Sex Toy Sommelier: Why Can't I Orgasm With My Partner?

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Sex Toy Sommelier is our sex toy matchmaking and advice column at SheKnows. Whether you’re taking your first brave steps into the world of sex toys and sexual health accessories (welcome, it’s fun here!) or an old pro looking to add some new goodies to your existing collection (hello to you too!), Health & Sex Editor Katherine Speller is here to help SheKnows readers level-up their bedside tables, toy chests and/or DIY sex dungeons with the tools they need to feel deeply satisfied — and give some pro-tips on how introduce some of these new toys and tools into your sex life along the way.

Write in to let us know what you’re into, what you want to be into or what you’re in the market for via our hotline (we’ll keep things anonymous, of course) and we’ll do our very best to drop a range of toys and sexual health products that meet your tastes, wants and needs. While money certainly can’t buy you love, it can buy you orgasms — which can be just as good, TBH.

Orgasms! They’re extremely fun to have. They can feel like a sparkly, explode-y, DIY hard reset on your body. But they can also be polarizing, elusive, high-pressure, stressful (and even painful!) for some.

There’s a lot of feelings surrounding the big O (who has more of them, who isn’t having them) and — because humans are diverse and fascinating critters — no two people have the same feelings about sex and pleasure.

Which brings us to this month’s ask:

I (cis-female, 29) have never had an orgasm with my partner (cis-male) who i deeply love and I am worried about hurting his feelings by sharing that. Are there some toys I can bring into the bedroom to help get us both there?

— Up-and-Not-cummer

So my very first instinct is to caution that orgasm is not synonymous with pleasure. There are numerous reasons some people don’t or can’t orgasm with a partner during intercourse or other activities (some medical, some mental, some technical!). If you’re still having fun and enjoying yourself and feeling honored and pleasured and cared for, it doesn’t matter if the orgasm itself doesn’t happen every time (unless you really want it to happen). But that said, a lot of people (disproportionately cis-women) who want to have orgasms are struggling to have them with their partners.

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