Lasting longer for PE - 10 min goal

This training is for lasting longer before getting aroused. I will post another one for staying in control after being aroused.

Core Idea

Instead of letting arousal spike early and then trying to save yourself, youโ€™ll control pace, tension, and breathing from the start.
Think of it like driving up a hill in first gear instead of fifth โ€” you reach the top much later.


Training Changes

  1. Longer rests between sets (40โ€“90 seconds)
    โ†’ Fully reset to ~40โ€“50% arousal before going again.
    โ†’ This keeps each set strong and helps push its duration.

  2. Fewer sets per session (3โ€“5 sets instead of 6โ€“10)
    โ†’ Youโ€™ll give more energy and focus to each one.

  3. Controlled thrust tempo
    โ†’ Start slow (about 1 thrust every 2 seconds) for the first half of the set.
    โ†’ Only speed up later when you know you can still handle it.

  4. Breathing pattern
    โ†’ Inhale on 1โ€“2 thrusts, exhale slowly over 2โ€“3 thrusts.
    โ†’ This keeps your pelvic floor relaxed and delays tension build-up.

  5. Reverse Kegels early
    โ†’ Light pelvic drop during the first 2โ€“3 minutes to prevent tightening too soon.


Progression Plan (8 Weeks)

Week 1โ€“2:

Start with your current best single set length.

Add +10โ€“15 seconds to one set per session.

Week 3โ€“4:

Begin sessions with 2-minute slow-thrust phase before normal rhythm.

Goal: reach 3โ€“4 minutes before hitting high arousal.

Week 5โ€“6:

Push at least one set each session to 5โ€“6 minutes before nearing climax.

Week 7โ€“8:

Merge two long sets into one continuous 8โ€“10 minute set.

Once you can do it with control, start adding more intensity near the end without losing it.


Why This Works

You delay the โ€œpoint of no returnโ€ so much that by the time you get close, youโ€™re already past 8โ€“9 minutes.

You conserve energy in the pelvic muscles so they donโ€™t involuntarily contract too soon.

Your nervous system learns that you donโ€™t need to react strongly to every sensation.