Man... I feel (as a sexual being and as a budding Psychologist) that there's something just... wrong about a device that is being sold for profit that has claims of "OMG just convince her to use this and she'll be coming like next week!" If a woman isn't having orgasms, there is usually a reason behind it- not always psychological, but usually. Until that psychological issue is dealt with ("I'm ugly/fat/'dirty'/smelly/having an orgasm would make me unattractive/I can't handle the loss of control/etc") using something like this to "force" an orgasm will likely do more damage than good. Even if the issue is purely physical (she just hasn't figured out what "does it" for her yet), it's still something that should be addressed before believing in this kind of sexual voodoo. It's the same argument that because L-Arginine increases blood flow within the body rubbing some on your privvy parts will make you more horny. Does that mean rubbing my dinner all over my body will fill me up?
This device is *not* approved by the FDA. They have done *no* supervised, regulated, controlled product testing on this- there have been no clinical trials, some nut with two wires and a battery just decided that by running "a mild electric current" through a woman's body you can jump-start your lover. Sorry, I'm not a car.
God, this is the literal interpretation of Caveat Emptor....
__________________
Sage knows our mythic history, King Arthur's and Sir Caradoc's
She answers hard acrostics, has a pretty taste for paradox
She quotes in elegiacs all the crimes of Heliogabalus
In conics she can floor peculiarities parabolous -C'hi
Last edited by Sage; 02-07-2006 at 05:20 AM..
Reason: expanded my POV
|