i'd rather go dust the book off and comment on it directly, maybe soon, but a few comments.
graham wrote: In fact, that's probably the reason it's not selling so well.
i doubt that had anything to do with success or lag at all.
merle wrote: I want my life back.
i think these five words sum up the majority of men's experience with gyne rather nicely. good wishes for the op and trip both.
graham wrote: I simply don't believe that you should encourage others to have surgery simply on the basis of your own success with it.
you'd be very popular with the bush and "patriot act" crew back here in the states, that doesn't much sound like a belief in the free and open marketplace of ideas to me. even one datum is data, and most people here read their experience in the light of others' too. and you imply you have no business sharing your own thoughts via the internet, since they are rooted in even
less foundation than first-hand experience. and, by that token, you also allow too that had you ever had a failure, above merely speculating about them, you would have no business sharing such perspective.
graham wrote: What I don't think will help is trying to inform the public at large about a condition that most of us are not even comfortable talking about.
i would have fidgeted like nothing to see a gyne documentary back in the 80's, but it would have spared me all hell. good for merle for getting the word out, and i personally bought it in part in appreciation for his setting up the site (not that he's rolling in cash as a result).
graham wrote: Gyno is not a condition like testicular cancer where 'educating' the public actually helps save lives in any real sense. If you think it is, then you are sorely mistaken.
the point you probably feel safest about is the one i think you miss the most widely. gyne is vastly more insidious and destructive precisely because unlike cancer, it does most of its work
unseen; it is the cancer of the living dead. i'll pass over the suicide question, significant as that is, to go straight to saying i think you need to vastly expand your concept of destroyed life, as gyne in ignorance can reach much wider than a simple headstone in a cemetary. i speak from my own experience i have seen echoed in part in the accounts of others too. gyne is a little like a neutron bomb: it destroys the life and leaves the outward structures intact, but since that is all you look on, you appear to deny anything ever detonated.
Ffurg wrote: But the bottom line here is surgery, whilst not always 100% successful is by far the most effective treatment for resolving gyne.
agree.
Ffurg wrote: And those who choose to go for it have my complete support. And those who don't, like H3 still have my support.
well said, and i'd bet all of us here, maybe graham included, agree. in fact i have never yet chosen not to, i might still get my chance, it's perhaps just a quirk of weird circumstances that i haven't.
hypo wrote: Oh I see education is ok for THE RIGHT PEOPLE Wink ... Either education is a good thing or it is not, the way you talk you would think it was up to you to decide who can obtain information and who can't.
i completely agree, however this has humorously ironic overtones for a discussion we once had on press freedoms
graham wrote: Who the hell are you but a friggin' noob?
giving people the flipout you were promising to deny them, eh? i actually think you're smart enough to know how absolutely unworthy a level of post you let yourself drop to here.
graham wrote: Next, let's all examine our stool for signs of blood - why? Because some people have discovered they had colon cancer. It's our duty to educate.
same deal again. and it's not like ignorance is preferable.
graham wrote: This is so lame. Do you think people with gyno are blind? They can see that other people have it too. Just like the thousands of us who found our way here, the thousands out there can too.
graham, this is waaaaaay off base. i never found this site till i was thirty-seven, and i read and get around much more than most. nor was i the first to mistakenly assume it was a cancer in remission.
graham wrote: So let's keep reminding them so everywhere a guy with gyne goes, there will be somebody who might potentially make fun of him.
to call this dicey logic would flatter it. there's a foundation for kids with cleft palate out there, but they must have no business putting out info or pictures since, exposing them to ridicule, that will make things worse, not better.
i think the thread would do a lot better returning to the subject of the book itself than theorizing about its desirability, degenerating further into cheap jabs at other people as noobs (like recency matters one fetid dingo's kidney anyway, as a great uk author once put it). no you shouldn't have to absolutely have read the book like me, but i do agree it would make a post a bit more credible.