Rey C.
Racing is life... anything else is just waiting.
Psychologist says ***’s sperm could help nauseated pregnant moms
A psychologist at SUNY-Albany, suggests that ingesting sperm may help a woman combat morning sickness.
One academic is proposing a cure for morning sickness that some moms-to-be might find in bad taste — sperm.
Gordon Gallup, a psychologist at SUNY-Albany has a theory that pregnant women who are continually exposed to the ******’s semen are less like to suffer from AM nausea.
Gallup, who specializes in human reproductive competition and behavior, offers the theory that expectant women become ill and ***** because their bodies are rejecting the semen’s genetic material as something foreign and unfamiliar.
The theory could feasibly quell their queasiness by ingesting the same sperm in order to allow the body to build up a tolerance.
The idea, while likely appealing to ****, is only a hypothesis and has yet to be tested.
The concept, presented at the 2012 Northeastern Evolutionary Psychology Society, also proposed that morning sickness would actually ebb in subsequent pregnancies — if the second ***** was of the same paternity as the first.
In 2000, immunologists proposed that pregnant women who suffered from preeclampsia, a dangerous condition that can cause high ***** pressure and early labor, suffered a lack of tolerance to the foreign properties of the fetus.
Dr. Alyssa Dweck, an ob-gyn based in Mount Kisco, NY and co-author of “V is for Vagina” called the concept of linking immunity with conditions associated with pregnancy “very interesting.”
After all, she said, there’s no medical rhyme or reason to morning sickness.
“The accepted literature links it to possible ***** sugar or hormone imbalances,” she said. “Acid buildup may also cause the feelings of nausea.”
However, due to the lack of conclusive findings on the topic, she said wouldn’t consider recommending oral sex as a morning-sickness cure to her patients.
Gallup has long been making headlines as a proponent of the healing nature of sperm.
In 2002, he made waves when he concluded that exposure to semen offered anti-depressant qualities.
In another article on this subject, I read that Dr. Gordon Gallup posts on a message forum at a place called FreeOnes - just so ya know. :hatsoff:
A psychologist at SUNY-Albany, suggests that ingesting sperm may help a woman combat morning sickness.
One academic is proposing a cure for morning sickness that some moms-to-be might find in bad taste — sperm.
Gordon Gallup, a psychologist at SUNY-Albany has a theory that pregnant women who are continually exposed to the ******’s semen are less like to suffer from AM nausea.
Gallup, who specializes in human reproductive competition and behavior, offers the theory that expectant women become ill and ***** because their bodies are rejecting the semen’s genetic material as something foreign and unfamiliar.
The theory could feasibly quell their queasiness by ingesting the same sperm in order to allow the body to build up a tolerance.
The idea, while likely appealing to ****, is only a hypothesis and has yet to be tested.
The concept, presented at the 2012 Northeastern Evolutionary Psychology Society, also proposed that morning sickness would actually ebb in subsequent pregnancies — if the second ***** was of the same paternity as the first.
In 2000, immunologists proposed that pregnant women who suffered from preeclampsia, a dangerous condition that can cause high ***** pressure and early labor, suffered a lack of tolerance to the foreign properties of the fetus.
Dr. Alyssa Dweck, an ob-gyn based in Mount Kisco, NY and co-author of “V is for Vagina” called the concept of linking immunity with conditions associated with pregnancy “very interesting.”
After all, she said, there’s no medical rhyme or reason to morning sickness.
“The accepted literature links it to possible ***** sugar or hormone imbalances,” she said. “Acid buildup may also cause the feelings of nausea.”
However, due to the lack of conclusive findings on the topic, she said wouldn’t consider recommending oral sex as a morning-sickness cure to her patients.
Gallup has long been making headlines as a proponent of the healing nature of sperm.
In 2002, he made waves when he concluded that exposure to semen offered anti-depressant qualities.
In another article on this subject, I read that Dr. Gordon Gallup posts on a message forum at a place called FreeOnes - just so ya know. :hatsoff: