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Movement For An Effective Massage >>
From the Random House House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006:
mas·sage
1. the act or art of treating the body by rubbing, kneading, patting, or the like, to stimulate circulation, increase suppleness, relieve tension, etc.
The hallmark of any effective massage is continual movement and manipulation of the muscles. For example, during a back massage a massage therapist
seeks to relax a muscle by repeating a cycle: apply pressure, release pressure. When the therapist quickly rubs the muscle, the cycle is
fast. When deeper, kneading-type strokes are used, these are still cycles, just slower. This movement of the muscle is what promotes
healthy circulation, increasing blood flow and providing fresh nutrients to the treated area. When this stagnation is released, the muscle can begin to
heal itself.
Stimulation Needs Movement >>
Plesaurable stimulation relies on movement as well. Consider the body's traditional erogenous zones - the penis, nipples, and clitoris. Pleasurable sensations derived
from these are the result of some kind of stimulation. In every case, the stimulation is tied to some active movement - the flick of a tongue, the use of
hands or fingers, the mouth during oral sex, or thrusting during intercourse.
Movement is the key, but it is quality of the movement that takes the pleasure to another level. Think back to some of the greatest sexual experiences of your life.
Chances are, yours and your lover's bodies moved rhythmically
together, almost as one. The Aneros works on this same principle - by moving with each contraction, the Aneros works perfectly in tune with your body.
The Aneros stimulates without distraction.
This freedom facilitates your mind and body acting harmoniously as a single entity, allowing you to focus only on the incredible feelings you are experiencing.
The Aneros Is Designed To Move >>
As the world's only medically patented prostate massager, the Aneros is precisely anatomically designed to massage and stimulate the prostate.
Though the prostate gland is not a technically a muscle and traditionally is not considered to be an erogenous zone, it shares characteristics of both, particulary
in the way it responds to massage and stimulation. For a hard (stagnated) or enlarged prostate, massage has shown to be effective in
shrinking and softening the prostate, in effect, promoting its healing. This concept is similar to the way traditional therapeutic massage can shrink and soften a
shoulder muscle, for example. Like a penis or clitoris, the prostate can be stimulated by massage. Similar to these sexual organs, stimulation of the prostate
is heightened with mental or visual arousal.
The Aneros is designed to move inside the man's body in order to provide an effective, active prostate massage. It is not
stagnant like an unmoving "prostate plug" under the guise of being a massager nor does it masquerade movement by using numbing vibrations like some of our
imitations and knock-offs.
The Aneros provides true movement through its patented hands-free mechanism.
A contracted sphincter muscle causes the Aneros to pivot forward, stroking the prostate. A relaxed sphincter causes the Aneros to pivot back, providing an
external prostate massage via the perineum. This cycle of contracting and relaxing is the engine which drives the movement of the Aneros. The more frequent
the contractions, the faster the cycles; the stronger the contractions, the deeper the massage.
Every subtle curve of each Aneros model has a purpose, to achieve the ideas
of our patents, giving a man the ability to administer a self-propelled, hands-free prostate massage solely via muscular contractions of his own body.
The pleasurable sensations follow.
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