Archive for the ‘Men’s Health-Erectile Dysfunction’ Category
ADULT SEXUALITY: MIDDLE ADULTHOOD
Saturday, May 28th, 2011GAMES TO RESTORE TENDERNESS – GAME 6: EXPRESSING LOVE (PART 3)
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009“And I love myself right now, and I love you right now.”
“Loving you makes me love myself.”
“And loving you makes me love myself.”
“I’m so glad I can love you and feel loved by you.”
“And I’m so glad I can love you and feel loved by you.”
“I love you so much, my dearest.”
“And I love you so very much, my darling.”
“I need so much love.”
“And I need so much love, too.”
“You are the most important person in my life.”
“And you are the most important person in my life.”
“I’d do almost anything for you.” “And I’d do almost anything for you.” “I’ll always love and honor you.” “And I’ll always love and honor you.” “I’ll cherish you until I die.” “And I’ll cherish you until I die.” Husband and wife kiss softly and tenderly.
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GAMES FOR ABSTINENT COUPLES – HOMOSEXUALITY
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009As a matter of fact, it was in playing the game “Indecent Proposal” that they first became aware of their built-in conflict. They both realized that they wouldn’t be jealous if their spouse had an extramarital heterosexual affair, but would be quite envious about a homosexual affair. Considering why this was so led to a series of shocks and insights. I neither encouraged nor discouraged their homosexuality; however, I recognized that it was the only way in which either might have an authentic sex or love life.
Homosexuality (like other forms of alternate sexual orientation) is rarely changeable. My theories about this are in line with classical psychoanalytical concepts, which hold that sexual orientation is conditioned during the “stage of discovery”— between two and three years of age, which is when children discover the differences in sexual anatomy between boys and girls. How parents respond to the child’s sexual discovery and curiosity, what kind of sexuality they themselves model, and how the parents and siblings relate to the particular child, all have an impact on sexual orientation. There may be personality traits that predispose a child toward a homosexual orientation, but I believe that the family environment is the most crucial factor.
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GAMES FOR UNATTRACTED COUPLES – GAME 2: HOW DO YOU REPEL ME? (PART 3)
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009Having the couple do the exercise while in the act of love-making serves to bring out the primitive erotic elements that have been submerged by the surface negativity, while at the same time facilitating an awareness of what is being displaced onto the other mate.
For example, they may realize that their objection to their spouse’s fat hips has to do with repressed memories about a parent’s fat hips, or to childhood taunts about their own fat hips by siblings and schoolmates. Or, they may discover that being repelled by hair is associated with repressed memories about a parent’s or sibling’s hair. By tracing the transference to its source, the intensity of the transference may be lessened, and sexual feelings enhanced.
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GAMES FOR PERVERSE COUPLES – GAME 3: LOOK, MOM—I HAVE A PENIS!(PART 2)
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009“Yes, Mom.”
“Now, I’ve washed your back, your underarms, your rear, and your penis. You wash the rest.” “Yes, Mom.”
She sits on a very high stool (or such), so as to give the impression that she is sitting high above him, just as a mother does. She may also be dressed in a mother’s type of dress— an old-fashioned one, and wearing makeup and hair in a motherly way (in a bun) as well. She sits with arms folded, as if ready to judge and rebuke.
The son proceeds to play with himself as Mom watches.
“Look, Mom, I have a penis.”
“It’s a very special penis.” “Is it?”
“It is! It really is! Look at my penis.” “I’m looking.”
“See what it can do? It can get big like this.” “That’s a wonderful penis you’ve got.” “And it can swing from side to side like this.” “What a wonderful swing.” “And up and down, too.”
“Oh, my dear—how amazing!”
“That’s nothing. Wait until you see what it can do next!” “What’s that, I wonder?” “You’ll see.”
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GAMES FOR OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE COUPLES – GAME 5: DETAILED MEDICAL EXAMINATION (PART 1)
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009Players: Doctor and patient. Activists: Both.
Setting: “Doctor’s office” in the home. Aim: Appeal to the fantasy of “playing doctor,” which children of a certain age act out and which represents a natural curiosity about sexual details. Obsessives are big on details, so this game is designed to take the “detail orientation,” eroticize it, and transform it into something more meaningful.
Game Plan: In this game, the husband and wife take turns playing doctor and patient. If they are an “odd couple,” the control freak should play the doctor first, because he or she will relish that role more than the other, whereas the slob will relish the role of patient more.
At the appointed time the doctor comes out of his or her office (a converted bedroom, den, or basement will do) and asks the patient to come in. The patient does, and the doctor asks the visitor to get undressed and lie on the examining table.
“Now, this isn’t going to hurt. I’m going to give you a thorough physical examination. Please bear with me,” says the doctor.
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PROCTOCOLITIS, PROCTITIS, AND ENTERITIS: TREATMENT
Friday, March 27th, 2009Treatment of these infections is directed at the underlying cause. For proctitis caused by bacterial infection with gonorrhea and chlamydia, the treatment is ceftriaxone and doxycycline. Treatment is usually started before the culture results return from the laboratory and is based on what is seen on examination. The treatments for chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, LGV, and syphilis are described in the respective sections in this part of the book.
The treatments for the bacterial causes of enteritis, such as salmonella and shigella and Campylobacter infections, are antibiotics. Giardia infections are usually treated with metronidazole.
Sexual contacts must be examined and treated. For some organisms that cause enteritis, such as giardia and shigella, evaluation of nonsexual household contacts(parents, spouses, children, and siblings) is also recommended, since these infections are fairly easy to transmit nonsexually as well, especially through improper food handling.
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HERPES IN PREGNANT WOMEN: CULTERES PERFORMING AT DELIVERY
Friday, March 27th, 2009Cultures performed on the mother at delivery, or even the polymerase chain reaction test,will usually take at least several days to show up positive if virus is present, and tests to detect shedding that are performed several days before delivery do not reveal anything about shedding at the time of delivery. The only benefit of performing these tests at delivery is to help guide therapy should the infant become ill; that is, a positive test for herpes may help diagnose the infant’s symptoms as being caused by herpes, and treatment may be started more quickly. A test may show up as positive even before a baby becomes symptomatic, and in that situation herpes medication should be started for the baby right away. Even though the presence of virus on the mother’s test doesn’t necessarily mean that the baby has been infected, it is probably better to be safe. Symptoms indicating that the infant may be infected include lack of appetite, skin lesions like blisters, fever, and sluggishness. These symptoms may take up to a month to develop in an infected infant.
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STD GENITAL WARTS: WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS?
Friday, March 27th, 2009Fewer than 1 percent of people who are infected with HPV develop symptoms. For those who do, the visible symptom is the external genital wart or warts, which look like the warts one might have on the hand: they are usually flesh colored or a little bit darker, and they are harder than the surrounding tissue. They can be raised or flat. The raised warts tend to have a cauliflowerlike appearance when looked at closely or with a hand-held lens. Warts may occur singly or in groups, often of varying size, and they may grow together to form larger warts. They do not hurt unless scratched or picked at, in which case they can become irritated. In about 20 percent of people they itch, and in 20 percent of people, they disappear on their own. They may remain the same size for some time, or they may continue to enlarge.
It can be difficult to know whether or not these “bumps” are warts, because the genital skin is somewhat irregular in appearance in most men and women anyway. Bumps can be a normal part of the genital anatomy—pearly penile papules in men, sebaceous cysts in men and women, or hymen remnants for women. An experienced health care provider can help determine whether the bumps are simply normal anatomy, are caused by HPV infection, or are due to another infection, such as molluscum contagiosum.
Warts can occur anywhere in the anal and genital area, as high up as the lower abdomen and as low down as the upper thighs. A man may have warts in the urethral opening, where they may or may not be noticed. Symptoms include urethral bleeding or discharge, or a change in the stream of urine, although generally warts in the urethra do not cause symptoms.
Women may have warts on the soft surfaces of the inner labia and vagina and on the cervix. Warts on the inner labia and vagina may be raised or flat. Warts on the cervix are usually flat. Internal warts may not be noticed by the woman and may only be revealed upon examination by a health care provider.
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