Articles

Chickipedia


The Scientific Method: Breaking Down How You’re Hooking Up

posted
06/4/12

<a href='http://www.mademan.com/tag/sex/' class='linkify' target='_blank'>sex</a> chemistry <a href='http://www.mademan.com/tag/brain/' class='linkify' target='_blank'>brain</a> rendering.jpg” /></p>
<p>The human body knows all too much about sexual chemistry. But do you? Pull up a seat, grab a pad and take notes. From a feminine scent to a scent from a gent, there are various scientific methods to consider when breaking down how you’re hooking up. Mind you, if these methods don’t <a href='http://www.mademan.com/tag/work/' class='linkify' target='_blank'>work</a>, then nothing will.</p>
<p style=funwithfruitsandvegetab.jpg

Revamp, repel, protect. How would a man know that a woman produces copulins when they are ovulating? Like an airborne virus, the scent of an ovulating woman can’t escape men. Testosterone levels can rise once the odor reaches a man’s nostrils. Men, in return, release androstenone. What does that have to do with planning on hooking up? Everything.

pheromone-cologne-by-marilyn-miglin-34-oz-eau-de-toilette-spray-for-men-348

Factory made pheromone scent of a man. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out why men wear cologne. Some cologne scents pump a chemical hook, line and sinker. Back and forth, like a tennis match, the perfume and cologne attract. Men give off androstenone. Androstenone triggers a woman’s hormone part responsible for sexual desire—the luteinizing hormone. Don’t use too much cologne and learn to use a new cologne every now and then. Guy Laroche’s Drakkar Noir is a good scented example that should be used sparingly. A little goes a long way and can last for hours.


More About..., , , , , , , , , , ,