Sex without orgasm: A new way of making love?

July 11, 2012
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A growing number of men and women give up conventional sex, and are decided by the ‘Karezza’ or ‘Carezza’, a word of Italian origin that means ‘caress’, and kept away from orgasm, rather than an emphasis on attachment and affection to climax.
Many couples are finding that the technique of Karezza helped save their marriages by injecting more spark in their sex life, away from the addiction to pornography, and even to cure sexual dysfunction.
The word was adopted by Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham in 1896, a Chicago obstetrician and feminist who campaigned for birth control, prohibition of corsets and sexual satisfaction for both men and women.
Karezza Method was published by J. William Lloyd in 1931 and is a manual of beautiful and inspiring scenes on the practice of controlled intercourse.
Praised by doctors, Karezza is beginning to be seen as a natural alternative to Viagra, and possibly a cure for sexual dysfunction or lack of desire in women.
Feintech Deb, a counselor from Portland, Maine, says that “often Carezza is used to help couples to repair their broken relationships.”
He explained to ABC News, “The people most interested are male. It is too radical for them, but they are finding much greater emotional intimacy than any of the thrill of hunting and mating mind.”
Through binding behavior and relaxation, Karezza discourages conventional foreplay oral sex, also encourages the brain to release the ‘love’ hormone oxytocin.












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