Generic Viagra Mentally (Part III)
As any other medication, generic Viagra has side effects. But I’m not talking about the possible negative side effects the medication can have on your system. Actually, I was thinking more on the lines of positive mental side effects. As a man whose leg has been severed takes a prosthetic leg with a smile, so I view my experience with generic Viagra when my erections were taken away from me. Of course, the physical effect was remarkable and I felt unbeatable and quite manly. Secretly I thought my penis as Popeye and generic Viagra was my sexy spinach. However, the biggest transformation I underwent was mentally. Read more
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Generic Viagra Physically (Part II)
After turning 40 last year and undergoing my personal prostate exam, I also started getting worried about other aspects of my poor health, I hate to admit. All my life I have had a very active pace. I exercised plenty, ate right and was constantly reading about new health issues and stuff. A few years into marriage changed things, and responsibilities, children and tiredness made me put on some weight. Sound familiar? I’m not blaming marriage for my overweight. But the truth is I no longer have as much spare time to buff up and sweat out the dozen hot wings and pitcher I used to have as I did 25 years ago. Actually, I seldom eat that way because I get heartburn. Read more
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Generic Viagra Socially (Part I)
Thinking about the impact generic Viagra has had on our society, I realized this medication while a revolutionary medical product, it is also a social actor that has strongly influenced both men and women about the way they perceive what was once thought of as a negative sexual situation. If you are a fan of Friends like me, you probably remember the episode in which Rachel and Ross fight and break up. The confrontation after which they break up ends up with her telling Ross, “it is NOT okay, it IS a big deal, and no, it doesn’t happen to all men” or something like that. Read more
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Why Men Don't Like Doctors
Since like forever, overall care of family members (specially children and elder people) have been in the hands of women. Men, on the other hand, not so much. Though social role labels may seem a little cliché or square, truth is they exist because of a reason. These clichés exist in society, whether we agree with them or not. Because of the role women were assigned, men were somewhat alienated from the “care giver” group. Men see their doctor when they are children, and it is mom who takes them. As of adolescence, men are cut off from the health-related interactions until they have to re-establish that relationship when they hit forty or fifty to have their prostate checked or something. Read more
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