Hivi vibamia vinaanzia nchi ngapi jamani?



Ukifuata ruler (kipimo kiko nje - objective) utangundua kuwa hiyo kitu ni balaa hasa kama hipo kwenye flaccid state! Ila kwa mind yako (yaani kipimo kimo kichwani mwako - subjective) yawezekana hupo sahihi na hakuna mtu mwingine anaweza kuona unavyoona wewe na ngumu kukukatalia.
 
Hivi jamani wanasema vibamia vinaanzia nchi ngapi?

There has been limited research interest concerning penis size despite it being of significant concern to many men. Surveys have focused on men’s desire for a larger penis size but have not related itto actual size (Grov, Parsons, & Bimbi, 2010;Johnston, McLellan, & McKinlay, 2014; Son, Lee, Huh, Kim, & Paick, 2003). Men are more concerned with penis size than women are with the size of their partner’s penis (Lever, Frederick, & Peplau, 2006). In an internet survey of 52,031 heterosexual men and women, 85% of women were satisfied with their partner’s penis size, but only 55% of men were satisfied with their own penis size – 45% wanted to be larger, while only 0.2% wanted to be smaller (Lever et al., 2006). In three smaller studies, 15–21% of women reported that penis length was important, but that penile girth was considered more important functionally during intercourse (Eisenman, 2001; Francken, van de Wiel, van Driel, & Weijmar Schultz, 2002; Stulhofer, 2006). There are no similar studies on the importance of the aesthetics of penis. In gay men, Grov et al. (2010) found that about a third expressed a desire for a larger penis (source: body image journal).

Mondaini et al. (2002) reported that men with SPA tended to over-estimate the average penis size in other men. A case series of fifty-seven men with SPA estimated the length of a flaccid penis in other men to range from 10 cm to 17 cm (median 12 cm). In a metaanalysis of 15,521 men from 20 studies worldwide,the mean flaccid penile length was found, however,to be approximately 9 cm (Veale, Miles, Bramley, Muir, & Hodsoll, 2015). The study by Mondaini et al. (2002)didnotfocus onrelative size,there wasno control group, and the men were not differentiated between those with SPA and those with BDD. Lee (1996) surveyed a group of 112 young (mainly heterosexual) male students. They tended to underestimate the size of their own penis compared to other men and 26% felt that it was smaller or much smaller than that of other men (source: body image journal).
 

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