I agree with the sense of vibration of these internal organs and tissues. Their induction is variable and must depend on parasympathetic resonance, in particular, as the poet says, "doors swinging on the stars", a telluric-cosmic dimension that is not always present for everyone.
Not sure that you answered the question... And I have no idea what you are talking about. Orgasm is a specific response that involves consistent sexual anatomy (the phallus), a consistent stimulation technique & the need for some kind of mental arousal in order that the phallus is tumescent - a requirement for orgasm. Anyone who has an orgasm, knows exactly how they got there. It is a fairly reliable and repeatable experience. Therefore it is strange that women are so silent on the topic. They have been given a description of their presumed responsiveness by men and consequently can make no sense of it.
Thanks Zoncita for commenting! No true biological sex drive can be inhibited by social or cultural factors. Certainly nothing has succeeded in reducing male sex drive to date! The idea that women routinely want to be impregnated is based on the male desire to enjoy the pleasure of being the penetrating male. If you think about it, you would be much less excited about being the receiver in intercourse. There is very little arousal from being the receiver of male ejaculate in any orifice. The vagina is part of the birth canal. A baby's head passes down it so a penis has zero impact. Only the clitoris, the equivalent to the penis, is erectile. But women's arousal is subconscious and there are no female erotic turn-ons with a lover. Women do not respond with a lover because they are not aroused. So it doesn't matter what stimulation is applied, even to the clitoris, female orgasm is quite impossible. The research has been ignored. Kinsey and Hite clearly identified female orgasm and clitoral stimulation with women's solitary masturbatory activities. But very few women are responsive - they never respond mentally to eroticism in such a way as to experience the kind of arousal that leads to orgasm.