Written by Stuart Stevens | Monday, 16 June 2008
The film showing in all cinemas and which everyone is talking about at the moment is Sex and the City starring Sarah Jessica Parker and her group of sexually liberated friends. Sex and the City started as a series which dealt with different aspects of female sexuality in each and every episode. Nothing was taboo and female orgasms, dildos, one night stands and everything else were discussed by the four women as they met for cappuccinos and lunch.

Sex and the City is credited with having empowered women and made them confident about their sexuality and at the same time it is said to have intimidated men and made them feel more insecure in the bedroom department. This is in turn credited with making men increasingly turn towards Viagra, Cialis and Levitra in an attempt to make sure that they do not come across as sexually inept.
It is now becoming increasingly common for men who are in their thirties to ask for Viagra, Cialis and Levitra when previously it would have been men who were in their fifties and older who asked for it generally.
Relationship and sexual experts say that women are increasingly being far more up front about what they want from men sexually and they tend to demand an increased level of imagination and stamina from their sexual partners.
Whereas previously advertising for fashion items tended to use images of a beautiful and sexy female form more and more advertising now contains perfectly toned and fit male bodies. This intimidates men even further and is said to be the reason why more men are working out than previously.
Spam e-mail which everybody gets in their hundreds every week are also designed to prey on male insecurities. They come headed with statements like “she won’t complain anymore”, “you’ll become a man again”, “perform like a porn star” and “regain control in the bedroom” all of which are designed to question whether you are up to scratch sexually.
But a word of warning to men thinking of getting erectile dysfunction drugs before they really need them is that there is some evidence which shows that men become psychologically attached to these drugs and therefore find it difficult to perform sexually without them once they have started to use them. Our advice at Ukmedix News is to delay using erectile dysfunction drugs unless you really need them.