If I wait a few days and last the full hr and then pull out and go to cum on her stomach I will shoot very hard and get her on the face. The longer the build up the more cum and long projectile.lol
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If I wait a few days and last the full hr and then pull out and go to cum on her stomach I will shoot very hard and get her on the face. The longer the build up the more cum and long projectile.lol
I wanked the night before to try last longer. Wasn’t a good idea. Got it up ok, but found myself getting limp after 15 as excitement wasn’t as high. Then it starts getting mental during the session, trying to stay excited and hard.
Next time I’ll just think a granny if I’m getting to excited and not wank for a few days beforehand.
it's called edging, but gotta be careful, you know want to end going the way David Carradine did.
I have to brag. I dont get to play much so have to go like a madman when I can. I've walked out of a room with 1 girl recently and booked the first girl I have seen in the same brothel. I did 3 shots in the first session (1hour) and 2in the second. Not sure where my energy came from. I use to think not wanking and abstaining for a few days would make it bigger and better. Not sure I still believe that.
lol, ghost loads
Fuck me, I have sex every day or at least every second day and I'm an old bastard. I only hold back for two days when I have a PSA test.
awesome, awesome to the max
When you have to have a PSA (prostate-specific antigen) test, you have to abstain for 2 to 3 days because PSA is elevated after sex. It is like fasting before a blood test.
It is the standard test to measure prostate function -- looking for signs of cancer, prostate enlargement, etc.
All men over 40 should have an annual PSA.
Wish they had told me this when I’ve had mine. Thats probably why mine is a bit higher than normal. Always busting a nut everyday.
its a relative test and give indication, its not related to age.
if there is any raised beyond average, you need to have a second one around 3 months to check the level again.
If its raised it depends on how much its raised and in most cases you will qualify for a MRI which is still costly even with medical rebates.
Depending on that, well its might end up with a Biopsy and then you might have some decisions to make.
Probably quite a few of the older brothers here have or are going thru it :(
As local says, it's relative. You establish a baseline, then look for trends. If it jumps up, confirm, then consider a biopsy. But a high PSA merely indicates a possibility, not a fact. The biopsy is the true test.
Google results for stopping PSA testing:
PSA testing for prostate cancer is generally recommended to stop around age 70 to 75, or when life expectancy is less than 10 years. Guidelines suggest stopping at this age because slow-growing cancers are unlikely to cause harm, while screenings can lead to over-treatment.
Key points regarding stopping PSA tests:
- Routine Screening Age: Most organizations recommend routine PSA testing every two years for men between ages 50 and 69.
- The 70-75 Threshold: Many experts and guidelines recommend stopping routine screening at 70 or 75 due to limited benefits for older men.
- Individual Factors: Decisions should consider overall health, not just age. If a man is in poor health, testing might stop earlier.
- Exceptions: Men with a high risk or family history might continue testing, though it is still rarely recommended beyond age 75.
- Always consult with a doctor to determine the best age to stop testing based on personal health history.
After a certain age, even the yearly visit to your urologist to become reacquainted with his finger is considered unnecessary.
Same idea for colonoscopies; 75.
If it hasn't killed you by now, even if you get cancer, you'll probably die of something else first.
If you start to have problems, then go see your urologist.
One of the few benefits of getting older...
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Google How accurate is a PSA test
PSA tests aren't perfectly accurate; they can be helpful but often produce false positives (high PSA with no cancer) or false negatives (normal PSA with cancer), leading to unnecessary anxiety and invasive follow-up biopsies, or missing cancers that need treatment; they detect prostate issues but aren't specific to cancer, with many elevated results from non-cancerous conditions like BPH or prostatitis, making shared decision-making with a doctor crucial.
Limitations of PSA Testing
- False Positives:
A common issue where elevated PSA levels (due to non-cancerous conditions like BPH or inflammation) lead to anxiety and potentially harmful biopsies.
- False Negatives:
The test can miss some cancers, as not all prostate cancers produce high PSA levels.
- Overdiagnosis:
The test often finds slow-growing cancers that might never cause problems, leading to unnecessary treatment (overtreatment) with potential side effects like erectile dysfunction or incontinence.
- Lack of Specificity:
A high PSA doesn't confirm cancer; it just indicates a potential prostate issue, with only about one-third of men with high PSA levels actually having cancer.
What the Test Shows
It measures Prostate-Specific Antigen, a protein made by the prostate gland, not a direct cancer marker.
Age influences normal ranges, so a higher PSA might be normal for an older man.
Accuracy vs. Utility
While controversial, some evidence suggests screening can reduce prostate cancer deaths, but the benefits must be weighed against harms like overtreatment.
A low PSA can be reassuring, but a high PSA requires further investigation, ideally through shared decision-making with a doctor.
In summary, PSA tests are a tool, not a definitive answer, and their results must be interpreted carefully by a healthcare professional to balance early detection benefits with risks of false positives and overtreatment.
Been holding my cum load now since last week. If I can last till next week, I’ll put Peter North to shame.
To add to what @11Bravo wrote above:
1. Prostate cancer is extremely common with age, but often irrelevant.
Autopsy studies show that many men will develop microscopic prostate cancer if they live long enough. In most cases, it is slow-growing and never causes harm. This is why routine PSA screening is often discouraged after ~70: not because cancer isn’t there, but because over-diagnosis and overtreatment cause more damage than benefit.
2. Prostate enlargement is almost universal and affects urination.
Most prostates start enlarging in the late 30s–40s. By the late 50s and 60s, this commonly affects urinary flow: weaker stream, hesitancy, incomplete emptying, dribbling, and getting up at night to urinate.
3. Enlargement also reduces ejaculatory volume and force.
The prostate provides ~20–30% of semen. As it enlarges, drainage becomes less efficient, so many men notice less volume and a weaker ejaculation.
Moral of the story: If you're under 60, have as much fun as you can today because you will not be banging with force in late life. It will creep up slowly on you, not suddenly on your 60th birthday.
How on earth do you guys hold it in for that long. If I go 2 days without rubbing one out my balls are absolutely angry at me and I have to get it done on my own.