First, let’s look at some sad-but-true facts:
Mr. Average
- The average erect penis size is just over six inches. Most men are close to this length.
- The majority of men cannot have intercourse longer than just three minutes before ejaculating, due to an underdeveloped PC muscle.
- 30 million men in the USA alone suffer from ‘erectile dysfunction’ - impotence
- Most of those men have very poor blood circulation to the penis.
- By age 29, over 90% of men suffer a reduction in the number of erections they experience, when compared to the numbers at age 20.
- More than 98% of men would - if they could or if they knew how- would increase the size of their penis.
- 93% of women have never achieved an orgasm during sexual intercourse - and 76% admit that their partner’s sexual performance is unsatisfying.
- 99% of all men have a smaller and more underdeveloped penis than what they could develop
In our research, we have found that the average length of an erect penis is just above six inches, and the average diameter is slightly less than five inches.
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You may ask,
“How did Herbal Remedies originate?”
“When did we go back to Alternative Medicine?”
To answer these, I will tell you a story.
Hunters And Gathers
Once upon a time, at the time when “Human” started to roam the earth.
The fit and able males better known as the “Hunters” would go hunting for
food. The hunt had three simple steps, Search, Kill and Retrieve anything
that was breathing. However it was not always a successful journey.
The animals were too fast, the hunters’ arrows or spears did not meet their
targets or there were just too much competition among other predators.
So the males came back to the caves with little food or even at times empty
handed. This did not please the females, because that meant extra work for
them. Besides looking after the children, the sick and elderly of the clan,some
females went on walk about. Gathering wood for the fire, water for the sick
and too frail to walk to the stream. These particular females became known
as the “Gatherers”. To supplement the food shortage, these gatherers would
emulate other animals by collecting fruit from trees, shrubs and almost
anything other animals were observed to be feeding on.
Our First Nightingales
Over time these smart Gatherers would notice that certain plants when
consumed by the sick would make the sick heal faster than the ones that did
not even touch those plants. They also noticed that certain plants that were
used to soften the bedding for the elderly or sick would make external wounds
heal faster than those using other types of plants. So these cunning and
observant gatherers would make a mental catalogue of which plant, fruit,
seed or leaf would be beneficial for healing. These mental catalogues would
be passed down from one generation to the next generations of female
gatherers only. Males were too busy gloating about their successful hunt or
too tired after a failed one. The ones that possessed the catalogue now
known as “Healers” were very highly regarded and were put equal to and sometimes above the male status but never above the male leader.
Competition and or jealousy paved the way for these catalogues to be passed
down to only a chosen few.
Battle Of The Sexes
As time went by, the catalogue grew and by now the mental catalogue was transferred to parchments and books. Time heals all wounds, including the ignorance of the males to the knowledge of healing.
At that time a lot of these healers were old, older than most of the villagers
due to self healing, lived better, had better food and didn’t work as hard as
most. Some males grew deep envy of theses so called “Healers” and the
status these healers held. Men plotted the demise of the women who held the knowledge of healing. So the battle of the sexes starts. As a coincedent, at that time, religion had engulfed the region. Any issue that followed the path of religion was good and everything else was devil’s work. Men fiendishly started spreading malicious stories about theses healers. Men would claim “Only God has the true power of healing. God was the one that inflicted sickness as punishment for sins. The strength of the sickness was equal to the type of sin committed.” So men green with envy, explained “To survive this long these women must be making deals with the devil to have such extended life and lifestyle.” In the name of God or Gods, some women were killed, others were exiled from town. The ones were exiled lived in shacks and caves and made do with what ever was around. That wasn’t good enough for men, “How can these women survive the wilderness, they must be “Witches””. These women, spent most of the time over pots brewing wether it be food or herbal concoction. “It was a concoction of evil potions” the men claimed. So more torturing and killing was a result of what we now call “Witch Hunt”.With most of the women healers either killed or driven to further hiding, their belongings were confiscated by the religious leaders (men) who were able to rifle through the scripts of journals for various remedies. These remedies were kept hidden for a while until the theologians were able to bring them out as a gift from God to use them to heal the repented.
Thus the healing profession was taken from women and gifted to men to lead the way. Women eventually were allowed to assist especially the spouse of a healer.
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Share of Knowledge
Each culture, around the world, developed its own type of remedies according to their own discoveries with their native plants. In time people started to travel
and mingle among the various tribes, taking with them the knowledge, samples and seedlings they have acquired. This would be passed on to the next tribe, village or town as an exchange for their secret collection. However some plants are very territorial. They need specific environmental conditions. Otherwise the plant will not grow at all or grow sluggishly or grow normally but not yield their full properties needed for remedy. Some citrus trees may grow in certain soil but if the soil doesn’t have the right elements, the citrus tree will grow and flower but will bear little or no fruit. Specialized growers were formed to grow certain plants in their natural environment. Then artificial environments were used as technology grew.
Synthetic Medicine
At the turn of the 18th Century, Man learnt to analyse the chemical ingredients of plants. Each ingredient was studied to find the right one or combinations of ingredients that was responsible for the cure it presented. As technology in analysis grew, properties of certain ingredients were simulated by the use of certain chemical compounds. Hence the word “Synthetic” was invented to mean made by chemical process especially to resemble a natural product. As these syntheses were refined, it became less laborious, less time consuming. It became cheaper to produce a synthetic remedy than it was to use a plant to cultivate the natural ingredients. So economy pushed the scales in favour of the chemically produced remedies better known as “Pharmaceuticals”. As discoveries were made, pharmaceutical companies rose to the task of developing these compounds, and then synthesising them for mass-production and mass-marketing.
An Indian physician Roston Jal Vakil wrote a British medical journal about how he discovered using the powdered root of the tropical plant “Rauwolfia Sepentina” to lower blood pressure. Not long after, a pharmaceutical chemist isolated the active ingredient of that plant and synthesis the drug Resezione.
As you all know that the world of medicine is Giga bucks and the people controlling the big bucks, rules the roost. These cunning pharmaceutical companies first started by enticing and luring the best of the best of doctors and chemists. Then they got a bigger footing by subsidising and paying for new buildings and new medical equipment within the high ranking medical schools. In return, the beneficiaries had to incorporate a believe within their students that “Pharmaceuticals” are better than the old antiquated herbal remedies.
Brain Wash
In today’s time, these pharmaceutical companies pay their own doctors and chemists to bring out targeted research results in favour of their own products. These companies not only conned and brain washed the medical students but they also brain washed the public with their fancy big budget advertising to make us believe in their products. In fact we are so brain wash by the constant bombardment of in your face advertising that we all now refer to natural medicine as alternative medicine.
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Time Means Money
The almighty dollar has once again commanded the attention of the CEOs, Directors
and Chair persons of many pharmaceutical companies. They have come up with the
“Repeat Business Syndrome”. They realised, if a doctor was to treat a patient’s
disease, that doctor is going to treat himself and the pharmaceutical companies right
out of business.
Once the patient is cured, he or she is not going to come back again. A healthy
person doesn’t visit the doctor and will not require chemical treatment. So the pharmaceutical companies teach the doctor to treat the symptoms rather than the
disease. Well how do they do that? You might ask.
The answer is “Timing”. The doctor spends less time with each patient and less
time asking questions to find the real cause of the pain but attending to more patients
per day. When one goes to the doctor now a days, for a bad head ache, the doctor who works on a time limit will quickly search his “Pharmaceutical Compendium” which tells the doctor which drug is recommended for that ailment and which has a bigger kick back from the company.
Capitalistic Commerce
This reminds me of my High School days when I was working part time at a
Pharmacy. A customer asked me what I would recommend for a persistent cough.
I turned around to the shelf where we kept the cough mixtures and looked puzzled at
what to recommend from ten varied brands of cough mixture. Then I noticed there
were two types. One for dry cough and the other was for congested cough
(one would cough phlegm or mucus). So I enquired about the type of cough the
customer had? It was a dry cough but I was still puzzled which out of the five brands
to recommend. Lucky for me the own of the store who was the Chemist, was near
by and whispered a brand which I picked up, recommended and sold to the unwary
customer. Later I asked the Chemist how he had arrived at that decision of which
brand to be the best recommendation. Without any hesitation he replied “It’s simply
the one we had the most off. I am trying to get rid of that brand. It is not selling as
well as the others. Push that brand as much as you can”.
So that was my earliest lesson in Capitalistic Commerce in it true form, rather than a
genuine old fashion professional advise with care.
So think twice before you ask a professional for a recommendation, since he or she
will be thinking of the almighty dollar rather than your best interest.
Merry-Go-Ride
Well back to the aching head and the doctor. The recommendation from the almight Compendium is to prescribe a fancy named drug. In essences is a glorified pain killer.
The prescription is written and you are sent on your merry way.
One takes the medicine; the pain subsides until the drug wears off.
Then the cycle begins, one takes more medicine until the body gets immune to the
effect of the drug. So another trip to the medical clinic. The doctor says “OK, let’s
try this one” and sends you on your way again.
The pain goes away but when the drug wears away, the pain comes back with a
vengeance. Naturally one goes back to the Doctor, who now realises the blood
pressure is up. So the Compendium reveals another drug to bring the blood pressure
down, a scribble on a piece of paper and sends you off on his Merry-Go-Ride.
So you see this is the repeat business syndrome.
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