LONGERDICK7+

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Most people dont want to believe in PE or even when it does the price a man has to pay is too high....


this is the info:


Does PENIS ENLARGEMENT really work?

Guys, be honest: Do you wish you were bigger? Almost certainly, the answer is yes.

“I think there isn’t a guy in the world who hasn’t wished his penis were an inch or two longer,” says Michael O’Leary, MD, professor of urologic surgery at Harvard Medical School and a urologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

However, after more than a century of generally dubious and sometimes lunatic penis enlargement attempts, there’s still not much you can do. Sure, there are lots and lots of supposed options out there — penis pills, creams, brutal stretching exercises, horrific-looking devices, and penis surgery. Almost none of it works. The few approaches that can work often have modest benefits and serious side effects. How serious? In some cases, erectile dysfunction-serious.

“Trust me, if I knew of a way to safely and effectively increase penis size, I’d be a billionaire,” O’Leary tells WebMD. “But I don’t. Nobody does.”

Still, common sense doesn’t stop size-obsessed guys from trying very sketchy treatments on a vital part of their anatomy — and risking a lot in the process.
How Small Is a Small Penis?

Think you’re smaller than average? You’re probably not. The typical erect penis is usually 5 to 6.5 inches long with a circumference of 4 to 5 inches. There’s more variation in the size of flaccid penises.

Some guys are genuinely smaller than that. In rare cases, genetics and hormone problems cause a condition called micropenis — an erect penis of under 3 inches. Sometimes Peyronie’s disease or prostate cancer surgery can reduce a guy’s size.

But studies show that most of the guys seeking penis enlargement are average-sized. They just think they’re below average.

Why? Part of it is perspective. It’s very hard to gauge the size of your own penis — looking down, you’ve got a bad angle.

Psychology plays a role, too. Some average-sized guys become obsessed with the idea that they’re too small. There’s even a psychiatric diagnosis: penile dysmorphic disorder (Small Penis Syndrome). It’s similar to the perceptual distortion of anorexics who think they’re fat no matter how thin they get.

According to one study, the majority of men who get penis enlargement surgery have this condition. They’re also the least satisfied with the results.
What Works: Weight Loss

There is one safe and effective method for getting a larger-looking penis: weight loss.

“A lot of men who think that they have a small penis are overweight,” says Jennifer Berman, MD, a urologist in Beverly Hills and co-author of Secrets of the Sexually Satisfied Woman.

Losing weight will reveal more of that hidden shaft that’s buried beneath belly fat. It doesn’t actually increase your size, but it will look that way.

For guys who would rather have a surgical procedure than eat less, liposuction of the fat pad around the penis can work. Still, the effects aren’t permanent — if you don’t change your eating habits, your penis will once again sink into your belly, like a pier at high tide.
Penis Enlargement: Pills, Creams, and Devices

What else is there? Here’s a run-down of some unsavoury options:

The vacuum pump. This is a cylinder that sucks out air. You stick your penis in and the resulting vacuum draws extra blood into it, making it erect and a little bigger. You then clamp off the penis with a tight ring — like a tourniquet — to keep the blood from leaking back into your body. What are the drawbacks? The effect only lasts as long as you have the ring on. Using it for more than 20 to 30 minutes can cause tissue damage.

Stretching with weights or exercises. Weights or stretching exercises won’t bulk up your penis — it’s not a muscle. But hanging weights off your flaccid penis may stretch it a bit, O’Leary says. The catch is that it requires a freakish degree of dedication. “You might have to wear a weight strapped to your penis eight hours a day for six months,” says O’Leary. At the end of it, you could be lucky enough to gain about half an inch. Risks include tearing of the tissue, burst blood vessels, and other problems.

Pills, supplements, ointments, and creams. They don’t work. None of them. “I think it’s safe to say that all of that stuff is complete nonsense,” Berman says.

Penis Enlargement Surgery

What about surgery? It can work, but there are a lot of cautions. There are two basic penis enlargement surgeries:

Lengthening the penis. The most common procedure is to cut the ligament that connects the penis to the pelvic bone. This allows a little more of the shaft — on average less than an inch — to become visible outside the body. It’s not really lengthening the penis so much as revealing more of what’s usually hidden. To prevent the ligament from reattaching, a guy would need weights or stretching devices daily for about six months.

Widening the penis. For men who think their penis is too thin, more controversial procedures can thicken it using implanted fat, silicone, or tissue grafts.

One newer — and low-risk — procedure can work for certain men. In some cases, the scrotum attaches high up on the shaft of the penis. Partially disconnecting the scrotum can reveal more of the shaft, making the penis look longer. The surgery takes 20 minutes and can be done on an outpatient basis, O’Leary says.
Penis Enlargement Surgery Risks

Before you take out a penile improvement loan and unbuckle your pants, consider the risks of lengthening or widening surgery.

There are no well-studied approaches. No major medical organisation approves of these surgeries. Some guys opt to travel to other countries for treatments that aren’t approved in the U.S. If that thought has crossed your mind, slow down — it’s time to have a frank talk with your doctor about the risks you’d be taking.

The side effects of lengthening surgeries are numerous and include infections, nerve damage, reduced sensitivity, and difficulty getting an erection. Perhaps most disturbing, scarring can leave you with a penis that’s shorter than what you started with. Widening the penis is even more controversial. Side effects can be unsightly — a lumpy, bumpy, uneven penis.

The few studies that have been done aren’t encouraging. The European Urology study looked at 42 men who had procedures to lengthen their penises by cutting the suspensory ligament and found that only 35% were satisfied with the results. Half went on to get more surgery.
Reconsidering Penis Enlargement

Wishing you were a little bigger is common. If it’s becoming a fixation, stop and think before you do something rash.

Talking to a doctor or a therapist can help. Research has found that when a doctor honestly reassures a guy that his penis is average-sized, he is likely to stop searching for surgery.

You also need to be on guard against phoney claims for miracle penis enlargement.

“The main target for penis enlargement advertising is insecure guys who think all their power lies in their penises,” says Berman. “These guys are easy victims.”

Ian Kerner, a sex counselor in New York, says that the imagined glories of a gargantuan penis are not all they’re cracked up to be.

“When it comes to penis size, being average is really where you want to be,” says Kerner, the author of books including She Comes First. “Having a penis that’s too big can be a much larger problem — pun unintended — than one that’s too small.” For guys who are too big for their partners, oral or vaginal sex can be difficult.

“Size really doesn’t matter nearly as much as being a good and creative lover,” Kerner tells WebMD. “How you use your brains, your hands, your mouth, and everything else — that’s what counts in the bedroom.”

So consider: A quest for a bigger penis could leave you with a lumpy, bruised, discolored, thickened, painful, dysfunctional member. (Not to mention a drained bank account.) Does risking the inches you have for the hope of an extra half inch make sense?


Source: webmd.com/ By R. Morgan Griffin, Reviewed by Michael W. Smith, MD
 
Consider the source:
R. Morgan Griffin is a full-time freelance writer and editor living in Easthampton, MA. In addition to his feature articles for WebMD, he's written stories for magazines and web sites such as Us Weekly, Intelihealth.com, and GayHealth.com. He has a master's in English from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

He does have valid points on the Psychology of the male self-perception, the different methods, surgeries, and dangers.

this article seem more a scare-tactic to deter males from doing PE

DLD lives in that area, may be DLD should go to his home and Dick-Slap him to show that PE actually works. (LoL)
Does this PE stuff really work ...only if you thoroughly apply yourself.
 
mmm i think people lke that doctor obviously cares about men health,unfortunately not everyone is going to follow his advice and men can take the easy way out= surgery..

manual PE even whit the devices needs discipline and dedication Gains arent easy to get and being honest can be quite hard to get bigger..
 
The psychological aspect of PE I think is significant.

"studies show that most of the guys seeking penis enlargement are average-sized. They just think they’re below average."

For me, the confidence boost is huge.
 
I see it all the time. My friends who've asked me to introduce them to powerlifting start to lose interest about twenty minutes in. They dont want to learn the difference between dynamic or static stretching, they don't want to learn how to breathe or brace properly anx wonder why they can't squat to below parallel without warming up or bothering to learn the reasoning behind set rep schemes and volume planning...

This applies to people who try PE. They dont want to work on their mental health they don't want want to pay attention to nutrition, they don't want to warm up or learn how the body needs to heal...hah

Fuck em. fuck em all
 
I'm unclear as to the author's motivation, seems like he's pandering to the insecurities of men as much as the charlatans peddling their crap. This will continue to be a hot topic until the end of time and we're fortunate enough to have a safe environment, (MOS) to discuss what's real and weed-out what's not.
 
Whenever I read articles like this, they are usually on some site selling some alternative option.
 
GottaGetAGrip;703792 said:
I see it all the time. My friends who've asked me to introduce them to powerlifting start to lose interest about twenty minutes in. They dont want to learn the difference between dynamic or static stretching, they don't want to learn how to breathe or brace properly anx wonder why they can't squat to below parallel without warming up or bothering to learn the reasoning behind set rep schemes and volume planning...

This applies to people who try PE. They dont want to work on their mental health they don't want want to pay attention to nutrition, they don't want to warm up or learn how the body needs to heal...hah

Fuck em. fuck em all

When you said squat... You have my complete attention. Lol
 
Threak-X;703775 said:
Consider the source:
R. Morgan Griffin is a full-time freelance writer and editor living in Easthampton, MA. In addition to his feature articles for WebMD, he's written stories for magazines and web sites such as Us Weekly, Intelihealth.com, and GayHealth.com. He has a master's in English from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

He does have valid points on the Psychology of the male self-perception, the different methods, surgeries, and dangers.

this article seem more a scare-tactic to deter males from doing PE

DLD lives in that area, may be DLD should go to his home and Dick-Slap him to show that PE actually works. (LoL)
Does this PE stuff really work ...only if you thoroughly apply yourself.

LMAO.

All these writers who create articles or blogs of some sort don't know that PE works. That's one thing. Two is that they believe science is the ultimate source of facts. Not saying all writers and bloggers but when it pertains to Penis Enlargement specifically they only fall back on what doctors recommend because they don't know any better. They believe science is the only way to prove/disprove things. However on the sides of the doctors, those who focus on penis anatomy, are either stupid and didn't retain enough information from school to understand the possibilities of growing or just want to reel in more customers so they can get $$$.
 
My belief is that PE and what we do here IS science, (physiologically) but the subject is still very taboo and easily dismissed due to the lack of a 'true study'. This is still a subject many snicker at, and until there's a mature-enough audience, it'll always end-up as a punch-line.
 
stillwantmore2;703804 said:
whenever i read articles like this, they are usually on some site selling some alternative option.

exactly!
 
AboveAvgAries;703786 said:
The psychological aspect of PE I think is significant.

"studies show that most of the guys seeking penis enlargement are average-sized. They just think they’re below average."

For me, the confidence boost is huge.

CONFIDENT BOOOST hell yeah!!:cool:
 
GottaGetAGrip;703792 said:
I see it all the time. My friends who've asked me to introduce them to powerlifting start to lose interest about twenty minutes in. They dont want to learn the difference between dynamic or static stretching, they don't want to learn how to breathe or brace properly anx wonder why they can't squat to below parallel without warming up or bothering to learn the reasoning behind set rep schemes and volume planning...

This applies to people who try PE. They dont want to work on their mental health they don't want want to pay attention to nutrition, they don't want to warm up or learn how the body needs to heal...hah

Fuck em. fuck em all

yep PE and the mind thing are two important things in PE.nutrition,and health is important too!!
 
Big Schwanz Acht;703826 said:
My belief is that PE and what we do here IS science, (physiologically) but the subject is still very taboo and easily dismissed due to the lack of a 'true study'. This is still a subject many snicker at, and until there's a mature-enough audience, it'll always end-up as a punch-line.

True most people wouldnt understand it or theyd apparently do, but i dont think theyd follow a routine or even bother reading a bit about PE..and how it works... guys would be like nah i dont need that or am i going to rip my penis off doing that...but yeah most men would think PE is a joke but who knows. lOL
 
However on the sides of the doctors, those who focus on penis anatomy, are either stupid and didn't retain enough information from school to understand the possibilities of growing or just want to reel in more customers so they can get $$$.

BOTH lol Making money out of people needs...Inches are expensive girth and lenght both and there is no real guarantee...:p
 
There are also medical licenses on the line if, for example a urologist says "sure try some jelqs for 3 months, here's a sample routine" and Mr Patient gets an injury. There are also no prescriptions to write with PE. Two of a laundry list of potential reasons.
 
stillwantmore2;703860 said:
There are also medical licenses on the line if, for example a urologist says "sure try some jelqs for 3 months, here's a sample routine" and Mr Patient gets an injury. There are also no prescriptions to write with PE. Two of a laundry list of potential reasons.


mmm PE is not for everyone then...because if a patient is following the doctors instructins and if he fails or gets hurt PE can turn into a lie or into an experimental set of exercises..

Dont you think PE is still taboo for most of them men out there? taboo, something unreal,a waste of time etc etc
 
Big Schwanz Acht;703826 said:
My belief is that PE and what we do here IS science, (physiologically) but the subject is still very taboo and easily dismissed due to the lack of a 'true study'. This is still a subject many snicker at, and until there's a mature-enough audience, it'll always end-up as a punch-line.

Yeah obviously it is science, I was just making a knowledge check for those who still only believe in the sciences. There are many other forms of knowledge.
 
Of course, PE is taboo. The PENIS is taboo in most 'western' cultures. The irony being that nothing is off limits when it comes to female sexuality.
 
PE is indeed a science, but it is a young science. Yes, jelqing has been around forever - but the concept of a daily routine with warmups and gadgetry and cooldowns is all pretty new on the timeline, right? Therefore it will be dismissed out of hand (see what I did there?) by many people and most professional groups (ie the medical community).

This is part ignorance, part fear. It's so risky for those people to endorse any activity which carries a risk of injury, as it could be potentially career-ending for people in that profession. Ever since Andrew Wakefield made the link between Autism and Vaccinations, journalists and medical professionals have been extremely leery about speaking up, lest they be destroyed. Unfortunately until scores upon scores of tests have been done under lab conditions, do not look for the thumbs-up for PE from the medical community - even though I'd bet good money at LEAST one doctor has tried PE and gained from it.

Well.....all of that, coupled with the fact the Illuminati don't want anyone to have a bigger pecker, obviously :p
 
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