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Pelvic Floor Training for Premature Ejaculation: Exercises & Progress

Pelvic Floor Training for Premature Ejaculation: Exercises, Timing & Progress

TL;DR

Pelvic floor muscles influence ejaculatory control. A progressive program—learning to isolate, strengthen, and coordinate contractions—can reduce PE for many men. Start with identification, then build strength and quick control, and integrate with sexual practice.

Editor’s note

Pelvic floor work benefits from clinician guidance; consider a physiotherapist for biofeedback and tailored progression.

Why pelvic floor muscles matter

PFMs are involved in bladder and bowel control and play a role in ejaculation. Learning to quickly contract and relax these muscles gives you another lever to delay ejaculation.

How to find the right muscles

During a normal urination, briefly stop the stream. The muscles you use are the pelvic floor muscles. Practice quick contractions (1–2 seconds) and gentle holds (3–5 seconds) to become aware of them. Avoid clenching abdominal or gluteal muscles—focus on the pelvic floor.

Beginner routine (4 weeks)

  • Weeks 1–2: Awareness and endurance — 3 sets of 10 slow holds (3–5s), rest between holds, twice daily.
  • Weeks 3–4: Strength — 3 sets of 10 stronger holds (5–10s) and 3 sets of quick contractions (10 fast squeezes), twice daily.

Intermediate: speed and coordination (weeks 5–8)

Add rapid contractions and timed contractions during stimulated practice to learn to interrupt the ejaculatory reflex. Combine with start‑stop practice.

Advanced: functional integration

Integrate PFM contractions during partnered sex or masturbation to delay climax, using quick strong contractions when close to orgasm. This requires practice and coordination to avoid interrupting pleasure.

When to see a specialist

If you can’t isolate the muscles, or if pelvic floor training causes pain, consult a pelvic physiotherapist. Biofeedback devices can show muscle activation and speed up learning.

FAQ

How long until I see results?
Often weeks to months with consistent practice; individual responses vary.
Can pelvic floor exercises worsen symptoms?
If done incorrectly (over‑tensing), they can increase pelvic tension; consult a physiotherapist if in doubt.

Sources

  • Physiotherapy and pelvic floor resources
  • Clinical reviews linking PFM to ejaculatory control

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