I HAVE 100 ORGASMS A DAY! - meet people who suffer from this condition


While it may sound to many men like more of a blessing than a curse, Dale Decker claims that his 100 daily orgasms are a hell that has ruined his life.
The 37-year-old, from Wisconsin, developed persistent genital arousal syndrome in September 2012 after slipping a disc in his back while getting out of a chair.
Speaking on ITV’s this morning, the father of two explains: ‘It’s completely changed everything I have ever done. I can’t do anything, I can’t get a job. You have to understand that in America 90 per cent of the jobs are service industry and nobody would ever put me in front of their customers so working is pretty much out of the question.’

Dale’s condition has affected not only his ability to hold down a job but his family life, even occurring during his own father’s funeral
Unable even to do simple things like play baseball with his two sons, Dale feels particularly awkward when it happens around children.
Becoming obviously tearful as he spoke, Dale says: ‘I don’t go around kids. My own children didn’t even know what the word orgasm was until Tuesday when some kids in school had apparently seen the video on YouTube. How do you explain an orgasm to an 11-year-old child?’

The painful pelvic condition has left him housebound and isolated, through the fear of suffering a public orgasm with some even causing him to drop to the floor.


According to medical literature, trauma to the pelvic nerves can trigger hypersensitivity in this area.

Meet Kim Ramsey a Nurse who suffers from Persistent Genital Arousal Disorder (PGAD), an incurable condition which causes her to be spontaneously sexually aroused without sexual desire. 


The 44-year-old’s unusual condition means sitting in a chair, travelling on a train or even doing housework can cause her to climax - sometimes even in public. 
Kim, from Hertfordshire, fell down the stairs and hurt her back in 2001. Eleven years later, doctors discovered that the fall may have caused a Tarlov cyst on her spine at the point where a woman's orgasm originates.
"I've even had one in public, I was travelling home on the train and it was a bit of a bumpy ride.
"Every jerk of the train or vibration made me more aroused and it was a forty minute journey so there was nothing I could do.
"I just had to bite my lip and sit on my hands and hope no-one noticed. I must have looked very awkward.
Kim, who now lives in New Jersey, US, said the condition has left her anxious and she now finds it difficult to go about her daily life because she is worried she will not be able to control the sexual arousal.





Rachel, an Atlanta, Ga. housewife, is very, very careful when she does her laundry. The mother of three experiences continuous, unwanted orgasms -- sometimes for several hours a day -- which can be caused by the most mundane of tasks, like the wash.
"When it goes on the spin cycle, I don't even like to touch it," Rachel said in a Discovery documentary about the condition. "The vibrations can... trigger an episode."
Rachel suffers from a rare and relatively new condition known as persistent sexual arousal syndrome, or persistent genital arousal disorder (PGAD). As she explains in the film, "100 Orgasms A Day", controlling her body's push toward arousal requires around-the-clock effort.
"If I wasn’t controlling it, I don’t even know if I could put a number on it. It would be in the hundreds," she said. 'If I had no self-control, no willpower, I don’t know that I would ever leave the house."
According to Psychology Today, PGAD occurs when a woman's genitals are physically arousedfor hours, days, weeks or longer, but the woman doesn't feel any desire to have sex. The word "distress" is often used to describe a woman's reaction to PGAD.
While Rachel is able to control some of her symptoms, others who have been diagnosed with the condition are not so lucky. For these women, the disorder is anything but pleasurable.


Source: MIRROR
               HUFFINGTON POST

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