[quote author=tripod2004 and partner link=board=pe;num=1081118353;start=0#0 date=04/04/04 at 15:30:13]
"Penile extension techniques do not work. You may get the impression its getting bigger but that is temporary...
...Growing your penis ain't gonna happen guys. Don't waste your time or money.
[/quote]
Thanks for your views. Each of us is entitled to his/her own opinions. We do not all have to agree.
Those of us who HAVE gotten (permanent) results would have to disagree with you, in all due respect.
Many of the pills, potions, and gadgets are hoaxes and--they're a waste of money. --That's very true.
btw--taking Viagra and using a vacuum pump are NOT the same "methods" although granted--the results are only temporary at best. (Vacuum pumping can produce some permanent results however, if the effort is made long-term. It's not going to add 5 inches however! )
Viagra induces increased blood circulation to where more blood flows into the genital area for NATURAL erections. Vaccum pumping, by changing the surrounding air pressure around the penis (technically the inner corpus cavernosa or inner penile chambers) creates a "forced" erection by trapping the blood and lymph fluids for an extended period of time.
It's a good idea to tell men that PE is not easy and there are no guarantees for the same success for every man. But, to say outright that ANY penis enlargement method is bogus--is simply incorrect. It's not telling the truth.
There are way too many men who, after trying and staying with a PE regimen long-term---well, we simply know better. I think some of us are even laughing a bit at this notion that PE doesn't work. 'Makes us feel even better now, for all our hard work!
Just like other areas of life...improvement of any kind doesn't come easy. If growing a bigger penis (reasonably bigger by say an inch or so) is important enough, then many men will simply accept it's going to take concentrated effort and a lot of hard work. The easy over-night wonder programs will soon be dismissed as hogwash. For about every ten men who try PE, only two will stay with it long enough to get results...(or, so I read months ago). I believe that statistic. Makes sense. The others who give up can often cast a negative light on the subject of PE (understandably so) yet wrongly so. They didn't give PE a fair chance to work for them and they speak ill of it thereafter.
--Is this really fair then, to men who might want to try PE...(and perhaps would succeed?) to be so easily dissuaded to even bother beginning it?