Thursday, June 20, 2013

procomil delay cream in pakistan 03437511221

PROCOMIL CREAM Made in German is an ointment which promotes the perfusion of skin and mucosa thanks to its active substance which produces a vasodilatation in the treated areas. That means that the hyperaemic effect appears particularly in the peripheral vessels and capillaries of skin or mucous membrane. Thus, applied in the sexual region of the man, erection is sustained much longer until both partners reach their complete satisfaction.
Application:
For a slight effect anoint the glans of the male organ, without massaging unduly, with 4 cm of PROCOMIL CREAM 10 minutes before intercourse. For a pronounced effect 4 cm of PROCOMIL CREAM should be applied half an hour before and another 4 cm 10 minutes before intercourse, without massaging unduly.
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MAXMAN Delay Cream In Pakistan 03437511221

Product Description
MAXMAN Delay Cream an approved quality
product specially formulated to reduce over-sensitivity in the male and prolong
sexual pleasure. Magic perfume cream will exert a calming effect to aid sexual
confidence. APPLICATION Apply two times creams as required to the head of the
penis shortly before intercourse. Experience will decide the number of creams
and the time interval required to suit your individual requirements.(5 minutes
is recommeded) Each can contains over 10 measured creams. DO NOT EXCEED SIX
CREAMS PER APPLICATION. CAUTION:For external use only Local application
stimulates the cells and increases the cells energy stores. Specifications:15g
Main composition:Lilac,shiandra,emimedium,ethanol,etc. Uses:Delayed time for
sex,clearance smegma,clesn sex life. How to use the cream: cream on the head and
shaft of the penis. Nomally between 10 and 25 minutes before sex. Precaution:
1.can’t use with other medicine. 2.Skin damaged,alcohol allergy,the nonage
forbids to use. 3.If you feel unwell,use water to clean
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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Seven Good Things About Feeling Bad

The bright sides of sadness
2. More accurate judgments.  There is a classic finding in experimental psychology called the “primacy effect.”  If you read two paragraphs about a fellow named Jim, and the first one makes Jim sound like a quiet and shyintrovert, whereas the second one focuses on some of his extravertedtendencies, you will remember him as an introvert, and reinterpret the extraverted behaviors as atypical.  If you read the same information in the reverse order, however, you will remember him as an extravert.  Forgas found that a happy mood magnified that bias, but negative mood erased it, again suggesting that the sad subjects make clearer judgments. 3. Reduced gullibility.  People in a negative mood are more skeptical in numerous ways, less likely to be misled by urban myths, and more likely to detect someone else being insincere.
4. Reduced stereotyping.  In one experiment, Forgas and his colleagues asked subjects to play a “shoot-don’t shoot” game, in which your goal is to play a cop whose task is to shoot any bad guys holding guns, but to hold your fire when the target is holding a soda can or cell phone.  The task was made more complicated by having half the targets wearing Muslim headgear (a heuristic cue for threat at a time of high conflict in the Middle East).  (see the photo for the pictures they used).

There was a general tendency to shoot more at the fellows wearing the Muslim headgear, and that tendency was magnified among the people who were feeling happy (so being happy doesn’t always make you nicer).
5. Motivational benefits.  People in a sad mood are more likely to persist at a difficult task, and less likely to self-handicap, than are people in a neutral mood.  Happy people, on the other hand, are more likely to quit a difficult task, and to handicap themselves by drinking a beverage that can hurt their performance.
6. Increased politeness.  Compared to people who have just watched a happy film, people who have just watched a sad film are more likely to make a request in a polite and nicely elaborated way.  Happy people are less attuned to their audience.
7.  Increased fairness.  People in another experiment were asked to play either a “dictator game” (you get $10, for example, and can divide it any way you want between yourself and another player) or an “ultimatum game” (you get to propose how to divide the $10, but the other player can say “no way” if you decide to keep $9 for yourself, and offer her only $1, in which case neither of you gets a dime).  Sad people made more reasonable and generous offers in these economic games, whereas happy people were, once again, more self-centered.
From all his research, Forgas concludes that: “These findings stand in stark contrast with the unilateral emphasis on the benefits of positive affect in the recent literature as well as in popular culture. It is now increasingly recognized that positive affect, despite some advantages, is not universally desirable.”
He does note a couple of important qualifications.  Most critically, these findings involve mild everyday negative moods, not intense, prolonged, and debilitating clinical levels of depression.
Forgas's program of research adds to an emerging literature that stresses that negative as well as positive moods and emotions all serve useful functions.  As such, Forgas notes, it can be self-defeating to spend one’s time in the unrelenting pursuit of giddy levels of euphoria.  (I’ve discussed related issues in a couple of earlier blogs: What's so good about negative feedback?  And If You Pursue Happiness, You May Find Loneliness).
So the next time you find yourself feeling mildly sad, instead of beating yourself up about it, or running to the medicine cabinet for your psychotropic meds, you might take a Zen perspective: Your unconsciousmind may be telling you it’s time to think carefully about whatever you’ve been doing, step on the brakes, and more carefully plan out an alternative strategy.
Douglas T. Kenrick is the author of Sex, Murder, and the Meaning of Life: A psychologist investigates how evolution, cognition, and complexity are revolutionizing our view of human nature. Now available in paperback (and in German, Chinese, and Korean!).  His new book: The Rational Animal: How evolution made us smarter than we think (coauthored by Vlad Griskevicius) will be out at the end of August.

Joe Forgas is a prominent social psychologist who has spent the last couple of decades studying what might seem like a depressing topic: Sadness.  Has studying sadness made him miserable?  Not at all.  In fact, as Forgas argues in this month’s issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, he and his colleagues have discovered something surprising: Being in a bad mood can improve your thinking, your motivation, and your social life!  On the other side of the coin, being in a happy mood can sometimes have unhappy consequences on the way you think, and on the way you act toward others.
Here are 7 exemplary findings suggesting some benefits of sadness over happiness:
1. Improved memory.  People in one study were tested for their memory of the details of a shop they just visited.  Those who visited the shop on gloomy cold days remembered more details than those who visited on a sunny warm day.  In another study, the researchers found that eyewitnesses to an altercation were less likely to be have their memories distorted by a misleading line of questioning if they were sad, whereas happiness made them more inclined to misremember.  Forgas believes that these findings reflect the fact that sad people are more likely to be attuned to their environments, whereas happy people are more likely to just “go with the flow.”

My five tips for making love , or xx


Five Sex Tips for Women About Men

What she needs to know to make him happy in bed and change the power struggle
1)  Men want to be desired too. As women we are socialized to be the objects of desire not the owners of desire.  We grow up thinking that sex is something that happens to us, not something we make happen. Seldom do we feel as agents of our own sexual lives.  Bombarded with messages from the media about impossible physical standards we are often wracked with insecurity of our attractiveness.  We may struggle to reveal our erotic imagination lest we raise suspicion or resentment (for not saying so sooner!) in our partner. Childhood training and adult anxiety leave us weak in reaching out in this powerful way to reassure our partner of our commitment to him. A commitment to grow strong in our erotic core, fulfills our pledge of fidelity – away from others.. yes…
but more importantly onto an exciting sexual relationship.  Our husbands don’t just want sex; they want us to want them.  It’s ever so slightly different but there’s almost a spiritual difference.  Wanting confirms our love and reveals our vulnerability to our primitive bond with each other. For many men, sex IS love, sex IS connection and a woman’s sexual initiation, compliments, and “winks across the party” offer deep feelings of both excitement and security.
The media is increasingly adding pressure to men about their appearance and even guys who have never been vain, can succumb.  Working 60 hours a week to help provide for the family takes a toll on that athletic physique; aging can bring baldness, failing erections, wrinkles which subtract from his sex appeal (for the record- baldness can mean higher testosterone!!) or even his promotionability! It’s a rough, critical world out there and we need all need the affirming physical love of our partner.  More deeply though, in a monogamous relationship, sexual desire is what sets our lover apart as our unique.  Expressing our desire says – I want you - we belong together.
2) Stop, drop and roll every once in a while.  Women need lots of time to get into the mood and even more time to reach orgasm, but every time?  Even once in a blue moon, should you get yourself in the mood and ready, blow his mind (and anything else that comes to mind.) Unleashed aggression.  Be hungry.  Devour.  Forget Saran Wrap and babydoll nighties – dress up in DESIRE.

 Women tell me every day intherapy, “I can’t do it if I don’t feel connected.” But it can’t always be one directional.  If your partner bonds sexually, needs sex to feel relaxed and talkative, initiate toward your mutual goal of being connected.
Every healthy marriage goes through three stages: fall in, fall out and fall back in love.  Falling out of love strips away our oft distorted projections of who are partner is – offering us the first clear sight of a real “other,”  usually not the prince or the toad but a real human being with warts.
The commitment necessary to fall back in love is simple.  Simple and hard.  Love your partner the waythey like to be loved.   This opens the space for true reciprocity.  The risk is he will take all your love and use it up without giving back.  With ordinary good people, a one spouse-only, six month commitment of loving your partner their way, will radically change the marriage.  It’s my goal in marital therapy with superstuck couples – to convince, support, cajole, wheedle, and move one partner to risk first.  Over and over, I witness how quickly their partner responds to the untallied, uncalculated gift of unconditional love. Save the therapy money – try it.  If you’re a woman, who needs erotic development to really take this chance; even if you lose the marriage; you will become a more whole woman in the process.  It’s difficult to risk when you already feel empty, yet usually your partner has a mirror experience of your feelings. He feels empty too.  Change the marriage – change the family climate – change the divorcerate – change your children’s lives – change the world.

3) Grab him.  Yeah, there.  If you are going to initiate – go for broke.  The most common complaint I hear from men whose wives claim theydid initiate is “I didn’t get the signal.”  One wife asked her husband if he was tired.  He would have never imagined that sex was on her mind, so he replied, yes.  She concluded that he didn’t want sex because she didn’t want sex when tired. Another wife in treatment told me she sat down next to her husband while watching TV.  Did she touch him? No.  Did she sit in his lap? No.  Did she snuggle? No, she was waiting on him to start the touching.  She really thought she had initiated. Maybe your guy needs some connection first; some men don’t want to drop their briefcase and roll in the foyer.  For him, feel free to offer wine, cheese, crackers and a backrub. You probably don’t like him to initiate by grabbing your breast or vulva; but men often try this because it’s how they fantasize being approached.  So to reiterate – try it his way.
4) Offer up a sexy debrief the next morning.  Men love to hear what you think of the last experience. Talking about sex is almost like having sex.  Women think if they start talking about it; he’ll start thinking about it and be disappointed that she doesn’t want to start all over again. Probably true. Double header?  If you’re really opposed to doing it again in the morning, wait and text him the debrief.  He’ll swagger into his meeting with the boss.

But in the morning over coffee, you will have his full attention to suggest ways that will make it better for you.  He won’t be lost in his own overpowering lust.  Do a high-low-high analysis.  “I loved it when you did x; next time, it would really be better for me if you did y; but I thought thus and so about your great z.”  Anytime we offer criticism, it is better to wrap it in velvet and reassure our partner that we think he’s sexy and good in bed.

5) Make it a game changer.  Let’s say you are the sexual distancer and emotional pursuer and he’s the opposite.  You want him to ask about your feelings and he wants you to remember his sexual needs.  The goal is to make your patterns more flexible not to change you into the eternal sexual pursuer.  Women are afraid that as soon as they enter the sexual relationship more fully, their husbands will raise the bar and expect more.  One woman in my practice got excited about telling her husband on the vacation car ride that she was fully prepared to rip his clothes off when they got to the hotel.  He asked for sex before they left the house.  She heard herself sigh and ask if they could just get on the road.  He encroached on her space and in her mind ruined her great plans to surprise him with initiating sex. More....next page
Not all men want sex more than their partners, about 15-20% of my couple-clients have the wife wanting more sex – those husbands could take this advice and just change the pronouns. But taking sex out of the power struggle no matter who wants it more means this: prioritize your partner’s sexual needs with time, energy and money, fantasize about your partner in ways that ignite your own body,  say no when you don’t want it and offer an inviolable raincheck that you remember and bring up on that day, cultivate receptive desire to say yes sometimes when you’re not in the mood and let arousal spark desire.  Coming forward with both initiating and receptive desire with lower his anxiety about not getting it again helping him feel relaxed and loved and reducing the pressure on the bedroom.

For more help: read my book Wanting Sex Again – How to Rediscover Desire and Heal a Sexless Marriage! Or follow Laurie Watson onFacebook and Twitter!  For information about therapy and coachingyou can reach her at Laurie Watson sex therapy.