Girls lapping it up – what these Australian men are doing

Girls lapping it up -- what these Australian men are doing

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Prepare for the lasses to be making passes at you…

—–Important Message—–

This just in: Australian men doing this to “get it up” and have girls lapping it up…

Girls can’t resist a “big” man…a man brimming with confidence. Girls love a confident man and they want to have sex with him.

But what if you aren’t confident?

It turns out there is a super-simple way to become bulletproof in the bedroom and brim with confidence.

This is from Ryan:

It wasn’t Ryan’s fault.

It was his lizard brain…unfortunately… And our human brain MUST obey the lizard brain.

It’s how we’re built…

(The lizard brain makes us sweat, it makes us hyperventilate, it makes our heart pound in our chest, it puts butterflies in our stomach… That’s the lizard brain!)

Fortunately, I discovered a shortcut to becoming totally confident.

You’ll swagger through your office and the girls will be looking at you and wanting you…

Prepare for the lasses to be making passes at you…

Your wife or girlfriend will be stunned but she won’t know why…

But she WILL know that she can’t get enough of the “new you,” the bulletproof man in the bedroom who has awesome erections and is brimming with confidence…

…this video tells men how to get RID of performance anxiety so they can be free as a bird and have wonderful feelings and memories about sex again…

Here’s Ryan today:

This is how any man can be fearless and take any girl, any time, by totally and forever getting RID of anxiety around erections and sexual performance

—————–

Girls lapping it up – what these Australian men are doing

The Australian men might be doing something different, because in the entire continent the number of HIV notifications have fallen to the lowest number of diagnoses since 2010, with 963 notifications in 2017.

And it’s probably because of aspirin!

Aspirin can kill viruses and can even prevent AIDS.

It may cure you – or prevent you from getting something else, even cancer.

Take AIDS, for example…

Big purple lesions on your arms, pneumonia, raging infections all over your body.

This is what often happens when an HIV infection turns into AIDS.

This is not something you want to die from.

It attacks your body from the inside out. And for most people is a very painful and difficult death.

HIV is treatable once you have it.

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But it’s much better to prevent HIV from turning to AIDS in the first place.

And you can keep it from turning into AIDS, but the medication regimen is very expensive.

Condoms can help prevent the spread of HIV by limiting bodily fluid contact, but they don’t work 100% of the time – and some people can’t or won’t use them.

There is also a regimen called PrEP that can be used to prevent HIV infection if you are in a very high-risk situation where you could contract HIV.

But it’s expensive too.

Since many of the treatments for HIV and HIV prevention are expensive, scientists are always looking for ways to prevent HIV infection at lower costs.

And they may have found it in a safe, inexpensive drug: aspirin.

Before I get into how this works (and it really is a breakthrough), I need to give you a disclaimer.

I’m not in any way advocating risky sexual behavior.

It’s important that you know your risks and adjust your behavior accordingly.

I’m also NOT saying to get off a PrEP regimen or HIV maintenance drugs if you are already on them.

You should always work with your doctor when going off any pharmaceuticals.

What I am doing is reporting to you another remarkable thing that aspirin can do.

Aspirin was one of the original “wonder drugs” – and it seems like we’ve only scratched the surface of what it’s capable of.

Okay, now that’s out of the way, let’s take a look at why aspirin could work to prevent HIV…

And this is important information even if you aren’t at risk for contracting HIV…

Not everyone who is exposed to HIV ends up contracting the disease.

Lots of people exposed to it don’t get it at all.

That’s because HIV requires a “susceptible target cell” to take hold.

If you have fewer of these target cells, you are less likely to contract HIV.

Target cells occur more often where inflammation is present.

Inflammation, especially inflammation that is out of control, causes a cascade of problems that leave you susceptible to many diseases.

“Transmission of the virus requires a susceptible target cell in the human host. Activated immune cells are more susceptible to HIV infection than resting cells. And it is known that inflammation brings activated HIV target cells to the female genital tract.”

Aspirin is an inexpensive, well-tolerated anti-inflammatory (which is why regular use has benefits for lots of diseases).

Scientists wanted to see if aspirin would reduce the inflammation and thus reduce the “susceptible target cells” that allow HIV to be transmitted.

“…the researchers found that aspirin was the most effective anti-inflammatory drug.”

Amazingly, the aspirin regimen worked!

“It reduced the number of HIV target cells in the female genital tract by 35 percent.”

Scientists aren’t sure how effective this strategy will be for long-term HIV prevention, but it does show a lot of promise.

Women who are naturally resistant to contracting HIV have a similarly lowered number of target cells as the women who took the aspirin.

“The reduced number of HIV target cells in the women who took aspirin approached the level found in Kenyan women at high risk of HIV contraction who have remained uninfected for many years.”

It’s exciting that such a low-cost and well-proven drug could have such a significant effect.

But I think the most important takeaway from this study is how controlling inflammation controls susceptibility to disease.

The anti-inflammatory effect of aspirin is significant.

Inflammation causes so many chronic diseases – dementia, heart disease, diabetes, and more.

So it’s interesting to think about what using a small-dose, well-tolerated anti-inflammatory such as aspirin could do to prevent these diseases as well.

If you’re on a blood thinner such as Heparin, then you don’t want to take aspirin daily because aspirin thins the blood.

But, otherwise, aspirin may be a good bet to help prevent a wide variety of chronic health conditions that are triggered by an out-of-control inflammation response.

—-Keep reading if you’re curious. (Important Message)—-

Inflammatory killer chemical ruining men’s erections

This inflammatory killer chemical builds up in the bloodstream…

Even one teaspoon of the inflammatory killer can kill erections and make men fat around the middle – as much as 10 pounds more fat with just a teaspoon of this inflammatory killer.

And this inflammatory killer enters your bloodstream from common activities, even exercise!

Even a teaspoon of blood fat wreaks inflammation havoc in your body.

Destroying the testosterone-producing Leydig cells…

…and causing you to have plaque build-up in your blood vessels and even in your penile chambers…

I developed this simple program to eliminate fat this way… And look what happened with one of my students, Jerry:

Click here to discover what Jerry did to raise his T and get “diamond cutter” erections and sexual performance again – by eliminating blood fat.

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Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
An aspirin a day may keep HIV away, study finds https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-08-aspirin-day-hiv.htmlUsing safe, affordable and accessible non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs to reduce the number of HIV target cells in the blood and at the female genital tract https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jia2.25150

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