viagra song

What’s to Like About Sex, Anyway?
One of the things about sex is the mythology. As we grow up, it starts off as this mysterious thing that adults do. Then as we begin to physically mature, it becomes more obvious what adults do and the anticipation begins to build. With friends, we speculate on what it will feel like, we bet on which one of us will be the first. Stories flash round school — that P is a stud, that Q is a slut. Gender stereotypes are formed early. Except that all too often, the first fumbling efforts are a disappointment. Those snatched moments of pleasure are uncomfortable and slightly embarrassing. Then you get into a relationship and the real question gets asked. What’s to like about sex, anyway? It’s something you do with the same person, over and over again. It gets boring after a month or so. But then we fall in love. Ah, this mysterious thing called love. According to the guys who write pop songs, there ain’t no sunshine when she’s gone and you always have her on your mind. Suddenly, there’s supposed to be a whole new meaning to the repeated act. Now it’s an affirmation of your continuing love and affection. Except that you’re not always in the mood at the same time and what was exciting at first grows less so. What should a couple do when there’s less sex? Should this be considered a medical problem? Everything is probably working as it should. It’s just there’s less interest. This thing called libido is replaced by a growing loneliness as the two that were one become two again. Of course, a man is supposed to be driven by the desire to have hot, passionate sex every night. The myths of frequency and enjoyment cling tightly to us. If there are problems, they can so easily be fixed by taking the little blue pill. Even if we failed to get an erection for the last two or three nights, viagra can fix everything. Except it can’t. Viagra only works to produce an erection when we are sexually stimulated. If, for some reason, we stop finding sex so interesting, no pill in the world is going to save us from our own lack of desire. Then perhaps we discover that we remain in love with our partners but not in love with sex. Alternatively, we find the relationship is at an end and go find a new interest in sex with a new partner.
Viagra song
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lyrics viagra song
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what lil wayne song is this?
i only know some lyrics : ive been through it all the.. and i got right back up like viagra
It's called
"Love me or Hate me"
Version 2 Of Rainbow Road In Halo CE(Via Gra-Ya Ne Vernus)*With Lyrics*
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viagra song download

does any one know where i can download the song robert klein made about viagra?
try limewire, if u haven't got it on your computer then go onto google and type in download limewire and you can download the software free. it does work, even tho lots of people say it doesnt. thanx
Brokencyde – Blame It On Tom [ New Video + Lyrics + Download ]
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viagra song lyrics
[mage source="flickr"]viagra song lyrics[/mage]
I heard Elton John was going to co-produce a song for Viagra. What are the lyrics and who is he working with?
He and Michael Jackson did the song, Don't Let Your Son Go Down on Me.
VIAGRA SONG PARODY
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the viagra song lyrics
[mage source="flickr"]the viagra song lyrics[/mage]
Anyone heard the song with lyrics "Viagra in the water?" or something like that?
My girlfriend heard it at a party she was catering and she said the live band that played there sang this funny song, lasts along time, has alot of verses. Oh, and one more thing… how do spell Viagera??? LOL… thanks for helping.
I'd spend my time with more important matters Ask your boyfriend or your great grandfather.
U2 – Stuck In A Moment You Can't Get Out Of (Lyrics)
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the viagra song

Feed Your Head
Life can be pretty tasty. Grace Slick said it all in a song nearly four decades ago, “Feed your head!” Of course, she was talking about a different diet then I am right now but it’s close. You remember, don’t you? Late sixties, just out of high school, I wore beads, you wore fringe. We told the barber to get a real job and followed Doc Acid’s directions “Turn on, tune in, drop out!” We were all tripping and I don’t mean by Greyhound.
When the Ice Queen sang about it, she was talking about drugs, any and all kinds and being obliging young rebels; we ingested this and smoked that. We fed our heads with everything that was available. We convinced ourselves that we were adventurous travelers, exploring the limits of our inner selves but hey man, we were mostly just getting high. We liked to think we were searching for the meaning of life but we ended up just spinning our wheels in psychedelia.
Even though we eventually found out that drugs could not provide the answers they did pose quite a few questions. It was those questions that were the real benefit of the drug culture of the late 60’s and early 70’s. They didn’t provide enlightenment but they sure peaked our interest (pardon my pun) and increased our awareness. The music; that was in part fueled by the drugs, had a more crystallizing effect.
Psychedelic acid rock, both powerful and political, reached into our ears and shook us by the brain stems. It made us aware of things our parents had no time to think about, the human condition and the fragility of our planet. It also forced us to question the authority of our government. Civil rights violence, Vietnam, the world was in a state of flux and we had the audacity to think we could change it all.
The sixties became the seventies and somewhere around Altamont things began to spin out of control and when Disco hit, man the scene skipped a beat. The we generation became the me generation and the drug menu changed right along with it. It went from weekend psychedelic trips to party down pharmaceutical lifestyles. Quaalude ruled the day, uppers and downers and, good old cocaine, the ‘all around towner‘.
We got older (and wiser?) and as we climbed the ladder of success we were forced to confine our tripping to the weekends . We occasionally needed a ‘pick me upper’ or a ‘slow me downer’ but caffeine and alcohol came back out of the dugout to pinch hit. Making money was the new high and as always, we did it to excess.
Even today, we never have the time to realize that the high we’ve been chasing all this time has been chillin’. Just hanging out, waiting for us to slow down to catch up. Our senses are the real drug. We carry them around all the time but we just barely use them.
Most of our adult lives we try to close the doors of our perceptions. We shut down from life. Worries cloud our perceptions; the bills, the kids, our careers. We become “comfortably numb”. We begin to be afraid to experience life and that fear dulls the senses. We tend to catch the real experiences of Life as a blur in our peripheral vision.
There is no drug quite like the experience of life. If you want to expand your consciousness just open your senses wide because it is all around you. Life is the drug. Close your eyes and smell that newly mown lawn. What do you flash on? Riding your Schwinn on a warm spring morning or sweating over the lawn mower in the middle of a hot humid August day? It is all in the way you interpret it. It is all in where your head is at. The great thing is you have control. You can make it be, what you want it to be.
I’m saying you’ve got to feed your head everything, continuously. It is meant to absorb all of our experiences and I don’t mean just the drug induced ones. That blood red sunset at the beach, that ice cold pale ale sliding over your tongue and down your parched throat, Garcia noodling in your ear on that Sunday drive in the country, the warm spray of the Gulf in your face as your Hobie cat is flying a hull. When any of these sensorial experiences hits that sweet spot in your gray matter, you’re off and running. You’re higher than a kid on Christmas Your brain wants more and the good thing is that you can give it more. The more you perceive the more you receive.
Don’t get me wrong, we still love our drugs. It’s just that, with the help of our primary care physician, we have made them legal if not mind expanding. Now we’re more concerned with reduction not expansion. We use our drugs today to lower our blood pressure, reduce our cholesterol and shrink our waistline or our prostates. But hey, don’t be bummed out. If you are still seeking expansion, at least you have Viagra.
The Viagra Song
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