PSA For Senior Citizens Warns Of The Dangers Of Unprotected Sex
Posted by Staff (05/31/2012 @ 6:15 pm)
A Public Service Announcement for senior citizens may seem too racy for some but the message is crucial.
Rates of sexually transmitted disease have doubled in those 50-90 years old.
According to the editorial, an estimated 80 percent of 50- to 90-year-olds are sexually active. This activity has contributed to rises in cases of syphilis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea among 45- to 64-year-olds in the U.S. and the U.K.
According to CDC estimates, there were almost 900 cases of syphilis in 45 to 64-year-olds in 2000, and in 2010, the number grew to more than 2,500. In the elderly age group, 6,700 people were diagnosed with chlamydia in 2000; by 2010? 19,000. The number of new HIV diagnoses in people over 50 has also doubled between 2000 and 2009, according to the editorial’s authors.
Modern medicine and willing partners has increased the incidence of sexual activity amount this age group.
No longer fearing pregnancy they need to be re-educated about condoms and the prevention of STD’s.
Big Love For Big People
Posted by Staff (02/03/2012 @ 5:33 pm)

Having sex when your’re overweight can be a challenge.
While self-esteem may play a role, it’s not the only factor involved. Conditions such as high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and diabetes often accompany obesity and can impair blood flow to the genitals, resulting in problems with erectile dysfunction in men and arousal in both men and women. Extra weight can also stress the knees and other joints, making some sexual positions uncomfortable.
Regardless of your size your health should be your main concern.
Enjoying an active sex life is a part of a healthy lifestyle and can offer many benefits to your physical and emotional well being.
Do Men Really Think About Sex All the Time?
Posted by Staff (12/11/2011 @ 1:20 am)

Well, men think about sex just about as often as they think about food and sleeping.
And while women don’t think about sex as often they are not far behind men. And thoughts of food and sleep are proportionately less, as well.
“The story about this paper that’s been reported in the press has been ‘Men think about sex 19 times a day!’ ” said Terri Fisher, a psychology professor at Ohio State University at Mansfield, and the study’s lead author. But that isn’t all that much when you consider the study’s participants were college students, those repositories of raging hormones and unfettered urges.
“The more interesting finding is that male college students think just as much about food and sleep as they do about sex,” Dr. Fisher said.
Jealousy is Different for Men and Women
Posted by Staff (09/14/2011 @ 11:57 pm)

Jealousy rears it’s ugly head from time to time with all of us but men and women feel the sting in different ways.
“Relative to women, men are more distressed by sexual infidelity, and women are more upset over emotional infidelity, relative to men,” says study author Barry X. Kuhle, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Scranton in Scranton, Penn.