Why are you crying after sex?

Sex with your partner is supposed to make you feel many things that include passion, tranquillity, warmth, closeness and other... positive feelings. Sometimes when the act has just ended, you find yourself in tears and negative emotions. Why? Formally, this situation called “post-coital bisphoria” or (post-coital output, PCD causes people to be sad, nervous, or complaining when supposed [...]
Sex with your partner is supposed to make you feel many things that include passion, tranquillity, warmth, closeness and other... positive feelings.
Sometimes when the act has just ended, you find yourself in tears and negative emotions. Why?
Formally, this situation called “post-coital bisphoria” or (post-coital output, PCD causes people sadness, nervousness, or anxiety when you're supposed to be in an optimistic mood.
Experts have raised several hypotheses about what they call “bed slots”, but none of them show you're the problem.
The truth is, at the end of the day, your sex life is yours and you can certainly cry, but some people would like to embrace instead, so learn once and for all what you should know about crying after sex.
First of all, you should know that this phenomenon happens to both women and men, regardless of whether they experience PCD symptoms differently.
Experts say that people generally describe this feeling as “loss in themselves” and as “shameful expertise”, which means they felt like out of their body.
These feelings are not always accompanied by tears, sometimes you may find yourself crying without such feelings.
Crying after sex doesn't mean you didn't enjoy what happened or that sex was bad. It's just that you, like so many other people, are affected by the phenomenon (that for experts it's still mystery) that goes contrary to what history has been believed in for the beautiful experience of sex.
So nothing to worry about.










