Grow jobs
Why penis enlargement is poised to become the next big thing
by Chris Wright
Until a few years ago, Tom Hubbard didn't put much stock in penis
enlargement."I'd never heard of it, assumed it wasn't possible," he says. "I started listening to [motivational speaker] Brian Tracy tapes, and one question he asked was, `What's the one thing you'd
want if you didn't know it was impossible?' Despite my embarrassment, after
some reflection I realized I wanted a bigger dick, period."
Newly inspired, he looked into the possibilities. After four months of
squeezing, slapping, and stretching his penis, Tom Hubbard (not his real name)
became a believer.
"It's been a magical, empowering `personal growth' experience," Hubbard writes,
of the inch or so he's gained. Indeed, Hubbard was so won over that he launched
a free Web site devoted to the subject. Judging from the hundreds of thousands
of men who have logged on to All About Penis Enlargement, Hubbard was not alone
in his desire for a bigger dick. Not by a long shot.
"Almost all guys are convinced that their penises are not large enough," says
Derek Polonsky, a sex therapist in Brookline. "This is something that guys have
struggled with for ages."
Aline Zoldbrod, a Lexington-based sex therapist, agrees. "Penis size," she
says, "is men's number-one concern."
Traditionally, however, it hasn't been one that men are willing to talk openly
about. It's a very rare occurrence indeed to have a man lean across a table and
confide, I have a small penis. Even today, when boob jobs are discussed
more openly than nose jobs were a decade ago, penis enlargement maintains its
aura of furtive shame -- one area where men have proved far more self-conscious
about body image than women. As Hubbard puts it, quoting Thoreau, "The mass of
men lead lives of quiet desperation."
But this may be changing.
Over the past year, Americans have been privy to a parade of high-profile
peckers -- beginning, of course, with the Starr Report, which put the
presidential tackle up for public perusal, and gaining momentum when Bob Dole
discussed his shortcomings in TV spots for Viagra. With each prime-time mention
of erectile dysfunction, each front-page account of the commander-in-chief's
penile peccadilloes, the taboo surrounding public discussion of the male
unmentionables has been further undermined.
Indeed, men's quiet desperation became something of a cacophony last year when
organizers of a golf tournament in Sanctuary Cove, Australia, offered
penis-enlargement surgery for the male competitor who hit the longest drive.
The tournament proved so popular that the Australian government has moved to
ban cosmetic-surgery incentives in sports.
"People are definitely becoming more willing to talk openly about it," says E.
Douglas Whitehead, president of the American Academy of Phalloplasty Surgeons.
"It's definitely out in the open right now."
POLONSKY ATTRIBUTES the penile bigger-is-better credo to what he calls "the
male-engineering model of sex -- namely, that you have to have a large piston
moving inside the cylinder; the bigger the piston, the better the operation."
Polonsky's analogy is apt, but man's obsession with size predates the
industrial revolution. Visitors to Dorset, England, are treated to the
spectacle of the Cernes Abbas Giant (circa second century AD), a 180-foot
figure cut into a chalk hillside, sporting a 25-foot erect todger. Japanese
pillow books are lavishly illustrated with guys sporting thigh-size hard-ons.
The Kama Sutra is packed with handsomely endowed lovers (or the "Ushvah," the
stallion man). Roman-era art is rife with images of the supernaturally sized
deity Priapus. From the obelisks of ancient Egypt to the skyscrapers of New
York, phallic imagery has dominated the popular imagination for millennia.
As Maggie Paley notes in The Book of the Penis (Grove Press), "Penises
are . . . the ultimate power symbols -- but that's big, erect
penises. No one builds an important building, or a rocket, in the shape of a
limp little dick."
For as long as cultures have valued penis size, men have found ways to bullyrag
the organ into immensity. In the 1995 book Penis Size and Enlargement:
Facts, Fallacies and Proven Methods (Hourglass Book Publishing) -- a
thumping tome containing tips, testimonials, and panoramic snapshots -- author
Gary Griffin cites the example of the Sadhu tribe of the upper Ganges, whose
men hang weights from their penises until they reach such dimensions
(reportedly up to 18 inches) that their owners have to tie a knot in them.
"There are accounts of Indian ascetics tying 100-pound weights to their dicks
and throwing the weight off of a cliff," Tom Hubbard says. "But these guys gave
up hard-ons years ago."
Such are the lengths that men will go to for more length.
"All men want to have larger penises -- all men," says Joel Kaplan, who makes a
living purveying penis pumps. "It's innate, part of being male. It goes back to
caveman times."
FOR YEARS, in America at least, penis enlargement has been a kind of squalid
punch line, a sweaty, secret pursuit -- a thing of brittle gadgets,
Swedish-language warranties. To some extent, this perception still endures, but
the popularity of a how-to book such as Griffin's -- now in its eighth printing
-- suggests that penis enlargement may be edging closer to the mainstream.
You can chalk this up in part to innovations in surgery, but even more so to
the Internet, which is, as always, wired directly into our loins. A quick
search on Yahoo turns up scores of sites dedicated to the burgeoning industry:
A1 Penis Enlargement, Big Penis, Absolute Penis.com, Penis of Steel, Penis
Pros. "How would you feel right now if your penis were two inches longer?" Many
of the sites sport before-and-after shots, forlorn little puds followed by
strapping, bruised-looking danglers. "You can have a larger penis!"
New medium, same old promises? Perhaps. But the Internet also offers
penis-enlargement enthusiasts something they haven't had access to before:
straightforward dialogue.
Oscar Wilde said, "Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give a
man a mask and he will tell you the truth." Wilde would have loved Internet
chat rooms. Emboldened by anonymity, guys with cybernyms like Bruiser and
WideGuy speak earnestly and openly about their fears, their triumphs, their
hopes, their flops. "I ALWAYS hot wrap before I exercise, this helps to keep
from bruising." "Hey, I'm glad to see you've had substantial
gains. . . . My question is, how do you keep the wrist weight
from falling off of the penis?" "I went from being 4.25 to 5.5 flaccid, and
7.25X6 to 8.75X6.5 when erect."
The tone here -- hi-fi buffs discussing ways to soup up their systems --
highlights one of the most remarkable aspects of the new attitude toward penis
enlargement. Traditionally, the image of the do-it-yourself enlarger has been
that of a loner, hunched over himself in the sanctuary of a locked room, a
penis pump in one hand and the offending pud in the other.
The emerging Web sites -- with their statistics, methodologies, expert
testimonials -- have shined the cleansing light of science on the proceedings.
Penis enlargement even has its own abbreviation -- "PE" -- which itself lends
an air of legitimacy. More important, PE sites have introduced an element of
community. You are not alone, they say. You are not a pervert, a dud,
a sucker. You are one of us. Suddenly, penis enlargement is a matter of
self-improvement rather than self-abuse.
ONE OF the most popular PE sites around is PenileFitness.com. The creation of a
21-year-old entrepreneur named Brandon Reece, the site has been in existence
for a little more than a year, during which time it has received six million
hits. In all, 50,000 men have forked over $39.95 to learn the secrets of
Reece's complete workout. ("Pull your penis directly out in front of you until
you feel a good stretch in the middle of your penis and at the base. Hold this
stretch for a 10-count and repeat three more times. Now slap your penis against
your leg about 50 times to get the blood back in where you have been
squeezing.")
Reece's site is basically a compendium of accepted techniques, organized into a
regimen. There's visualization ("Focus on the size you want it to be"), hot
compresses, milking (manually squeezing blood into the semi-erect penis to
engorge and enlarge the erectile tissue); there are simple stretching
exercises; and there are Kegels, which involve flexing the muscle that
surrounds the anus and prostate.
An advanced regimen of the kinds of techniques listed in Reece's site can take
up to three hours a day, every day. The site promises possible gains of
anywhere between one and four inches in length, and an inch or so in girth.
Like all exercise, though, it's work. And yet, as Reece puts it, his
program has been "selling like hotcakes."
His success has not been lost on competitors. "Last year I could hardly find
any sites," says Reece. "Now there are over a hundred.
"Mimic, mimic, mimic," he says. "My lawyers are looking into it."
A similar feeding frenzy has broken out in the field of penis pumps, which
started out in the early '70s as a cottage industry and has escalated into a
retail free-for-all. Today, penis pumps are almost as numerous as breakfast
cereals: the Boston Brass, the Blue Veiner, the Bull Fighter ("Be a master in
the arena!"), the Stallion, the Big Bazooka, the Fireman's Pump ("For the man
who wants a REAL fire hose hanging between his legs").
Among the more high-tech -- and costly -- penis pumps on the market are those
sold by Joel Kaplan, which go for between $160 (for a manual pump) and $400
(for an electric). Though his products have been on the market for only about
eight years, Kaplan claims several innovations in pump design, including what
he calls "custom-fitted cylinders." His pumps are, he says, "the only product
that's FDA approved."
And yet Kaplan, too, complains that he's been plagued by imitators. "My sales
aren't necessarily increasing because of my competition," he says. "People are
copying me." The most flagrant example of this, he says, is a product called
Dr. Joe's Penis Pump. "I'm the original," Kaplan grumbles.
In truth, though, pumps came on the market a good 20 years before Kaplan began
selling his, and the practice has probably been around for much longer. The
pump technique is not complex: place the penis in a sealed chamber and suck out
all the air, creating a vacuum around the member, forcing blood into the
corpora cavernosa (the pockets that fill with blood during erections),
stretching and enlarging the penile tissue. You can add as many pressure gauges
and shatterproof cylinders and easy-squeeze triggers as you like -- we're still
talking grade-school science here.
Not surprisingly, Kaplan has no intention of suing his competition. "That's
capitalism," he says. "That's how America works."
And capitalism has wholeheartedly embraced penis enlargement. Guys willing to
shell out big bucks for an extra inch or two are outnumbered only by the people
willing to take their money. One enterprising company, according to an industry
insider, has a product based on the "African method" of penis enlargement:
"They sell you a rock for 20 bucks."
Though patently a rip-off, this isn't as crazy as it sounds. (Then again, in
the context of penis enlargement, nothing sounds crazy after a while.) Some men
hang 20-pound weights from their penises. Or they rig up elaborate suspensory
apparatus running from knee to dick, which yank the penis when they walk.
Others manually tug and twist their members for hours on end. There are
accounts of men applying wasp stings to their organs, or mustard. Some swear by
such exotic fare as bull's-penis soup. ("Chop up the BP, boil it for
1/2 hour. Add black-pepper pellets, onions, and your favorite veggie
and simmer.")
Then there are those who go to New York hypnotherapist Laurie Straub.
Like Reece, Straub got into the penis-enlargement business about a year ago.
Since then she has treated 700 to 800 men. Straub's treatment consists of a
12-week program of hypnosis, which is administered either by tape ($295) or in
one-on-one sessions ($150 per hour). Straub is aware that many might view her
as a "quack," she says, but she insists that her technique has its basis in
physiology: "I tap into the hypothalamus, same as any hypnotist. I make you
relaxed, but also in control of the neurotransmitters that tap into your
pituitary gland, which releases the hormones that make the penis grow."
BY FAR the most expensive technique -- up to $10,000 a go -- is phalloplasty,
cosmetic surgery to lengthen and thicken the penis. It's also the most
controversial.
"Surgical penile enlargement is not recommended or condoned by the American
Urological Association," says Winchester-based urologist Peter Tiffany. "The
benefits are considered to be questionable, and the risks are significant."
According to Tiffany, "These patients are usually more in need of psychological
counseling than surgery." In fact, Tiffany questions the ethics of anyone who
offers the procedure. "You think you're getting something but you're not," he
says. "You're being boondoggled."
Nonetheless, penis-enlargement surgeons have no difficulty finding clients.
Penis surgeon Whitehead estimates that, since phalloplasty came into its own in
the early '90s, 250,000 men worldwide have received the treatment. Half of
those have been in the US.
Traditional penile-enhancement surgery involves one or both of two basic
procedures. The first, to increase length, involves making an incision at the
base of the penis and snipping the ligament that anchors it to the pubic bone.
This causes the portion of the penis that is normally inside the body to fall
forward, giving the illusion of more length -- usually about an inch.
As in all operations, infection and scarring are a concern. But the most
unfortunate side effect of surgical elongation is inherent in the very
procedure. Cut loose, as it were, the penis becomes unstable, slipping and
shifting -- jarring -- during intercourse. Furthermore, to prevent
shrinkage during the healing process, patients must hang weights from their
penises for up to a few months following the procedure.
Perhaps even more daunting (given that this is supposed to be cosmetic
surgery), the penis can take on several rather uninviting visual qualities. For
one thing, without the ligament to keep it pulled upright, the newly enlarged
penis points south when erect. Then there's the "scrotal dog ears" syndrome,
which occurs when the penis sinks down into the scrotum, giving the appearance
of a long-nosed dog with bulbous ears. Furthermore, in its elongated state, the
penis tends to look a little, well, spindly.
And so there is a second surgical procedure, called a fat transfer, to add
girth to the penis. This operation involves liposuctioning fat from the
abdomen, inner thighs, or love handles and injecting it under the skin of the
penis. Patients can expect gains of about 30 percent in girth. But this
technique, too, is not without its drawbacks. "A lot of people think it feels
like breasts," Whitehead says.
And it gets worse. As many phalloplasty patients have discovered to their
horror, a fundamental characteristic of body fat is that it is reabsorbed,
often unevenly. The terrible irony is that guys who have worked so hard at
improving their penises often end up with something knobby and gnarled, like a
ginger root.
Not surprisingly, these technical glitches have left a lot of men less than 100
percent satisfied with their new penises. Gary Alter, until recently one of the
top phalloplasty surgeons in the country, has given up the procedure
altogether. "The complications were not something I wanted to deal with," he
says. These days, Alter spends a lot of his time reversing the damage
done by previous operations.
Although most men are too ashamed to go public over their mangled members,
those cases that do make it to court have resulted in some high-profile,
big-money lawsuits. In 1998, for instance, two men sued a Toronto surgeon for a
total of $6 million.
A few years ago, phalloplasty surgeons believed they had found a solution to
the girth problem in a process using something called a dermal graft. In this
procedure, strips of skin are removed from the patient's body, usually the
buttock region, and inserted in layers underneath the skin of the penis.
Because dermis -- or skin tissue -- doesn't reabsorb into the body the way fat
does, there is less chance of lumpiness. The procedure can leave nasty scars,
however. In the end, you're still robbing Paul to pay Peter.
Needless to say, surgical penile enhancement has found few friends outside the
phalloplasty industry.
"Do you realize how dangerous this stuff can be?" says Aline Zoldbrod. "There
are arteries in there, blood supplies. Hello? Leave your penis alone.
You'll burst yourself open."
"You generally should keep sharp things away from your penis," says Brandon
Reece.
"One would have to be nuts to go through these procedures," says Derek
Polonsky.
"Surgery sucks," says Tom Hubbard.
FOUR YEARS ago, Douglas Whitehead and other phalloplasty surgeons decided it
was time to "clean up shop" and founded an advisory body called the American
Academy of Phalloplasty Surgeons. And two years later, Whitehead hit upon a
method of girth enhancement that he believes will revolutionize the field. A
product called Alloderm, he says, will one day make a bigger, fatter penis
within the grasp of all men.
"I think it's going to be extremely popular," he says. "In five years this is
going to be one of the more popular male cosmetic procedures."
Whitehead got the idea for his technique by observing procedures used on burn
victims, who are treated with Alloderm to rebuild severely damaged tissue. Like
the dermal graft, Alloderm treatment entails layering dermis around the penis
-- "like a sandwich, a triple-decker sandwich" -- thereby avoiding the
lumpiness of fat grafts. Alloderm differs from the dermal skin graft, however,
in one important detail.
"Alloderm comes from a cadaver," says Whitehead. "It's purified cadaver
dermis."
Some have expressed concern that the Alloderm treatment could transmit disease,
perhaps even HIV. Whitehead calls this worry unfounded. "It's perfectly safe,"
he insists. "It's just like getting blood from a blood bank, only in this case
the tissue goes to a tissue bank."
Not everyone, however, is so breezy.
"Oh my God!" says Zoldbrod, fairly howling. "Who are they doing this for?
They're not doing it for women. That's not what female sexuality is about. Why
don't they do something useful, learn to kiss?"
Zoldbrod asks an extremely pertinent question: if not for women, who are
men stretching, snipping, stuffing, pumping, and slapping their penises for?
IN THE end, men do this for other men rather than for women," says Brandon
Reece. "It's a guy thing."
Which is not to say it's a gay thing, as Joel Kaplan is quick to point
out. "Many men are afraid that expressing a desire for a larger penis will make
people think they are homosexual," he says, "which is absolutely crazy. Most
people who buy my products are not gay."
The fact is, PE is once removed from the sexual act, gay or straight. It sounds
kind of disingenuous to say so, but penis size has as much to do with a sense
of power as it has to do with sex. "It's like the stockpiling of nuclear
weapons," says Reece. "Who has the biggest penis?"
Aline Zoldbrod tells the tale of a man who was competing in a bicycle race.
During a bathroom break, another cyclist peeked at the man's small penis and
remarked, "You'll never make it up the next hill with that thing." This story
illustrates a central fact: penis size is, at least in the eyes of other men,
inextricably linked not only to a man's sexual prowess, but to his strength,
his vitality, his very manhood.
"It's sad that people will subject themselves to this stuff so they can stand
in the locker room and feel better," says Derek Polonsky. And yet the big-dick
syndrome goes far deeper than simple alpha-male baiting.
"A lot of these guys have had terrible relationships," Polonsky says. "They
have this mindset that if I have this perfect penis I'll be more of a stud and
everything will be fine, rather than paying attention to what's involved in
sustaining a relationship, rather than enhancing their self-esteem. Which is
not to trivialize the worry and the concern. A lot of guys are tormented by
this."
In her book Sex Smart: How Your Childhood Shaped Your Sexual Life and What
You Can Do About It (New Harbinger), Zoldbrod argues that most men who are
obsessed with penis size have suffered some kind of childhood trauma, usually
at the hands of male peers. "Boys are so competitive, they say terrible things
to each other and shame each other," Zoldbrod says. "But boys won't come out
and say anything about it. It becomes this secret thing."
It's certainly true that boys -- and men -- don't generally talk openly about
the fear of a small penis. Instead they bluster, embellish, inflate, simply
laugh the issue off. Or they attempt to project their pain onto somebody else
by making fun of his penis. It's a self-sustaining syndrome, and one
that can have far greater repercussions than mere embarrassment.
In some men, the obsession with penis size may be symptomatic of a condition
called body dysmorphic disorder, a pathological self-loathing brought about by
a negative body image. According to a recent study, between one and two percent
of Americans suffer from BDD, 60 percent of them men. Many of these men have
what Whitehead calls "perceived penile inadequacy."
The key word here is "perceived." "Virtually all of the patients I see are
totally normal in terms of dimensions," says Whitehead. "They just want to be
larger. It's a body-image issue, a perception issue."
Almost all men who opt for PE -- surgical or otherwise -- already fall within
the normal size range (about three to four inches flaccid, five to six inches
erect). But, as Hubbard points out, "Bland reassurances of normalcy don't allay
the concerns."
One PE enthusiast, who goes by the name Big Al, said in an e-mail
interview: "Personally, I was a bit above average before I decided to start
`enlarging.' Most men are about in the five-to-six-inch range, but they'd feel
better about themselves knowing that they had eight inches or more (eight seems
to be the `magic number')."
"There are many men," says Kaplan, "who buy my pump who are nine or 10 inches,
but who still want to get bigger."
"I think they're shooting themselves in the foot," says Zoldbrod. "Most men
like oral sex, and most women would rather not feel like they're choking."
And yet this argument holds little sway among PE enthusiasts, for whom an
oversize dick is often seen as a badge of honor. Indeed, PE chat rooms brim
with reports -- presented with thinly veiled satisfaction -- of a partner who
has been staggered, startled, and downright roughed up by a newly enlarged
member. "I've bruised [my wife] internally using certain positions," says a PE
enthusiast named Dave. With a larger penis, he adds, "you feel better about
yourself and more confident with your partner."
If this sounds irrational -- well, it is. It's a guy thing: pre-logical,
instinctual. Maybe even inescapable. It cuts across racial, religious, and
economic boundaries. It affects the ugly, the scrawny, the handsome, the
strong. And it affects every age group.
"I'm only 14," writes a boy in one of the online PE forums. "The only reason I
want to enlarge my penis is that I haven't had sex yet. I don't want my first
experience to be a bad one. And plus it makes your life miserable if you have a
bad rep."
Hypnotherapist Laurie Straub tells the tale of "a real old man" who came to her
for assistance. He had visited a nude beach, this old man, and had come away
from it full of despair. "I thought I was normal," he told Straub. "But I have
a teeny-weeny wienie."
She tells a story, too, about a man whose eight-year-old son had walked in on
him in the bathroom and remarked, "Daddy, you have a big pee-pee."
"I hope you told him he does too," Straub advised the guy, "or he'll be coming
to see me in 20 years."
n
Chris Wright can be reached at cwright[a]phx.com.
Members
of the club
In his book Penis Size and Enlargement, Gary Griffin devotes a
chapter to "Well-endowed celebrities" -- a who's who of penis size.
Herein, a brief selection.
Actors
Warren Beatty. "Women who have enjoyed Beatty's amorous advances swear
that he is hung like a donkey."
Milton Berle. It's "a well-established fact" that " `Uncle Miltie'
is the King Cock of Hollywood."
Humphrey Bogart. "Sources claim that he sported a pendulously long
cock."
Michael Caine. The British actor "is also known to be a talented lover
hung in the 8" (20 cm) range."
Willem Dafoe. "Star of Mississippi Burning and Platoon,
Dafoe is as hung as he is talented."
Errol Flynn. "The late actor best-known for his salty swashbuckling
roles delighted in exhibiting his manhood to close friends."
Harrison Ford. "A female reader . . . reports that the star of
the Indiana Jones series, the Star Wars Trilogy, and the
Fugitive is tremendously hung."
Cary Grant. "A former amanuensis of Cary Grant wrote to me, stating that
. . . [Grant's] flaccid cock lied flat against his belly, almost
reaching his navel. A size 8 (20 cm)."
Don Johnson. "One look at the phallus that made Miami Vice a
prime-time staple and you can see why Melanie Griffith married him twice."
Steve Martin. "This `wild and crazy' guy has no need to be modest in the
locker room. Steve allegedly sports a size 8 (20 cm)."
Steve McQueen. According to one of his lovers: "Like two Coors beer cans
welded together."
Eddie Murphy. "Star of Beverly Hills Cop, Murphy is known to be
very well hung -- probably in the 8-9" (20-22 cm) range."
Liam Neeson. "His reputation as a truly BIG star is now widely
disseminated."
Musicians
David Cassidy. "With monster phallic genes inherited from dad Jack
Cassidy, it was inevitable that son David would be a `chip off the old block.'
"
Shaun Cassidy. "David isn't the only Cassidy boy with a lot to crow
about. . . . A reader of an earlier edition of this book claims
. . . `a good approximation of his size is 8" (20 cm) in
circumference and 9-91/2" (22-23 cm) in length.' "
Jimi Hendrix. "Rock's premier psychedelic guitarist was hung like a
bull. Scores of groupies spread the word that his cock was `damn near as big as
his guitar.' "
Tom Jones. "Loyal fans fight for front-row tickets to get a glimpse of
that legendary bulge in his peter-pinching tights."
Miscellaneous
Mikhail Baryshnikov. " `A thick 91/2 " of Russian
salami,' claims a former paramour."
Tom Brokaw. "I estimate his broadcast abilities to be a 9+."
Lyndon Baines Johnson. "Horsemen might be interested in knowing that LBJ
may have had the crown champion of presidential cocks."
David Letterman. "The popular host of late-night television has been
reported to sport an impressive penis in the 9" (22 cm) range."
Dan Rather. "He is as hung as he is handsome and intelligent."
PE resources
Bear in mind that pumping, hanging
weights, squeezing, and applying angry wasps can be damaging to your penile
health. You should consult the experts before beginning any PE regimen;
following are some resources.
* PenileFitness.com: http://www.penis-enlargement-now.com
* E. Douglas Whitehead: http://www. drwhitehead.com, (212) 879-3131
* All About Penis Enlargement: http://www.nedhosting.com/users/enlarge/
* Joel Kaplan: http://www.drjoelkaplan.com, (619) 574-PUMP
* Laurie Straub: http://www.hypbody.com, (877) 4EXTEND
* American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons:
http://www.plasticsurgery.org, (800) 635-0635
* American Urological Association: http://www.auanet.org, (410) 727-1100
-- CW
The Teat Generation
My nipples are naturally large, but I don't think they're large enough," writes
"Noah," in an online chat room. "I've tried clothespins, but it's only
temporary."
Noah, believe it or not, is not alone. Writing in the magazine Chest
Men of America, a guy named Max expresses similar desires. "Like most men,
I came into the world with good pimple-sized nipples," he writes, "but decided
four years ago that what nature didn't give me, I'd give myself."
Unfortunately for Max and Noah, nipple-enlargement options are limited. For one
thing, surgery is not available. Even if it were, "it's not something you want
to do," says one cosmetic surgeon who specializes in breast reconstruction. In
fact, the options are pretty much limited to stretching and pumping (penis-pump
magnate Joel Kaplan also has a sideline of nipple pumps).
Max proposes what he calls a "tit workout": "Pull, tug and s-t-r-e-t-c-h
those tits until you can't stand it any more. . . . If you're
not sore for at least two days afterwards, then you haven't worked on them long
enough," he writes. "Clamps are useful. You should be able to wear a one-pound
weight on each tit for at least 20 minutes. You can also put a piece of elastic
around your neck and attach the two ends to your clamps and stretch your tits
UP!"
Needless to say, don't try this at home.
But even with the pain -- or perhaps because of it -- nipple enlargement has
its devotees, many of whom are women. "Ladies, have you ever wished for a bit
more sexual sensitivity?" asks one body-modification Web site. "How about
deliciously sensitive nipples that stand up and say, `Look at me'?"
Like so many fetishes, nipple enlargement has few practical justifications.
What exactly does one do with a newly enlarged nipple, anyway? Well, nothing.
But, as one enthusiast puts it, "Nipples are fun to pump."
-- CW
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