pedals. This must have caused me
to rub on the seat in just the right away. I thought I was starting to
cramp, but soon realized it felt great. [I] thought I should stop, but chose
not to!”
Another woman described literally falling off a piece of gym equipment; one
more recalled an errant medicine ball flying across the gym after she lost
control. “Some talked about this happening as children during the
Presidential fitness challenge, during pull-ups or chin-ups,” says Herbenick.
The research was published online Monday in a special issue of Sexual and
Relationship Therapy. What’s so special about this issue? It’s all about
orgasm: there are papers about tantra and orgasm, about non-genital kinds of
orgasms deriving from mental fantasy, as well as criticisms about a
perceived superiority complex surrounding vaginal orgasm. Says Herbenick:
“It’s a very interesting issue.”
Herbenick’s contribution finds that exercise-induced orgasm is not
of the wham-bam variety. In other words, don’t expect good vibrations from
your first sit-up. “It’s often on number 15 or number 30,” says Herbenick.
Nor is what induces orgasm during exercise clear from this study. Most
respondents said they weren’t daydreaming about sex at all. The catalyst
seems to be the exertion itself, with abdominal exercises appearing to
trigger the reaction in 51% of respondents. (The top orgasm generator in
this category was the “captain’s chair,” a contraption in which the user
supports her arms and back against a frame while the legs dangle, and she
repeatedly raises her legs into a sitting position.) The next most likely
culprits? Weight lifting, yoga, bicycling, running and walking or hiking.
Some women can induce orgasm by engaging in exercises that have previously
yielded the big O; 40% of respondents reported they’d experienced orgasm or
sexual pleasure while exercising more than 10 times. Others actively try to
avoid climaxing in public; after all, it can be pretty mortifying. Yet even
if it’s never happened to you, devoting some brain cells to its mystery and
allure can serve as an excellent distraction during a workout. “Once you
know about it,” observes Herbenick, “it is sometimes interesting to think
about and wonder if others are experiencing it too.”
We know who’s not experiencing it: men. Sorry, guys, but this
one’s (mostly) for the ladies. While Herbenick has heard of men orgasming
during exercise, she says it’s far rarer. Even among the fairer sex, it’s
fairly uncommon. Herbenick estimates that up to 15% of women have the
uncanny and perhaps enviable ability to orgasm while exercising, a form of
multitasking I’d never heard of before her research landed in my inbox. When
I requested an interview with the author, an email response arrived with
impeccable timing — just as I was winding up my morning boot camp session.
Alas, no fireworks. |