Transformational coach and mBIT trainer, Scofray Nana Yaw Yeboah, clarified that a woman’s orgasm during sex is not solely the responsibility of the man and is fundamental in relationships. He spoke on Joy Prime’s Prime Morning show on Tuesday, August 27, 2024, discussing the science of happiness. The coach explained that orgasm involves an emotional connection and that sex is an activity. Therefore, there needs to be a strong connection between the two in order to reach the orgasm stage.
Therefore, sex is not the ultimate determinant of one’s happiness but lovemaking, meaning there needs to be an attachment between the heart and the sexual act.
“Orgasm writes on the chemical oxytocin and serotonin, which is the heart. But sex can just be heady; an activity. So the question is, what you’re doing, is your heart involved? Are you in connection because if there’s no connection, it becomes mechanical? One of the ways to grimmer happiness and well-being is lovemaking, not sex.
So, it’s not the act; it’s the art and act that makes lovemaking. But because we want the happiness up here, we’re more consumed with the act. So, no man is responsible for the woman’s orgasm because he is not in your body,” he clarified. Similarly, Mr. Yeboah pointed out that the orgasm of a man is equally not the duty of the woman, clearing that a man’s ejaculation is not his orgasm stage.
But he said, “It is the extra journey behind the connection between the two of you in the act. That solid connection that can get me to surrender absolutely without feeling threatened that my vulnerability can be used against me.” On that account, the individual’s surroundings and daily activities such as food, water, people, and sexual partners are vital determinants of the individual’s happiness.
The life coach further highlighted that one can attain orgasm without necessarily engaging in any sexual intimacy because it is the obligation of the vagus nerve, especially when it coordinates all senses.
Mr. Yeboah urged individuals to make a conscious effort to have what he calls ‘Me Time’ with themselves before commencing their daily routines in order to grow consistently in happiness. He noted that stress is worryingly on the rise, according to statistics.
“It is not fidgeting with your phone, watching a movie. It’s coordinating every moment for you. Just do that for 3 minutes before you start your day,” he told Asieduwaa Akumia and KMJ.
By:Joan Nyaame

