MONITOR YOUR HEALTH PART 1

in #health5 years ago

All living creatures have a natural lifespan. Although some people live much longer, the Brain, Muscles, Joints, Eyes, and other organs all decline with age but changes are usually small until after the age of 60. Genetics and lifestyle are major contributors to a person’s lifespan. The human body is alive with information being a complex, dynamic mechanism; its interacting and interdependent parts require control and coordination. This is done by passing information between them. Two body systems are responsible for command control and data management, the nervous and endocrine systems. There are many problems emanating from the body, some of it are:

MALE MENOPAUSEchristian-lunde-Gf8xG0a0XDY-unsplash.jpg

When a male behaves irrationally, he is on the stage of menopause, at this stage, there are certain changes taking place in his body. The problems are mainly prostate gland, sexual impotency and virility. The health of prostate gland is crucial regarding the male’s sexual potency. A weak and unhealthy gland will reflect in his sex life. When a man begins to have problems with his sexual performance he begins to feel old and inadequate. The prostate gland contains more zinc than any part of the body. When a zinc deficiency occurs, the prostate gland enlarges and prostate fluid is not producing enough quantity which brings about a decline in sexual desire, vitality and general health.

IMPOTENCEwesley-tingey-4q_1c0rd1A0-unsplash.jpg

The dictionary defines impotency as “wanting in physical, intellectual, or moral power, of the male, lacking the power of sexual intercourse”. This definition omits the overwhelming sense of frustration, embarrassment and powerlessness the word also contains. This applies to both men and their partners. Another word for impotence from dictionary is: Inefficiency, Incapacity, emasculation, disarmed, inoperative, inadequate, and powerless. It means simply not being able on more than 25 per cent of occasions, to get and maintain an erection sufficient for sexual intercourse. The man may want to feel aroused but not have erection, or get one but lose it before intercourse or ejaculation. Or he may get an erection that is not firm enough for penetration. The cause may be organic, to do with illness, fatigue, age or medication, or psychological, or mixture of both. Impotence is a shared problem. It affects both of you, yet often it seems that the male takes total responsibility for what he perceives as his failure. Impotence is rarely to do with physical attractiveness alone, though big physical changes may create their own problems.
Part of the problem in our perception of impotence lies within the symbolic aspect of the sexual act and the way in which male think about themselves as sexual people. The self esteem and confidence they have in their everyday lives is tied in with this perception. It may be sometimes harder for the man to cope with a wider sense of failure, such as the loss of a job, than the failure to maintain an erection from time to time.
The sex act is by its very nature and history, an aggressive act. The female partner receives the penis, it enters her, and the man penetrates with his penis. One enters the other, and testosterone fueled erection enable this to happen. The words associated with this activity are strong, masculine words hard on, thrust, penetrate, erect, impregnate, and ejaculate. If a woman does not always have an orgasm, or sometimes does not even get aroused, it is unlikely to cause a major upset between the couple. The female will be the most likely to acknowledge to herself that she is overtired, unwell or simply not in the mood, and there is an end to it. Not so the anxious male. His masculinity is under question, he feels a failure, no matter what his partner say or does.
If you observed changes in your body regarding these problems, you are advise to see a physician or your doctor for proper medical check up and go on your knee and pray to God, with faith, he will heal you.