Swoon!

She came. She screamed. She passed out.

Fainting during orgasm, or orgasmic syncope, is one of those things that happens more often in porn than in reality. But it does happen in reality. Usually it's nothing to worry about. But, just to be on the safe side...

Lay the faintee flat on her (for the purposes of discussion, we'll assume it's a "her") back. Check to make sure she's breathing and that her heart is beating regularly. If you don't know how to take a pulse, the front pages of your local phone book often have good basic instruction. (And take a good first-aid and CPR class soon, OK?)

If she's not breathing, and/or her pulse is irregular or absent, you've got a full-blown emergency on your hands. Call 911 immediately. If you know how to do CPR, get to work.

Another possibility that is quite serious is that she bore down so hard during her orgasm that she raised the blood pressure in her head and burst a blood vessel. If she doesn't regain consciousness quickly, if she vomits, or if she seems weak or uncoordinated (especially if it's only on one side of her body), call 911.

However, both of these possibilities are pretty unlikely. If she's breathing and her pulse is regular, leave her alone, and she'll come out of it soon. You can speed this process by putting a cold compress on her forehead and nudging her a bit. (You can be forgiven for having a few necrophiliac fantasies while you wait for her to come back.) She'll be cold when she wakes up, so it would be nice to have a blanket ready to wrap her in.

If you know ahead of time that you have a tendency to faint at Those Moments, it's considerate to let your partner know about it—having a partner pull the Sleeping Beauty routine without warning can be pretty upsetting.

Rating
4.583335
Average: 4.6 (12 votes)
Your rating: None

Comments


Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

The Cult of Shrinking Violets

Apparently, this was quite in fashion in the late 1800s, where women were portrayed as fainting, sleeping or dead. Women were thought to be weak, sickly and close to death, which was a sign of their delicacy and breeding and it became a cult among the leisure class women. Exercise, outdoors and sunlight were shunned. Corset probably didn't help the matter either... From the book Idols of Perversity.

Too True to be Good

George Bernard Shaw's play "Too True to be Good," and the Preface he wrote for it, are on the topic of iatrogenic and otherwise artificial diseases of upper-class British women, in the Victorian Era. Shaw wrote from a homeopathic viewpoint, and regarded bacteria as symptoms of disease, rather than their causes. One can access that play and its prevace online, by means of a Google search.

This reminds me of the studies of Jean-Martin Charcot.

He was a French doctor, who developed neurology, and identified many diseases, including Lou Gehrig's Disease, long before Gehrig was ever born.

One of the conditions he identified was "hysteria," during which women had "fainting spells." This was often happening in the 19th Century, but was rare, thereafter. However, in the mid-1940s. there were accounts of girls "swooning" during performances of the then-youthful Frank Sinatra.

Charcot experimentally produced "hysteria," by hypnosis.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

October 16th, 2009
Charles Moser and Janet Hardy's picture

Charles Moser, Ph.D., M.D., received his doctorate from the Institute for Advanced Study in Human Sexuality, where he is now a Professor of Sexology and Dean of Professional Studies. He went on to earn his medical degree from Hahnemann University School of Medicine in Philadelphia in 1991. He is board certified in internal medicine, and he is also a board-certified sexologist. He maintains a private internal medicine practice in San Francisco, with a focus on sexual concerns and the medical problems of sexual minorities.

Janet W. Hardy (aka Catherine A. Liszt and Lady Green) is a writer, perv, girlfag, pain slut, and educator. The author or co-author of ten books about alternative sexuality, she has spoken at hundreds of conferences and workshops around the world.

Syndicate content