Announcing Orgasms

3,798 Uploads · 7,211 Members · 99 Forum Posts · 6,388,540 Visitors
The "I'm gonna Cum" thread. No fake moaning, Pros or Semi-pros or Men. If they aren't really cumming, telling us they are doesn't have the proper effect. No off topic BS. If I can't hear it, it gets deleted. That means I must hear the words "I'm cumming. I'm gonna cum. Here it cums. or something similar." A high pitched squeal isn't good enough. No spamming of posts. More than 20 0r 25 and I delete them all. On topic or not.

Cum With Me

31 Uploads · 90 Members · 1 Forum Posts · 72,214 Visitors
Women telling the you to cum with them/for them while masturbating or their partners during sex. Also mutual orgasms

Orgasm Spasm

362 Uploads · 1,655 Members · 1 Forum Posts · 742,519 Visitors
When a girl cums in Orgasmic Spasms it is a thing of beauty..... Please only FEMALE ORGASMS dudes will be deleted

Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome

1,168 Uploads · 1,215 Members · 18 Forum Posts · 474,547 Visitors
Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder (PGAD), originally called Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome (PSAS) and also known as Restless Genital Syndrome (ReGS or RGS),[1][2] results in a spontaneous, persistent, and uncontrollable genital arousal in women, with or without orgasm or genital engorgement, unrelated to any feelings of sexual desire. It was first documented by Dr. Sandra...
Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder (PGAD), originally called Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome (PSAS) and also known as Restless Genital Syndrome (ReGS or RGS),[1][2] results in a spontaneous, persistent, and uncontrollable genital arousal in women, with or without orgasm or genital engorgement, unrelated to any feelings of sexual desire. It was first documented by Dr. Sandra Leiblum in 2001,[3] only recently characterized as a distinct syndrome in medical literature with a comparable counterpart increasingly reported by men.[4] Some physicians use the term Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome to refer to the condition in women; others consider the syndrome of priapism in men to be the same disorder. Priapism is a recognized diagnosable medical condition by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV, whereas PGAD is not.[4][5] In particular, it is not related to hypersexuality, sometimes known as nymphomania or satyriasis. Hypersexuality, nymphomania, and satyriasis are also not recognized diagnosable medical conditions by the DSM-IV. In addition to being very rare, the condition is also frequently unreported by sufferers who may consider it shameful or embarrassing.[6]Physical arousal caused by this syndrome can be very intense and persist for extended periods, days or weeks at a time. Orgasm can sometimes provide temporary relief, but within hours the symptoms return. The return of symptoms, with the exception of known triggers, is sudden and unpredictable. Failure or refusal to relieve the symptoms often results in waves of spontaneous orgasms in women and ejaculation in men. The symptoms can be debilitating, preventing concentration on mundane tasks. Some situations, such as riding in an automobile or train, vibrations from mobile phones, and even going to the toilet can aggravate the syndrome unbearably causing the discomfort to verge on pain. It is not uncommon for sufferers to lose some or all sense of pleasure over the course of time as release becomes associated with relief from pain rather than the experience of pleasure....