Becoming Orgasmic with Medical Cannabis — Dr. Suzanne Mulvehill
★ Founding Cohort — Limited to 15 Women ★

A 12-Week Science-Based Program

Becoming Orgasmic
with Medical Cannabis

For women who have tried everything else.

The world’s first science-based, cannabis-assisted orgasm program.

72.8%
More frequent orgasms
Mulvehill & Tishler, 2024
71%
Easier to reach orgasm
Mulvehill & Tishler, 2024
96%
Reported improvement in orgasm frequency, ease, and satisfaction
Mulvehill & Tishler, 2024
40%+
Increased ability to have multiple orgasms
Moser et al., 2023

You are not alone

If You’ve Ever Felt This Way,
You’re in the Right Place.

“The problem was never you.”

— Dr. Suzanne Mulvehill, PhD

Orgasm difficulty is not a character flaw, a psychological weakness, or evidence that your body was built wrong. It is a lack of access problem — something is interfering with your nervous system and blocking access to your orgasm.

When your nervous system cannot access the conditions for orgasm to emerge — whether because of anxiety, shame, conditioning, trauma, or simply never having been taught how your body actually works — orgasm becomes unavailable. Beyond difficult. Unavailable.

This is not a life sentence. Your nervous system can be taught. It learns. And what it has learned, it can unlearn and relearn.

“Following my radical hysterectomy, I was left with a lot of pain, tenderness, muscle tightness and nerve damage causing loss of sensation. I lost my ability to feel pleasure and could not reach orgasm… I began dabbling with cannabis to reconnect with my body and to my own amazement, I discovered new sensations and new ways to orgasm with my partner.”

— Rebecca Andersson, cervical cancer survivor  ·  Oral Testimony to the Oregon Health Authority, October 2024

Grounded in 50 years of peer-reviewed science

This Is What Science Has Known
for Half a Century.

No program was built. No treatment pathway was created. No woman was told. Until now.

1970
Researcher Barbara Lewis published The Sexual Power of Marijuana and asked: “Could marijuana be the catalyst that would enable a so-called non-orgasmic woman to reach orgasm?”
1970
Sociologist Dr. Erich Goode documented a woman who could achieve orgasm only under the influence of cannabis. One participant described it in five words no clinical language has improved on: “I become the orgasm.”
1979
Dawley and colleagues formally recommended in the Journal of Clinical Psychology that cannabis should be explored as a treatment for sexual disorders.
2024
Connecticut became the first U.S. state to formally recognize female orgasmic disorder as a qualifying condition for medical cannabis treatment. Illinois followed in 2025. Two states. Fifty-four years later.
2024–2026
Dr. Mulvehill publishes the first formal study of cannabis and female orgasm difficulty; a systematic review of 16 studies encompassing 8,849 women; and a clinical and policy review — all reaching the same conclusion: cannabis warrants consideration as a first-line treatment.

In a systematic review of 16 studies encompassing 8,849 women, every single study that investigated cannabis use prior to sexual activity reported improvements in female orgasm function.

Not most. Every one.

This program is what should have existed decades ago.

The neuroscience

Your Brain Can Learn to Orgasm.

Research confirms that sexual behavior grows new neurons and builds new neural pathways. That means the more you practice, the stronger and more permanent those pathways become.

Three sessions per week practiced consistently over 12 weeks is sufficient for neural pathway consolidation. Twelve weeks of consistent practice gives your brain what it needs to begin making lasting change.

Women who used marijuana before sex were more than twice as likely to report satisfactory orgasms. For each additional step of cannabis use intensity, the odds of reporting female sexual dysfunction declined by 21%.

From the founder

If Cannabis Scares You,
Know It Scared Me Too.

I was raised on an image of an egg frying in a pan. “This is your brain on drugs.”

In college I tried cannabis once in a parking lot, had a panic attack in my physics class, and wanted nothing to do with it again. That was 1980.

Fast forward to 2018 — after decades of struggling with orgasm difficulty, after four sex therapists, Tantra training, new vibrators, a private session with the legendary Betty Dodson — I decided to experience cannabis. Not try it. Experience it.

In a safe setting. With intention.

And when I did, my brain — wired for productivity, efficiency, and control — wanted no part of it. The altered state felt wrong. Uncomfortable. My brain kept asking: “Are we done yet?”

Some sessions brought breakthroughs.

Some brought tears.

Some brought orgasm.

There was also a lot of unlearning. Patience was required. Non-judgment. And a willingness to go on an exploratory journey with oneself — without knowing exactly where it would lead.

I had to learn to stay in the discomfort long enough for something to change. To train my brain and to develop a practice that worked with my resistance rather than against it. That practice — and everything I learned from it — is inside this program.

You do not need to have used cannabis before.
You do not need to be sure it will work.
You do not need to be unafraid.

You need only to be willing.

Program details

What Is Included

The founding cohort is a 12-week, live, guided program — limited to 15 women.

One-hour private onboarding session

With Dr. Mulvehill — your history, your goals, your barriers.

12 weeks of live group sessions

Weekly education, exercises, and journal prompts — live with Dr. Mulvehill.

Cannabis and Climax! Journal

The 90-Day Journey to Reclaim Your Orgasm — your written companion throughout.

Direct WhatsApp access

To Dr. Mulvehill between sessions — not a support ticket, direct access.

Private WhatsApp community

Open to all graduates indefinitely. The community continues after the program ends.

Pre, mid, and post assessments

Tracked every 30 days — so you can measure and see your own progress.

Physician referral to a certified CTFOD Orgasmologist

In our physician network — for medical cannabis guidance specific to your situation.

Why this works

Cannabis opens the door.
This program teaches you how to walk through it.

Too much cannabis and it may not work. Too little and it may not work. The right amount, the right conditions, the right setting, the right practice — that is where cannabis can give you access to your orgasm.

01
A prescription is the beginning — not the program.

Knowing what to do with cannabis, how to work with your nervous system, and how to work through the resistance — that is what this program provides.

02
You will not be navigating this alone.

Being held, witnessed, and guided by others was not incidental to Dr. Mulvehill’s own breakthrough — it was essential to it.

03
Learning in community accelerates everything.

When women hear each other’s experiences, their own become normalized. The belief that change is possible builds faster when you witness others on the same journey.

What becomes possible

What Women in the Research Report

Based on 40 interviews and 387 surveys conducted by Dr. Mulvehill.

“I never had an orgasm before I started using cannabis, and it worked the first time.”

Anonymous research participant · Mulvehill (2023)

“I was raped in my late teens. I told the guy I was dating, who is now my husband, about my sexual abuse history, and he said, ‘Try this.’ And it worked the first time.”

Research participant · Mulvehill (2023)

“You asked about the last month’s use, but I want you to know that before using cannabis, I had NEVER had an orgasm.”

Anonymous participant survey comment · Mulvehill (2023)

“I become the orgasm.”

Research participant · Goode (1969)
Some things need no clinical language.

Meet your guide

She built this program for you.

From evidence. From practice. From thirty years of knowing exactly what it feels like to struggle with orgasm difficulty.

SM
Dr. Suzanne Mulvehill, PhD
Suzanne Mulvehill, PhD
Clinical Sexologist · Scientist · Researcher

Suzanne Mulvehill, PhD is a clinical sexologist, scientist, and researcher specializing in female orgasmic function and difficulty. She is the founder of the Female Orgasm Research Institute — a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization — and the Women’s Cannabis Project, the policy initiative that established female orgasmic disorder as a qualifying condition for medical cannabis in Connecticut and Illinois.

After decades of living with orgasm difficulty herself, she sold her international company and returned to school to earn her PhD — to find out if other women were experiencing what she had experienced, and to build the science to prove it.

  • First formal study of cannabis and female orgasm difficulty
  • Systematic review of 16 studies · 8,849 women · 50 years of science
  • Invited contributor, Handbook of Cannabis and Related Pathologies (Elsevier)
  • Clinical and policy review on cannabis and female orgasmic disorder treatment
  • Presented at ESSM, Academic Cannabis Conference, Medical Cannabis Visionaries

Frequently asked questions

Your Questions, Answered.

You do not need to have used cannabis before. You do not need to be sure it will work. You do not need to be unafraid. You need only to be willing — and this program will meet you exactly where you are. Dr. Mulvehill herself was completely against cannabis before her own breakthrough in 2018.
Yes — we recommend having your medical cannabis prescription in place before you begin the program. Your enrollment includes a referral to a certified CTFOD Orgasmologist in our physician network, who can guide you through the process and help you access the right products for your situation.
Medical cannabis laws vary by state and country. To date, Connecticut and Illinois have formally recognized female orgasmic disorder as a qualifying condition for medical cannabis treatment. If you have questions about eligibility or access in your area, please contact us directly before enrolling — we want to make sure this program is the right fit for your situation.
This program is not therapy and does not require a formal diagnosis of female orgasmic disorder. It is a science-based training program. If you have medical or mental health considerations that may be relevant, please consult your doctor or contact us before enrolling. We are happy to talk through whether this program is the right fit for you.
Cannabis creates the conditions that allow a woman to experience her own orgasm — it does not “make” a woman orgasm. The right amount, the right conditions, the right setting, and the right practice are all factors. That is precisely what this 12-week program is designed to provide. If you have specific concerns about your situation, please book a Discovery Call before enrolling so Dr. Mulvehill can speak with you directly.
This treatment program is a journey that may provoke buried emotions and feelings, particularly if working through old and unprocessed trauma. Feelings such as anger, resistance, sadness, and fear may arise — and that is normal. If these feelings become overwhelming, we have a list of therapists and sex coaches we can suggest. You will not be alone in this.
The founding cohort is limited to 15 women. This cohort will not be repeated at this price or in this format. The founding price of $1,997 reflects a 50% discount from the standard program investment of $3,997.
Yes. Book a 30-minute Discovery Call with Dr. Mulvehill for $99 — applied in full toward your enrollment if you decide to join. This is not a sales call; it is a real conversation about your situation and whether this program is right for you.
★ Founding Cohort — Limited Enrollment ★

Space Is Limited to 15 Women.

This cohort will not be repeated at this price or in this format.

$3,997
$1,997
50% founding cohort investment
Founding cohort · 15 women · Live, guided, with direct access to Dr. Mulvehill throughout
Yes — I’m Ready to Enroll

Have questions before enrolling? Book a 30-minute Discovery Call with Dr. Mulvehill for $99 — applied in full toward your enrollment.

If you have questions about whether this program is right for your situation — including any medical or mental health considerations — please consult your doctor or contact us directly before enrolling.