There's a distinction in erectile problems that most discussions completely miss, and it matters enormously for treatment.
Getting hard is different from staying hard.
If you can get an erection but lose it within a few minutes — during sex, when a partner moves, when you take a break from stimulation — that's difficulty maintaining an erection. Not the same physiological problem as never getting hard. And the fix is different.
The most common cause of maintenance issues in otherwise healthy men is a muscle group they've never trained: the pelvic floor.
What the pelvic floor does
The bulbocavernosus muscle — the primary pelvic floor muscle involved in erections — contracts to trap blood inside the erectile chambers. When you're hard, it's the BC's sustained contraction that keeps blood from flowing back out.
If this muscle is weak or undertrained, you get hard but the trap doesn't hold. Movement, position changes, or simply time causes the blood to escape and the erection to soften.
This is not a blood flow problem. Your blood is flowing fine. The problem is retention — which is a muscular problem, which means it responds to muscular training.
The training protocol
First: find the muscle. Next time you urinate, stop the flow mid-stream without contracting your glutes or abs. The muscle you just used is the bulbocavernosus. That's your target.
Now train it:
- Week one: Three-second holds, ten reps, three sets, twice daily. Add thirty seconds of rapid contractions at the end of each session.
- Week two: Five-second holds, twelve reps, three sets, twice daily.
- Week three: Eight-second holds, fifteen reps, three sets, twice daily.
- Week four+: Ten-second holds, twenty reps, three sets, two to three times daily.
Two things that determine whether this works: muscle isolation (no clenching glutes or abs) and consistency. You need four to six weeks before expecting significant results. Most men notice improvement in erection firmness around week three. Partners typically notice before the man mentions it.
Other causes of maintenance difficulty
Alcohol. Even one to two drinks causes vasodilation — the opposite of what you need for blood retention. The erection arrives because arousal triggers initial blood flow, but alcohol undermines the sustained contraction needed to keep it.
Performance anxiety. Anxiety doesn't just prevent erections — it interrupts them. Sympathetic activation from mid-encounter worry redirects blood flow and breaks the physiological chain the erection depends on.
High body fat. Elevated body fat increases aromatase enzyme activity — the enzyme that converts testosterone to estrogen. Men with significant belly fat often have measurably lower free testosterone, affecting both arousal intensity and erection maintenance.
The combined approach
For most men dealing with difficulty maintaining an erection, the most effective protocol combines pelvic floor training with Zone 2 cardio for nitric oxide baseline, L-Citrulline supplementation for direct nitric oxide support, and anxiety management work if monitoring or performance pressure is part of the picture. These three combined produce results within four to six weeks of consistent implementation.