ANSWERS: 8
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Like the other answer said, it probably will increase your chance of keeping a willing partner... that should make you a happier person... and I think happy people have a better chance of getting a willing partner.
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I don't think it will even increase the chance of keeping a willing partner. Most women that I know don't use sex as the ONLY reason they stay in a relationship. Besides this there are side effects to taking viagra just like any other medication.
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It will have no effect on acquiring a willing, casual, sexual partner. Viagra takes two to three hours to reach full effect, which means you have to ingest it well before you begin your sexual activity. Viagra is a drug that is best used for planned encounters, while "getting a willing partner" implies you do not have one available to plan anything with. Viagra should not be taken unless you have a medical need for such a product. As with all drugs, it has side-effects. One of these can cause blindness, so its nothing to play around with. If you do not have erectile disfunction, it won't do anything for you that you cannot do already. Well, except for the person selling it to you - he or she will profit financially from the transaction. ------------------------------------------------------------ Re: "stop blindly believing anti-drug slogans" I have no idea what "anti-drug slogans" exist with respect to Viagra, as I have never heard of any. But I do know that taking prescription drugs without medical monitoring is a stupid thing to do. A doctor will assess a patient's needs before prescribing any medication and monitor its effects afterwards by communicating with the patient and testing. At least this is what they are supposed to do. If your doctor doesn't, get a new one. People who take prescription drugs without proper monitoring are playing with fire: danger to their own health and to the health of others. Improper use has lead to drugs being withdrawn from the market. This was a significant factor in the recent withdrawal of Vioxx: it was over-prescribed, used against the advice of the manufacturer, used without proper monitoring, and misused by patients. And what happened to the people who needed the drug and were using it properly? Many of them have yet to find a replacement that works as well. Any drug is used for a purpose: the purpose of Viagra is for males who experience erectile dysfunction. If you do not have this problem, you do not need the drug. Period. Viagra is not a 'magic bullet' and it often fails when used properly by the people who need it. If you can achieve an erection without assistance, the only thing that Viagra can offer is the potential for unmonitored health risks. This has nothing to do with "anti-drug" campaigns and everything to do with common sense and safety. Abuse of prescription drugs can lead to their removal from the market, which adversely affects those who can benefit from them. Do you ever read the information sheets that accompany prescription drugs or the information published in CPS (Compendium of Pharmaceuticals and Specialties)? I do and I would suggest you do the same, beginning with Viagra: http://www.viagra.com/safety.asp .
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NO. While you are seeking a positive answer for love or lust, you might as well look for the fountain of youth.
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No, I believe it would do just the opposite. Men aren't circus performers but some men and women have reduced them to that status. Real women don't want artificial men. They love a lover who is a bit more imaginative than sex in a bottle!
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No, Viagra will not increase your chances of finding a partner. In fact, a surprisingly high number of Viagra prescriptions are never refilled. This is due to the fact that taking Viagra does not in and of itself produce an erection. Viagra only increases the ability of blood to flow into the penis when a man becomes excited or aroused. A lot of men buy Viagra, pop a couple pills and then realize they have no one around to turn them on and hence, no erection.
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Reading your question carefully, first makes me laugh because we don't really know how serious your were but I'll error on the serious side: Viagra would not increase your chances of finding a partner. However, if Viagra was needed, then you might want to also ask your doctor to check your testosterone level. If this level is low, you might not have the drive to even look for a partner and that seems what your question was actually driving towards. Treatment for low testosterone is very simple -- usually a jell like substance that can be applied on many area's of your body in order to be absorbed -- but does require that you monitor carefully functions of your liver; which your doctor can explain easily. You don't have to worry about being the first to address this with him because if he's had much experience at all, he's been over it with many more than you think, it's a very common condition. Basically, he just needs all the facts as they are.
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Yes once you take a Viagra pill a magical hole in the space time space time continuum and one falls from the sky.
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