It's no longer the oldies who are taking anti-impotency pills. Now-a-days, even younger men are turning to enhancers to meet the increasing bedroom demands of their modern female partners, claim experts.
According to them, today's modern women, inspired by strong female characters in flicks such as 'Sex and the City', have become more vocal about their sexual desires and demand a higher level of stamina and imagination in the bedroom. As a result, men aged between 18 and 40 years feel increasingly emasculated. In fact, the pressure is causing many of them to experience "performance anxiety" and is also leading to the diagnoses of erectile dysfunction, the experts have claimed.
Dr John Tomlinson of Sexual Dysfunction Association said that he was hearing from an "enormous" number of 18 to 40-year-olds worried about sexual problems. "Men may feel emasculated by modern women and feminism has taken its toll. But most of problems are psychological. I am sure many of these men are fuelling the counterfeit drugs industry by buying their Viagra online," British newspaper the 'Daily Mail' quoted him as saying.
According to him, advertisements glamourising the well toned male body, make an impact on men who presume it is what women expect. Dr John Dean, a specialist in sexual medicine, said when Viagra was introduced ten years ago, it would have been unusual to treat men in their 30s. Now, however, it is common.
Added sex therapist Denise Knowles: "Pornography affects how men see themselves and how they think women will see them. Further pressure comes from the myth that men should know what to do in the bedroom
and that women are difficult to satisfy."
According to them, today's modern women, inspired by strong female characters in flicks such as 'Sex and the City', have become more vocal about their sexual desires and demand a higher level of stamina and imagination in the bedroom. As a result, men aged between 18 and 40 years feel increasingly emasculated. In fact, the pressure is causing many of them to experience "performance anxiety" and is also leading to the diagnoses of erectile dysfunction, the experts have claimed.
Dr John Tomlinson of Sexual Dysfunction Association said that he was hearing from an "enormous" number of 18 to 40-year-olds worried about sexual problems. "Men may feel emasculated by modern women and feminism has taken its toll. But most of problems are psychological. I am sure many of these men are fuelling the counterfeit drugs industry by buying their Viagra online," British newspaper the 'Daily Mail' quoted him as saying.
According to him, advertisements glamourising the well toned male body, make an impact on men who presume it is what women expect. Dr John Dean, a specialist in sexual medicine, said when Viagra was introduced ten years ago, it would have been unusual to treat men in their 30s. Now, however, it is common.
Added sex therapist Denise Knowles: "Pornography affects how men see themselves and how they think women will see them. Further pressure comes from the myth that men should know what to do in the bedroom
and that women are difficult to satisfy."
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