Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
27 April 2011

How Viagra Can Mess Up Your Marriage

Sure, men are thrilled to have a two-hour erection, but ... are their wives?

By Judith Newman

viagra
Did the makers of Viagra and its cousins, Levitra and Cialis, foresee the side effects — physical and otherwise — that the drugs could cause?

Be careful what you wish for, I think as my husband reaches again for his new toy. Tragically, it's not a Ferrari or the latest Mac laptop —  it's his Penis 2.0—the new, pharmaceutically enhanced model.

I married an older man, and lucky for us both, the only part on him that's given out is his knees. But since I was writing about erectile dysfunction (ED) drugs, I wanted him to help me out. Would he try one? The little blue pill enables older men to sexually respond like 18-year-olds. "Wouldn't that be interesting," I asked him, "journalistically speaking?"

John was skeptical. "What if I take this and things never work without the pill again?" he asked. I pointed out that the label of a leading brand, Viagra, does not list physical dependence as a side effect (although it does mention headaches and an upset stomach). True to promise, when John used Viagra, everything was perfectly fine. But to my chagrin, it was perfectly fine a lot.

And therein lies a problem I wonder whether the makers of Viagra and its pharmaceutical cousins Levitra and Cialis foresaw. While men of a certain age are undoubtedly thrilled to have their sexual potency restored, maybe their wives' enthusiasm is a bit more subdued?

What at first glance seems an obvious win-win situation for both husbands and wives can have a raft of unintended consequences. Don't get me wrong: Viagra is a wonder drug. Since the early '90s, when researchers testing a new heart medication called Sildenafil discovered that it had a startling side effect in men, erectile dysfunction drugs have become more than a billion-dollar industry.

One study conducted by Express Scripts, a pharmacy benefit management company, found that nearly 20% of all American men over age 45 have tried them. And since, according to the National Institutes of Health, approximately 5 percent of 40-year-old men and from 15 to 25 percent of 65-year-old men experience ED (for reasons ranging from narrowing of the blood vessels with age to high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, and neurological problems), these drugs have been a godsend to millions.

ED drugs can also, indirectly, be lifesavers. Thirty-four to 70 percent of all men who take antidepressants experience sexual dysfunction as a side effect, and of those who have this problem, almost 90 percent stop taking the antidepressants so their sex lives can go back to normal.

But ED drugs are so readily available, so much a jokey part of the cultural landscape, that few of us really know how they work and what the potential dangers are. This leads to misuse — not so much life-threatening as knuckleheaded.

Essentially, ED drugs work like this: What gives a man an erection is blood flow to the penis. The vessels dilate, and blood flows in. There is an enzyme that counteracts the dilation. ED drugs inhibit that enzyme, allowing dilation to occur more easily and last longer. They can also diminish a man's refractory time, meaning that after orgasm he can more quickly get an erection again.

The one thing most people know about Viagra and its cohorts is that they are not supposed to be used by men who take nitroglycerin, a common medication for heart patients that also dilates the blood vessels. But ask around. That little piece of knowledge has translated into "Viagra is bad if you have a heart condition."

Not so, says Arthur S. Agatston, MD, a cardiologist and associate professor of medicine at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Prevention editorial advisory board member. In fact, Dr. Agatston says, because Viagra keeps the blood vessels from becoming "sticky" and helps blood flow through them smoothly, not just in the penis but throughout the body, in the future, many of us—women included—may end up taking some small amount of Viagra daily, the way we take baby aspirin, which has the same nonsticking effect on blood itself.

So when a man takes Viagra, he has to avoid anything that dilates the blood vessels, not just nitroglycerides. Drinking, lying in the sun — both are problematic. Viagra won't give him a heart attack, but, taken with too much alcohol, it could make him pass out, Dr. Agatston says.

Perhaps more damaging than ignorance of the physical ramifications of ED drugs is ignorance of their potential interpersonal blowback. When not discussed frankly, Viagra can cause a lot of misunderstanding and hurt between couples. "There is something about a hard erection that is extremely important to a man's identity," says Steven Lamm, MD, an internist in New York City and author of The Hardness Factor. "And of course most couples would prefer that the man be able to have one. But there are some who may have adjusted to life without sex. Perhaps the woman doesn't really want it anymore, for one reason or another. And for those couples, the introduction of an ED drug can throw them seriously out of sync."

That leads to what is perhaps the biggest complicating factor: the reality that a woman's postmenopause genital health can put her physically at odds with her partner's newfound, drug-assisted prowess. As women age, their hormonal balances change. Reduced estrogen levels often mean less sexual desire but also decreased vaginal elasticity and lubrication, and thus more potential for sex to be painful.

The problem can be especially daunting for older women who are widowed or divorced or just beginning to date after years of being alone or with one man. Certainly this was the case for Marjorie P., a 60-something woman who complained about the drugs on a 50+ Web site: "Men have been saved from their middle-age sexual issues by Viagra and Cialis. They can be thirty again, while I have to deal with the sexual issues of being my age. It's put the world on 'tilt.'" Andrea D., a twice-divorced physician from Santa Monica, CA, and an over-50 dater, put it more bluntly. "Viagra has been liberating for men, but unless a woman is taking hormone therapy, she may have vaginal dryness and really not be that interested in the kind of driving, pounding intercourse he's now capable of."

There is also fallout from the erroneous belief that Viagra causes not just greater blood flow but also greater desire. The hormone testosterone is the driving force behind libido; a man with little or no testosterone will not have any desire to have sex, Viagra or no. Moreover, even with normal amounts of testosterone, "Viagra does not just instantly give a man an erection," says Abraham Morgentaler, MD, associate clinical professor of urology at Harvard Medical School and author of The Viagra Myth.

"You have to be in a sexual situation, you need to have desire and intent, in order for the drug to work." Dr. Morgentaler tells the story of a patient who was very upset because Viagra didn't do the trick for him. "He said, 'Doc, I followed your directions exactly. I took the pill an hour in advance. Then I watched a baseball game on TV and waited.' The man's wife was in the other room, waiting too; neither of them realized that the drug would be effective only if they were together, doing what couples do."

The misunderstandings cut all ways: Some women think ED drugs make men amorous and that their presence isn't required. "What a lot of women need to be turned on is the feeling that they're desired," adds Virginia A. Sadock, MD, director of the program in human sexuality at New York University Langone Medical Center. "So with Viagra, they think, Oh, it's not me he wants; it's the Viagra talking. In my practice, I spend a lot of time reassuring them that this isn't the case — and I tell men they must reassure the women too."

Another big issue for many women: ED drugs drastically shorten the interval between climaxing and achieving another erection. Men look at this differently than women do. For them, it's not a bug, it's a feature. And for the woman?

"We want maybe twenty or thirty great minutes of sex," says Susan K., a mother of two in Connecticut. "We don't want an interminable two hours." Not to mention the fact that prolonged intercourse, particularly without sufficient lubrication, can do damage. It can lead to vaginal abrasions and even tearing and can expose a woman to risk of getting yeast infections and — particularly for a woman who is dating or divorced — to sexually transmitted diseases.

There are, too, single women who worry that men with new-and-improved sexual abilities will be less likely to commit to marriage, and wives who worry that their husbands will be more apt to look outside the marriage for sex.

"A partner's Viagra use is now another reason some women give when I ask why they've come to see me," says Miami plastic surgeon Lee Gibstein, MD, who has performed breast implants, face-lifts, and even vaginal rejuvenation on women concerned about turning back the clock.

Which is not to say that Viagra hasn't ever led to straying—but not for the reasons women think. "I've seen problems when a wife or partner objects to ED drugs on the grounds that sex should be natural and spontaneous," says Dr. Morgentaler. So if the man is unable to have erections on his own, and the woman shoots down the idea of a pill, then the guy is really stuck. The relationship can get into trouble, because one person wants sex and the other doesn't or only wants it on her terms.

So how can you make sure, if ED drugs come into your marriage, that they help rather than hamper your relationship?

"Couples really need to talk about what each partner in the relationship expects," says New York couples counselor Jane Greer, PhD, author of What About Me?: Stop Selfishness from Ruining Your Relationship. "The drug can highlight problems about which member of the couple puts him or herself first, which one is thoughtful and which isn't — creating all sorts of conflict."

Adds Andrea, whose own Viagra dating experiences and the experiences of similarly aged friends have ranged from excellent to Emergency Care Needed:

"You have to be crystal clear about what works for you and what doesn't. Because even with someone you really, really adore ... sometimes you just want to get back to reading your book!"

Moreover, women need to stop lying about what they like and don't like to protect the male ego, because that's a recipe for sexual dissatisfaction. "Women can cheat themselves out of good sex because they don't take responsibility for their own feelings, both physically and emotionally," says Dr. Sadock. This means: If you need to buy lubricant to make sex more comfortable, do it; if you need to tell him you're perfectly happy having intercourse for a few minutes, do that too.

After my husband's little panic about never being able to function without the wonders of pharmaceuticals again, well, it took only a week before he was back to his old self. But here's the interesting thing. He told me at the time that he threw out the Viagra. Last night, I noticed it was still in his drawer. I guess it's nice to have an insurance policy.

Source:

Why Women Don't Like Nice Guys

12 Reasons Women Can't Stand Nice Guys

Women say they want a nice guy, yet usually end up dating bad boys. Here's why.

12 Reasons Women Can’t Stand Nice Guys

By Lucia

Not real: Nice guys are too nice. No one can always be that nice unless they’re a saint. They are busy being nice instead of being real and women instinctually don’t trust that. Bad boys “keep it real”. Nice guys don’t want to upset the apple cart.

Respect: No one respects a doormat. Nice guys don’t set boundaries or make any real demands. A bad boy doesn’t let a woman walk all over him or control him. Women can’t respect a man they can control. No respect = No attraction.

Predictable: Most people lead boring, predictable lives, so they’re attracted to people who are exciting and a bit unpredictable. Bad boys are always a challenge. Nice guys are never a challenge. Predictable + No excitement + No challenge = I prefer a bad boy.

Mother Nature: Women are designed to nurture. However, instead of doing this with children, they often end up doing it with bad boys. They think their love will save them. Nice guys rarely need to be saved. Why Women Aren't Attracted To Their Sons

Fixer-Upper: Nice guys don’t usually need to be fixed. Bad boys usually do, so they become a project. Women think if they can “create” the perfect man, he will never leave them. Also, if they’re busy fixing someone else, they don’t have to look at what needs to be fixed in their own lives.

Sperm wars: Women are designed to procreate with the strongest possible genes. Bad boys are sending an unconscious message that they have great genes, so they’re not afraid of losing the woman by misbehaving. Nice guys are sending a message that they don’t think their genes are good enough, so they won’t misbehave.

Fear of intimacy: If a woman is afraid of intimacy, she subconsciously knows she can avoid it with a bad boy, since she can never get close enough to him to have to go there. A nice guy will eventually want a commitment, and that’s scary.

Low self-esteem: We don’t feel comfortable with people who treat us better than we treat ourselves. If you don’t think much of yourself, the bad boy is simply reinforcing your negative belief. A nice guy is treating you in a way you’re not familiar with.

Sex: Women feel a nice guy won’t be good in bed. They sometimes like to be manhandled and think a nice guy won’t be able to take control and get the job done. A bad boy comes across as being able to deliver, even though that may not always be the case. Experts Agree: Cheating Is Not About Sex

Hot: Have you ever seen a bad boy who wasn’t hot? I’m sure there are a few, but they wouldn’t be able to get away with half the stuff they did if they didn’t look so good. Meanwhile, when a woman describes someone as a nice guy, she means, “He’s not hot”.

Charm: Nice guys don’t always know what to say, and are sometimes at a loss for words. Bad boys can be very charming and know exactly what women want to hear. However, they eventually switch over to being selfish. By the time they reveal their true colors, the woman has fallen for them and has a hard time letting go.

Protection: Historically, men have protected women—physically and otherwise. Bad boys give the illusion of being able to protect women, while with nice guys, women aren’t so sure. Life is about balance. Most men fall into either the bad boy or the nice guy category. The ideal man is neither, but walks that fine line between the two. Until men learn how to do this, more often than not, women will choose the bad boy, until they realize that his bad qualities outweigh his good ones.

The Amazing Cinemagraph Technology Which Brings Photos To Life

Far Better Than 3-D: Animated GIFs That Savor A Passing Moment

Jamie Beck and Kevin Burg's animated photos turn the medium of choice for 4chan trolls into something approaching high art.

Photographer Jamie Beck and motion graphics artist Kevin Burg may have finally found a way to elevate the animated GIF to a level approaching fine art, with their "cinemagraphs" -- elegant, subtly animated creations that are "something more than a photo but less than a video." Here's one of my favorites:

NYC Photographer Jamie Beck

The pair was inspired to create these cinemagraphs while preparing to cover Fashion Week this past February: "We wanted to tell more of a story than a single still frame photograph but didn't want the high maintenance aspect of a video," they told Co.Design via email. Primarily, Beck shoots the photos and Burg applies the motion-graphics magic in what they describe as "a highly collaborative process" that can take several hours of manual editing in order to breathe the whisper of life into each image.

NYC Photographer Jamie Beck

NYC Photographer Jamie Beck

So why did Beck and Burg choose the GIF format, rather than something more flexible like Flash? After all, it doesn't take more than a couple of these gorgeous pics to slow most browsers to a crawl. "The format has interesting capabilities as well as some severe limitations which are very influential in the visual style of our images," say the pair. "GIF is very basic, highly linkable through outlets such as Tumblr, and integrated into the web. Flash certainly has more capabilities but since our images are at their heart a traditional photograph, a format like .gif makes the most sense."

NYC Photographer Jamie Beck

[This one shows Beck herself]

Fair enough -- just make sure you enjoy Beck and Burg's creations one at at time, at relatively small sizes (their Tumblr does a good job of keeping the spinning beachballs to a minimum).

Source: fastcodesign.com

25 April 2011

What Happens When Fruit Flies Take Meth?

Fruit Flies On Meth: New Study Indicates Drug Has 'Perfect Storm' Effect On Body

Fruit Flies Meth

Scientists at the University of Illinois sought to answer that question in the hopes of learning more about the powerful drug's effects on the human body.

Most methamphetamine studies focus on how the brain responds to its influence. But this recent experiment examined instead how meth can affect the entire body's molecular makeup.

Fruit flies provide the ideal test subjects, said lead researcher Barry Pittendrigh, a U of I entomology professor. "They're small, we can work with the whole organism and then look at the great diversity of tissues that are being impacted."

The results weren't pretty. "One could almost call meth a perfect storm toxin because it does so much damage to so many different tissues in the body," Pittendrigh said.

The study showed meth wreaking widespread havoc on the fruit flies' bodies, Physorg.com reports:

The researchers found that meth exposure influenced molecular pathways associated with energy generation, sugar metabolism, sperm cell formation, cell structure, hormones, skeletal muscle and cardiac muscles. The analysis also identified several new molecular players and unusual disruptions of normal cellular events that occur in response to meth, though the authors acknowledge that further work is required to validate the role of these pathways in response to meth.

In total, the scientists discovered 34 changes in the molecular processes of the fruit flies' cells.

This may explain why heavy meth users often undergo extreme changes to their physical appearances, including advanced aging, as these before-and-after images from Portland, Ore., illustrate (warning: graphic content).

Another key finding: cells exposed to meth may nourish themselves in a similar manner to cancer cells. While normal, healthy cells use oxygen to break down stored energy, cancer cells use glycosis, a quick and wasteful process in which glucose, a simple sugar that aides metabolism, replaces the oxygen.

The meth-induced fruit flies that ingested trehalose, a type of sugar insects metabolize, lived longer than those that didn't, the researchers observed. Similarly, heavy meth users often crave sugary beverages and foods. The study's findings suggest meth users' taste for sugar may indicate a biological response to the drug -- much like cancer patients, sugar becomes a means for their cells' survival.

However, Pittendrigh was quick to emphasize the preliminary nature of his findings. "We do know that people who are methamphetamine addicts oftentimes take in large amounts of sugary drinks, so that was an interesting observation," he said. "But whether or not these things turn out to be related is a question for future research."

For more information, read the entire study on PlosOne.org.

The Making of Extreme Pizza at the Pizza World Cup

This is the World Cup of pizza that was held in April in the northern part of Italy.

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22 April 2011

Men Spend Two Hours, Women 15 Minutes On Porn

London, Apr 22 : Young men enjoy watching pornography on the web for at least two hours a week, while women do so for 15 minutes on an average, say a survey.

The study conducted over 1,000 individuals aged 18-24 found, a quarter of young men fear they are watching too much pornography.

One in three young adults, who were light users, admitted it upset their partner or caused relationship problems.

That number rose to seven out of ten for those who watched for more than ten hours. And one in four became less interested in sex with a partner after watching porn, the survey for BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat found, The Sun reported.

Men spend two hours, women 15 minutes on porn

The survey also showed that one in three light users, who spent less than an hour a week viewing porn, said they had missed a deadline or appointment as a result.

But this figure rose to four out of five among the four percent who were heavy users watching more than ten hours a week - a level described as "problematic and potentially compulsive" by doctors.

During the programme, Heather Wood of the Portman Clinic, said: "Those people spending large amounts of time accessing porn are not having more fun.

"They are more worried about themselves, more worried about what they are looking at, and report more relationship problems."

Hannah Ewens, 19, said on the programme that young men were even expecting their girlfriends to act like porn stars in the bedroom.

She said: "All the guys my age that I know watch it regularly.

"Whenever they talk about sex they're having with actual girls they talk about it in the same way as they do about porn.

"If that's what they're learning, then that's what they're going to be taking into the bedroom. And what guys think a good girlfriend is in bed is like whatever these porn girls are doing."

21 April 2011

Wanna Waste Time? Try These

They say that nobody ever said on their deathbed that they wish they spent more time at the office.

The reason why is because they spent time doing actual work and not poking around the Internet.

Had they spent more time on cat blogs, there would be no shame in sitting at a computer all day, because cat blogs truly are the fruit of life.

Crap Souvenirs

From the creator of Signspotting comes Crap Souvenirs, a seemingly endless collection of kitsch from gift stores around the world.

 

Anti Joke

Possibly the most famous joke of all time, regarding a chicken's motivation for crossing the road, is an example of an anti-joke, where the punchline deflates the set-up to humorous effect. Anti-joke.com is your source of hundreds of examples of such comedy.

Mount Rushmore Photoshopped

It's common to say that four paragons of any field are the "Mount Rushmore of [blank]," but Mount Rushmore Photoshopped takes it one visual step further.

Llama Font

Why does Llama Font, a site where text is converted to illustrations of llamas in various poses, exist? Why does "llama" have two Ls? These are the questions for which there are no answers.

Man Babies

Since we have to include one nightmare-fodder site every week, this time the slot goes to Man Babies, where dads and babies' heads are swapped out. Even creepier than the Etrade baby.

STFU Parents

Perhaps Facebook's biggest crime is shoving our cool friends' babies in our faces, giving daily reminders of how unfun they are quickly becoming. STFU Parents gives Facebook examples of parents who need to cool it with showing off their progeny to the world.

Hipster Animals

Hipster Animals might sound like a bit of a tired premise, but the inspired, carefully constructed drawings of animals rendered as hipster tropes really elevates this site to a thing of beauty.

14 April 2011

What is Bipolar II?

Catherine Zeta Jones has disclosed that she is receiving treatment for bipolar II disorder.

Catherine Zeta Jones has disclosed that she is receiving treatment for bipolar II disorder

Catherine Zeta Jones has revealed that she sought treatment for manic depression Photo: REX FEATURES

Mental health professionals have identified four main subtypes of bipolar disorder that together are referred to as bipolar spectrum disorders: bipolar I, bipolar II, bipolar not otherwise specified, and cyclothymia.

Although symptoms vary significantly from person to person factors that differentiate the types of bipolar include the duration and intensity of the mood swings.

Depression is the primary characteristic of bipolar II. While those with bipolar II do have "up" periods, these episodes are less marked. Instead of full-blown mania, people with bipolar II experience hypomania, a milder form of mania. Studies show that women are slightly more likely to have bipolar II.

Though a person with bipolar II may deny that anything is wrong, loved ones will probably notice that he or she seems agitated, is flying off the handle more often, or seems unusually upbeat.

Bipolar II is sometimes mistaken for depression because the hypomanic periods are harder to detect. Over time, without treatment, hypomania -- the "up" period -- can progress into mania or turn into a depressed state.

11 April 2011

300 Years On, Puzzle Solved

By Marlowe Hood

Blindfold

Could a blind person recognise familiar objects by sight if their vision was restored? Picture: Getty

  • Philosophical question 300 years old 
  • Neuroscience has finally answered it 

Paris, Apr 11 : RESEARCHERS say they have solved a conundrum about human perception that has stumped philosophers and scientists alike for three centuries.

Irish politician William Molyneux first posed the question in a letter to the great British thinker John Locke written 323 years ago.

Imagine, Molyneux wrote, that a man blind from birth who has learned to identify objects — a sphere and a cube, for example - only through his sense of touch is suddenly able to see.

The puzzle, he continued, is: "Whether he Could, by his Sight, and before he touch them, know which is the Globe and which the Cube?"

For philosophers of the time, answering "Molyneux's question", as it became known, would resolve a fundamental uncertainty about the human mind.

Empiricists believed that we are born blank slates, and become the sum total of our accumulated experience.

So-called "nativists" countered that our minds are, from the outset, pre-stocked with ideas waiting to be activated by sight, sound and touch.

If a blind man who miraculously recovered his sight could instantly distinguish the cube from the globe it would mean the knowledge was somehow innate, they argued.

More recently, this "nurture vs. nature" debate has found its counterpart in modern neuroscience.

"The beauty of Molyneux's question is that it also relates to how representations are formed in the brain," said Pawan Sinha, a professor at MIT in Boston and the main architect of the study.

"Do the different modalities, or senses, build up a common representation, or are these independent representations that one cannot access even though the other modality has built it?" he asked.

Recent studies have suggested that the mental images we accumulate through sight and touch do, in fact, form a common pool of impressions that can be triggered and retrieved by one sense or the other.

But until now, no one has been able to design a definitive experiment.

The problem was finding subjects. They would have to have been blind at birth and then have had their sight restored, but not until they were old enough to reliably participate in tests.

Most forms of curable congenital blindness, however, are detected and cured in infancy, so such individuals are extremely rare.

More precisely, they are rare in rich countries. So in 2003, Prof Sinha set up a program in India in cooperation with the Shroff Charity Eye Hospital in New Delhi.

Among the many patients he treated, he found five — four boys and one girl, aged eight to 17 — who met the criteria for surgery that would almost instantly take them from total blindness to fully seeing.

Once bandages were removed, researchers had to first be sure that the volunteers could see well.

Using objects that looked like Lego building blocks, they tested the ability to discriminate visually between similar shapes. The subjects scored nearly 100 per cent.

They scored nearly as well when it came to telling the difference by touch alone.

For the critical test, however, in which the children first felt an object and then tried to distinguish visually between that same object and a similar one, the results were barely better than if they had guessed.

"They couldn't form the connection," said Yuri Ostrovsky, also a researcher at MIT and a co-author of the study.

"The conclusion is that there does not seem to be any cross-modal" - that is, from one sense to the other - "representation available to perform the task," he said.

The answer to Molyneux's question, then, appears to be "no" - the data blind people gather tactically that allows them to identify a cup and a vase, and to tell them apart, is not accessible through vision.

At least not at first.

"From a neuroscientific point of view, the most interesting finding is the rapidity with which this inability was compensated," said Richard Held, an emeritus professor at MIT and lead author of the study.

"Within about a week, it's done - and that is very fast. We were surprised," he said.

The overall results suggest that the human brain is more "plastic", or malleable, longer into childhood that previously thought, the researchers said.

"This challenges the dogma of 'critical periods', the idea that if a child has been deprived of vision for the first three or four years of life, he or she will be unable to acquire any visual proficiency," Prof Sinha said.

Source: AFP

Jamaican Women Risk Everything To Make Their Skin Whiter

Skin bleaching a growing problem in Jamaica slums

Mikeisha Simpson AP – In this photo taken Jan. 14, 2011, Mikeisha Simpson poses for a portrait in Kingston, Jamaica. Simpson, …

By DAVID McFADDEN

KINGSTON, Jamaica – Mikeisha Simpson covers her body in greasy white cream and bundles up in a track suit to avoid the fierce sun of her native Jamaica, but she's not worried about skin cancer.

The 23-year-old resident of a Kingston ghetto hopes to transform her dark complexion to a cafe-au-lait-color common among Jamaica's elite and favored by many men in her neighborhood. She believes a fairer skin could be her ticket to a better life. So she spends her meager savings on cheap black-market concoctions that promise to lighten her pigment.

Simpson and her friends ultimately shrug off public health campaigns and reggae hits blasting the reckless practice.

"I hear the people that say bleaching is bad, but I'll still do it. I won't stop 'cause I like it and I know how to do it safe," said Simpson, her young daughter bouncing on her hip.

People around the world often try to alter their skin color, using tanning salons or dyes to darken it or other chemicals to lighten it. In the gritty slums of Jamaica, doctors say the skin lightening phenomenon has reached dangerous proportions.

"I know of one woman who started to bleach her baby. She got very annoyed with me when I told her to stop immediately, and she left my office. I often wonder what became of that baby," said Neil Persadsingh, a leading Jamaican dermatologist.

Most Jamaican bleachers use over-the-counter creams, many of them knockoffs imported from West Africa. Long-term use of one of the ingredients, hydroquinone, has long been linked to a disfiguring condition called ochronosis that causes a splotchy darkening of the skin. Doctors say abuse of bleaching lotions has also left a web of stretch marks across some Jamaicans' faces.

In Japan, the European Union, and Australia, hydroquinone has been removed from over-the-counter skin products and substituted with other chemicals due to concerns about health risks. In the U.S., over-the-counter creams containing up to 2 percent hydroquinone are recognized as safe and effective by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. A proposed ban by the FDA in 2006 fizzled.

Lightening creams are not effectively regulated in Jamaica, where even roadside vendors sell tubes and plastic bags of powders and ointments from cardboard boxes stacked along sidewalks in market districts.

"Many of the tubes are unlabeled as to their actual ingredients," said Dr. Richard Desnoes, president of the Dermatology Association of Jamaica.

Hardcore bleachers use illegal ointments smuggled into the Caribbean country that contain toxins like mercury, a metal that blocks production of melanin, which give skin its color, but can also be toxic.

Some impoverished people resort to homemade mixtures of toothpaste or curry powder, which can stain skin with a yellowish tint.

The Jamaican Ministry of Health does not have data on damage caused by skin-bleaching agents, though dermatologists and other health officials say they have been seeing more cases.

Eva Lewis-Fuller, the ministry's director of health promotion and protection, is redoubling education programs to combat bleaching in this predominantly black island of 2.8 million people, where images of fair-skinned people predominate in commercials for high-end products and in the social pages of newspapers.

"Bleaching has gotten far worse and widespread in recent years," she said. "(Bleachers) want to be accepted within their circle of society. They want to be attractive to the opposite sex. They want career opportunities. But we are saying there are side effects and risks. It can disfigure your face."

Health officials are running warnings on local radio stations, putting up posters in schools, holding talks and handing out literature about the dangers. But a similar anti-bleaching campaign in 2007 called "Don't Kill the Skin" did nothing to slow the craze.

The bleaching trend is sparking a growing public debate. Even dancehall reggae hits celebrate the practice, or condemn it.

The most public proponent of bleaching is singing star Vybz Kartel, whose own complexion has dramatically lightened in recent years. His 'Look Pon Me' contains the lines: "Di girl dem love off mi brown cute face, di girl dem love off mi bleach-out face."

Kartel, whose real name is Adijah Palmer, insists that skin bleaching is simply a personal choice like tattooing.

Christopher A.D. Charles, an assistant professor at Monroe College in New York City who has studied the psychology of bleaching, said many young Jamaicans perceive it "as a modern thing, like Botox, to fashion their own body in a unique way."

Others, however, say it raises awkward questions about identity and race.

"If we really want to control the spread of the skin-bleaching virus, we first have to admit that there's an epidemic of color prejudice in our society," said Carolyn Cooper, a professor of literary and cultural studies at the University of the West Indies, writing in The Jamaica Gleaner newspaper.

Felicia James, a 20-year-old resident of the Matthews Lane slum, said skin bleaching just makes her feel special, like she's walking around in a spotlight. She was taught to bleach by her older sister and her friends.

"It's just the fashionable thing to do. After I bleach, I'm cris," she said, using a Jamaican term for cool. "Plus, a lot of the boys are doing it now, too."

Source: Associated Press

How To Brew Your Own Beer In a WEEK

By Steven Callas
It is said in the Old Testament that the earth was created in seven days.

That’s a pretty awesome thing to accomplish in a week, regardless of whether or not you believe it, right?

It’s not every day that someone wakes up on Monday and says, “man I’m bored, I think I’m going to create me a planet by Sunday.”

Well a company out of New Zealand called
WilliamsWarn is allowing you to accomplish something even more awesome than planetogenesis (made up word, still sounds cool), all in the same amount of time: brewing your own beer.

I can feel your heart racing and I can see that huge grin on your face already.

The WilliamsWarn Personal Brewery is a waist-high device on wheels that can replace your water cooler’s footprint if you so choose.

Which you should, because who wouldn’t want a cold, delicious, frothy brew that will spark conversations that are infinitely more awesome and interesting than those sparked by a paper cup of water?

    The WialliamsWarn Personal Brewery will run you 5,660 New Zealand Dollars (a little over $4,400 USD) from their website and ingredients are priced separately, but at $40 USD for a Blonde Ale pack that will make 23 liters of beer and the fact that your home or office will have its own personal brewery makes it so well worth the price!

    And if that isn’t convincing enough, then check out the video below as it features the three things required to sell you on luxury beer: a suave narrator with a New Zealand accent, a man staring intently at

    The WilliamsWarn Personal Brewery from WilliamsWarn on Vimeo.

    Why More And More Women Are Turning To Internet Porn

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    02 April 2011

    Sick Of Jerking In Bed? Try Masturbating

    By Peter Farquhar

    Something About Mary

    "You're still not tired? Are you kidding me?" 

    • Dopamines relieve RLS
    • Ejaculation releases dopamines
    • Connect the dots

    Some say it makes you go blind. Others reply that hey, the lights are out anyway, and I need some sleep.

    Yes, we're talking about masturbation. And later, about how doing it more often can be good for your health.

    Particularly if you suffer from Restless Leg Syndrome - a condition that causes as much consternation in scientific circles as it does to those who claim to suffer from it.

    Restless Leg Syndrome - RLS - is characterised by an irresistable urge in the limbs to move or spasm.

    As the name suggests, it mainly affects the legs, and is at its most active when the sufferer is trying to sleep.

    The tickling or burning sensation builds up until the affected limb spasms, then settles only to build up again.

    It's not unusual for people who suffer RLS - which has a wide range of effects - to describe it as torturous.

    The scientific community is not so easily convinced. The cause of any individual's RLS is difficult to diagnose and treatments can range from relaxation techniques to cutting down on coffee to increasing physical exercise.

    Of particular concern is the potential for pharmaceutical companies to develop and promote drugs that "cure" RLS online and through backing RLS support groups.

    Some of the drugs have been proven effective and are endorsed by government agencies. One such line of drugs includes dopamines.
    Fortunately, the body can produce a ready supply of dopamine, something which Luis Martin and his colleagues at Sao Paulo's Federal University have decided to, er, investigate further.

    Here's comes the bit about masturbation.

    In this month's edition of Sleep Science, Prof Marin points to study results from the University of Groningen in The Netherlands, which shows ejaculation in men swamping their brains with dopamines.

    "Manual penile stimulation was performed by the volunteer's female partner," the study says, with the end goal producing "a wide variety of rewarding behaviors".

    "Parallels are drawn between ejaculation and heroin rush," it concludes.

    Prof Luis says this seems like a simple way for men to reproduce the effects of RLS treatment drugs, without the cost and side effects of using dopamine agonists, one of which is, bizarrely, problem gambling.

    So if you find yourself in bed jerking spasmodically and unable to get to sleep, why not go with the flow?

    A quick hand shandy certainly never hurt anyone and, hey, it may even take your mind off the slots.

    Astounding Museum By Porsche

    Porsche Museum.

    An architectural wonder, the Porsche Museum is a car enthusiast's delight.

    It is a treasure trove of some of the most exquisite cars from the Porsche stable. It is located in the Zuffenhausen district of Stuttgart, Germany.

    Housed in this futuristic museum, are iconic vehicles such as the 356, 550, 911, and 917. The exhibits include some of the outstanding technical achievements of Professor Ferdinand Porsche from the early 20th century.

    Photographs, courtesy: Porsche Museum

    Porsche museum.

    The Porsche museum is located just outside the Porsche headquarters.

    It tells of the spirit and the passion that motivate work at Porsche, and pays tribute to the company as well as the people behind the product.

    Porsche Museum.

    The museum was designed by architects Delugan Meissl. The exhibition spaces were designed by HG Merz.

    Porsche Museum.

    Porsche built the original museum near its car factory in 1976 . It was a small museum, which could hold around 20 exhibits.

    Porsche Museum.

    Porsche built the museum as a kind of 'rolling museum" with rotating exhibits from a stock of 300 restored cars.

    Porsche Museum.

    While the cost to build the museum was initially pegged at euro 60 million, its actual cost hit euro 100 million.

    Porsche Museum.

    Work on the concept for the museum began in 2003. A storyboard comprising relevant topics, exhibits and their presentation was designed.

    Porsche Museum.

    The museum, with a contemporary design functions as a home base for the vehicles.

    Porsche Museum.

    The history of Porsche sports cars began in 1948 with the legendary Type 356 No 1.

    The credit for building the conceptual basis of the brand goes to Professor Ferdinand Porsche (1875 1951). His remarkable work was carried forward by his son Ferry (1909 1998).

    Porsche Museum.

    Ferdinand Porsche laid the foundation for the House of Porsche by establishing an independent engineering office in Stuttgart in 1931.

    Porsche Museum.

    During the past six decades, Porsche has built many innovative models like the 356, 911, 914, 924, 944, 928, the Boxster and the Cayenne.

    Today, Porsche has grown into one of the world's most successful automobile manufacturers.

    Porsche Museum.

    The display area is spread across 5600 square meters with many rare cars and historical models.

    Porsche Museum library.

    Porsche has a production capacity of around 100,000 units per year. The Porsche Museum houses a central department offering all the historical and contemporary knowledge about Porsche.

    Porsche Museum.

    Porsche is bullish on sales in India. It expects to sell 500 units in 2011.

    The waiting period for the sports utility vehicle (SUV) Cayenne is around 500 days and for other sports car models it is 100 days.

    Porsche Museum.

    The global order book position for Cayenne is 74,000 units whereas the production is around 44,000 units.

    01 April 2011

    Does Beauty Buy Happiness?

    By Jessica Bennett

    Does Beauty Buy Happiness?NEW YORK – A new study appears to show that beautiful people are happier than their ugly counterparts—but research has also proven good looks to be a curse, especially on the job. Jessica Bennett reports.

    If self-conscious young women didn't have enough to worry about, here's an awful new stereotype to add to the mix: Ugly people are sad. Not innately, of course—but over time, the curse of unattractiveness will affect them in so many ways that it's actually quantifiable. Ugly people make less money. They have trouble finding a mate. And in a culture that places insurmountable pressure on appearance, they don't feel as good about themselves when they walk down the street.

    These are the findings of a new report out of the University of Texas at Austin, called "Beauty Is the Promise of Happiness". Compiling data from more than 25,000 people surveyed across four countries, economists Daniel Hamermesh and Jason Abrevaya compared respondents' happiness levels with how attractive they were (as judged by interviewers). Their finding? Those ranked in the top 15 percent of hotness were 10 percent happier than those ranked in the bottom tier of good looks. (In other words, not all ugly people are sad, but pretty people are statistically happier than their less attractive counterparts.) "Personal beauty raises happiness," says Hamermesh simply. "I know it's not terribly surprising, but what's neat is that nobody's ever documented this."

    It all sounds terribly shallow, until you look at the data that produces those happy feelings. Studies have shown that attractive people earn, on average, some 5 percent more over a lifetime than their less attractive counterparts. Pretty people get more attention from teachers, mentors, even babies; and as we discovered in a special Newsweek report last year, attractive people are favored in the workplace to a surprising degree. (As one New York recruiter put it: "This is the new reality of the job market. It's better to be average and good-looking than brilliant and unattractive.")

    But rest assured, beauty isn't always a blessing—particularly for professional women. Here are five ways good looks can be a curse.

    1. For Women, Beauty Can Be a Double Bind Beauty may get them in the door, but attractive women tend to face heightened scrutiny from female peers, who rate them less competent, less talented, less loyal, and, strangely, less motherly than women from homelier stock. They also face what some have dubbed the "bimbo effect"—colleagues view their success as a function of superficial assets. In male-dominated fields in particular, pretty women can be seen as too feminine (and thus unfit) for leadership positions.

    “Beauty is just one of the many things that affect how well you do. So take advantage of what you’re good at.”

    2. Beauty Can Be Beastly In what's known as the "beauty is beastly" effect, one recent study found that attractive women are likely discriminated against outright—at least when it comes to hiring. Published in the Journal of Social Psychology, the study gave volunteers a list of jobs, along with photos of men and women suitable for those jobs, and then asked them to match the photos with the categories. For jobs typically considered "masculine," with titles like director of security, hardware salesperson, prison guard, and tow-truck driver, attractive women were overlooked, sorted instead into positions like receptionist and secretary. The same was true among more professional categories, like manager of research, director of finance, or mechanical engineer. "In every other kind of job, attractive women were preferred," Stefanie Johnson, the study's coauthor, told Science Daily. "This wasn't the case with men."

    3. Playing Up Your Flaws Can Work to Your Advantage—at Least When It Comes to Finding a Mate This from a January study from dating site OK Cupid, which examined data from 43,000 users to try and determine what kind of women most men find attractive. What they found? That the more men as a group disagree about a woman's looks, the more they end up liking her; that guys tend to ignore girls widely considered to be attractive and opt for women who had less consistent ratings; that having some men think you're ugly actually works in a woman's favor (in terms of the number of messages she gets). What that means for ladies looking for a match? "We now have mathematical evidence that minimizing your 'flaws' is the opposite of what you should do," the site's editorial director and co-founder, Christian Rudder, said at the time. "If you're a little chubby, play it up. If you have a big nose, play it up. If you have a weird snaggletooth, play it up: Statistically, the guys who don't like it can only help you, and the ones who do like it will be all the more excited."

    4. At Least We're Willing to Admit that Looks Discrimination Is Wrong In Michigan, there are laws against appearance discrimination. According to a Newsweek survey, 60 percent of respondents said they believe most Americans would favor a law making it illegal to discriminate in hiring based on looks.

    5. Looks May Get You in the Door, But They Won't Keep You There Asked to rate nine character attributes from one to 10 (with 10 being the most important), corporate hiring managers told Newsweek that confidence and experience were still the most important assets when it comes to getting a job. As Hamermesh, the author of the happiness study, puts it: "Beauty is just one of the many things that affect how well you do. So take advantage of what you're good at."

    Jessica Bennett is a Newsweek senior writer covering society, youth culture and gender. Her special reports, multimedia packages and original web video have been honored by the New York Press Club, the Newswomen's Club of New York and GLAAD, among other organizations. Follow her on Twitter.

    25 March 2011

    Modern Men Prefer Powerful Women (But Also 'Bad Girls' Like Angelina Jolie)

    Power has become the ultimate aphrodisiac for modern day men, according to a new study.

    Research shows that two thirds of British men now lust after women in high-powered jobs.

    Long gone are the days when the ideal woman was the domestic, stay-at-home type - now men believe the ultimate woman is a strong, sexy executive.

    Actress Megan Fox U.S. actress Angelina Jolie

    Attitude: More than a third of men said they also liked 'bad girl' Hollywood actresses like Megan Fox and Angelina Jolie

    Experts say this is not only due to changing gender roles but due to economic hardship men may also be taking a more traditionally female view and looking for a 'provider'.

    Research released today shows 66 per cent of men are most attracted to high-flying females, rising to 71 per cent among 30 to 34 year old men.

    A girl who is strong, independent and professional is likely to be far more appealing to the modern male, according to the study by games company Electronic Arts.

    Now 18 per cent of men look for a partner who's fun, 14 per cent want a woman who can stand up for themselves and nine per cent value spontaneity.

    A further 35 per cent said they like so-called 'bad girls' like Hollywood actresses Angelina Jolie, Megan Fox and Welsh singer Charlotte Church.

    Commenting on the findings, relationship expert Jo Barnett, said: 'Finances are harder than ever, and men who may once have been scared of a powerful, successful woman, have wised up.

    Ambition: 60 per cent of women said they were more attracted to men with high-powered jobs

    Ambition: 60 per cent of women said they were more attracted to men with high-powered jobs

    'They are now embracing it, as someone who is financially independent is a very alluring option.

    'Also, media has sold us the powerful, executive woman as a very sexy image today.

    'Women who have it all have a buzz about them, they are not so readily available and the guys flock to them.'

    Those living in London are the most likely to be smitten by a high-profile woman, compared to just 56 per cent of the Welsh.

    TOP TEN CELEBRITY 'LOVEABLE ROGUES' TOP TEN CELEBRITY BAD GIRLS
    1. Colin Farrell 1. Angelina Jolie
    2. Gerard Butler 2. Megan Fox
    3. Robbie Williams 3. Charlotte Church
    4. Jude Law 4. Sienna Miller
    5. Jonathan Rhys Meyers 5. Lily Allen
    6. Jose Mourinho 6. Christina Aguilera
    7. Russell Brand 7. Lindsey Lohan
    8. Christian Bale 8. Britney Spears
    9. Danny Dyer 9. Paris Hilton
    10. Simon Cowell 10. Nicole Richie

    Research also showed that when it comes to looking for their perfect man, most women are no longer looking for a knight in shining armour.

    Men who display chivalrous and courteous behaviour are now regarded as weak or patronising by one in ten of the nation's females.

    And for 45 per cent, the modern-day groomed man isn't their ideal either.

    One in six now find loveable rogues like Irish actor Colin Farrell and Scottish-born heart throb Gerard Butler more appealing.

    And, like men, they are also drawn to ambition - 60 per cent of women said they were more attracted to men with high-powered jobs.

    Miss Barnett, of datingcoach.me.uk, said: 'Women are looking for the buzz and excitement to distract them from the mundane life of work, kids, usual.

    'The 'bad boy' is a challenge, it works the same for women as it does for me, the harder the game, the more we want to play.

    'Bad boys have that sex appeal that some of the chivalrous men just can't muster, it's the belief they have that they can play the field and get away with it.

    'They have the ability to lay on the charm and we never quite know if they are telling the truth, but it's fun while it lasts.'

    The research marks the launch of the new computer game The Sims Medieval.

    Stuart Lang, marketing director for The Sims Medieval, said: 'It's interesting to see the change in appeal of men being attracted to high-powered women and more dominant bad-girl types.

    'It shows the evolving position of women in society and the developments of their strength.

    'These results show that there is still an element of Middle Age mentality in today's society, with women being drawn to roguish characters.'

    20 March 2011

    15 Mistakes Women Make When They Try To Look Attractive (According To A Man)

    portrait of a young caucasian woman in front of a white background with make upWomen in general are very beautiful, it doesn’t matter what they have on, to someone they will be beautiful. Then you have others who try to make themselves look more attractive by doing a little work. Too bad they are some that over do it and looks a mess and don’t even realize it.

    Here are 15 of the worst mistakes women make while trying to look more attractive. Hopefully they read this and prevent it from here on.

    via socialhype.com