A boyfriend a long time ago asked me to perform oral sex on him, which I did with hesitation. I very clearly told him not to ejaculate, and he agreed — but then did anyway. It's a moment I have never forgotten, and I feel so confused by it. It has affected my intimacy ever since. Was this assault or abuse? I feel like I need a term to describe what happened to help me move forward.

Dr. Laura

Answer by Dr. Laura

PhD Mental Health Nurse & Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner

Thank you for trusting us with this question. The confusion you're feeling, the lasting impact on your intimacy, and the need to find language for what happened all make complete sense. The fact that this moment has stayed with you for so long is meaningful, and your instinct to name it sounds like it might be an important part of your healing process.

What you're describing involves something really important: you set a clear, verbal boundary, he agreed to it, and then he violated it. Consent is not just about agreeing to a sexual act...it also includes the specific terms and limits someone communicates within that act. When you said no to ejaculation and he agreed, that was a boundary that deserved to be honored.

It's worth acknowledging that physiologically, ejaculation does have a point of no return and sometimes there is a brief moment where the body takes over and stopping becomes genuinely difficult. In that narrow sense, the final moment itself may not have been fully within his control. However, what matters most is everything that led up to that moment. He knew your boundary and had agreed to it, which meant the responsibility was on him to communicate before reaching that point-- to stop, to check in, to prioritize what you had clearly asked for. The failure to do that, regardless of what happened in the final moment, still reflects a disregard for what you asked for.

In many legal and advocacy contexts, this kind of violation (where the terms of consent are not upheld during a sexual act) is recognized as sexual assault. Some people also describe experiences like this as sexual coercion or intimate partner sexual violence. You are allowed to use any of these terms if they feel true to your experience, and you are equally allowed to call it a violation, a betrayal, or whatever language feels most honest and useful to you. There is no single right word, and you get to decide what fits.

What you're describing about intimacy being affected afterward is a well-documented trauma response. When a boundary is crossed by someone you were intimate with, especially one you stated out loud and had confirmed, it can fundamentally shift how safe your body feels in vulnerable moments. That kind of breach doesn't just affect how you feel in the moment. It can also reshape your sense of safety, your relationship with your own body, and your ability to feel present during intimacy for a long time afterward. This is not an overreaction. It is your nervous system responding to a real violation.

Finding language for what happened can be a meaningful step forward. Words help us organize experiences, communicate them to others, and access the right kinds of support. You deserve support that helps you reclaim a sense of safety and trust in your own body and boundaries. Thank you for trusting us with this. While only you can label your experience, we hope this information was helpful.

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