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Female Problems below the belt for a change.


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Posted

When it comes to problems "below the belt", male prostate problems mostly arise. Among so many other things, that can affect the performance an well being of a mortal male.

 

I would like to direct certain "Female Bodily Activities" below the belt.

 

For example: Ladyfriend of mine (64 years old) drinks a cup of Coffee or Tea, after 15 minutes she needs to "pee". (urinating). Why? Otherwise she is in perfectly good health.

 

I am confident, that male contributors practise a certain amount of restraint, awaiting "Sheryls" comment, as this is a "female-matter" only.

 

Posted

In the absence of other symptom, wanting to urinate not long after consuming coffee is nothing to worry about. Remember, coffee is a diuretic and caffeine increases urine production, which can lead to more frequent urination.

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Posted
4 hours ago, swissie said:

When it comes to problems "below the belt", male prostate problems mostly arise. Among so many other things, that can affect the performance an well being of a mortal male.

 

I would like to direct certain "Female Bodily Activities" below the belt.

 

For example: Ladyfriend of mine (64 years old) drinks a cup of Coffee or Tea, after 15 minutes she needs to "pee". (urinating). Why? Otherwise she is in perfectly good health.

 

I am confident, that male contributors practise a certain amount of restraint, awaiting "Sheryls" comment, as this is a "female-matter" only.

 

Ask AI.

Posted

After menopause, declining estrogen levels result in a thinning of the tissue of the genitalia and urethra. This leads to frequent urinary infections,  urinary frequency  and  painful intercourse, among other things. It is extremely uncomfortable -- and readily treated with vaginal estrogen creams or suppositories, however for some reason this is little known and little used in Thailand.

Posted
15 minutes ago, Sheryl said:

Please do NOT "ask AI".

 

AI programs in the public domain are not designed/optimized for medical research/diagnosis and  will often yield extremely misleading results.

 

AI just regurgitates information on the web (from multiple sources of varying or even no reliability) and weaves it into text - -with no fact checking or vetting of accuracy. It is not a "source" of information. Everything you might see in an AI result comes from someplace else on the web, often unattributed.  There is no advantage, and much disadvantage, to trying to get medical information this way.

 

Plenty of reliable web sources one can use for medical or health related information e.g.

 

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions

 

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases?dFR[type][0]=diseases

 

https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/

 

Unlike AI results, the content of the above sites has actually been written by, and reviewed by, health professionals. And periodically updated.

Wish I could give this more than just one "Thanks" emoji. Possibly one of the best posts I've seen in quite some time.

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