Tag: erectile dysfunction

  • Why 1 In 3 Men Cannot Control Ejaculation

    Why 1 In 3 Men Cannot Control Ejaculation

    A man may lose control over his own normal ejaculation for various reasons. Therefore, when this control is lost, the only way to get it back is with patience and certain ways to treat in a very positive way.

     Are Ejaculation Issues Mind Over Matter In Reality?

    The mind can indeed become a big problem where ejaculation issues are concerned. This is because it does have a tendency to create them very effectively. However, just as effectively as it can create them, the mind can destroy them. So, with this said, in essence mind over matter does matter where ejaculation issues are the focus. However, if a man has an ejaculation issue, it won’t really matter much when he does climax. Therefore, he should stimulate his partner to the very brink of orgasm at the very same time he feels he is ready to climax himself. Then it is matter over mind.

    What Are Some Common Psychological Causes For ED?

    Some of the most apparent of all common psychological causes for erectile dysfunction (ED) are as follows. These psychological causes can range from the lack of overall attractiveness to a partner to certain religious beliefs that having sex is very sinful to traumatic events. These traumatic events can include having a partner cheat on them to having illicit sex to discovering that they have been masturbating in secret and it is brought to attention by someone. There are also some factors where anger towards a partner can be involved and this brings it on.

    What Are Some Common Ejaculation Problems?

    Some very common ejaculation problems do include premature ejaculation, retrograde ejaculation, and delayed ejaculation. Each one of these ejaculation issues is not identical in nature. They all have their own individual symptoms and so forth. Therefore, with this said, just like there are numerous causes for these issues, there are also numerous forms of these problems at the end of the day.

    What Causes Delayed Ejaculation?

    There are lots of varying reasons why a man gets delayed ejaculation. Some of these reasons can be due to taking anti-depressants for depression to you name it. Another reason is a man’s advancing age. A good deal of time, the nerve endings on the penis do become less sensitive with physical age. A man’s erection ability is another thing that can go down physically with age too.

    Does Masturbation With Ejaculation Issues?

    A man can have a strong hand in his own delayed ejaculation problem. How can he do this? He just needs to do some very good masturbation with his hand on his penis. A masturbation technique that has lots of very real pressure, friction, and intense speed can do wonders for a stimulation like no other. Men can physically train themselves to pleasure themselves to such a level of top stimulation that even what a partner can provide them with falls on the average. Therefore, masturbation is indeed a good thing, and it can help a man’s ejaculation in a major physical way that is also therapeutic in delivery. Masturbation is something that can also teach a man to control his own level of arousal. This is a working essential if a man is trying to delay orgasms for himself.

    What Are Some Other Ways To Treat Premature Ejaculation?

    A technique that is very time honored and popular is no other than the distract yourself technique. You should distract yourself from having an orgasm by focusing on something that is either very boring or disgusting to you in description. This will help to halt your want to have an orgasm in a very big way. This is something that may prove to work for some men. However, for others it can distract them away from their partner, and also, from the sexual experience that is trying to take place.

    Just because a man has issues with control over his own ejaculation, it doesn’t mean it is the end of the world for him sexually overall. If anything, it is quite the reverse, there is hope to regain control of male ejaculation with just the right form of treatment. However, he himself needs to determine what that specific treatment is and apply it to the root cause.

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  • The “Hard” truth about Erectile Dysfunction | Part 2

    The “Hard” truth about Erectile Dysfunction | Part 2

    Although there are many various types of sexual dysfunctions, one of them is considered especially significant: erectile dysfunction, caused by an inhibition in the sexual excitement phase during the male’s sexual response. It is defined as a permanent, occasional or recurring inability to develop or maintain an erection required for one to successfully engage in sexual activities and complete sexual intercourse.

    Apart from the first instance of the 85-year-old man who abstained from sex for 3 years following his wife’s death, I once had another client with erectile problems. He came to see me some time after his divorce, which was caused, among other things, by his passive role in marriage and pathological jealousy. His then-wife ended up cheating on him (a self-fulfilling prophecy), which he had a hard time getting over. Despite feeling angry and bitter, he would not accept a more rational understanding of love and sex. He remained a victim of his immature thinking, which manifested itself sexually. After divorce, he tried to have sex with younger women, but he failed—except with the drug Cialis, although even with it, the sex wasn’t that great.

    His poor sexual functioning was not caused merely by his “scar” of being cheated on and divorced; in the sense of distrust towards women, but also by his wrong expectations. Even though we worked on his problems for several sessions, he failed to accept the responsibility for his own sexual exchange. Being desired by young girls flattered him; he stopped having panic attacks, took some anxiolytics, antidepressants, and felt confident in verbal communication. However, sex was still an issue. I suggested that he try to find a more serious woman, who would understand his condition and be tolerant of his current erectile dysfunction. However, I could not “cure” his ego, which caused him to keep spiraling down. In the end, he fell in love with his friend’s daughter, telling me that the two of them had a close encounter without sexual intercourse, so he required that I give him an instant solution for sex. Seeing that psychosexual therapy does not offer that kind of help, I told him that only an injection may stiffen his penis, and sent him to a urologist. He later informed me that the urologist didn’t give him the injection, but only Cialis and some anxiolytic powder, and admitted that it was not the right way, but also that he could not “let that girl go”—because she was too good looking.

    All of these indicate that erectile problems are not that trivial and it often turns out that many men do not wish to engage in proper relations with their partners, where they will show their true face, but instead they build false, shallow relations, full of lies and deceit, only to fulfill some societal ideals and satisfy their egos. They may believe that women appreciate and respect those men more, but that is no excuse. Those same women will sooner be disappointed and leave them when they realize that these men are not how they have presented themselves. This is why I advise men to take a risk and be more honest when meeting women, because in the end they always get more out of it. Maybe they won’t have as many sexual partners, but what they do get will undoubtedly be more meaningful and fulfilling.

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  • The “Hard” truth about Erectile Dysfunction | Part 1

    The “Hard” truth about Erectile Dysfunction | Part 1

    Although there are many various types of sexual dysfunctions, one of them is considered especially significant: erectile dysfunction, caused by an inhibition in the sexual excitement phase during the male’s sexual response. It is defined as a permanent, occasional or recurring inability to develop or maintain an erection required for one to successfully engage in sexual activities and complete sexual intercourse.

    Freud classified impotence as a type of neurosis, and only with the arrival of Masters and Johnson, as well as Kaplan, did impotence receive a nicer name, free of pejorative meaning and negative self-evaluation, which is erectile dysfunction. Another discovery then was that not every man with sexual problems is necessarily neurotic, suffering from a personality disorder or another psychopathological disorder. One can be completely “normal” and be unable to develop or maintain an erection, without it meaning anything other than (most commonly) an inability to initiate or maintain sexual excitement during one of the phases of the sexual response cycle. Therefore, a satisfying erection cannot be achieved without positive sexual excitement, although, in rare cases, certain fears may lead to an erection (e.g. when men were forced to rape women at gunpoint during the war). Generally speaking, fears have an adverse effect on sexual functionality, although uncommon fears such as the fear of being discovered by others (e.g. while engaging in sensual contact in the bathroom at a friend’s party) may increase excitement.

    The first research of all types of impotence was conducted by Kinsey et al. in 1948, when they established that there was a relatively high percentage of “total impotence”, both psychogenic and organic in origin, on a sample of over 6,000 men. They determined the percentage to be 2–4% at the age of 35 and 77% at the age of 80. More methodologically valid tests were subsequently conducted, indicating a percentage of 7‒10% (Hawton, 1985). In 1993, the National Institutes of Health found that there was a high prevalence of erectile dysfunction in the United States and that between 10 and 20 million men over the age of 18 suffered from this disorder.

    The article proposes to discuss two examples of such:

    An 85-year-old man, after abstaining from sex for 3 years following his wife’s death, experienced several failures with a woman who accepted to have sex with him (mostly due to financial aid on his part), and approached us, demanding that we enable him to have a hard penis when he takes off his clothes so that she could see that he is “ready to go” and a “real” man. He would not accept my suggestions that things did not work like that even in much younger men, but he still, somewhat foolishly, hoped that there was a drug that would “raise him from the dead”. Prejudices of this type are not uncommon in men, who often expect that their penis should function regardless of their psychophysical condition, and the pharmaceutical industry relies precisely on these myths when it produces drugs for potency. This perspective disregards any ideas about necessary conditions, good relations with the partner, erotic surroundings, etc., as unimportant.

    Your partner may be Monica Bellucci or Claudia Schiffer, but if you are not “there”, are absent-minded, have not provided your necessary conditions, do not have a positive sexual excitement, are not in good relations with your partner, you will not have a satisfying erection. No drug can give you that.

    Therefore, an erection only means that your penis is hard. Whether you really want sex, whether you are indeed a real man, whether you find your partner attractive, etc., depends mostly on your assessment, your feelings and current circumstances. It would certainly not be a good idea to want to act upon your erection caused by looking at your best friend’s daughter

    (to be continued …)

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  • Secrets of the Unpredictable Penis & How Psycho-Sensual Massage can help

    Secrets of the Unpredictable Penis & How Psycho-Sensual Massage can help

    She is cute and sexy, you caught her eye as you entered the room, instant chemistry flows causing a stirring below.  Two hours later, hands have brushed thighs, cheeky stories have been shared, bums have been touched but just as the excited anticipation of the next few hours has crossed your mind, so has the apprehension that Mr Unpredictable may misbehave yet again and later, true to form, your temperamental friend once more seems to have a mind of his own and lets you down.

    Does this sound familiar?  If so then you have experienced what most men at sometime in their sensual encounters have also experienced, what is known as Situational Erectile Dysfunction.  God forbid that you have a problem, of course this is not to tell yourself that it was the extra pint you had and yet just when you wanted things to go to plan, they didn’t and frustration and embarrassment ruled the day.

    40 % of my clients have SED

    Working as a Sexologist & Psycho-Sensual Masseur at least 40% of the clients I see come to me with what is now proving to be the most common and yet least understood sexual performance problem for men.  Properly called Situational Erectile Dysfunction, it affects many men over the age of 35 and particularly those in high stress work environments.  The myth that SED mainly affects older men is simply not the case as I see guys as young as 20 who also found at times that Mr Temperamental just won’t behave the way they want him to.

    What is Situational Erectile Dysfunction?

    Not getting or not maintaining an erection can fall into 5 main categories, some will be driven by physiological causes, others by psychological, some by a combination of both.  They are:-

    Primary: when the man has never been able to achieve an erection.  This represents approximately 10% of cases of erectile dysfunction.

    Secondary: when the man has had erections in the past, but can no longer achieve or maintain an erection.  This traditionally has been viewed as the most common type of erectile dysfunction.

    Situational: Much more common than research reveals, when the man can only achieve an erection in a particular situation or with a particular person.  For example, he is able to achieve an erection with an extramarital partner, but not with his usual partner, or vice-versa.  One of the most common scenarios for situational erectile dysfunction is the first time a man tries to have sexual intercourse with someone new.

    Total: when the lack of erection is complete.

    Partial: when there is a degree of erection, but is insufficient to allow sexual intercourse

    For many men, the image of self is inevitably linked to a perception of masculinity which in turn involves functioning and performing well sexually. – A result of either physiological or psychological influences or often both. .

    Generally, unless the sufferer is experiencing blood pressure problems or is taking some form of blood pressure medication or has heart problems or has general ill health, then the cause of SED will be mostly psychological and not pathological.  It will probably be the body’s natural fight or flight mechanism (autonomic nervous system) reacting to a perceived fear signal that is causing the body to alternate from its rest & relax mode (Para Sympathetic) to its fight & flight mode (Sympathetic) when certain blood vessels and muscles and bodily characteristics alter their behaviour making a full erection impossible.  Quite simply, nature has not designed men to “hunt & fuck” at the same time and things can go wrong at any point of the 3 stages of producing and maintaining an erection.

    First Stage: 
    Sexual arousal, getting sexually stimulated from our thoughts and senses.

    Second Stage: 

    The brain communicates the sexual arousal to the body which increases the blood flow to the penis.

    Third Stage:

    Blood vessels that supply the penis relax allowing an increased blood supply to flow into the shafts that produce the erection.

    Psychological vs Physiological

    Physiological causes can be due to a variety of conditions such as: Cardiovascular diseases, Diabetes, Disease of the Nervous System, Ageing, Medications, Smoking, Alcoholism, and Hormone Imbalance and can be treated with medical support.

    However, in most cases the condition can also be influenced by Psychological processes and in many cases be the prime reason for intermittent erectile dysfunction. Generally, if involuntary erection occurs during the night or on waking in the morning but does not occur or is lost during conscious sex (with another or even during masturbation), then other emotional based influences will be the source.

    These emotional influences generally fall into the following two areas, performance and acceptance, and if there is any worry around either of these two agendas then this will quickly convert into a feeling of fear around rejection or abandonment, which in turn switches on the primal survival mechanisms of the fight or flight reaction causing the autonomic nervous system to move from the para sympathetic mode that is needed for arousal to take place to the sympathetic mode of fight or flee.

    Early Childhood Influences – Upside down triangle

    Often, the way a man feels he should perform sexually will be connected to his early childhood psychological development.  If he grew up in an environment where he was conditioned to be an achiever and to do well, then good performance is essential to his sense of self worth; on the other hand if he was taught to be a good boy and not disappoint others then his need to please his partner sexually will be paramount to him feeling relaxed.

    If one views this like an upside down triangle, sitting on its point, the flat top is the area of his general behavioural platform, sexual performance a major part of this and the point of the triangle, at the bottom represents the primary driver that is influencing this behaviour.  Between these points, there are often many layers of thought and behaviour that are taking place both consciously and unconsciously, gradually switching the brain from the rest & relaxed mode (para sympathetic) to fight or flight (sympathetic) and consequent loss of erection.

    For example

    Conscious

    Thought 1 – “I really like this person and want to have sex with them”

    Thought 2 – “I am worried about losing my erection”

    Thought 3 – “If I lose my erection they will think I don’t like them “

    Thought 4 – “If they think I don’t like them then they will not like me”

    Unconscious Thoughts

    Thought 5 – “If they don’t like me then I am not good enough”

    Thought 6 – “If I am not good enough then I will be rejected”

    Thought 7 – “If I am rejected I will be abandoned and will be vulnerable”

    Thought 8 – “I may die”

    How Can a Sensual Massage Help? 

    The private space of a comfortable massage room and the friendly welcoming openness of a trained Psycho-Sensual Masseur can create a supportive caring environment where any focus on performance is removed and where the receiver can concentrate on what he is feeling rather than what he is doing.

    As the massage unfolds, the body slowly becomes relaxed, with the sensual strokes of the massage encouraging arousal to take place causing the body to respond and moving deeper into the para sympathetic mode.  As anxiety levels fall and the body becomes rested, this attention on “self” encourages an erection to occur.  As the receiver feels the erection grow, his confidence builds and so the body goes deeper into the relaxed state and the erection responds by getting even firmer, causing a positive spiral rather than the traditional negative spiral of anxiety/erection loss/ further anxiety/complete loss of erection.

    Throughout the massage the masseur incorporates certain movements that may intentionally challenge the receivers comfort zones and mildly raise anxiety thus affecting the level of erection.  By observing and reading these minute changes of the receivers dynamic, the masseur can begin to understand the possible psychological triggers that may be causing the arousal switch to flick on and off, giving an indication as to the under laying fear that is influencing the arousal process.

    Also, with the attention on himself, the receiver is able to be more self aware of the influences and intensity of the erection.  A discussion following the massage often reveals the core fear that is at the root of the anxiety and with further counselling, and psycho sensual massage, the sufferer can considerably reduce the occurrences of SED that he experiences.

    Even if he still does not always “get it up”,  with this better understanding of how he works, he can explain to his partner that it’s because he is so attracted to them that he can’t get a hard on rather than being a signal that he not attracted at all.  Changing the thought process and communicating this to the partner will greatly lessen the possibility of SED taking place.

    For Example

    Better Conscious Thoughts & Actions

    Thought 1 – “I really like this person and want to have sex with them”

    Thought 2 – “But I am worried about losing my erection”

    Thought and action 3 – “I will tell them that I like them and that I am worried about losing my erection ”

    Thought and action 4 – “I will be honest and tell them that if I lose my erection it is because I am a little nervous and I want them to have a good time”

    Better Unconscious Thoughts

    Thought 5 – “Now, If I don’t get an erection they will understand that it’s not because that I don’t like them”

    Thought 6 – “Now that they understand that I if lose my erection it is not because I don’t like them, they will continue to like me”

    Thought 7 – If I am honest about my fears then they will understand my behavior and not judge me

    Thought 7 – “If they don’t judge me I will feel accepted”

    Thought 8 – “If I am accepted then I am safe”

    Thought 9 – “ If I am safe I will be relaxed and my body will allow me to become aroused

    Paradoxically Thought 9 shows that this shared openness and honesty should  help him to feel calm and then he will probably get an erection anyway.

    If you have any questions for Colin related to this subject or on any other sexual performance related issues, Colin will be delighted to answer them.  He can be contacted at colin@intimacymatters.co.uk