
Iâm a heterosexual cisgender male who loves prostate stimulation. I discovered it later in life, but it's been a staple for the last fifteen years. I'm worried I'm pushing the envelope too much and need your advice. Lately, the last six months or so, I will have an orgasm thatâs so intense I have pain just to the right of the base of my penis & balls immediately afterwards. If I push a finger in toward the center of my body, it's tender. It goes away after a few minutes, but sometimes my right ball remains sensitive. I've even taken an ibuprofen to lessen the pain and I've had a prostate exam when it's happening and I do self-exams of my testicles regularly, and I've noticed no changes. Usually my next orgasm is normal, and thereâs no pain...
Pain Around Balls Concerning
âIâve never had a patient specifically say they wanted me to âtake my timeâ with a prostate exam,â said Dr. Ashley Winter, a board-certified urologist in Portland, Oregon. âBut on numerous occasions, Iâve had a patient say, âWow, that was way more detailed of a prostate exam than my primary care doctor did.â And generally, that comment is meant as a âthank you,â as in, âthank you for being detail-oriented.ââ
To be perfectly honest, PABC, I shared your letter with Dr. Winter because I suspected the request you madeâtake your time up there, docâmightâve been the reason your doctor rushed through that prostate exam. Dr. Winter assures me that was unlikely.
âI understand when someone wants their doctor to do a thorough exam,â said Dr. Winter. âA detailed exam shows the clinician is actually intent on collecting information about their body apart from lab tests and imaging studies. The patient feels âseen.â Or touched. You get my point.â
But just as a prostate exam that ends quickly isnât evidence a doctor is worried a patient might be perving, an exam that ends quickly also isnât evidence a doctor isnât being thorough.
âSome patients have a very âhigh-riding prostate,â for example, and thatâs difficult to feel except for the apex, or the tip, of the prostate,â said Dr. Winter. âAnd I have long fingers! In those cases, I will probably do a quick in-and-out because taking longer would just involve me massaging the anus with no specific information being gathered.â
Thereâs nothing wrong with massaging an anus for the sake of massaging an anus, of course, but no one needs to go to med school and/or to the doctor for that. But while I had her on the phone, I asked Dr. Winter again if some people do go to the doctor for that.
âIn extremely rare instances patients are manipulative or fetishize their exams, but this is extremely uncommon,â said Dr. Winter. âAnd while I can't rule out the possibility that the urologist who saw PABC was âweirded outâ by his comments, it seems more likely that PABC is projecting that on to his doctor. There is so much shame around âbutt stuffâ and so I can easily see how this happens.â (Itâs also possible that Iâm the one doing the projecting here, as I was the one who raised the issue.)
That said, while intentional perving is rare, some people do get aroused during exams.
âUnintended genital responsesâwhether erection, or prostatic secretion during a rectal examâare normal and occur on occasion,â said Dr. Winter. âIt is the role of any self-respecting sex-positive clinician to acknowledge that these things are normal and move on. But it's super uncommon and when it happens, the patient is usually stressed out and very apologetic about it.â
As for your problemâsensitivity around the base of your penis after one of your extended butt-play JO sessionsâDr. Winter thinks you might need a different sort of exam altogether.
âIt sounds like what heâs having is a pelvic floor muscle spasm,â said Dr. Winter. âPeople tense and contract muscles in their pelvisâmuscles at the base of penisâduring periods of prolonged stimulation. Heâs not doing anything wrong, and he doesnât have to stop. But he might want to take a warm bath after. And if itâs too uncomfortable or gets worse, he should ask to be referred for a pelvic floor exam and possible pelvic-floor physical therapy.â
Follow Dr. Ashley Winter on Twitter @AshleyGWinter.
There's a long-running controversy among the Adult Baby/Diaper Lover (ABDL) community about the long-term impacts of continuously wearing and using diapers. Some argue that adult babies may or may not become a bedwetter and/or incontinent from continual diaper use. The ABDLs who claim to have been successfully âun-potty trainedâ are loudly decried as liars by other members of their community. Naturally, there aren't a lot of medical studies on this (there arenât any), and I'm not going to ask my family doctor. Can you figure this out?
In Nappies Cancels Out Nocturia
Nope.
Iâm a 74-year-old straight male. I donât have a problem for you. Instead, I am writing to share an idea with you with potential benefit to society. But, unlike you, I donât have the means to spread the news. Based on the success of your âIt Gets Betterâ Project, you seem like the perfect person to publicize it. My idea and my proposal to you is this: International Come-Out-of-the-Closet Day. It would include coming out about your sexual orientation but not be limited to sexual orientation. It would include all long-suppressed âsecrets,â including affairs, crushes, no longer being in love with your spouse, or anything else a person might have kept hidden. I even have a suggestion for when to celebrate International Come-Out-of-the-Closet Day: March 4. The slogan would be âMarch Forth on March Fourth!â What do you think?
Movement About Really Changing Hearts
We already have a National Coming Out Day (NCOD), MARCH, when closeted queer people everywhere are encouragedâif they can do so safelyâto come out to their families, friends, neighbors, and coworkers. NCOD is not a new thing; itâs taken place on October 11 every year since 1988. And while I appreciate the spirit of your proposalâletâs all get those long-suppressed secrets off our chestsâIâm not sure youâve thoroughly thought this one through.
If one day a year we blurt out our secretsâaffairs and crushes and secret second families includedâthe result would probably look less like National Coming Out Day and more like The Purge. And since most people regard breaking up on an annual holiday as a needless and avoidable cruelty, people who confess to affairs or no longer being in love on International Come-Out-of-the-Closet Day will not be seen as courageous truth-tellers, MARCH, but as inconsiderate assholes. Itâs fine to dump someone, people fall out of love, people have affairs. But no one thinks itâs okay to dump someoneâor to share a secret that forces someone to dump youâon Thanksgiving or Christmas or Valentineâs Day. Because then the person whose heart you stomped on winds up being reminded every year when that holiday inevitably rolls around. So, for the same reason it wouldnât be okay to blurt out terrible secrets on the holidays we already have, it wouldnât be okay to blurt them out on a day dedicated to blurting out terrible secrets.
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