Quote:
Originally Posted by 1010011010
Way back in the early days of fluoroscopy most doctor's had fluoroscopes that were used while the patient was standing... unfortunately the reference films for what a normal X-Ray should look like were generally produced using patients that were laying down.
Thus a lot of uncomfortable trussing and occassionally unnecessary surgery because people had organs in the "wrong" position.
Your internal organs are more affected by breathing or changing position than they are by a relatively insignificant penis. It might be able to poke some tissues in the immediate neighborhood, but it's not going to have much affect on anything else.
|
When a woman has endometriosis as bad as I had it, that 'insignificant penis' affects quite a lot. Sex HURT and for years I didn't know why and assumed that was just part of the deal. Not until they opened me up did they realize I had endometriosis so bad that my colon and uterus were, as the doctor described it 'one organ'-two hours of lasering and snipping got rid of most of it(it was so bad that even after being pregnant 40 weeks, the ob/gyn could still see it during my C-section.)
In preparation for sex, the uterus moves up and back, causing that 'stirring' feeling women get. Imagine it not being able to budge.....