Posts Tagged ‘sexuality’

Defining “bioidentical”

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010 by Bat Sheva Marcus LMSW MPH PhD

There is so much confusion and misinformation when it comes to “bioidentical hormones.” Let me see if I can clarify a little: 

  • “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “organic.”
  • “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “natural.”
  • “Bioidentical hormones” does not mean that the hormones are “not really hormones.”

 “Bioidentical hormones” means that the chemical makeup of the hormones exactly matches the chemical makeup in the same hormones in your body. It can be man-made but the molecular components are exactly the same as that same hormone in your body. For example, if you look at bioidentical estrogen under a microscope it would look exactly the same as the estrogen your body makes. It could have been created all chemically, in a laboratory, but the components of the compound match your body.

 “Hmmmm…” you ask, why would anyone make non-bioidentical hormones to replace those in your body. Well, for one thing bioidentical hormones can’t be patented. The same way you can’t patent water, unless you add some flavorings to it, you can’t patent estrogen unless there is something different about your estrogen. So drug companies are incented to change the chemical compound. Sometimes makers of specific hormones suggest that the difference they have made is a “good” difference and thus justify the changes. We haven’t found that to be the case. In general we find that women seem to respond better to bioidentical hormones.

 But don’t worry about the drug companies. Now that many realize that women prefer the bioidentical compounds they have found ways to patent their product by developing better or unique delivery systems: a specific cream to hold the compound, a patch, a pellet.

 So, if a practitioner wants to prescribe a hormone, you can discuss the options intelligently. For more information you can read these two articles, the first is authored by the Mayo Clinic and is a negatively predisposed to bioidentical hormones; the next comes out of Harvard Medical School and is more balanced. Let us know your thoughts!

Erotica for the blind

Monday, May 3rd, 2010 by Bat Sheva Marcus LMSW MPH PhD

Here’s an interesting article about a new sexy book with a twist. It’s been written and produced for the blind.

‘Tactical Mind’ is billing itself as the first erotic book for blind people and it incorporates raised sexually explicit images as well as erotic descriptions in Braille. The book has received a great deal of attention recently by mainstream newspapers here and abroad. “Porn you can touch,” was how it was described by the  New York Daily News.
  
The author, Lisa Murphy, is a photographer who observed, as many of us do, the sexualization of , well, everything and she decided to create a new venue for pornography – tactile erotica.  She wasn’t sure it would appeal to a large crowd, more, that she worked hard on the idea and was commited to it.  “I’d been dragging it around to erotic fairs for the last two years,” Murphy commented. “It was a labor of love and I never expected to make any money from it.”

It certainly seems like it involved a great deal of labor as the author used friends to pose for pictures and then created sculptures for each one. It took her hundreds of hours.

 What I find particularly fascinating about this project is that too often the physically challenged get left behind in an erotic world. We somehow think they “don’t really count.” Or aren’t sexual beings. It’s always important to recognize that all of us, yes all of us, deserve healthy ways to attend to our sex lives.  

 If you want to read more about the project click here: http://www.france24.com/en/20100417-tactical-mind-first-erotic-book-blind-lisa-murphy-canada

sting article about a new sexy book with a twist. It’s been written and produced for the blind! ‘Tactical Mind’ is billing itself as the first erotic book for blind people and it incorporates raised sexually explicit images as well as erotic descriptions in Braille. The magazine has received a great deal of attention recently by mainstream newspapers here and abroad. “Porn you can touch,” was how it was described by the New York Daily News. “I’d been dragging it around to erotic fairs for the last two years,” Murphy commented. “It was a labor of love and I never expected to make any money from it.” It certainly seems like it involved a great deal of labor as the author used friends to pose for pictures and then created sculptures for each one. It took her hundreds of hours. What I find particularly fascinating about this project is that too often the physically handicapped get left behind in an erotic world. We somehow think they “don’t really count.” Or aren’t sexual beings. It’s always nice to see someone or something pay positive attention to the sex lives of the handicapped. If you want to read more about the project click here: http://www.france24.com/en/20100417-tactical-mind-first-erotic-book-blind-lisa-murphy-canada

Ever wonder a cervix looks like?

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009 by Shannon Bertha, ACS, PhD

I, like many people are fascinated when television shows surgeries that are being performed or one that takes you inside an emergency room.  Anything, where I can take a look inside a human body and marvel at its many functions, working together in unison.  It is one thing to see a diagram or chart, a very different thing to see the real thing.  In this day of technological advances, we are able to peer in the human body and actually see parts of the human body. 

Check out:  http://www.beautifulcervix.com/ photos-of- cervix/

A 25-year-old woman took pictures of her cervix, everyday, for a month.  Look at the changes one can see just within one cycle of a woman’s period.  Not many of us, usually just people who perform gyno exams, have gotten this type of view.