About half of women have had multiple orgasms at some point. The reason more people have not had them is not physical. It is that after the first orgasm, the body enters a state of extreme sensitivity that feels like a signal to stop. It is not. It is a transition. Understanding what that transition is and how to move through it is how multiple orgasms become accessible.
The clitoris becomes acutely sensitive immediately after orgasm. Touch that felt wonderful moments before can feel sharp, almost painful, or simply wrong. This is not a problem. It is a normal physiological response. The nerve endings are temporarily overloaded, and direct stimulation at this point tends to irritate rather than build pleasure.
The useful mental shift here is to think of the post-orgasm body as a completely different body from the one that just had the orgasm. It has different preferences, a different tolerance for direct stimulation, and needs to be approached as if from the beginning. The approach that worked for the first orgasm will almost certainly not work right now.
The first thing that helps is a brief break from focused stimulation. This might mean pausing for ten seconds, or it might mean a minute or more. During this time, touch that is diffuse, not focused on the clitoris, and lighter than usual, is usually welcome. The whole area can be held gently without any specific stimulation. Many people find this grounding and comfortable.
What does not tend to work is continuing with exactly the same stimulation that just produced the orgasm. The body needs a moment to reset, and the sensitivity that comes immediately after orgasm is the signal that this moment is needed.
The most popular approach to building a second orgasm is to essentially rewind to much earlier in the process. Not to stay where you were, but to go back to the very beginning. Touch that is not on the clitoris at all, gentle and exploratory, the kind of touch that belongs in warm-up rather than buildup. Let the body find its footing from there.
This feels counterintuitive. You were just in advanced territory. Why would you go all the way back? Because the body after orgasm is not picking up where it left off. It is starting a new experience with different needs. Meeting it where it is, rather than where it was, is what allows things to build again.
Once the initial sensitivity fades and arousal starts to rebuild, stimulation can gradually become more direct again. But lighter than before. More indirect. Less pressure on the exposed clitoris, more through the hood or surrounding area. The same techniques that worked for the first orgasm can be used again, just in gentler versions.
This is not a scaled-down experience. Many people find the second orgasm is more intense than the first, partly because there is already a baseline of arousal present from the first, and partly because reaching it required more patience and attention.
Not everyone pursues multiple orgasms, and there is nothing wrong with one being completely satisfying. Some people find the post-orgasm sensitivity too uncomfortable to navigate. Some simply feel finished in a way that is genuine and pleasant. Multiple orgasms are worth knowing about and exploring if curious, but they are one option among many, not a benchmark.
For people who do want to explore them: the main obstacle is usually not physiological. It is the assumption that the sensitivity signal means stop. Treating it as a transition, rather than an ending, and giving the body the brief reset it needs, is usually enough to find out what is possible.