Three Tips For Sexual Stamina - Last Longer Tonight And Make Sure She Is 100% Satisfied
Posted by Todorasa | Filed under Men's Issues

Lasting longer in bed is absolutely paramount for keeping your lover satisfied and coming back for more. Did you know that it takes the average woman 15-20 minutes of active intercourse to achieve orgasm? If you are a “two minute man” or a “three minute man,” I should not even have to tell you that you have some work to do. Despite what the pill manufacturers want you to believe, stopping premature ejaculation is something that has to be done from within, not with some external agent. Here are three tips for sexual stamina that will get you started in the right direction:
Male Impotence Myths
Posted by Todorasa | Filed under Men's Issues, Mental Health

Hippocrates, the father of medicine, said: “There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance”. Those words still ring true today.
Many of the myths and legends about impotence, borne out of ignorance thousands of years ago, still influence our sexual culture. Primitive cultures believed that male virility was intricately interwoven with power, wealth and domination.
So it’s not surprising that beliefs still persist in a number of cultures that to lack virility, or worse still, to be impotent, is to lack the very essence of life. Manhood and the “ability to perform” are inextricably linked, so impotence is viewed as a “lack of manhood”.
When Big Boys Don’t Cry
Posted by Todorasa | Filed under Depression, Men's Issues, Mental Health

Men don’t cope well with grief as a rule. How can you help a man deal with grief and find the healing he needs? It’s in the nature of a man to want to be in control, by letting him know that his mourning is a step toward the goal of healing, you help him to find that sense of control
Our society has placed clear expectations and requirements upon our roles as men and women. Boys learn quickly what is considered inappropriate behavior through such statements as, “Stand up and take it like a man.”. From their earliest days the pressure is on to suppress their emotions, project strength and confidence, and grin and bear it through all kinds of pain and sorrow. What happens when boys reach adulthood? The messages become contradictory. You will find many grieving families in which only the wife and children are crying, and worried because Dad isn’t crying. Yet if he does, they get upset. Although a wife may be relieved that her partner is able to grieve, she may fear that his tears somehow lessen him as the stalwart of strength she holds him to be. Thus, men are criticised when they don’t grieve, and their masculinity is questioned when they do. Men have been taught to hide their tears, and to replace their sadness with anger. Women have been shamed out of their anger and use the strength of tears in grief, men must learn to use their strength of anger to move into their tears.
















