Childbirth Finally Helped Me Experience My First Orgasm

After years of struggling with anorgasmia, I unexpectedly experienced my first orgasm after giving birth and finally understood what my body had been missing.

Smiling young woman with dark hair lying on a bed, partly covered by teal patterned fabric, with her hands near her face in a relaxed intimate portrait.
A candid moment of ease and vulnerability: a smiling woman rests on soft bedding, wrapped in teal fabric, evoking the personal intimacy of a story about pleasure, birth, and self-discovery.

The first time I had sex, I was 20 years old. I was old enough to know that first times usually are not cinematic or especially mind-blowing, so I tried not to expect too much. When I did not orgasm, I was not shocked. I told myself it would probably take time to learn what worked for my body.

I had waited until I was in a relationship with someone I really liked, and I tried to focus on that instead: how safe I felt, how comfortable I was, how surprisingly not nervous I had been. I figured the rest would come together eventually.

But months turned into years. That boyfriend moved away, and no matter who I was with, sex followed the same frustrating pattern. Pleasure would build and build, but I could never seem to reach the big O. It felt like a song climbing toward a drop that never arrived, all intensity and no release.

For a while, I wondered if maybe I was orgasming and just did not recognize it. Movie scenes had made orgasms look loud, dramatic, and unmistakable, and my experience never matched that. Sometimes I felt a small wave of release and wondered if maybe my orgasms were simply quieter than other people’s.

Still, I kept searching for the orgasm I felt like I was missing. My husband and I talked openly and tried everything we could think of, from longer foreplay to exploring fantasies. In my usual Type A way, I read Come As You Are and Becoming Orgasmic. I signed up for OMGYES after hearing Emma Watson recommend it and completed every lesson like it was homework.

I learned a lot, and I do not regret any of it. But the big release still never came.

Eventually, I went to sex therapy. I talked through my history, filled out worksheets, and tried to follow every suggestion with an open mind. In the end, I did not get much closer to an answer. I started to accept that maybe orgasm just was not going to be part of sex for me.

So I focused on what sex did give me. It still felt good. It still made me feel connected to my partner. It still mattered. I tried to stop measuring every intimate moment by whether it ended in orgasm and instead enjoy it for what it was.

A few years later, I became a mom. I had a vaginal birth that went incredibly smoothly, and I felt grateful for that. I needed a stitch or two for a first-degree tear, and things looked a little different afterward, but at my six-week checkup, I was cleared to return to normal life, including intimacy.

That night, I felt a little like I had at 20 again. I was nervous about having sex for the first time after birth, but I also felt completely safe with my husband. I had no expectations. I knew it might not feel amazing. I simply wanted to know what it would feel like now.

And then I orgasmed.

There was no mistaking it. The warm, heavy buildup of pleasure that had always stopped short finally crested into actual release. It was amazing and overwhelming. Maybe it was not as dramatic as the movies, but for the first time, I understood what everyone had been talking about. My husband and I were both stunned and thrilled.

Almost immediately, I started searching online to see whether other women had experienced the same thing. What I found was mostly the opposite. Article after article talked about women losing orgasms after delivery, not finding them. Even years later, when I look for stories like mine, I mostly find accounts of painful sex, dulled pleasure, and low libido after childbirth.

I can only guess what changed for me. Maybe birth connected my brain and pelvic floor in a way they had not been connected before. Maybe pushing out a nearly 8-pound baby helped certain muscles tense or relax differently. Maybe small structural changes inside my body made it possible for me to finally let go. I really do not know.

When I mentioned it to my OB-GYN, she did not have much insight either. There was no neat explanation, no medical lightbulb moment, and no clear reason why childbirth would unlock something I had spent years trying to find.

Obviously, I would never recommend giving birth as a treatment for anorgasmia, which is the medical term for being unable to orgasm despite enough stimulation. Children are famously not easy on their parents’ sex lives. But for me, giving birth somehow changed everything.

Now I orgasm about nine times out of 10, probably because my husband and I spent so many years learning what feels good for me. I may never know exactly what shifted or why it happened when it did. I just know that after years of feeling like my body would not let me cross that final line, I finally got there.


Inspired by this post on Scary Mom.


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FAQs

What is anorgasmia?

Anorgasmia is the medical term for being unable to orgasm despite enough stimulation. The author describes experiencing pleasure and buildup for years without reaching a full release.

What did the author try before experiencing her first orgasm?

She and her husband tried longer foreplay and explored fantasies, and she studied resources including Come As You Are, Becoming Orgasmic, and OMGYES. She also attended sex therapy and followed its suggested exercises.

When did the author experience her first orgasm after childbirth?

She experienced it during her first time having sex after a vaginal birth. This happened after her six-week checkup, when she had been cleared to resume intimacy.

Does the author know why childbirth changed her ability to orgasm?

No clear explanation was identified, and her OB-GYN did not have a definitive answer. The author wonders whether changes involving her brain, pelvic floor, muscles, or internal structure may have played a role, but presents these only as guesses.

Does the author recommend childbirth as a treatment for anorgasmia?

No. She explicitly says she would never recommend giving birth as a treatment for anorgasmia and describes only her own unexpected experience.

How did the author's sex life change after her first postpartum orgasm?

The author says she now orgasms about nine times out of 10. She believes the years she and her husband spent learning what feels good for her may contribute to that change, although she does not know exactly what shifted.

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