APHRODISIACS
(Investigator 60, 1998 May)
MORE OF WHAT YOU ARE
Aphrodisiacs are foods, chemicals or routines which are said to make you more of a man or more of a woman.
ALMOST ANYTHING HAS QUALIFIED
The word "aphrodisiac" comes from Aphrodite. Aphrodite, according to
Homer, was the Goddess of Pure and Heavenly Love. In Greek mythology
the sea god Uranus was castrated by one of his sons and the genitals
tossed into the sea. A foam formed around them and Aphrodite emerged.
Almost anything, so it seems, has been considered an aphrodisiac at some time:
Lilies; Onions; hyena eyes; peppermint oil; fish; goat testicles;
honey; chocolate; broad beans; bull testicles; carrots; coriander; nail
parings; wormwood (dangerous in large doses because it contains a
hallucinogen); watercress; oysters (Casanova ate fifty every evening);
vitamin E; alcohol; almonds; artichokes (these actually cause more wind
than sex); strawberries; various herbs; frog's legs; seeds of the plant
Acacia farnesia (which worked by repelling mosquitoes which distract
from sex); pepper (consumed in quantity this also supposedly repelled
mosquitoes); oats; shark fin soup; apple soaked in the lover's armpit
sweat; asparagus; sparrow's tongue; marzipan; the full moon. Of course
the last is not eaten but works psychologically.
Peter Taberner in Aphrodisiacs: The Science and the Myth (1985) listed 500 supposed aphrodisiacs!
The ancient Romans thought that parsley, one of the most common herbs,
"promotes body heat". If a lady didn't say "Yes" the guy would
surreptitiously drop parsley seeds into her drink!
Arabs used to seek extra pep by consuming crocodile eyes. Asians,
particularly the Chinese and Japanese, consume powdered rhinoceros
horn. Rhinoceros horn is not bone but keratin — very similar to what
fingernails are made of. A writer in Investigator
No. 9 joked: "Potentially therefore, powdered Australian finger nail
clippings could become a lucrative export commodity to Asia."
In Hong Kong Prince Charles was handed a deer's tail and told it would
cure impotence and improve virility. ''I'd better try it," the Prince
said. (Sunday Mail 1989, 11th November, p. 19)
Investigator Magazine inquired
of Princess Diana whether: "Charles' virility has noticeably improved."
A reply from the "Lady-in-Waiting" noted the question had been received
but omitted to supply the answer. (Investigator 1990, No. 14, pp 14-15)
Investigator No. 24 mentioned a Sydney publication, New Age News, which claimed information on achieving 24-minute-long orgasms!
WARNING
By way of warning that you get professional counsel before trying
anything out that you know little about consider some negative
happenings.
In a segment called Believable Or Not in Investigator No.3 it said:
POOR PERFORMANCE. A New
York man who injected cocaine into his penis to enhance sexual
performance developed gangrene after a 3-day erection. Doctors
amputated 2 legs, 9 fingers and the penis.
Reject any supposed aphrodisiac that you don't know about. Spanish fly,
for example, is a beetle which is ground up and either eaten or applied
to the genitals. Its active ingredient is cantharides, an irritant
poison that inflames the penis and makes it bigger and seemingly ready.
However, the resulting erection is painful and non functional. Spanish
fly can lead to urinary problems, strokes, gastroenteritis, kidney
damage and death. Nothing stops sex entirely like death!
A report in the Sunday Mail of
1954 told of an office manager who poisoned two female typists with
coconut ice containing the poison cantharidin and was sentenced for
manslaughter:
[The Chief Justice]
told Ford [the office manager]: "Miss Grant was not apparently willing
to submit to your desires, but you were determined to administer to her
an aphrodisiac or what you believed to be an aphrodisiac..."
(June 19)
In 1909 a dozen officers at the headquarters of the Austrian General
Staff each received a packet of pills and a letter claiming the pills
were an antidote to loss of virility and: "Take two, one at a time with
water about an hour or two before intercourse is to take place. Amazing
results…"
The pills contained potassium cyanide and one officer died. They were
an attempt at revenge by a member of the Military Academy class of 1905
who hadn't progressed as well as the others. It's a good lesson not to
consume substances you know nothing about supplied by strangers! (The
Poisoned Potency Pills, Headlines No. 33, May 1974)
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry
reported on four people in New Brunswick who took clomipramine an
anti-depressant drug. The side effect was orgasms whenever they yawned
and one took to wearing condoms constantly.
APHRODISIACS (?) APLENTY
Here we'll consider some magazine and newpaper articles on the topic of potency:
How nutrition can Boost Your Sex Powers (Health Today 1975, No. 14 p. 12)
This one-page article claimed, "Physicians have discovered that the
sexual 'fountain of youth' is boosted and extended when the body is
adequately nourished."
"Potent foods" include (l) fish, garlic and watercress because these
provide iodine, (2) protein (fish, poultry, eggs, beans, cheese, nuts)
which keeps the thyroid gland working, (3) lecithin and B-complex
vitamins to maintain the pituitary which "dictates sexual power", (4)
sunflower, pumpkin seeds, nuts, herring, liver, wheat germ, mushroom
and onions because these have zinc which is "Nature's sex tonic."
Aphrodisiacs: Do They Really Work? (The National Times, September 13, 1981)
A client requested "frolic acid and rootin' tablets. "Unfortunately,
explained naturopath Dorothy Hall, there are no aphrodisiacs: "There
are herbal confidence raisers, but that's all they raise." Ginseng
stimulates the pituitary "to conduct the body orchestra a little
faster".
Zinc & Sex (Health Today 1984)
This was an advertisement for a zinc supplement and said, "Oysters ...
are rich in an essential nutrient crucial to sexual maturity and
fertility." The ad listed other rich sources of zinc — meat, liver,
eggs, seafood and of course "ZinGo" the zinc supplement.
Passion Potion (Australasian Post, February 20, 1988)
Grandmother Kath Campbell had another baby at 55 and became Britain's
oldest mother. She attributed this to an aphrodisiac cocktail
consisting of, "one bottle of guinness, two eggs, sugar, rum, brandy or
gin, goat's milk and grated nutmeg."
Herbal Aphrodisiacs (Simply Living, Volume 3, No. 10)
A discussion about Aphrodite and other myths followed by a summary of
herbal tonics and stimulants: Damino (which contains female hormones
and deactivates menopause), Wormwood (for males), Saw Palmetto Berries
(used to cure frigidity and make breasts bigger), Passion Flower,
Calamus, Mint, Valerian, Muira Puma (for "rituals of love and
fertility"), and Mandrake (a "love charm to attract a lover").
There's a fly in my soup! (Truth, April 28, 1990)
Canadian romeos "sharpen their sexual appetites" with pea pod soup.
French honeymooners drink tomato soup. Swedes consume reindeer antler
soup and South Sea Islanders shark broth!
Did You Know (The News, October 22,1990)
When first introduced to Europe potatoes were considered an
aphrodisiac. This pushed their price per pound to $500 in 16th century
Europe!
Ginseng has the power of love (Sunday Mail, June 16, 1991)
Ginseng is a perennial plant which grows to 30cm and has
greenish-yellow flowers and small, red, edible fruit. The nutrients are
in the roots. Ginseng "works through the glands" and "is most suitable
in the treatment of sexual impotence in men."
Slugging it out in a sea of love (The Advertiser, October 9, 1992)
This report said six licenses have been issued to harvest northern
Australian sea slugs known as "trepang": "The slugs were a delicacy in
Asia and were thought to be effective as an aphrodisiac."
Asian markets hooked on eels (The Advertiser, October 31, 1992)
"Eels are wriggling their way up Australia's export list" said this
news item. Considered a pest in Queensland the eels are an aphrodisiac
in Asia and sell there for $25 per kilo.
Old bid to cash in on cane toad (The Advertiser, March 4, 1993)
This press cutting told of Queensland entrepreneurs being helped to
"hop on to demand for cane toad venom which is used overseas in herbal
medicine" and "was also popular as an aphrodisiac."
Oxygen powers the potent penis (New Scientist, March 13, 1993)
Successful erection depends on production of nitric oxide in nerves to
the penis and by the cell-lining of some penile blood vessels.
Production of nitric oxide in turn is enhanced by high levels of
oxygen. The blood in an erect penis is fully oxygenated.
Suggested the New Scientist writer: "Forget the oysters — reach for the oxygen cylinder."
Your Sex drive Bigger and better with bodybuilding? asked Jerry Brainum in Muscle & Fitness
magazine. His answer was, "Short-term, maximal exercise, such as weight
training, appears to raise testosterone levels." However, extended
endurance exercise such as long distance running "lowers testosterone
levels in men." (p. 98)
Sex key to younger look (The Advertiser, July 31, 1993)
By studying 3000 volunteers whose youthful appearance belied their age,
Edinburgh psychologist Dr Weeks concluded, "The best route to looking
younger lies in the bed-room." However, ''you need to make it last for
at least 20 panting, hip-swiveling minutes, working up a sweat and
maintaining the pace…"
(Obvious question: Is the reverse true instead — does youth and/or
youthful looks act as an aphrodisiac and promote longer, more vigorous
sex?)
New sex pep pill stalled in US (The Advertiser, July 31, 1993)
In 1990 the US Food and Drug Administration refused approval to further
test the drug quinelorane — "the world's first pharmaceutical
aphrodisiac". The reason was that the drug causes nausea. There was
also concern about its effect on sex offenders! The reporter, Melissa
King, suggested, "Don't put away your oysters, powdered rhinoceros
horns and Chinese herbal potions just yet."
Love potion perks up a panicky penis (New Scientist, August 21, 1993)
Two Israeli scientists developed the substance "Stearyl-VIP" a mixture
of stearic acid and vasoactive intestinal peptide. When applied to the
penis it penetrates pores and blood vessels and produces an erection
without side effects. Tests on castrated rats suggest Stearyl-VIP will
cure some kinds of impotence or improve performance.
Seal penis trade boom (Sunday Mail, November 7, 1993)
This item said that a Chinese syndicate wanted Canadian sealers to chop
seal penises off for export to Asia. At $75 each the penises are valued
for alleged aphrodisiac qualities.
Canned 'love potion' export winner (The Advertiser, January 22, 1994)
Abalone, canned in Tasmania and in Adelaide, sells in South East Asia
for $45 per 425g can. Asians consider abalone an aphrodisiac and "The
demand ... is virtually insatiable."
Tiger extinct 'in six years' (The Advertiser, April 18, 1994)
This report said that 700 tigers are killed by poachers every year for
their bones, penises, pelts and meat: "Tiger penis soup, sold for up to
$500 a bowl in Taiwan, is taken by men in an attempt to revive their
sexual prowess."
Scientists unlock secret of a woman's arousal (The Advertiser, July 1, 1994)
"Alcohol may act as a female aphrodisiac because it stimulates the
production of sex hormones, according to a new study." The hormone
which increased as drink increased is testosterone. The effect was more
marked during the fertile stage of the menstrual cycle.
Impotency clinics raise hopes (The Australian, May 29, 1996)
Impotency clinics began in 1990 and in 1996 Sydney had twenty. Most
cases are treated "as if the problem is physical or mechanical" rather
than psychological. The clinics teach clients to inject a solution into
the penis with a needle and [they] make additional profit by selling
the injecting solution.
MORE ABOUT ALCOHOL
The Great Australian Sex Survey done via the Sunday Mail revealed:
…the single most
popular food or drink among respondents for creating a sexy mood is
alcohol, with a staggering 79% using it as an aphrodisiac.
(What feeds your passion November 17, 1996)
However, The Advertiser reported Beer, meat linked to impotence
(December 27, 1997). A British sex therapist attributed impotence to
the female hormone oestrogen which is prevalent in beer and also
commonly used to alter fat distribution in meat production.
Booze — the bitter pill (Sydney Morning Herald, May 20, 1993)
Research is cited showing that abuse of alcohol may cause impotence as
well as aggression and ill health. In moderation it lowers inhibitions
and increases desire.
Alcohol "provokes the desire but it takes away the performance." (Macbeth)
Too much drink can also make you no lover at all. Abuse of alcohol can
wreck your brain, destroy your liver, atrophy your testicles and make
you impotent and sterile. Who wants all of that??
IMPOTENCE PILL — "SEX FIVE TIMES IN A NIGHT"
Pill for impotence (Sunday Mail, March 29, 1998)
The drug Viagra is Food & Drug Administration approved and may help
30 million Americans who have "erectile dysfunction" including cases
caused by spinal cord injury, diabetes and emotional problems.
Loaded Gun (The Weekend Australian, April 25-26, 1998)
"Viagra works by enhancing the natural method." A worry is that healthy
men "might eat the pills like lollies" and "have sex five times in a
night" leading to unforeseen side effects.
FOR GOOD SEX EAT RIGHT AND LIVE RIGHT
A. Yates and W. Wolman in Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality say that no drug or food is a true aphrodisiac. Perhaps Viagra changes that, but it costs $USl0 ($A15) per pill.
What else, therefore, can you do?
Find out about a balanced diet which contains all the nutrients you
need and eat it! Find out about exercise appropriate for you and do it!
Know how to live so as to be interesting and live that way! Discover
how to be romantic and loving and be these things! Study physical and
behavioral techniques from books like The New Sensual Massage and Keep Love Alive.
Right food, right attitudes and right behavior are the safest "aphrodisiacs".
Sex-research pioneer Alfred Kinsey recommended five true aphrodisiacs:
exercise, good food, fresh air, sufficient sleep, and sunshine.
In a book on how weather effects people Stephen Rosen wrote, "When
temperature rises, blood vessels near the skin's surface dilate, and
both men and women feel more relaxed and sexy."
Consider all of these things and be a sexual winner!
P. D.