PARTNER DOESN’T ORGASM? 7 WAYS NOT TO TAKE IT PERSONALLY! BAY AREA COUPLES & SEX THERAPY CENTER CAN HELP

Partner Doesn’t Orgasm?

 

Seven Ways Not To Take It Personally!

You, like many other people, could be taking it personally when your partner doesn’t come to orgasm during love-making. Are you worried that you’ve done something wrong? Do you wonder if you aren’t pleasing them at all?  Have these frustrations contributed to a fight or a tense moment which has led to a missed opportunity for sexual connection?

Orgasm can be a very elusive for many people.  Our San Francisco Bay Area Couples Counselors & Sex Therapists see all genders in our therapy practices who report having a difficult time coming to orgasm.  A lot of people are frustrated, angry at themselves, ready to give up hope and pretty depressed about their inability to orgasm during sex.

Orgasms are healthy and wonderful and it’s great for everyone to have them, however, pleasure is the goal in love-making and being frustrated and tense is not the way to go.  When the non-orgasmic person is frustrated and you are frustrated it causes a real lack of possibilities for true pleasure and satisfaction to happen.

Here are some simple ways you can stop taking it personally and enjoy your own body’s pleasure:

  1. It’s not you. While it can be tempting to believe that you have control over your partner’s orgasm it may be truer that their body’s functioning has to do with what’s going on with them, not with you.
  2. Have some patience.  Usually, it’s the person who is unable to achieve orgasm that is suffering more than you. Have patience with them as they go through their emotions.
  3. Ask how they like to be touched.  When tension and frustrations arise it can be easy to neglect healthy communication.  Healthy communication with your partner includes asking them how they like to be touched.  Asking questions like, “what pressure do you like”? “where do you feel the most sensation in your body”? “what type of touch arouses you”?  brings a sense of comfort and curiosity to the dynamic.  Sometimes people are so busy getting to the “finish line” that they forget the journey is the most important part of getting there!
  4. If you are sexually frustrated and can’t be present for your partner, take some time out for yourself and your own pleasure.  If you want your partner to orgasm so much that you are neglecting your own needs, take a break and masturbate! It’s okay to masturbate in front of your partner and it can be sexy too.  Sometimes, taking the pressure off the orgasm of your lover and putting the attention on yourself can break some of the tension.  Then, go back to making out and finding ways to please them.
  5. Engage in some slow, sensual foreplay and massage.  Bring the energy and tension down by going back to the basics.  If everyone is tense and frustrated they are not experiencing pleasure so enjoy some gentle, slow caressing and sensual massage.  Remember, Get Out of Your Head And Into Your Body  (if you want to have great sex).
  6. Enjoy the moment, whatever it takes.  If you are processing verbally and emotionally during sex, don’t.  Take a shower together, give each other acknowledgments and gratitudes, do some breathing together and enjoy each other.  Striving for orgasm and feeling like it’s your fault that you can’t “give” your partner an orgasm is a missed opportunity to simply enjoy each other.
  7. Learn some creative, fun techniques and learn how your partner’s body works.  We are all different and we all come to orgasm is our own unique ways.  For some, they need a little fantasy role-play, others need a little verbal stimulation through “dirty talk”, some peoples bodies take a longer time to warm up and become aroused.   Learn how your partner’s body works as well as a few techniques to help them along the way.

You are in this together and you can be a team! If you feel down about yourself come back to these steps again and again.  There is a lot of good that can happen by letting ourselves off the hook and instead, maintaining a sense of team-work and creativity in the process.

At North Berkeley Couples Therapy Therapy Center, our highly trained couples and sex therapists have helped hundreds of partners turn their whole relationships around by learning how to be a team when it comes to sex and leaning into the experience of getting to know each other in a whole new way.

Remember, it’s all about Pleasure and you deserve it!

How Sex & Couples Therapy Can Help

San Francisco Bay Area's Top-Rated Couples & Marriage Counselors & Sex Therapists can help you build intimate, lasting and loving partnerships. 

East Bay Sex Therapist & Author: Dr. Anya de Montigny, DHS is a sexuality expert with over 20 years experience working with individuals, couples, and groups. Dr. Anya has a Doctor of Human Sexuality (DHS) degree, is a certified sex educator and certified sex coach and was the host of the popular radio show The O Word Sex Talk Radio. Dr. Anya has a private practice in the San Francisco Bay Area working with individuals and couples and invites straight and LGBTQ people into her practice. She also teaches adult sex education classes as well as consent & boundaries workshops at Universities and Colleges.

 

SAN FRANCISCO SEX THERAPYSF COUPLES COUNSELINGBETTER SEX

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Creating Your Couple Bubble: East Bay Couples & Sex Therapy Tips for a Better Relationship

This intimacy building exercise is adapted from Dr. Stan Tatkin's Psychobiologial Approach to Couple Therapy (PACT) and his book "Wired for Love."

East Bay Couples therapist, East Bay psychologists, East Bay Sex Therapy,

Creating Your Couple Bubble

 

By creating a “couple bubble,” you will be utilizing the power of the brain to create a sense of safety and a secure attachment both in yourself in your partner.  When this sense of safety exists, you’ll both be equipped to relax and bring your best selves to the relationship.

 

Your partner should embody your “safe zone” – where you go for respite and a feeling of being wanted and fully accepted. 

 

“The Couple Bubble is an intimate environment that partners create and sustain together that implicitly guarantees such things as:

•I will never leave you.

•I will never hurt or frighten you purposely.

•When you are in distress, I will do my best to relieve you, even if (especially if!) I am the cause of that distress.

•Our relationship is more important than my need to be right, what other people think, or any other competing value.

•You will be the first person I come to with information, not the second, third or fourth.

•I will always have your back.

•Our relationship comes first.

 

Exercise:  How close are you?

 

1. Do you agree with the guarantees listed above? If not, which ones would you remove from your list?

2. What other guarantees wouldyou like to give?

3. What guarantees would you like to receive?

 

Remember, you do not have to receive a guarantee from your partner in order to provide one.  Each day, look for moments in which you can express your feelings of closeness and promise safety in the relationship.

 

*The Couple Bubble concept is taken from “Wired for Love” and “Your Brain on Love,”by Stan Tatkin, PsyD

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8 steps to effective communication with your partner.

​Great steps to deepen understanding and effective communication/listening with your partner. ❤️

Being heard is vital to secure functioning and intimacy. It's a core human need and reflective listening skills can deepen emotional closeness between partners. ​

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The Definition of Intimacy

The Definition of Intimacy

The Definition of Intimacy

True intimacy is not the absence of privacy or the absence of boundaries or the absence of a separate self. We need to have our own spaces and limits and identity.

True intimacy is the absence of secrets.

True intimacy is what happens when the floor of our marriage is covered with our garbage, because we are two people dumping it all out and figuring out how to clean up the mess together. It may take a while and it may be gritty work, but we will find ourselves healing the whole time. 

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