At 24, Akina married a company employee introduced by a friend—he was 11 years her senior. By their fifth year of marriage, their intimate encounters had naturally decreased. As her husband approached 40, he began thinking about the future. One day, he told Akina, "I want us to have a child." Considering her age and hoping it might rekindle their intimacy, Akina agreed to start trying. Using an app to track her menstrual and ovulation cycles, they attempted timed intercourse, but the husband, burdened by obligation and pressure, couldn't perform. The passionate kissing, the devoted foreplay—every inch of her body tenderly licked—everything had been perfect up to that point. But then, he lost his erection, suffering erectile dysfunction. As a wife, as a woman desired, everything came crashing down. Aware it might be ED, she tried to gently make him realize, but his stubborn pride got in the way. Fearing their marriage would become sexless despite their efforts to conceive, Akina felt a deep sense of crisis. Just when she thought she might finally find release, she was left unsatisfied once again. The desperation of an unfulfilled married woman is no ordinary thing—her arousal fluid drenches every single hole.