Research shows that sex can increase intelligence (for example, see Scientific American Mind, September/October 2011, pages 36 - 43), so it is reasonable to wonder if more sex and better sex do even more for the mind. As I discussed in an article, geniuses are often very fond of sex. Albert Einstein, Robert Oppenheimer, Erwin Schrödinger, Marie Curie, Nobel Prize-winning Richard Feynman, and Founding Father Ben Franklin were intensely interested in sex and had more of it. In contrast, small-minded idiots are less interested in sex and more interested in ridiculing its importance and discussions of it. Thus, smart people should read on, while dumbbells should keep knocking their heads against an undeniable truth: sex is one of the most important parts of life. Lose that spark, and you've lost an essential ingredient to a great life, and perhaps a first-rate mind.
Did you believe the Media Matters lies? Read this and other articles in my blog. Even the über-liberal New York Times called Media Matters “highly partisan.” That's a nice way of saying they aren't fair. I write for adults, not the pathologically immature children Media Matters recruits to write for them. I explained elsewhere that sex is part of medicine and why I wrote The Science of Sex. Anyone who thinks that doctors shouldn't know about sex should read this article.
If you haven't attended medical school lately, you likely don't know that the best schools teach modern doctors some surprising things about sex. As I discussed in one of my other sites, sex is part of the field of medicine. We covered everything you can imagine, and then some. My professors discussed penis size (of course), but they didn't know of any nonsurgical way to increase size after puberty. I discovered how to do that and wrote a book about it. If you don't let others think for you, this topic should interest you because it is a good example of how it is possible to do something that seems to be impossible.
To order Advanced Enlargement (or my other books), see my order page.
While the primary focus of Advanced Enlargement is on penile enlargement techniques that go beyond what is presented in The Science of Sex, the information in it is also useful for enhancing libido, sexual pleasure, and performance.
Before I try to sell you a copy of Advanced Enlargement, let me attempt to persuade you not to buy it. Such a book is unnecessary for most couples. The rationale for enlarging the penis is obviously to improve sexual tightness during intercourse. However, since a woman can do far more to tighten things up with far less effort, such as by doing Kegel exercises, that is where I’d begin. If additional tightening is needed, you may wish to try some of the other techniques that I discuss in The Science of Sex.
If you insist on pursuing penis enlargement, you will likely be amazed by the first page of Advanced Enlargement, on which I reveal a revolutionary new technique. As always, my 100% money-back guarantee applies. If you find a previously published book that presents all the information in my book, I will refund every penny you paid. To the best of my knowledge, no other author has yet put two and two together and conceived of the breakthrough I present in that book. Incidentally, it does not require any prescription drugs, although you could use them for additional augmentation. Furthermore, in Advanced Enlargement I explain more key tips for enhancing penile growth.
Like other doctors, in medical school I was taught that penis size is fixed at the end of puberty. I previously believed that, too, and the evidence seemed overwhelming. Then, purely by accident (or serendipitously, if you like big words), I discovered a way to trigger what amounts to a "second puberty" of penile growth. The only difference between this "second puberty" and real puberty in terms of penile growth is that the penile growth was much more dramatic the second time. My penis grew more in three weeks than it did during three years of puberty. I once believed that such a transformation was impossible, but I was wrong, and so were the professors who taught me that myth. Clearly, penile size is not necessarily fixed at the end of puberty if you provide the body with the proper stimulus to rekindle penile growth.
After realizing that my medical school professors were wrong about this topic, I naturally questioned if there are other ways to enlarge the penis. The answer is yes, and I present all of them in Advanced Enlargement. By the way, in that book I do not discuss enlargement techniques that "everyone knows about," such as jelqing. I consider that to be a garbage technique because I've heard from too many men who said that it either did nothing for them, or it damaged their penis.
You are probably skeptical about anything to do with penile enlargement, since there is so much misinformation about this topic sold by unscrupulous people with room-temperature IQs and no scientific training. I graduated in the top 1% of my class in medical school, so of all the people claiming to know how to enlarge the penis without surgery, I am probably the smartest and most knowledgeable. You should always consider the source, especially in matters pertaining to your body. My readers are usually intelligent or very intelligent, and intelligent people typically are more skeptical and questioning, which is good. I recently corresponded with a man who was clearly skeptical and asked several questions before he decided to buy Advanced Enlargement. You may be wondering about some of the same things that he asked, so I posted our e-mail exchange.
Order Advanced Enlargement (or my other books).
Any questions? Ask me.
Q: When will I receive Advanced Enlargement?
A: I will send the download link to you as soon as I receive your order, which will be the next time I check my e-mail. I check for new e-mail messages at least twice per day.
Even if you are not interested in penile enlargement, my serendipitous discovery that true penile growth can be rekindled after puberty is very interesting from a medical standpoint because it demonstrates yet another way in which doctors and scientists are wrong about something they believe so firmly that they don't even bother to question it.
If you study history, you will find that people have given more credence to health “facts” then in vogue than those “facts” deserved. Actually, many of those “facts” are dead wrong. For example, I once studied the evolution of the acceptance of the germ theory of disease. To do that, I didn't take the lazy approach and just read what others have said about this topic. Instead, I read the actual medical journals and newspapers from that era. When I did that, I found that some of the foremost medical scientists in the late 1800s thought it was preposterous to think that microscopic organisms could cause disease. Those preeminent authorities often ridiculed the germ theory of disease, which is now one of the most basic tenets of medicine.
Some of the best minds in medicine have flubbed the understanding of the etiology (the study of the causes or origins of disease) of other diseases in recent times, too. For example, it wasn't long ago that it would have been laughable to think that peptic ulcers could be caused by bacteria, but we now know that a bug called Helicobacter pylori is responsible for most ulcers, according to the National Institutes of Health. We are also witnessing a profound rethinking of what causes something as basic as clogged arteries. It’s not just a matter of fat and cholesterol.
When I stumbled upon a way to trigger a “second puberty” of penile growth, I wondered if I should write about it because that finding went against the grain of conventional wisdom, and I know how eager people are to belittle doctors who discover things that don't fit into their neat little picture of reality. Anyone who is on the cutting edge of science risks being ridiculed by people with small minds who cling to the past, akin to the hidebound members of the Flat Earth Society. Nicolaus Copernicus and Galileo were ridiculed and persecuted for saying the Earth is not the center of the universe, but they were correct, and everyone who doubted them were wrong. They are now universally regarded as geniuses, while their skeptics seem like small-minded idiots.
When I graduated from medical school, writing about sex was the last thing on my mind. A decade later, I was convinced that I had to write about it. What changed my opinion? Unlike a car salesman who puts his interests ahead of yours, physicians must put the interests of patients ahead of their personal interests. In medical school, I was taught that if one possesses knowledge that can help others, it is an ethical transgression to withhold that information. I therefore felt morally compelled to write about sex because I knew that I had countless tips that could help people. Personally, I would rather write a book about microhomes or making various gizmos. I could have kept to myself all of the sex info that I acquired over many years of reading and research, but I wanted to share that knowledge so others could benefit from it.
Read more about why I write about sex. As I discussed in that link, while examining a patient who'd just committed suicide, I noticed several circumferential cuts around the base of his penis. I spoke with his parents, who said his fiancée recently ended their relationship and made fun of him because of his lack of endowment. That's obviously an extreme case, but I know of others in which the fiancée terminated the engagement immediately after finding less than she expected.