busted a big ole nut skype sexing with this Jewish chick i met on blackpeoplemeet last night shyt was thick like the poridge the 3 lil bears ate
I am so ready to get back to America and unload this goo in one of the new broads that I met off BPM
I forgot to update that I been added Pygeum Bark to the mix
Pygeum africanum is a large evergreen known as the African cherry tree, native to central and southern Africa, which grows to up to 150 feet. For thousands of years, traditional African healers have used the bark for its healing, aphrodisiac qualities and for male health. Historically, the powdered bark was made into a tea.
pygeum improves sperm longevity and activity by enhancing seminal fluid quality and boosting healthy prostate secretions, and thus improving male fertility
Pygeum can help to reduce the androgen breakdown product of testosterone called dihydrotestosterone (DHT), which impedes healthy sperm development.
Studies have found that pygeum leads to an increase in the volume and viability of sperm in semen. The medically effective constituents of pygeum bark, according to modern research, are fatty acid molecules called phytosterols. The prime ones are beta-sitosterone, beta-sitosterol, beta-sitosterol-3-o-glucoside, docosan-1-ol, n-docosanol, which appear to boost sperm count. Other active ingredients in the bark of the pygeum tree include triterpenes, fatty acids, and ferulic acid esters of fatty acids.
Pygeum bark phytosterols inhibit the body’s production of the androgen dihydrotestosterone (DHT), a potent breakdown product of testosterone. One key study found that extracts of pygeum partially blocked the action of two enzymes, aromatase and 5-alpha-reductase, that stimulate production of estrogen and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) respectively. Sperm production is greater when these two hormones are lower. Pygeum alone showed much higher efficacy than did nettle root, but nettle root could magnify the benefits of pygeum for blocking the aromatase enzyme.1 Less aromatase means less estrogen in a man’s body, which supports more abundant sperm production.
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