It may come as something of a surprise to discover that,
by a considerable margin, Germany is the penis enlargement capital of
the world. One in five of all of those delicate operations takes place
in that land of bratwurst, long socks and Angela Merkel. I will leave it
to you to reason why.
You can also make what you will of
the fact that Australia did not even come in the top ten. It certainly
doesn’t mean, for example, that our men are not vain.
The steroid black market here is flourishing, and we are among the greatest consumers of testosterone in the world.
Yes,
testosterone. Across the nation, men are jabbing themselves with
needles, wiping on gels, sticking on patches, or having implants
inserted under their skin, in order to look better, feel younger and
beat what is now being called the “manopause.”
In
the land of cliches, a decade ago, a man’s mid-life crisis meant a
shiny red sports car and a pneumatic blonde. Today, it’s extreme diets,
single-digit body fat, hordes of MAMILs (middle-aged men in lycra) on
bicycles, gym selfies of sucked-in stomachs – and a
several-billion-dollar global industry in testosterone.
So
what is manopause? Some relate it to a mid-age natural decline in
testosterone production – called andropause – which leads to weight gain
and libido loss.
Lisa Friedman Bloch and Kathy Kirtland Silverman, the authors of Manopause, define
it as: "a powerful force that hits men between the ages of 40 and 65,
as declining testosterone collides head on with the cultural pressures
men feel … pressures like having to 'man up', to be strong, powerful,
even invulnerable, to hide emotion, and to always be able to perform
sexually.”
Urban Dictionary defines it as: “Men in their
early to mid 50s who lose their minds because they are going through
'the change.'"
Time magazine ran a cover story on
manopause this week, based on a recent University of Sydney study that
found the testosterone industry globally is booming, especially among
middle-aged and older men who want to increase longevity and libido,
boost energy and “power, passion and performance".
But
Professor David Handelsman, the author of the study, said manopause was
“a consumerist fiction invented to fleece the gullible, worried
[well-off men] with more money than sense. There is presently a global
epidemic of unproven and possibly unsafe testosterone prescribing – much
worse in North America than here – but we seem to follow like sheep.”
Professor Handelsman’s study, published in the Medical Journal of Australia,
found that between 2000 and 2011, world testosterone sales increased
12-fold from $150 million to $1.8 billion. Per capita use rose in 37 out
of 41 countries surveyed – and the increase has been particularly acute
in the past five years.
The problem is, testosterone is
often handed out through off-label prescriptions, and used when not
needed. Professor Handelsman wrote that although there is little
understanding of how it worked, testosterone was subject to "surging
overuse from off-label prescribing for diverse unproven indications,
including use in older men as an anti-aging or sexual tonic and in
younger men for bodybuilding or doping."
Professor
Handelsman found in a previous study that drops in testosterone had more
to do with poor diet, obesity or smoking than ageing. One study found
sesame oil injections had the same impact as testosterone injections,
which suggests the placebo effect is a powerful motivating force,
especially when it propels men to eat better and move more.
In
many ways, these men are guinea pigs, often self-administering drugs
with unknown risks. Two studies have found an increased risk of heart
attacks and strokes while taking testosterone. A 2010 study had to be
aborted because the older men involved were thought to be too much at
risk of “adverse cardiovascular events".
Of course it’s
heretical to suggest a drop in testosterone might sometimes be a good
thing. Author Jill Shaw Ruddock says an increase in estrogen in the male
body means 60-year-old men might: “Start exhibiting behaviour that may
start to surprise even him – calling the children every day, learning
how to cook and worrying about home decorating or how the dish towels
are folded and put away.”
This behaviour may be a more exciting prospect for the women of the house than the men.
I
know, the exploding anti-ageing and plastic surgery industry is just
madness: unchecked and booming. It is also brutally adept at exploiting
exisiting insecurities, and at creating new ones.
Professor
Handelsman said the excitement about manopause is “a re-emergence of
the rejuvenation fantasies that recur whenever society can afford such
indulgences as believing that ageing can be somehow avoided.”
It’s
true. In the 1970s, feminists marched to see women valued beyond the
superficial, not to see men judged by the same lame, impossible criteria
of agelessness and physical perfection. Now men are joining us, in a
hamster wheel of endless self-criticism and consumption our mothers
tried so hard to hop off. For the most part, it’s a charmless dichotomy –
you can look old, or look weird.
It’s good to be fit,
strong and healthy. But there is an element of untested sorcery here.
Can men really make middle age disappear, by injecting and tweaking and
exercising it into oblivion? Do we really want to spend years racing our
own limitations until suddenly we are old, or keel over from the
exertion? It’s a shame we associate middle age with crisis, not comfort,
or with a plinth instead of a prime.
by a considerable margin, Germany is the penis enlargement capital of
the world. One in five of all of those delicate operations takes place
in that land of bratwurst, long socks and Angela Merkel. I will leave it
to you to reason why.
You can also make what you will of
the fact that Australia did not even come in the top ten. It certainly
doesn’t mean, for example, that our men are not vain.
The steroid black market here is flourishing, and we are among the greatest consumers of testosterone in the world.
Yes,
testosterone. Across the nation, men are jabbing themselves with
needles, wiping on gels, sticking on patches, or having implants
inserted under their skin, in order to look better, feel younger and
beat what is now being called the “manopause.”
Advertisement
Curiously it is Australia’s mining states - Western Australia and Queensland - that consume the most testosterone.In
the land of cliches, a decade ago, a man’s mid-life crisis meant a
shiny red sports car and a pneumatic blonde. Today, it’s extreme diets,
single-digit body fat, hordes of MAMILs (middle-aged men in lycra) on
bicycles, gym selfies of sucked-in stomachs – and a
several-billion-dollar global industry in testosterone.
So
what is manopause? Some relate it to a mid-age natural decline in
testosterone production – called andropause – which leads to weight gain
and libido loss.
Lisa Friedman Bloch and Kathy Kirtland Silverman, the authors of Manopause, define
it as: "a powerful force that hits men between the ages of 40 and 65,
as declining testosterone collides head on with the cultural pressures
men feel … pressures like having to 'man up', to be strong, powerful,
even invulnerable, to hide emotion, and to always be able to perform
sexually.”
Urban Dictionary defines it as: “Men in their
early to mid 50s who lose their minds because they are going through
'the change.'"
Time magazine ran a cover story on
manopause this week, based on a recent University of Sydney study that
found the testosterone industry globally is booming, especially among
middle-aged and older men who want to increase longevity and libido,
boost energy and “power, passion and performance".
But
Professor David Handelsman, the author of the study, said manopause was
“a consumerist fiction invented to fleece the gullible, worried
[well-off men] with more money than sense. There is presently a global
epidemic of unproven and possibly unsafe testosterone prescribing – much
worse in North America than here – but we seem to follow like sheep.”
Professor Handelsman’s study, published in the Medical Journal of Australia,
found that between 2000 and 2011, world testosterone sales increased
12-fold from $150 million to $1.8 billion. Per capita use rose in 37 out
of 41 countries surveyed – and the increase has been particularly acute
in the past five years.
The problem is, testosterone is
often handed out through off-label prescriptions, and used when not
needed. Professor Handelsman wrote that although there is little
understanding of how it worked, testosterone was subject to "surging
overuse from off-label prescribing for diverse unproven indications,
including use in older men as an anti-aging or sexual tonic and in
younger men for bodybuilding or doping."
Professor
Handelsman found in a previous study that drops in testosterone had more
to do with poor diet, obesity or smoking than ageing. One study found
sesame oil injections had the same impact as testosterone injections,
which suggests the placebo effect is a powerful motivating force,
especially when it propels men to eat better and move more.
In
many ways, these men are guinea pigs, often self-administering drugs
with unknown risks. Two studies have found an increased risk of heart
attacks and strokes while taking testosterone. A 2010 study had to be
aborted because the older men involved were thought to be too much at
risk of “adverse cardiovascular events".
Of course it’s
heretical to suggest a drop in testosterone might sometimes be a good
thing. Author Jill Shaw Ruddock says an increase in estrogen in the male
body means 60-year-old men might: “Start exhibiting behaviour that may
start to surprise even him – calling the children every day, learning
how to cook and worrying about home decorating or how the dish towels
are folded and put away.”
This behaviour may be a more exciting prospect for the women of the house than the men.
I
know, the exploding anti-ageing and plastic surgery industry is just
madness: unchecked and booming. It is also brutally adept at exploiting
exisiting insecurities, and at creating new ones.
Professor
Handelsman said the excitement about manopause is “a re-emergence of
the rejuvenation fantasies that recur whenever society can afford such
indulgences as believing that ageing can be somehow avoided.”
It’s
true. In the 1970s, feminists marched to see women valued beyond the
superficial, not to see men judged by the same lame, impossible criteria
of agelessness and physical perfection. Now men are joining us, in a
hamster wheel of endless self-criticism and consumption our mothers
tried so hard to hop off. For the most part, it’s a charmless dichotomy –
you can look old, or look weird.
It’s good to be fit,
strong and healthy. But there is an element of untested sorcery here.
Can men really make middle age disappear, by injecting and tweaking and
exercising it into oblivion? Do we really want to spend years racing our
own limitations until suddenly we are old, or keel over from the
exertion? It’s a shame we associate middle age with crisis, not comfort,
or with a plinth instead of a prime.