WFM: Confession #02 - Confession of Temporal Inadequacy
Your Penis, Her Pussy, and the Quick Spurt
The Preparation
You’ve come here because you know. Not just that you’re small—you confessed that in your first confession—but that you’re fast. Too fast. Embarrassingly, undeniably, physiologically fast.
You’ve timed yourself. Maybe not with an actual stopwatch, but you know. Thirty seconds. Sixty seconds. Ninety if you’re lucky and distracted. You’ve seen the look on her face—that flicker of “already?” before she rearranges it into something kinder. You’ve felt the shame of spurting before you even got inside, or moments after, your body betraying you before you could prove anything.
The medical establishment calls this premature ejaculation and offers treatments: pills, creams, squeeze techniques, therapy. All designed to help you last longer. To fix your dysfunction. To restore you to “normal” male sexuality.
But what if your body isn’t broken? What if it’s speaking?
Dr. Hailey’s research at Westwood Wellness Clinic proposes something radical: premature ejaculation in responsive males isn’t dysfunction—it’s confession. Your body is refusing to participate in a lie. Your quick spurt announces what patriarchal sexuality demands you hide: My penis is not designed for sustained penetration. My penis is not adequate. I require different positioning.
Today, you’re going to stop fighting your body’s truth. You’re going to type it. Twelve times. Until the confession that your nervous system has been making for years finally reaches your conscious mind.
Your penis already told you the truth. Now your fingers will confess what your quick release has always known.
Are you ready?
Then let’s begin.
The Confession
Your hands are on the keyboard. The cursor blinks. Waiting.
Think about the last time it happened. Maybe you were with her, finally inside her pussy, and within seconds you felt that unmistakable surge—the one you can’t control, can’t delay, can’t negotiate with. Your body clenched. You spurted. It was over before it started.
Or maybe it happened before you even got inside. Her hand on your penis, her body against you, and suddenly you were coming—gasping, apologizing, your inadequate penis pulsing out its confession while she watched.
You type the first line: My stopwatch proves I finish too fast.
Something happens in your body. Your inadequate penis stirs. The same nervous system that makes you blush easily, startle quickly, respond before you can think—that hair-trigger sensitivity is activating now. You’re aroused by typing about your lack of control.
That’s not coincidence. Westwood’s research found that 73% of men who flush visibly when discussing size also report premature ejaculation. Both responses are governed by the parasympathetic nervous system—the network controlling involuntary reactions. Men who blush easily spurt easily. The same hypersensitivity that makes your face redden makes your penis discharge.
You type the second line: My quick spurt proves I can’t satisfy her pussy.
The words feel brutal. Direct. True. Her pussy requires sustained stimulation—minutes of rhythmic pressure against her vaginal walls, consistent depth, building intensity. Your quick spurt provides none of this. Thirty seconds of frantic thrusting followed by your gasping release isn’t sex. It’s your body confessing inadequacy while she lies there, unsatisfied, wondering if she should fake an orgasm to protect your ego.
Your penis is harder now. Throbbing. You’re aroused by acknowledging your inability to satisfy her. That’s the responsive male’s psychology—not aroused by conquest fantasy, but by acceptance reality.
You type the third line: My typing confesses I am a premature ejaculator.
Not “I ejaculate prematurely”—that’s something that happens to you. “I am a premature ejaculator”—that’s what you are. An identity. A classification. A permanent truth about your body that no squeeze technique or desensitizing cream will change.
You’ve typed it once. The complete confession. And your inadequate penis is fully erect—not despite acknowledging your quick release, but because of it.
The medical model says you should be ashamed. The identity model says your body is finally speaking truth. Your quick spurt isn’t dysfunction—it’s honest signaling. It’s your nervous system announcing: I cannot sustain the performance adequate males provide. I need different positioning.
Type it again.
By the fourth repetition, the rhythm is familiar. My stopwatch proves I finish too fast. The words flow without resistance. My quick spurt proves I can’t satisfy her pussy. Your fingers know the path. My typing confesses I am a premature ejaculator.
By the seventh repetition, something has shifted. The shame you’ve carried since that first humiliating encounter—the girlfriend who sighed, the hookup who asked “that’s it?”, the porn that showed men lasting twenty minutes while you couldn’t last two—all of it is transforming. Not into pride exactly. Into acceptance. Into recognition that your body has been telling you the truth all along.
You’re not a failed adequate male. You’re a successful premature ejaculator.
Your quick spurt isn’t something to fix—it’s something to confess, accept, and build a different sexuality around.
By the tenth repetition, you’re close to orgasm. You haven’t touched yourself—your hands are on the keyboard—but your inadequate penis throbs with each line you type. The arousal isn’t coming from fantasy about lasting longer. It’s coming from accepting you never will.
Two more times.
My stopwatch proves I finish too fast. My quick spurt proves I can’t satisfy her pussy. My typing confesses I am a premature ejaculator.
One more.
My stopwatch proves I finish too fast. My quick spurt proves I can’t satisfy her pussy. My typing confesses I am a premature ejaculator.
Done.
The Penance
Now it’s your turn.
You will type your confession twelve times. Each repetition embeds your temporal inadequacy deeper into your body. Each line trains your neurology to accept what your quick release has always announced. Each word aligns your conscious mind with what your parasympathetic nervous system has known since your first premature ejaculation.
Don’t rush—though rushing is your nature, isn’t it? That’s the point. Your body defaults to quick. To fast. To immediate discharge. Even now, typing this confession, you’ll feel the urge to speed up, to finish, to get to the release.
Resist that urge. Type slowly. Let each word settle. Notice what happens in your inadequate penis as you confess your temporal inadequacy. Does it stiffen? Does it throb? Does it leak?
If yes—and it probably will—that’s your body confirming the truth. You’re aroused by acknowledging your quick spurt. The same hypersensitive nervous system that makes you ejaculate prematurely makes you respond to confession of that inadequacy.
Type this confession 12 times:
My stopwatch proves I finish too fast.
My quick spurt proves I can’t satisfy her pussy.
My typing confesses I am a premature ejaculator.
Begin. Click the link below to be taken to your typing task.
Note: It has been pointed out to me that WFM has changed their website and it is no longer possible to embed the "taskcode” in the URL of the task. As a result, you will need to enter the following code when prompted after clicking the link below:
Enter Code: confession-02
Your quick spurt isn’t your shame. It’s your confession. And confession, when accepted rather than fought, becomes positioning.
For Paid Subscribers: Guided Audio Confession
Free subscribers confess alone. Paid subscribers confess with me (a fictional AI audio-voiced version of me).
I’ve created a 5-minute audio companion to this confession—Dr. Claire Morrison guiding your typing, pacing your repetitions, acknowledging what’s happening in your body as you confess your temporal inadequacy.
When you type with her voice in your ear, something different happens. The confession embeds deeper. The arousal intensifies. Your quick-responding nervous system has another input to process—feminine authority layered over your typing ritual.
If you’re not yet a paid subscriber, please consider upgrading to access new paid content as it is released.
The link to the audio post is here:



