Good to see you're back in posting, veteran brother.
In my early days of PE, I jelqed a lot. Till this day my base is skinnier than rest of my cock.
And it's not uniformally skinny. You know how people cut a tree, they chip away on one side? It looks almost like that lol.
Is there a way to increase the girth?
This is what we're talking about. So many of the brothers focused so much on just getting bigger, but ended up with a misshapen penis shaft. Some have baseball bat shapes, some have reversed baseball bat shapes, some have an elliptical shape that looks like a freaking football, and some just appear to be massive, odd-shaped sausages that scare the craps out of the ladies. In your case, you got a skinny base, with ununiformed body.
To correct this, two things immediately come to mind:
- Isolation pressurization.
- Reengagement of base tissue building
So, the question for you is, "Do you still want more girth, or are you just wanting to increase that missing girth to make the penis more uniform?"
What you're describing at the moment is a Peyronie's, or scarring, issue that you may not see but is hidden below the surface. When a mishap occurred during intense PE routines in the past, say, you do the crazy DLD Benders or some kinds of extreme jelqs that favored one side to correct the curvature, the tissues on one side toughed up, scarred, and caused hardening. Expansion is no longer favored on that stressed side, which is causing the odd shape you're facing now. If you go to a urologist, ask for an ultrasound during a full erection (make sure a female nurse/doctor is enjoying the scan rather than a male nurse/doctor), they'll probably point out the same info that I provided earlier. If they scan just slightly below the curvature point of the expansion near the base, they'll probably discover pinched soft tissues that appear to be like a funnel, resulting from possibly a band, ring, or even an OK grip used to expand the penile shaft in the past. The tissues may be softer near the base, while the progressive tissues above the pinched point are much tougher and denser.
At this point, think about what you want to do, how much you want to invest in correcting the shape, and do a bit of measuring as well. Measure the base with NBPEG, base with BPEG to get below the fat pad (if you have some), at the pinched/curvature point, and every 1in along the entire shaft all the way to the base of the glans, and the coronal ridge itself. Measure the BPEL to get the full length of the penis. Record every possible curvature angle of the penis to see if the penis shift to left, right, up, or down along the entire penile length. Why so much info? There may be multiple scarred points.