"Why Scientists Don't Want You to Know that Pheromones are the Perfect Aphrodisiacs"
It has long
been known that pheromones are a natural sexual attractant the body produces to
entice the opposite sex. They have been shown to contribute to the term, "chemical
attraction" between men and women.
The study of pheromones has been going on since the early 1960s. And yet, until
recently, the scientific and academic circles has tried to suppress information
that indicates that pheromones are the perfect aphrodisiac.
Researchers have uncovered over two dozen different chemical messengers in human
beings and decoded their chemistry. Among them were pheromones that
excite sexual
desire. Labs have synthesized over 100 artificial pheromones, and scientists
have been hurrying to have each one of them patented. But many of them have been
reluctant to market them as aphrodisiacs.
Why?
Pheromones perform other tasks considered, quite understandably, as being more important
than to simply arouse us to have sex. Synthesized pheromones have opened up incredible
possibilities for treating illnesses.
They have been used as appetite suppressants, contraceptives and sedatives, and
have also been used to regulate the menstrual cycles of women, as well as treat
impotence, sexual disorders and prostate cancer. Apparently, specific pheromones
decrease the amount of testosterone in the blood, which causes cancer to shrink.
One of the foremost pheromone researchers, who shall remain unnamed, refuses to
speak of synthesized human pheromones as having the ability to excite sexual desire
because he feels that marketing them as medicines for various illnesses are a far
nobler cause.
Be that as it may, the word is out. Pheromones are the perfect aphrodisiac because
they cause both the pheromone wearer as well as members of the opposite sex that
happen to be nearby to become relaxed. This "relaxation response" that
the pheromones bring about may just be the clue to their aphrodisiac effect since
the likelihood of sexual encounters are significantly increased when a person
is relaxed.
To learn more about pheromones' aphrodisiac properties, and how you can use them
to attract the opposite sex and dramatically improve your love life, read:
"Pheromones: The Perfect Aphrodisiac?" at:
http://www.Luvessentials.com
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