
Yes, it’s midweek and the average worker is gradually preparing for the weekend, which commences on Friday evening.
Weekends are those glorious times of the week when we take care of those things we have pushed off — including, ahem, sex — during the week because of the pressure of work and also because of the need to wake up early and sleep late.
Now that the weekend stares each of us in the face, it’s also necessary to have a rough idea of what we will do in order to stay focused, healthy and totally revved up to meet the demands of the new week.
One physical activity that can help in
this regard, researchers say, is getting down to ‘business,’ not
necessarily to make babies, but really to unwind and let your partner
feel your presence the right way all over.
Many long-married couples seem to miss
out on the benefits of sex, which they, more often than not, push to the
back of family agenda, especially when they are no longer trying for
babies. Yet, scientists insist that sex has so many advantages that
affect our health psychologically, mentally, physiologically… name it,
and there you are. This part of our social life is so necessary to our
overall wellbeing that researchers counsel us to indulge in it for up to
three times in a week.
Scientists caution, though, that too much
sex can also be detrimental to health. They warn that having sex more
than thrice a week can weaken the immune system and make us susceptible
to infections.
Again, researchers warn that only those
in healthy, loving monogamous relationships could hope to reap the
health benefits of sex. They say having risky sex with lots of partners
will definitely do more harm than good.
Now, what are the advantages derivable from this physical gratification? Here…
Boosts circulation, brain power
Scientists at the Royal Australasian
College of Physicians note that more blood moves through the blood
vessels when you have sex, expressly cutting your risk of heart attack
or stroke as a result. The researchers enthuse that sex releases certain
feel-good hormones such as dehydroepiandrosterone and oxytocin, both of
which play a huge role in pair bonding. In fact, because of its
importance in love-making, oxytocin is variously referred to as the
“love hormone,” or “cuddle hormone” because it is released when people
snuggle up or bond socially.
Cuts blood pressure and stress
For some of us, the time of stress is
also the period we refrain from sex. Yet, a study by some scholars at
the School of Sciences, University of Paisley, Scotland, reveals that
sex not only lowers blood pressure, it also reduces stress.
The scientists argue that sex can improve
mood and combat anxiety by reducing stress signals in the brain. They
counsel that when you have sex, it lowers the levels of cortisol — the
hormone that indicates high stress levels.
Relieves pain
A sexuality researcher at Rutgers
University, Professor Emeritus Beverly Whipple, assures that good
coition can relieve physical pain. The magic hormone, again, is
oxytocin, which she describes as a natural chemical in the body that
surges before and during climax. Again, she says, “the endorphins
released during climax block pain signals from reaching the nervous
system and thus are critical to maintaining optimum health.”
Goodbye to colds!
A bout of colds can make you miserable
for days. Not to worry though, researchers at Wilkes University in
Pennsylvania, United States of America, found that “having sex once or
twice a week increased the production of the immune-boosting antibody —
immunoglobulin — by a third. Again, German scientists say copulation
increases the white blood cells. The white blood cells are the cells of
the immune system that are involved in defending the body against
infectious diseases and foreign materials.
Heart attack? No more!
In 2002, British scientists carried out a
study of large population of men, and concluded that frequent sexual
intercourse can “shield you from fatal coronary events.”
The researchers say men who have regular
lovemaking are about “45 per cent less likely to develop
life-threatening heart conditions than men who have sex once a month or
less.”
Another research by scientists at the New England Research Institute in Massachusetts and published in the American Journal of Cardiology,
shows that “men who made love at least twice a week were much less
likely to have heart disease than those whose sexual encounters were
limited to once a month or less.”
So, in addition to healthy eating, rev up your health with this other therapy and you are good to go!
Banish prostate cancer
Experts at the America-based National
Cancer Institute counsel that men who successfully conclude a sexual
activity at least five times a week were much less likely to get
prostate cancer.
A reproductive endocrinologist, Prof.
Oladapo Ashiru, says prostate cancer is the single most common cancer in
men; while urologists warn that it’s also the second deadliest cancer,
next only to lung cancer. Yet, experts say a simple act of regular
sexual intercourse can serve as a preventive measure.
According to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association, men who have sex at least thrice a week reduce by 15 per cent their prostate cancer risk.
Takes care of headaches
It’s not all about men, as women also
stand to benefit from this benevolent act. Researchers enthuse that the
endorphins and corticosteroids released during sex have analgesic
effects on the body, relieving the pain of headaches, arthritis, cramps
and body aches.
“Endorphins are a natural painkiller,”
the researchers say; while “the production of oestrogen (which is also
released during sex) in women may also ward off period pain.”
Improves sleep
Those who find it difficult to sleep may
also try this therapy, as experts say sex induces sleep as a result of
the oxytocin that is released during the act. Of course, when you are
able to obtain a restful sleep, your mental and physical health will
improve.
No more incontinence
Incontinence is the inability to control
urination. And although urinary incontinence affects both men and women,
physicians say women are twice as likely as men to develop
incontinence.
But then, you can guard against this
embarrassing phenomenon by having sex. Scientists say this is achievable
because the muscles that regulate the bladder receive a “workout”
whenever you have sex, as the entire pelvic floor muscles contract while
the exercise lasts.
Again, experts advise post-menopausal
women to guard against vaginal atrophy by having regular sex. It will
prevent likely complications and urinary tract infections, we are told.
No comments:
Post a Comment