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03-17-2010, 07:04 PM | #2453 (permalink) | |
Juicious Maximus III
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Scabb Island
Posts: 6,525
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Not long ago, I was skipping channels and one of the american pies movies was on, not sure which one. There was a scene where this guy was masturbating and he uses like a handful of some lubrication. I remember wondering "does anyone ever do that?". Aside from perhaps some early experimentation, I never did and I don't think I've heard of anyone else I know in real life who do (not that we often talk about it in detail mind you). I thought then it might be in there for comical effect, he's sort of preparing to have a good wank almost the way you could prepare a romantic dinner with your girlfriend. Now when I think about it, maybe circumcision being so much more common in America might also help explain it? Perhaps the character was cut. I assume uncut guys have less or no need for lubrication when jerking off (goes for me at least) while the same might not be true for those who are circumcised, but I'd like to see what someone circumcised have to say about it.
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03-17-2010, 10:14 PM | #2455 (permalink) |
Cardboard Box Realtor
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Hobb's End
Posts: 7,648
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Yep, I hated it. When I was on cymbalta in late '08 I could not cum to save my life. Working 8 hours on your feet and then fucking for another 3 before finally giving up really sucks the next day. That was actually one of the main reasons why I stopped taking it, well that and the fact it made me dizzy and really hungry.
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03-18-2010, 02:05 AM | #2456 (permalink) |
nothing
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: everywhere
Posts: 4,315
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i never had issues but i remember a friend of mine in college commenting about how he always had to use cooking oil. i think it depends on how much the doctors snipped off when the procedure was done (this was standard practice for all Canadian boys until sometime in the mid 80s unless the parents specifically objected to the procedure).
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03-18-2010, 09:18 AM | #2457 (permalink) | |
Music Addict
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 965
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03-19-2010, 07:08 PM | #2459 (permalink) | |
Make it so
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 6,181
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"Elph is truly an enfant terrible of the forum, bless and curse him" - Marie, Queen of Thots
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03-20-2010, 07:13 PM | #2460 (permalink) | |||
Facilitator
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
Posts: 2,014
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Circumcision
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Story, the foreskin is more than just "skin," which is knowledge that many people in the U.S., including parents and doctors, may not have since circumcision is so common here that they don't question it or think to ask about the function of the foreskin. Protecting a child's foreskin from those who wish to cut him is important for physiological and ethical reasons. The male foreskin is a double layer sleeve, with skin on the outside and a mucous membrane on the inside, that covers the glans (head) of a man's penis and has protective, sensory, and sexual functions. A baby boy's intact foreskin, which is almost always fused to the glans at birth much like the fingernail is fused to the nail bed, protects it from urine and fecal matter during the diaper phase, contains numerous erogenous, fine-touch sensory receptors, similar to those in the lips, and matures into a natural sliding and gliding mechanism that enables non-abrasive, self-lubricating sexual activity (Taylor, JR, et al. (1996) Br. J. Urology, 77:291-295). Three of the most responsive areas of the natural, intact penis are the specialized foreskin structure called the "ridged band," the tip of the foreskin, and the frenulum, which attaches the foreskin to the glans. Recent research has found that circumcision removes the most sensitive parts of the penis: "Five locations on the uncircumcised penis that are routinely removed at circumcision were more sensitive than the most sensitive location on the circumcised penis," which is the circumcision scar on the ventral side (Sorrells, ML, et al. (2007) "Fine-touch pressure thresholds in the adult penis," BJU International, 99:864-869). http://www.nocirc.org/touch-test/bju_6685.pdf Routine circumcision of newborn boys destroys the foreskin and causes the certain loss of its protective, erogenous, and sexual functions. The practice of tearing and cutting off the male foreskin parallels Type I Female Genital Mutilation, defined by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) as the removal of the female foreskin that covers the clitoris. My advice is that newborn children be allowed to grow up intact so that as adults they can decide for themselves if they wish to undergo surgery of their most private of body parts. CIRCUMCISION AND SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES: Although three recent randomized controlled trials in Africa found that men had approximately a 50% reduced risk of HIV infection in the year following circumcision, over 1% of the circumcised men still became infected with HIV (Bailey, RC, et al. (2007) Lancet, 369:643-656). Follow-up studies found that women partners of circumcised men had an increased risk of HIV infection. Results from another African study suggest that simple genital hygiene would be as effective as circumcision at reducing the risk of HIV infectin (Journal of AIDS, Sept. 2006 Issue). Studies in the United States have found that intact males do not have an increased risk of STD infection, including HIV (Laumann, EO, et al. (1997) JAMA, 277:1052-1057 and Thomas, AG, et al. (2004) International AIDS Society). Furthermore, the U.S. has both the highest rates of circumcision and HIV infection among developed nations. In the U.S., where 80% of adult males are circumicsed, the HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate is 0.6%, three times higher than in the United Kingdom, where almost all men are intact (HIV data from www.cia.gov). Rather than circumcising babies, who are not sexually active, parents who fear that their child may contract a sexually transmitted disease (STD) can teach him about the most effective STD prevention techniques: abstinence, safer sex (which includes consistent use of condoms, fidelity to one's partner, and reduction in the number of partners), and genital hygiene (retracting the foreskin and washing with water and drying the penis shaft daily and after sexual activity). Quote:
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