Monday, February 9, 2015

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MULTIPLE ORGASMS AND WHOLE-BODY MULTIPLE ORGASMS?

 Each genital orgasm helps release the tension that results from the built-up sexual energy and the increased flow of blood into your pelvis. Several pelvic – non-ejaculatory – orgasms are extremely satisfying (and energizing), but as you develop your orgasmic capacity, you will no doubt want to expand these pelvic orgasms throughout the rest of your body, which is the real secret of the Tao. Whole-body multiple orgasms also begin with the contractile-phase release of pelvic orgasms, but instead of keeping the sexual energy (and the pleasure) in your pelvis, you draw your sexual energy up your spine, into your brain, and throughout your entire body, as we will show you step by step in the next chapter. Most men do not even realize they can reach these sexual peaks. Not only do they experience only one orgasm (which, for them, is the same as ejaculation), but they experience this orgasm almost exclusively in their genitals. In Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex (But Were Afraid to Ask), Dr. David Reuben describes orgasm as it is typically understood by Western sexologists; "For orgasm to occur, the full force of the body's entire nervous system must be concentrated on the sexual organs. Successful orgasm requires that every microvolt of electrical energy be mobilized and directed toward the penis and clitoris-vagina." Reuben, however, goes no further than a discussion of what the Taoists knew was just the first level of orgasm, or genital orgasm. As represented in the illustration of your orgasmic potential (see figure 4), you can learn not only to experience multiple orgasms, but also to expand your orgasms from your genitals to your brain to your entire body. In the words of one multi-orgasmic man, "A whole-body orgasm is unbelievable. Once you experience it you never go back to a genital orgasm."

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