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Journal of Orgonomy Volume 14 no. 1

 

Function of the Orgasm (Part II)*

Wilhelm Reich, M.D.

 

II. ORGASTIC POTENCY

We understand "orgastic potency" to be a person's capacity to attain gratification by discharging an amount of libido equivalent to the built-up sexual tension in the organism; further, the capacity to attain gratification should far outweigh one's susceptibility to genital disturbances, which occasionally trouble even the healthier organism. Orgastic potency is attained under certain conditions found only in persons with the capacity for pleasure and achievement. It is absent or inadequate in neurotic individuals.

Is it possible to describe orgastic potency as a specific function despite individual differences in sexual needs? One may object that we are describing as ideal type not even closely approximated in reality. We dispute that; actually, we are dealing with empirical facts. I am indebted to some of my colleagues for having given me a phenomenological description of their sexual experiences, which enabled me to list some criteria of orgastic potency; if these are lacking, we may diagnose orgastic impotence quite accurately according to type and severity, without having to rely on the most misleading statements made by patients.

Clinical observations support the depiction of a specific orgastic potency since, after we remove disturbances in potency, the patient's orgastic curve automatically approximates the curve of orgastic potency described by us. 1

Let us begin with a discussion of the progress made by a patient during the course of analysis, a patient who, among other things, suffered from premature ejaculation and excessive masturbation.

Since age 8, he had masturbated one to three times daily without guilt or conscious fear that this would destroy him. As a rule, he would think about masturbating during the evening meal or at bedtime without feeling the least excited. He would commence reading in bed, then decide to masturbate after half an hour. At the beginning of masturbation, the penis was flaccid, but it became erect when manually stimulated. During the act, he would think about whom he would "dedicate" it to; it seemed like a mass which he must say for someone." Some fantasy then produced excitation, which increased steadily. His thoughts wandered to trivial matters concerning his business, minor events of the day, etc. The excitation subsided whenever his thoughts wandered away, and returned as soon as he started to fantasize again. This occurred several times, and the whole procedure lasted about half an hour. Finally, he reached acme with strong physical tremors, and gratification returned him to the unexcited state he had been in just prior to masturbation. When asked to depict the course of the excitation graphically, he drew the curve in Figure 1.

Fig 1 Course of masturbatory excitation.

a - absence of excitation
i - involuntary interruption of fantasy production
v - voluntary continuation of fantasy excitation
A - Acme
f - fall in excitation

 

Prior to his neurotic illness (erythrophobia), he had suffered from premature ejaculation, which had become much worse since that time. He was only relatively potent with a married woman who fulfilled some of his sexual needs. Forepleasure was greatly prolonged, and intercourse lasted about half a minute. There was greater satisfaction after coitus than after masturbation, especially when he and the woman reached orgasm together; in contrast to masturbation, he was left with a feeling of inner happiness. After intercourse with other women, he had felt only aversion and disgust. Curve 2 represents the course of orgasm with the beloved woman; curve 3 the excitation with premature ejaculation.

Fig 2 Coitus with faculative potency

a - absence of excitation
p - prolonged forepleasure
i - intromission
A - acme
pE - residual psychic excitation
Duration from time of penetration: about 1/2 minute

 

Fig 3 Premature ejaculation

---- comparative curve
o - overexcitement
p - prolonged forepleasure
i - intromission and flat acme
d - subsequent strong displeasure

 

At the time he started analysis, intercourse was characterized by a few censored homosexual fantasies and good erective potency when thrusting between the thighs or into the buttocks. He explained his behavior on the grounds that he did not want to get the women pregnant. However, his dreams revealed intense fear of penetrating the vagina. So great was his fear, that I managed to persuade him that his explanation was nothing more than rationalization. He had wanted to prove me wrong, and, during his next attempt at intercourse, his penis "exploded" even before he had assumed his position. Analysis of the dreams that followed this fiasco showed his fear of a dangerous "some-thing" that he imagined in the vagina. Later, he himself interpreted his premature ejaculation as an expression of a fear of "remaining too long in the lion's den."

As his fear and some important but hitherto unconscious motives became conscious, he followed through with more satisfactory intercourse. He said that he had never experienced such gratification. He spent much less time than before on forepleasure, since his fear of coitus had lessened. He reported that coitus itself had lasted about three times longer (approximately one-and-a-half to two minutes) than with the beloved woman before his illness. Excitation was slow at first but then increased more rapidly; for the first time, he had not fantasized during the act and afterwards had felt pleasantly tired throughout his whole body without feeling terribly weary "in his head alone" as he did after masturbation or intercourse with premature ejaculation. The course of excitation is represented by the curve in Figure 4.

Fig 4 Course of excitation after analysis of the fear

a - absence of excitation
f - forepleasure (shorter)
i - intromission
I - more gradual increase in excitation
II - steeper rise fo acme (A)
III - steeper fall and more gradual decline in excitation
Duration: about 2 minutes

 

Several months after terminating analysis, he told me, among other things, that he felt completely potent and satisfied: The sex act lasted about five minutes, he did not fantasize, and he did not feel "empty" afterwards.

When comparing the graphs, we note that the ascending part of the second curve is shorter than the fourth curve. The great trust the patient had in the beloved woman, plus certain sexual demands, enabled him to be erectively potent and to experience a relatively strong gratification; but the fear of coitus resulted in prolonged forepleasure and a considerable shortening of the friction time. The latter increased three-fold after he recognized his fear of coitus. With premature ejaculation, there was hardly any friction time; the orgasm was flat and attenuated; the few pleasurable sensations were accompanied by intense feelings of displeasure, unlike the intercourse he had when relatively free of anxiety.

In coitus free of fantasy and unmarred by anxiety or displeasure, the intensity of orgastic pleasure is directly proportional to the amount of sexual tension concentrated in the genital: The greater the amount of excitation and the steeper its drop, the greater the sexual pleasure.

The following phenomenological description of an orgastically satisfying sex act covers only the course of some typical phases and modes of behavior.

Fig 5 Typical phases of the sex act with orgastic potency in both sexes.

f - forepleasure
i - intromission
I - phase of voluntary control of rise in excitation: prolongation still harmless
II - (6a-d) phase of involuntary muscle contractions and automatic rise in excitation
III - (7) sudden and steep climb toward acme
IV - (8) orgasm
V - (9-10) steep drop in excitation
r - relaxation
Duration: about 5 to 20 minutes

 

A description of coital physiology is not necessary here because of the many excellent expositions found in the literature. Nor are we considering foreplay, which varies according to individual needs and shows no uniformity. In Chapter 4, we shall discuss excitatory processes in the vasovegetative system, with a view to grasping them phenomenologically.

 

1. Phase of Voluntary Control of the Rise in Excitation   2

1. Erection is not painful but pleasurable, and the genital is not overexcited. The female genital becomes hyperemic and moist through copious secretion of the genital glands. During penetration, the clitoris may be the excitation focus, but, in the orgastically potent woman, the excitation is immediately transferred to the vaginal mucosa with contest. An important criterion of orgastic potency in the male is the psychomotor urge to penetrate. Erections can also occur without this urge, from sensory stimuli alone, as happens with many erectively potent narcissistic characters.

2. The man is gentle in his aggression. Pathological deviations from this behavior are: harshness and pushiness stemming from sadistic impulses, as in many compulsion neurotics with erective potency, and the inactivity of the passive feminine character. In the "masturbatory coitus" with an unloved object, gentleness is absent. The woman is more passive than the man without being totally inactive. (There may be extreme inactivity, as, for example, that due to masochistic fantasies of being raped.)

3. The pleasure level, which during foreplay has stayed about the same, shows a sudden sharp rise in male and female alike, coinciding with the act of penetration. The man's sensation of "being sucked in" corresponds to the woman's sensation that she is "sucking the penis in."

4. In the man, the urge to penetrate very deeply increases without, however, taking the sadistic form of wanting to "pierce through" the woman, as is the case in compulsive characters. Through mutual, spontaneous, and effortless friction movements, the excitation is concentrated on the surface and glans of the penis, as well as on the dorsal portion of the vaginal mucosa. The typical sensation, which presages and accompanies ejaculation, is still completely absent (in contradistinction to cases of premature ejaculation). The body is still less excited than the genital. Consciousness is completely focused on the perception of pleasure; the ego participates in this activity, endeavoring to exhaust all pleasure potential and attain the peak of tension before orgasm occurs. Needless to say, this is not done with deliberate intent, but rather, it happens quite automatically and differently for each individual, according to his previous experience, by a change in position, or the manner of friction and rhythm, etc. According to the consensus of potent men and women, the pleasure is all the greater, the slower and more gentle the friction movements are, and the better they synchronize with each other. This entails a strong capacity to identify with one's partner. Pathological counterparts are the urge toward harsh friction movements, as indulged in by sadistic compulsives with some degree of penile anesthesta and the inability to ejaculate, or the nervous haste of those suffering from premature ejaculation. Orgastically potent individuals never talk or laugh during the sex act-with the exception of words of tenderness. Both talking and laughing reflect severe disturbance in the capacity for surrender, which presupposes an undivided absorption in the sensations of pleasure.

5. In this phase, interruption of the friction movements is in itself pleasurable, due to the particular sensations of pleasure which appear when the partners lie quietly; this occurs without mental effort. It prolongs the sex act, since, during rest, the excitation drops off a little, without, however, completely subsiding, as it does in pathological cases. By the same token, interruption of the sex act through penile retraction is not unpleasant, as long as it follows a resting phase. With continued friction, the excitation keeps mounting higher than the level attained prior to the interruption, and begins to spread more and more to the whole body, while the excitation of the genital remains more or less at the same level. Finally, in the wake of another, usually sudden, rise in genital excitation, the second phase unfolds:     next page

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* Translated by Barbara G. Koopman, M.D.. Ph.D. and Irmgard Bertelsen, B.S., from Die Funktion des Orgasmus, which was published by the International Psychoanalytischer Verlag in Leipzig, Vienna, and Zurich in 1927. This is not to be confused with The Function of the Orgasm (Volume I of The Discovery of the Orgone) published in 1942 by the Orgone Institute Press in New York.

 

Footnotes

1. For the sake of clarity, the orgastic disturbances are depicted graphically.  back to text

2. The test from here to the conclusion of Part II is the only portion of the 1927 work incorporated into the later The Function of the Orgasm published in 1942.  back to text

 

 

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