martes, 3 de mayo de 2011

Discover Why Herbal Viagra May Be Your Best Investment Yet

Herbal viagra - you must have certainly heard of this term already. It is probable that you are looking for information on this, that's why you landed here. The term itself has only recently been coined. Due to recent discoveries in the science of herbs, modern medicine has indeed a tremendous facelift. One of the aspects of this medical revolution is that modern medicine is being ruled by a new trend: that of going back to the past for inspiration. Hence, while order cialis was the talk of the town a few years back, its herbal form - or herbal cheap cialis - is now stealing the show.

So, what is the purpose of herbal viagra? Research in the medical field has shown that the penis can indeed get bigger beyond its current size in a fully erect state. The penis is designed to grow, much like the other muscle groups in the body. Therefore, a man has every right to want a bigger penis and harder erections on demand.Indeed, it is no secret that traditional medicine has been trying to cater to these needs of men since a long time ago.Having realized this, modern medicine has only recently created the herbal alternative to viagra to satisfy the demand among the male population worldwide for greater penis size and girth, as well as sexual potency.

Despite their differences, the basic principle behind Viagra and its herbal alternatives are similar. The male penis is made up of 3 chambers - 2 larger ones on top, which comprise the erectile tissue (Corpora Cavernosa) and one tiny chamber at the base, from which one urinates and ejaculates (Corpus Spongisum). The pills feed the cells in the Corpora Cavernosa with specific nutrients so that it grows strong enough to retain the blood filled in during an erection. Now, modern medicine has even tested the herbs and aphrodisiacs used in traditional medicine centuries ago. It has been discovered that some of them actually do contain valued nutrients that can increase the capacity limit of the Corpora Cavernosa, thus allowing more blood to enter the cavern creating a longer and thicker erection. These discoveries resulted in the birth of the herbal viagra, which by the way, is considered safer than the actual blue pill.

Indeed, modern medicine has embarked on a serious research of alternative forms of viagra because of the latter's unexpected bad side effects. In comparison, herbal viagra is considered safe without any adverse side effects to the user. Nowadays, more and more people are opting for safer herbal remedies in place of the more dangerous prescription medicine. And this is true not only regarding herbal viagra as opposed to Viagra itself, but even in other areas such as beauty products, and even pain relief where natural alternatives are favored.

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Comics! The Doctor is in!


A slim week for Pepito's stolen comics this week ... although not slim enough to prevent him from sniffing out at least SOME crap! He picked out this new J. Michael Straczynski hack-job 'Bullet Points,' after all ...

.... Still, some of the crap he picked out didn't LOOK like crap on the surface. This is certainly true of the latest 52, which was boring, hyperventilated, and completely unsatisfying.

I've noticed this about '52' - some of the issues (like the last one) work perfectly, managing to deliver an enjoyable comic book while at the same time being part of a much larger storyline. And some of them both don't do that and also suck. This was such an issue.

There's a lot of shouting in it - poor, bereaved Elongated Man gets the vengeance-inflicting powers of the Spectre just long enough to make the soul of his wife's murderer suffer for all e-teerrrrrnity, and Eclipso comes in for a bit, dunno why ...

But the issue wasn't a total loss: it had a wonderful backup feature detailing the origin of Black Canary, with rip-snorting good pencils by the mighty Howard Chaykin. Which made me wistful! Chaykin seems to be 'back' - willing and able to do mainstream comic work ... so why not a mini-series about the original Black Canary, the mother of the current one? That would be Canar-ific!

And even Pepito, with his crap-sense tingling, couldn't pass up the second issue of the great new purchase cialis Strange mini-series 'The Oath.'

The thing I love about this title is that its writer, Brian Vaughan, is smart enough not to re-invent the wheel. His Stephen Strange is looser and funnier than any previous incarnation (hands-down favorite line of comic book dialogue in 2006 happens in this issue: when confronted with a cadre of killer robots, the good cialis says "By the hoary #%*-ing hosts!" Hee), but he's still the same character Stan Lee and Steve Ditko created decades ago, and for good reason: that character works.

So, no 'he's really an alien' or 'secondary mutations' or any of that nonsense. This is still the man who was a brilliant but arrogant surgeon, who lost the skill of his hands in a car accident, and he learned the mystic arts from the Ancient One. In fact, this issue's best sequence is a flashback showing us just how big a jerk the pre-accident Stephen Strange was.

(and post-accident, as when the recovering Strange says he feels 'like suing whoever made seatbelts too damned uncomfortable for any reasonable man to wear')

Two things are certain about this mini-series: first, it will be collected in a nice trade paperback (so Pepito really shouldn't be buying it, but let's not tell him that)(he won't read it here, since this site has nothing to do with Menudo), and second, it will certainly re-launch a monthly Doctor Strange comic - let's hope the creators of the mini-series stay on board!

Let's finish up with some Doctor Strange trivia, to keep my little marmosets on their toes:

1. The presence of the Night Nurse in this issue raises the question: how many super-heroes have also been practicing members of the medical community? A full list, from memory!

2. In addition to his vast mystic abilities (learned from the Ancient One) and his considerable martial arts abilities (learned from who knows who - there's a great mini-series to be mined from the time when Strange and Mordo were students), Doctor Strange also has one other rather unusual superhero-trait. From memory, no peeking - what is it?

3. The good doctor knows at least one real-world literary giant - who can tell me who it is?

OK ... by the Vapors of Valtorr, by the hosts of Hoggoth, and by the Belches of Beepy, that's all for now!