Showing posts with label bodies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bodies. Show all posts

When women are seeing a new partner, they often have a lack of sexual confidence. They would rather dive hurriedly under the covers than let their partner see them naked. Most women assume that when they are married, their emotional wellness and wellbeing will allow them to feel more confident in front of their partner. A new survey from an online pharmacy has revealed that this often is not the case.


 


One in six married women in the UK has not let their partner see them fully naked for over a year. This body insecurity and lack of libido mean that women hide their bodies from their partner, and the survey seems to indicate that women’s confidence is at an all-time low. Around 21 percent of women surveyed said that they never look at themselves naked, so it’s no wonder that many do not show their naked bodies to their partners.


 


The study was carried out as a poll of around 1,902 women aged over 18, who were all in varying relationship statuses. Around 16 percent of the women in the study said that their partner had not seen them naked for at least 12 months – and sometimes it was significantly more. Around 45 percent of those surveyed said that their hiding their bodies was down to a lack of body confidence whilst around 30 percent said they had a low libido, and so did not want their partner to see them naked as there was either no need, or they did not want to initiate anything.


 


About 40 percent of those who hide their bodies from their partner felt that their relationship had suffered as a result, and around 36 percent of women said that it had even caused arguments with their partner.

We can check our financial health easily. We know where we stand with our employers. Our families members can generally tell us how our relationships with them are doing. Even so, our health is one of the most complicated aspects of our lives to measure.


 


In movies and television we often see protagonists stand before the mirror and flex their muscles, as if that were the metric by which we should gauge our health. Unfortunately, the diameter of your muscles isn’t enough to determine your true health.


 


However, thanks to technology, these days we can learn more about what’s going on inside our bodies than ever before.


 


 


Facts and Figures


Hypertension, better known as high blood pressure, is often referred to as “the silent killer.” That’s because many people who suffer from it have no idea that they have high blood pressure. As a result, they fail to treat it until it triggers more obvious events like heart attacks and strokes.


 


Plenty of other conditions can lurk beneath the surface, slowly eroding your health even as you seem to feel fine. Conditions like diabetes, cancer, and artherosclerosis can be wreaking havoc on your future even though you feel fine, or at most, have a diffuse group of odd symptoms that you ignore.


 


So just because you don’t notice anything unusual doesn’t mean that something serious can’t be afoot.


 


Getting to the doctor for annual physicals is key. That means going at a time when you aren’t sick and just having your practitioner give you the age-relevant rundown of what you should be checking on. Then, you must take the initiative to get the necessary tests and check-ups.


 


 


Are We Taking the Right Medications?


And while we’re debunking the old ways of monitoring our health, let’s not forget the knee-jerk move to request prescription medication from our doctors the moment we feel run-down.


 


There was a time when the math of health went something like this:


 


Condition + Medication = Recovery


 


But that equation has gotten muddier in recent years. Drugs have side effects. Medications can interact with each other or generate new health problems.


 


The surest way to avoid a negative side effect from your treatment is to submit to prescription drug testing by health professionals who can accurately determine the medication levels in your body. This can also help you and your doctor develop a personalized treatment plan.


 


Remember that many drugs, particularly antibiotics, linger inside your body long after you have gulped the last pill. Certain steps can help you clear many toxins from your body, but medications are harder to resolve.


 


So if the condition for which you’ve taken that medicine is persisting even as the drug remains active in your body, it’s clear that you need to try a new strategy.


 


Obviously that’s not necessary with every pesky cold or nagging cough. But when more serious conditions exist, like major infections or organ malfunctions, it’s critical that you know if your current prescription isn’t cutting the mustard.


 


And your doctor should know too.


 


Speaking of things your doctor should know, interactions are critical events as well. If you continue to show significant levels of a drug you finished weeks or even months ago–and yes, they can hang around that long–your doctor needs to know that before providing you with a new medication.


 


That information is more important if the leftover medication was prescribed by someone else.


 


Regardless of the circumstances, identifying medication residues can direct us to use a different medication or consider nutritional or other treatments for new conditions.

The idea of young childrenplaying doctor’ is as old as the hills, and is actually not a sexual thing in any way, shape or form. This usually occurs when young children undress and look at one another’s bodies, and is very common amongst children during preschool and early school years. There is nothing unhealthy about this and in fact helps to protect children’s wellness and wellbeing as they start to learn about bodies and gender in a healthy, natural way.


 


Children are naturally curious about bodies – they are very interesting things, if you think about it! Children also learn a lot through role play and copied behaviours, so they can frequently be found playing at being grownups or being married, and this helps to prepare them for the roles they will take on later in adult life.


 


If you happen to come across your child engaged in this type of play with another child, it is very important that you react in the correct, calm and appropriate way.


 


Try to keep calm – it may seem horrifying to you that your child is engaged in a behaviour that seems sexual, but it is not actually sexualised behaviour, just natural curiosity.


 


Some parents choose to simply ignore this type of play and know that it will pass, but others don’t feel it is appropriate to let this behaviour continue. In this case, the best thing to do is to tell children (in a calm way) that the play should stop, they should get dressed, and then encourage them to play in a room that does not have a closed door, such as the family room or play room.


 


Later, you use the opportunity to talk to your child about the experience. As well as explaining that bodies are private and that nobody should touch their bodies without their consent, you can tell them that there are other ways to learn about bodies, such as looking at a book together.