Normal Sexual Desire for Men
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If one accepts the opinion that sexuality in general and sexual desire in particular may be different in men and women, another question quickly follows: when regarding sexual desire, what is normal for men? A corollary to this question is: since there is a general understanding that sexual activity shifts with age, what represents normal sexual desire for men as they get older?
An exceptional source of information on men and sexuality (including sexual desire) is the Massachusetts Male Aging Study (MMAS), a survey that involved a random sample of men in the common population aged 40 70, and one in which questions were asked about sexual issues from the viewpoint of both behaviour and subjective thinking. A total of 1709 men participated in the study. A self-administered questionnaire included 23 items on such sex-related subjects as: satisfaction; oftenness of activity; oftenness of desire; frequence of thoughts, fantasies, or erotic dreams; oftenness of erections and erectile difficulties; orgasm difficulties; genital pain; oftenness of ejaculation; and attitudes to sexual changes with age. Studies were divided into two categories: behavioral and subjective phenomena. Only the latter will receive comment here, as sexual desire is a personal phenomenon (which, indeed, might have behavioral consequences but far from always).
Results of the survey pointed a consistent and profound fall with age in feeling desire, in sexual thoughts and dreams, and in the desired level of sexual activity. The decline in sexual interest neither preceded nor followed a similar decline in sexual behaviour or events. They appeared to occur together. Since the data were cross-sectional, it was not possible to answer the question about which came first . . . there was no evidence here of a disjunction between the level of sexual activity desired and the level of activity actually reported; it is not the case that as men age they desire at a level that is different from that which they report. Nevertheless, the authors also found that satisfaction did not follow the same path in that . . . men in their sixties reported levels of satisfaction with their sex life and partners at about the same level as younger men in their forties.
The authors of the MMAS considered many factors that might be associated with the decline in sexual interest and found that aging and its social correlates . . . were strongly predictive of reduced involvement with sexual activity . . . (and that) . . . good health was associated with more involvement . . . The authors concluded that the MMAS study, by considering men in their middle years, goes part way towards filling the gap of up-to-date normative data available to inform clinicians as to the usual levels of activity and interest of normally aging men. |
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Author Resource:-
David Crawford is the CEO and owner of a does penis enlargement work company known as Male Enhancement Group which is dedicated to researching and comparing male enhancement products in order to determine which male enhancement product is safer and more effective than other products on the market. Copyright 2010 David Crawford of vigrx plus This article may be freely distributed if this resource box stays attached.
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By :
David Jamesonsess
Submitted
2010-07-06 01:58:51 |
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