Posts Tagged ‘Know’
» posted on Sunday, January 3rd, 2010 at 6:14 pm by Irene
5 Interesting Facts That Will Help You Know Your Penis Better
Rediscover your penis by learning more about it. This article reveals some interesting facts about your penis that have been revealed by medical experts. Men and even women will find this article interesting as well as informative.
1. Your penis has a mind
Urologists opine that your penis has a mind as well. You know, your penis does not always listen to you. For instance, at time you get erection when it may not be appropriate. Similarly, you get erections even while you are asleep and might not necessarily be dreaming about sex. Heavy lifting or straining to have a bowel movement can also cause an erection. Even sexual arousal usually is not voluntary. The conscious mind does play a role but a lot of sexual arousal goes on in the sympathetic nervous system. Moreover, your penis may also shrink without your consent. For instance, exposure to cold water or air makes your penis shrink. Now, this is again the doing of the sympathetic nervous system. You certainly do not wish your penis to be shrunk.
This means you have less command over your penis than other body parts like your arms and legs. Your penis does not react on your commands but it answers the reflexes received from the nervous system which is not always under your conscious control.
2. Your penis may be a grower or a show-er
Though these are not medical terms and aren’t scientifically established, men still place a lot of significance to this aspect of the penis. Your penis will be labelled as just a show-er if it doesn’t gain much length with an erection. On the other hand, a penis that gains a lot of length with an erection is said to be a “grower.” In a study conducted on 80 men, researchers found that increases from flaccid to erect lengths ranged widely in men, from less than a quarter inch to 3.5 inches longer.
An analysis of more than 1000 measurements taken by a sex researcher shows that shorter flaccid penises tend to gain about twice as much length as longer flaccid penises. The data also showed that most penises aren’t extreme show-ers or growers. In fact, about 12% of penises gained one-third or less of their total length with an erection and only about 7% penises doubled in length when erect.
3. Your penis is shaped like a boomerang
Researches, who have studied men and women having sex inside an MRI scanner, say that the penis is shaped like a boomerang. You may not be aware of this because just like a tree which has roots inside the soil, your penis is tucked up inside your pelvis and attached to your pubic bone through suspensory ligaments. These ligaments also serve the function of making an erection sturdy.
4. Your penis can get broken
Even though there is no “penis bone,” you can break your penis if you do not use it cautiously. Once you suffer from a penile fracture, you may experience a terrible pain and hear a pop or snap and your penis turns black and blue. Penile fracture is rare and is mainly reported in younger men because their erections tend to be quite rigid. You may get a penile fracture if you thrust too hard and fast during sex and your penis slams into your partner’s pubic bone. Also, your penis may get broken if your partner moves wildly while on top of you.
Older men may suffer from a related condition called Peyronie’s syndrome. This is when your penis bends too much a certain way during sex, small tears in the tissue can form scars and the accumulated scar tissue gives the penis an abnormally curved shape. Therefore, you should never use your penis too roughly.
5. Most penises in world are uncut
Only 30% of males aged 15 and up are circumcised, this was estimated in a report conducted by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
About 70% of all circumcised males in the world are Jewish and Muslim. The United States has the highest proportion of males circumcised for non-religious reasons. A whopping 75% of non-Jewish, non-Muslim American men are circumcised. The CDC estimates that about 65% of all newborn boys are circumcised in the US. While in Canada, only 30% males are. In the UK, it’s 20% and in Australia it’s merely 6%.
The practice of circumcising baby boys for medical and cosmetic reasons has become controversial in the US. But recently the WHO and the UNAIDS recommended circumcision for adult men, based upon evidence that men with circumcised penises have a lower risk of being infected with HIV.
post a comment | filed under palo blanco | tags: Better, Facts, Help, Interesting, Know, Penis
» posted on Friday, January 1st, 2010 at 3:49 pm by Irene
Getting to Know About The Island of Madagascar
Madagascar is popular since it is the home of various species of flora and fauna which can be found nowhere else on the globe. Although the high rate of poverty in Madagascar, the wildlife aspect of this island will not cease to amaze you. The cultural diversity in Madagascar speaks for itself and the island is seen as the perfect representation for preservation efforts around the globe. Madagascar is a place where ancestors still hold the same importance in the lives of the Malagasy.
As such, the law merely exists when it comes to beliefs and traditions. Nowhere in the world will you see a funeral carried out in the same way as in Madagascar. This is because people have kept the different rules passed on to them by their ancestors. There might be many descriptions concerning the history of Madagascar. Some people believe that Madagascar might have been initially occupied by Indonesians around 2000 years in the past. Africans came to Madagascar only afterwards. Other beliefs suggest that the people of Madagascar hail from the coupling of Indonesians and Africans. There is no proof of a stone age in Madagascar, which means that the island might have been settled at the time when Polynesians moved into the globe’s most lonely islands.
This process brought other people such as Arabs and Indians to migrate into Madagascar. As time went by a true amalgam of cultural diversity was created. Madagascar is now the home of people which stem from Asia, India, Africa and Middle East among others. The appearance, religions and traditions of people in Madagascar depend highly on the regions in which people live. The most common thing with the locals of Madagascar is that they all speak the same language. Nowadays, Madagascar comprises of around 20 ethnic groups, which makes it a colourful country in the cultural sense.
Moreover, if you see Madagascar for the first time, the African and Asian countryside would instantly catch your eyes. For instance, the south and west of Madagascar are cattle raising regions and would have a similarity to the savannas of East Africa. On the other hand, the central parts of Madagascar would most resemble Southeast Asia as the rice fields would be green and carefully irrigated. This therefore shows how origins are varied in the island of Madagascar.
In brief, the Malagasy was born due to the number of people of different ethnic backgrounds who migrated in Madagascar over the course of time. All, in all, if you need moments of relaxation, head to Madagascar. The wonderful landscapes in Madagascar can fill you with immense joy and you will not regret a single penny that you’ve spent. You could take a nice villa on rent in a calm and nature surrounded area of Madagascar and enjoy the pleasures that this island will give you.
post a comment | filed under Canary island date palm tree | tags: About, Getting, Island, Know, Madagascar
» posted on Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at 5:07 pm by Irene
Do You Want to Know How to Make Money at Home?
So you are out here on the internet searching for how to make money at home? Believe me when I tell you that you aren’t alone. There are millions of people just like you searching for the exact same thing.
While millions are searching there are hundreds of thousands that have already figured it out and are doing it every day! I bet you would like to learn their secrets. The first thing that you should understand is that sometimes it’s difficult to make yourself do the work. If you don’t have a boss telling you what to do and deadlines to meet, are you sure that you are the type of person that will get things done?
If you are sure then let me tell you what you need to get started. You will need a website and you will need a teacher. If you don’t know where to find a teacher and you don’t know how to make a website then you are going to need to find a real program that can show you the ropes. Don’t fall for the get rich quick schemes or the overnight millionaire fairy tales, if you believe those then you might be interested in buying a bridge that I have up for sale too. Let me know.
You are going to need determination, hard work, patience and knowledge if you really want to learn. With these things plus a website and a program to follow, you can make it happen and you can start now. Making money at home is not as hard as it may seem. With that being said, you should know that it isn’t easy either. There is no magic wand that you can wave to have a money tree pop up in your back yard that you can start picking 20’s from.
The point is this, make sure that you are up for the challenge and if you are then look for a program that doesn’t require any fancy technical skills but still gives you everything that you need to be successful. I really believe that almost anyone can learn the ropes, become successful and figure out how to make money at home.
post a comment | filed under Ironwood trees | tags: Home, Know, Money, Want
» posted on Tuesday, December 29th, 2009 at 1:53 pm by Irene
Do You Know About Green Cleaning Products For Restaurants?
You hear about going green everywhere and about using green cleaning supplies. In all types of business activities and in the products you use for your home. What does all this green stuff really mean? Is it using degradable products or using products that have been recycled. Well it does mean this but there is more.
Perhaps the most important idea about using green cleaning supplies is that the green clean products do not have harsh chemicals that pollute the environment. And because of this they are not toxic and destructive to the environment. Their smell is more tolerable, and you can work with them without them harming you as much as non-green products.
Learn some of the following names and avoid them in various cleaning products. If a product claims to be “green” make sure that is it not loaded with the following chemicals.
Chlorine
Chlorine is very volatile and when used has to have good ventilation to avoid damage to the lungs and internal tissues. Chlorine is used in a variety of cleaning products. It is used in drinking water and swimming pools. When use pools with chlorine makes sure to shower immediately after swimming.
Chlorine is also used in house water and when you shower there is a lot of chlorine in the water mist. If possible keep a window open or the exhaust fan on full blast to put out the mist. The best solution here is to use a shower filter that can get rid of the chlorine.
Here are some other products that use chlorine or organ chlorines: Bleach, pesticides, and various bathroom cleaners. By using green cleaning supplies, you will avoid chlorine all together.
Here is a quick run down of other chemicals to look for in your cleaning product that are harmful to your health:
Formaldehyde is a poison. It is found in germicides and products you use on your body.
P-dichlorobenzene is a chemical that has a strong smell and you should not be smelling it since it affects your health. It is used in insect repellents and toilet bowl deodorizers.
Pesticides are chemical poison used to kill other insects. Many pesticides have been banned in the United States, but many imported fruits and vegetables get sprayed with ban pesticides. These chemical are used as repellents, weed killrs, and rodent poisons.
Glycol Ethers comes from petroleum products. Because they are used in many different house-hold products we use, the can get onto our skin and into our blood. When handling any kind of cleaning chemical agents it would be wise to use plastic gloves. Glyco Ethers are used in various cleaning products, brake fluid, and cosmetics.
There are so many chemical products that we use to scrub, clean, and deodorized our house that we don’t think about the harm these product do to us or our family. These products easily produce fumes which we breath causing illnesses related to our lungs, liver and to our whole body.
These chemicals interrupt our natural cell function and makes more susceptible to cell mutation or cancer. Why take a chance with these products when you use green cleaning supplies.
post a comment | filed under Mexican fan palm tree | tags: About, Cleaning, Green, Know, Products, Restaurants
» posted on Sunday, December 27th, 2009 at 4:42 pm by Irene
Flcocajuncujo Did You Know?
At its greatest extent in the Americas, Spanish territory stretched from Alaska through the western United States, Mexico, and Central America to southern Chile and Patagonia, and from the state of Georgia south to the Caribbean islands, Venezuela, Colombia, and Argentina. In Africa, at various times Spain occupied territories in the Western Sahara (present-day Morocco), and along the coast of what is now Equatorial Guinea, including the offshore island of Fernando Póo (now Bioko). In Asia, Spain ruled the Philippine Islands, which the Spanish named after King Philip II in 1542 . In Oceania, Spain held the Mariana Islands and later the Caroline Islands. Gibraltar, a rocky promontory connected to the Spanish mainland by a sandy isthmus, is a British dependency still claimed by Spain.
Spain’s overseas empire dates from the joint rule of Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragón, whose marriage in 1469 began the process of uniting their separate Iberian kingdoms into one Spanish nation. It was during their reign as Isabella I and Ferdinand V that the newly united country began to build an empire. Spanish expansion overseas began for a number of reasons. The monarchs wanted to secure neighboring areas for defense against Muslim raids originating from North Africa, to protect Castile’s shipping activities and trade in the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, and to use the neighboring areas as ports for export of gold and enslaved Africans. They also supported exploration of distant areas primarily to spread Christianity and to increase Spain’s potential for trade with the Far East, thereby gaining wealth and international prestige.
The concern to increase Spanish trade centered on the desire to overcome the advantage Portuguese explorers and traders had gained by establishing similar bases on the African continent and islands off of Africa in the Atlantic Ocean. Earlier in the 15th century Portuguese explorers had discovered and settled two of the small island groups, the Madeiras and the Azores. Between 1456 and 1460 Portugal occupied the Cape Verde Islands and soon established fortified trading posts in the Gulf of Guinea. In 1488 Portuguese navigator Bartolomeu Dias sailed around the Cape of Good Hope at the southern tip of Africa and opened a sea route to the Far East.
Portugal’s growing international influence encouraged Spain to match its neighbor’s achievements. Although claimed by both Portugal and Spain, the Canary Islands came under Spanish control through a 1479 treaty. In the 1480s and 1490s, papal decrees assigned the Canaries to Spain. Despite fierce resistance from the indigenous Guanche people, by 1496 all seven islands had come under Castilian control.
Like the Portuguese islands in the Atlantic, the Canaries under Spain were essentially military enclaves and trading centers where paid laborers or sharecroppers worked for a few merchant proprietors. The Spanish introduced cows, pigs, horses, sheep, and Mediterranean plants to the Canaries. The islands proved valuable for their supplies of sugar and fish, as well as their proximity to the West African coast.
Columbus’s voyage occurred at an opportune time for Spain. In January 1492 Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand had conquered Granada, the last Muslim kingdom on the Iberian peninsula, completing what is called the Christian reconquest of Spain from Moorish control. Still, Islam was advancing elsewhere and posed a threat to Europe. Spain’s rulers planned to extend Spain’s Christian crusades overseas. They readied an armed expedition to North Africa, declaring Muslim-held Jerusalem as the ultimate goal, but that army was ultimately diverted to war in Italy. They also sponsored Columbus, who proposed to reach India or Asia by a westward route and so give Spain an alternate route to Jerusalem. They also hoped his voyage would bring Spain international prestige and fabled riches.
Thus, Spain justified its imperial expansion on four grounds: to spread its religion; to reinforce national unity and identity by keeping alive a sense of national mission; to enhance Spain’s international power; and to compete with Portugal for trade, territory, and glory.
Columbus laid the foundation of the Spanish overseas empire by claiming for Spain the lands he explored in the Caribbean islands and establishing the first European colony there. At that time Europeans simply assumed that if representatives of Christian nations discovered previously unknown lands and peoples, they had the right and the responsibility to take charge of them. In 1493, to formalize their claims to the lands that Columbus discovered, Spain began diplomatic negotiations with Portugal and with the papacy, which served as a sort of international mediation agency. Because Spain and Portugal had similar desires to expand, the papacy helped reduce conflict between the two nations by establishing formal boundaries.
A series of papal decrees confirmed Spain’s claim to sovereignty in some of the lands that became known as America. The papacy based these decrees on what was considered to be the Spaniards’ responsibility to spread Christianity and Christian ways of life to the inhabitants of those newly discovered lands. In 1493 Pope Alexander VI formally approved the division of the unexplored world between the two countries. This was incorporated into the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494) between Portugal and Spain. This treaty established the so-called Line of Demarcation, which set the boundaries between areas that would become Spanish territories and those that would be Portuguese. As it turned out, the treaty determined where Hispanic culture would gain a foothold and where Portuguese culture would take root.
On his first voyage, Columbus sighted Cuba and landed on Española (now Hispaniola), the island now occupied by Haiti and the Dominican Republic. He returned to Spain with small quantities of gold, native plants and animals, and six men of the indigenous Taíno people. Columbus made three more voyages to the Americas between 1494 and 1502. At that time the area was called the Spanish Indies because Columbus continued to claim that he had reached India. For this reason, the inhabitants of the Caribbean area were all called Indians, despite their diverse cultures.
Many of the people who accompanied Columbus on his four voyages were veterans of the Spanish wars to take Granada from Muslim control. Others included peasant farmers, royal officials, a few priests and friars, some women, as well as a few Africans, most of whom were enslaved. On Columbus’s second voyage, he took 17 ships carrying about 1500 colonists, to establish a permanent settlement on Española. Most of those people were peasant farmers, but some early immigrants to the Caribbean neither farmed nor settled. Instead, they relied on plentiful Indian labor and sought to find gold and return home rich. These immigrants were soon in conflict with both the native peoples and Columbus. By late 1494 many colonists opposed Columbus’s policies, such as his handling of the native people’s hostilities. They even filed grievances to the Spanish monarchy against Columbus in his role as administrator of the new lands.
Spain’s royal government quickly imposed its own officials, first to collect taxes and then to administer the colony. Its goal was to assert royal control over both settlers and indigenous peoples. In Spain the government established a House of Trade to supervise colonial affairs and to oversee, license, and tax all trade and commerce. As the royal government asserted more authority over colonial activities, Columbus lost effective power, and was eventually replaced by other colonial governors.
During the early 1500s, Spaniards used the major Caribbean islands as a base for expeditions to the mainland of Venezuela and Central America. Men called conquistadors recruited, equipped, and led these expeditions, often with the financial backing of merchants. Most hoped to find great riches or legendary places, such as the Seven Cities of Cíbola, which were supposed to have streets and houses adorned with gold and jewels, and the fountain of youth, a spring whose waters were said to have the power to restore youth.
The conquistadors came from areas of Spain where fighting was a way of life. The wars against Muslims in Spain had lasted for centuries, and clashes between rival clans were common. These men were accustomed to achieving their goals of fame and fortune through military endeavor. By taking treasure, territory, and subjects for their country, they won recognition from the king. Many explorers also felt it was their moral responsibility to convert people to Christianity.
With the blessing—but not the financial support—of the Spanish government, these conquistadors made their way through Central and South America claiming territory for Spain. The conquistadors’ expeditions increased Spain’s territory, wealth, and power. In 1513 Vasco Núñez de Balboa and his men crossed Central America and became the first Europeans to see the Pacific Ocean. Six years later Hernán Cortés led an expedition into Mexico and in 1521 captured Tenochtitlán, the capital of the Aztec Empire. In the early 1530s Francisco Pizarro conquered the Inca Empire in Peru. Even so, native resistance to Spanish rule continued for years.
From Peru, expeditions pushed north into Ecuador and Colombia and south into Chile. Conquistadors founded Buenos Aires, in what is now Argentina, in 1536 and Asunción, in what is now Paraguay, in 1537. Francisco de Orellana first explored the Amazon Basin in 1541 and 1542, searching for legendary chief El Dorado and his kingdom, which was rumored to abound in gold and precious stones. Other explorers ventured to the borderlands of northern Mexico and the Guiana Highlands, where they generally established only isolated and often temporary outposts. In the 16th century the major permanent settlements were in central Mexico and the Andes Mountains. By the 1550s Spain controlled the areas that are now Mexico, most of the South American continent, Central America, Florida, and Cuba.
The European explorers of Central and South America encountered native civilizations far richer and more sophisticated than the Caribbean cultures—for example, the Maya and Aztec peoples in Mexico and the Incas in Peru. They came upon technology allowing relatively abundant crops and encountered forms of empire where city-states dominated smaller satellite communities. Their conquests brought dramatic changes to both the Americas and Spain. The conquistadors and colonizers introduced European culture and religion to the Americas, while Spain gained enormous wealth from the spoils of its conquests and from silver and gold mines in the newly conquered lands.
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