I was on Zoloft for quite a while. It is indeed true this drug is amazing at treating premature ejaculation.
After a few months, my time to orgasm became 30 minutes as opposed to 3 minutes. I thought it was just an odd occurrence.
After a few more months I couldn’t ejaculate at all. The girl asked “are you done yet” after about an hour of intercourse. I finally gave up knowing it wasn’t going to happen.
I suppose if I wanted to have three girls at once I could just go at it with each one until each girl was completely satisfied.
I could go on for hours.
They key is to find the dose of Zoloft that lets you come in 30 minutes as opposed to never.
From the Playboy Advisor:
November, 2005
Q. When you read about a guy who has a problem with premature ejaculation,
what does that mean exactly? How soon is too soon?
— K.L., Miami, Florida
A. PE occurs when a man consistently ejaculates before or shortly after
penetration following minimal foreplay. That’s a common clinical definition,
but it has never satisfied anyone. Guys want numbers. So last year a team
led by psychologist Stanley Althof of Case Western Reserve University gave
stopwatches to the partners of 1,587 men, including 207 who had been
diagnosed with PE. (The study was funded by Johnson & Johnson, which has a
pill in the pipeline, dapoxetine, that it hopes to have approved for
treating PE. Several other stamina drugs are in development, including one
by Pfizer, which makes Viagra.) After tabulating the results, the
researchers found that the men who suffered from rapid ejaculation had an
average “intravaginal ejaculatory latency time” of 1.8 minutes, compared
with an average of 7.3 minutes among the other men. Althof notes that PE is
a lifelong problem in two thirds of cases; the other third are “acquired,”
meaning the condition shows up later. Anxiety over coming too quickly can
contribute to the problem; in trials of dapoxetine, men given placebos had
double the stamina. Traditionally PE has been treated with squeeze or
start-stop techniques, antidepressants that stifle arousal (dapoxetine is
similar to Prozac but doesn’t stay in the body long enough to be effective
for depression) or numbing creams. It is often frustrating for both
partners, not only because of the bad sex but because the man’s shame or
frustration can bring an abrupt end to the intimacy. Althof says teaching
men to avoid such a response is an important part of treatment.