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The Woman Who Can't Stop Getting Off

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/10/12/the-woman-who-cant-s.html

Lisa Katayama

POSTED AT 4:25 AM October 12, 2009

Featured • Weird • health

Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder
The woman who can't stop orgasming

The following true story was told to me by a woman who chooses to remain anonymous for privacy reasons. If you think you have Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder, you can visit this forum for help.

I had my first orgasm at the age of 17. I was sitting at my desk at school when all of a sudden, I felt a warm, pulsing feeling in my genital area. My vagina flared up and I couldn't think straight. It was like someone had squeegeed my thoughts away. I was like, whoa, what's that? It felt really erotic and good, but I was also freaked out, scared, and confused. After that, it started happening a few times a day. I searched online for spontaneous orgasms, but all I found was weird porn.

It kept getting worse. During my second semester of senior year, I counted orgasms on a sheet of paper. I was having 100 and 200 a day. I ran to hide in the bathroom between classes to relieve the pressure.

By the time I started college, the orgasms became even more intense and disruptive, and I was having trouble concentrating. I became really depressed. I didn't know what was wrong with me, and I wasn't getting any better. I cried a lot. I hid in the bathroom. I became violently protective of my privacy. In the beginning, I told everyone I trusted about my condition. People said things like: "You're so lucky!" and "Dude, I'd love to date you." They didn't understand why I wanted it to go away, and labeled me a drama queen. The school psychiatrist thought I was crazy. After my sophomore year, I bought a bunch of vibrators and took medical leave.

One day in 2003, a friend sent me an article in the Boston Globe about a newly discovered condition called Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome*. When I read it, I started crying hysterically--it described exactly what I was going through. I immediately made an appointment at the institute the article linked to, and after hours of tests, I was diagnosed with PSAS. My engorged genitalia and hypersensitivity made me a textbook case. Every other doctor had thought I was just a delusional hypochondriac.
PSAS feels like having a second heartbeat. No, it's more than that. It's alive — it has its own life force, a mind of its own. I often wonder if this is how teenage boys feel about their erections.

My parents pretend my PSAS doesn't exist. It makes me feel uncomfortable and rejected. My mother is very conservative — she has trouble saying the word "orgasm" out loud, and she thinks I'm a pervert because I have toys. A couple months ago, out of the blue, she said, "You still having that orgasm problem?" That was only the second time she asked about it since 2003. I sometimes wish I could make reference to it in normal conversations without feeling like a freak, but I understand that PSAS isn't exactly dinner conversation.

Every time I do something, I have to evaluate my situation. Where am I? Are there other people around? How well do I know them? What is the likelihood that, if I don't get someplace private in time, things could get complicated? Can I make noise? (Being vocal isn't necessary, but it helps release more of the pressure.) I avoid triggers — things like music with heavy bass, vibrations from riding a train or an idle car, cold air, musky cologne, darkness, stress, scary movies, romantic movies, unexpected touch, a full bladder. PSAS is completely unrelated to sex drive. Watching sex scenes does nothing for me, but the other day, when a friend put his hand on my back, I found it really hard to contain a screaming orgasm. If my heart rate shoots up too high for too long, I flare up. I avoided exercise and gained a lot of weight. One time, I was hugging a male relative and I felt an orgasm arise. It felt really dirty and wrong, and I totally freaked out. Now, I try to avoid hugs in general unless I feel ready for them.

I've been with my boyfriend for about six years, but we still haven't had sex. I don't know if I'll ever be ready to do it. Because of a vulvar pain disorder I have that sometimes comes with PSAS, I know it will hurt like hell. Others who have PSAS say that sex is not satisfying at all — the orgasms associated with sex are nothing compared to the ones induced by the condition. Sometimes I wish I could have sex with him because I think he deserves to have a 'real' girlfriend, but honestly, I just enjoy being held by him and not having it feel inappropriate. He's been very patient and understanding; he's my best friend, and we talk every night.

I'm 24 now, and have learned to manage PSAS pretty well. I discovered dancing — it's a great alternative to jogging because it's not as cardio-intensive. As long I take breaks between routines, folk dancing or doing salsa doesn't cause a flare up.

Last week, I was at the movies and had to leave twice because I was flaring up. Each time, I ran to the bathroom and tapped my heels on the floor to hear if there was anyone else around. Then I locked myself into a stall, braced myself against the stall door, and let the orgasm run its course. I missed about 15 minutes of the film, but that's just one of the many things that result from managing PSAS and its collateral damage.

My orgasms feel like a cosmic joke. I don't know why this happened to me and not someone else. If I didn't have PSAS, I'd be much more outgoing, and I probably would have finished college two years earlier. I'd have a normal sex life. I feel like I'm lugging around a shadow, a ghost that I just can't shake. It depresses me that I'm stuck with it, probably for the rest of my life, but strangely enough, I don't want to be cured instantly of PSAS. It appeared suddenly in my life, and if it disappeared just as suddenly, I would always be looking over my shoulder, and I'm not sure I would know who I was. I would rather have it slowly fade away, but if it doesn't, well, I'm doing my best to make peace with this part of my life.

*The name of this condition was recently changed to Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder to remove the stigma that this is a sexual disease. PGAD will be officially recognized in the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which comes out in 2012.
 
200 orgasms a day?! :eek:
 
I don't know if I buy this story. If she's having all those orgasms, why would she buy sex toys so she could masturbate and "relieve" herself. This sounds like someone who can't stop sneezing buying some snuff so they can sneeze more to relieve themself.
 

Alyssa Rose

Official Checked Star Member
geez and I thought I could orgasm easily..my multiple orgasms are more lik 7 or 8 not 200 lol
 

biomech

Virtus Junxit Mors Non Separabit
Holy hell. That is horrible if true.
How the hell doe's she manage to do anything?
 
My BS detector pulsated about 200 times while I was reading this. This was the sentence that set me off..
In the beginning, I told everyone I trusted about my condition. People said things like: "You're so lucky!" and "Dude, I'd love to date you." They didn't understand why I wanted it to go away, and labeled me a drama queen.

Yeah. Most people tell everyone, especially strangers, about health issues...
 
bullshit... there was a post recently that i commented in, and this shit is real.... i got it, satyrisis. i can nut 20 times a day/evedryday and shit comes out every time! omg i wish i cud cum 200 times a day but im a guy n not a girl and i cant even eat that much food to make that much sperm let alone have time for my body to process it. the girl is a nympho and needs some good dick! it isnt an affliction. she needs to meet a guy who has her sexual stamina levels... or just be a slut which every nympho i ever met is... but that still wont make her happy. we need relationships with someone we care about to feel fulfilled... find someone who u are sexually compatible with is all i can say...
 
this article helps me understand why some women are nymphos
 

PlasmaTwa2

The Second-Hottest Man in my Mother's Basement
So, she fakes it 200 times a day?
 

Legzman

what the fuck you lookin at?
ok, that would suck. Poor woman must be tired as hell by the end of the day...
 

Vanilla Bear

Bears For Life
First, oh no not again. This story is not true!

And secondly...


geez and I thought I could orgasm easily..my multiple orgasms are more lik 7 or 8 not 200 lol

HISSYYYY!!! :weeping: Why do you have to tease me like that?!?! :( :shy:
 
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Damn, as a guy I'm never going to understand the female orgasm. Although "Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder" does sound like something every teenage boy in the world has gone through.
 
geez and I thought I could orgasm easily..my multiple orgasms are more lik 7 or 8 not 200 lol

Lucky you Hissy! The most I've ever had in a short period (1 minute) has been three or four. I say lucky, cause normally I'm that type you can't touch right away again for a few minutes...in most cases it would be nice to keep going.
 
Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder (PGAD)

This newer thread should be merged into this one:
- http://board.freeones.com/showthrea...se-Describes-How-Fall-Gave-Her-Rare-Condition

Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder (PGAD) is a real condition, but it's typically not this disabling. Most of these media stories are extremely chronic conditions where it becomes repeatedly painful. People act like it's a gift, and in some cases, it may be. But in others, it's a real issue that almost often leads to depression, just like any disabling disease. The media stories are the most extreme, and quite often sad, cases.

The majority of real cases vary from women who orgasm too intensely, even painfully, or too quickly to those who have a dozen orgasms per day, possibly with a not-so-infrequent state of arousal. It also affects men who naturally maintain continual erections more than 4 hours quickly suffer the consequences, including accelerating impotence decades before they should. The lack of studies in this area have been the main issue.

More recent studies have shown it is related to both Overactive Bladder (OAB) and Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS). This makes sense given the muscle and nerve proximity, and given a recessive genetic trait or an extremely rare (and I want to stress extremely rare) accident that modifies the proximity of organs and bundles, it could result. The prostate is crucial to male seminal fluid and ejaculate, and OAB is largely about the prostate and its tubing. It's not that much different inside of women either.

I've often wondered if select pornstars have very acute cases of PGAD, possibly with OAB and RLS. Mason Moore might be such a case, given her clear and regular quivers in her legs, repeat ejaculations and other cases of arousal when with her partners. It doesn't mean she has full PGAD, OAB or RLS, although she would probably recognize the last. But some of the symptoms related to those conditions are evident in her on-screen performances. Hence why I've wondered.

In any case, society is poorly equipped to be understanding to women with even just acute cases. Too many men think this is a dream disease for a woman to have, but it's not, quite the opposite. It's kinda like men dreaming of being a 13 year-old boy and having an affair with a 25 year-old teacher. The reality of the situation is far from the fantasy of it.
 
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