The Truth About Male Enhancement Drugs: Discover the Truth About Naturally Enhancing Your Sexual Satifsfaction……
January 27, 2009
Before you start popping all of the popular pills on the market that promise incredible performance, often overnight. This is a pretty common topic we get asked about at JfM Magazine, and the article below is a good one, highlighting some of the problems that pills, and other products that promise to enhance your sex life present. Check out the full story at the link below!
If you believe the advertisements, men who experience problems in the bedroom can pop a pill once a day and instantly enjoy more passionate, longer-lasting, satisfying sexual experiences that leave them feeling confident about their manliness.
Naturally, men of all ages are lining up to try the latest miracle drug.But health care professionals caution men to think about what marketers fail to tell you.
These “miracle” enhancement drugs can lead to physically and emotionally painful side effects, including impotency.
We’ve entered an era where talking about sex isn’t taboo. People aren’t afraid to discuss ways to improve their sexual function, and companies are flooding the market with over-the-counter drugs they claim will solve a couple’s problems in the bedroom and make men the tigers their wives supposedly want them to be.Erectile dysfunction, also known as impotency, is a condition in which a man is consistently unable to get or maintain an erection sufficient enough to have sexual intercourse. The condition is more common in older men, and certain medical conditions, like high blood pressure or diabetes, can increase a man’s risk.
Important Considerations:
There are several things every man should understand about male enhancement drugs before popping a pill in the hopes of revving up his sex life:
* Most men have problems with sexual satisfaction, not a medical dysfunction. Most men have complaints related to sexual satisfaction (a desire for longer-lasting erections or more stamina, for example) versus a physical dysfunction like premature ejaculation or the inability to get an erection and maintain it for his partner’s sexual pleasure.
Naturally, these issues can lead to sexual misunderstandings and stress between couples, but you have to identify the problem before you can fix it, and pills will not solve this problem. Understanding how your sexual brain works usually will. In most cases, the problem is the man’s lack of understanding about overall sexuality and how to interpret his partner’s body signals.
Most people choose to address the problem with a quick fix, like an over-the-counter drug, because talking to a doctor or their partner about it is too embarrassing.
Debunking the Myths about Male Enhancement Drugs
Tags: maleenhancement drugs
Dita?s Pics, Bruce?s Jeans, and the Broccoli that Dare Not Speak its Name
January 27, 2009

The Unexpected Teese: Dita von Teese renews our enthusiasm for the semi-celebrity photoset. [BlackBook]
Bruuuuuce!: A close study of the Boss’s jeans. [Men.Style]
Coloring Book: Inside the fast-paced world of Pantone’s color machine. [ExpoTV]
Vegetable Attraction: The latest too-sexy-for-TV ad comes from…PETA? To be fair, we really don’t think you should do that with broccoli. [Vulture]
—R.B.
High Art
January 27, 2009

There have been a lot of different representations of Kate Moss over the years—most of the photographic, non-clothed kind—but this is one of the more ambitious ones.
Found at the Arts Gallery in London, it’s part of a larger series of portraits of gossip mag staples, done by painter Yuko Nasu without any knowledge of who the faces are. We can’t say much for the likeness, but we think they captured Ms. Moss’s essence pretty well.
Especially the swirling around the eyes…
—R.B.
Untied
January 27, 2009

Now that the cultural novelty of the iPod has worn off, we’re left with a lot of distant-looking people in public places. We aren’t suggesting you start talking to people on the subway—we’re not crazy—but disengaging from the world is rarely an attractive thing, and probably best kept private and unadvertised, like knitting or watching Heroes.
All of which means you’d do best to keep it off your tie.
—R.B.
Longhand
January 27, 2009

We’ve already stopped remembering phone numbers and writing down directions, but the flood of technology is about to wash away a genuinely useful skill. In just a scant few years, writing in cursive may join the ranks of useless abilities, alongside long division and parkour.
According to an elegiac piece in the Boston Globe (via PSFK), many teachers aren’t bothering to push kids through the cursive grind anymore, now that they’re bound for a world of Blackberries and LOLspeak. Meanwhile, every year, there are more adults who can’t read cursive…even if they’re handy with an HTML tag when the need arises.
We’re not too surprised longhand is dying off (it was never going to do too well in the Tumblr age), but allow us to suggest a bit of gentlemanly anachronism. Like tying a bow tie, you could do worse than being the only one in a group who can write a cursive S.
Of course, we’ll always have calligraphy….
—R.B.
Pull Up a Stool
January 27, 2009

Tumblr is a many-splendored thing, but the casual nature of the microblog, together with the ocean of images now available online, make it perfect for the peculiar phenomenon known as the inspiration blog.
Our current favorite is The Barstool Romantic, a more literary cousin to The Impossible Cool. They’re most impressed by the motorbike style of the 50s—in fact, we know a store they should check out—but the blog is broad enough to throw in a Rimbaud quote, pictures a few Francophone chanteuses, and a quick introduction to flaneurism—something any dedicated man about town should look into.
—R.B.



