Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
What is this?
Less
More

Owned by Gerard

Prostate God

19 members • Free

A Private community for men 40+ to restore prostate comfort, clarity, and confidence. Weekly protocols, supplement guidance, and support.

Memberships

Skoolers

193.1k members • Free

23 contributions to Prostate God
Flomax and your Prostate 😓
Flomax, Tamsulosin, and the Mistake Men Keep Making About Enlarged Prostate Treatment A lot of men finally go to the doctor because the urinary symptoms get annoying enough to interrupt life. Weak stream. Trouble starting. Stopping and starting. Getting up multiple times at night. Feeling like the bladder never really emptied. Then they get prescribed something like Flomax. They take it. The urine flows a little better. They feel some relief. And then a very common misunderstanding starts: “Okay, good. My prostate must be getting better.” Not necessarily. That is one of the biggest areas of confusion in prostate health. What Flomax Actually Is Flomax is the brand name for tamsulosin. It belongs to a group of medicines commonly used for enlarged-prostate urinary symptoms. These medicines are called alpha-blockers. Their job is to relax the muscles in the prostate and bladder neck so urine can pass more easily. NIDDK and Urology Care Foundation both describe alpha-blockers this way: they make it easier to urinate by relaxing muscle, which helps relieve BPH symptoms. That means Flomax is living in the symptom-relief lane. It can help: - weak stream - hesitation - trouble starting - incomplete emptying sensation - urinary frequency - nighttime bathroom trips That relief is real. And for some men, it can be a big deal. If a man has been up three or four times a night, straining to urinate, and feeling miserable, symptom relief matters. But men need to understand exactly what relief means. The Mistake Men Make The mistake is this: A man pees better and assumes the prostate itself is now smaller, calmer, or healed. That is not what alpha-blockers are designed to do. They help the muscles relax. They do not directly reduce the size of the prostate. That distinction matters. Because a man can absolutely feel better symptom-wise while the enlarged-prostate issue is still there in the background. NIDDK says 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors are the class that helps stop growth or shrink the prostate; Mayo says these medicines shrink the prostate by blocking hormone changes that make it grow.
Flomax and your Prostate 😓
1 like • 2d
Thank you for sharing your experience, to help others
Diabetes, Pre-diabetes and erectile dysfunction…
Why the Male Body Starts Sending Invoices Early A lot of men think diabetes is just a blood sugar problem. That’s too small. Diabetes and prediabetes are also blood-vessel problems, nerve problems, and metabolic-environment problems. That is one reason erectile dysfunction is so common in men with diabetes. NIDDK and Mayo both explain that high blood sugar over time can damage the blood vessels and nerves involved in getting and keeping an erection. That matters because erections are not just about desire. They are a performance review of the male vascular and nerve system. A man can still love his woman. Still want intimacy. Still have sexual thoughts. But if the delivery system is damaged, the body may not be able to do what the mind wants. That is why ED in diabetes is often not random and not “just age.” It is the body sending an invoice through one of its most sensitive systems. Mayo notes that erection problems are common in men with diabetes, especially type 2 diabetes, because long-term high blood sugar can damage both nerves and blood vessels. Why Diabetic ED Shows Up Earlier Than Men Expect One of the things men rarely get told is that ED can show up years earlier in men with diabetes than in men without it. NIDDK says men with diabetes may develop ED 10 to 15 years earlier than men who do not have diabetes. That is a big deal. Because by the time a man notices weaker erections, the process may have been going on quietly for a long time. NIDDK also explains that in type 2 diabetes, some of the vascular and nerve damage may begin before diagnosis, because men can spend years with elevated blood sugar before they are formally told they have diabetes. That means a man can think, “I just started having trouble,” when in reality the system has been under pressure for years. That’s how the body works. It tolerates. Compensates. Then eventually it sends invoices. The Two Main Biological Problems: Plumbing and Wiring When I explain diabetic ED to men, I like to make it simple.
Erectile dysfunction
Just curious is possible for one as ed can be reversed
1 like • 13d
absolutely. You can reverse ED naturally. Takes time. You have to reverse the root causes, usually biological…caused by lifestyle.
1 like • 5d
@Garet Thompson Janumet is not a common or classic cause of ED.ED is much more commonly caused by the diabetes itself, high blood pressure, blood vessel damage, nerve damage, or sometimes other blood-pressure medicines rather than Janumet. Most Diabetes care literature recognizes that ED as a common complication of diabetes because diabetes affects blood vessels and nerves, and that can directly impair erections. You have to rebuild your blood vessels. We will do a series on that.
Kidney issues
Sup man? Just saw your video on kidneys. It hit when you mentioned uric acid. I been dealing with gout for over 13 years and it seems like all my issues started there. Runs in my family. Good information.
1 like • 5d
I’m glad the kidney info resonated with you brother. I will do a few more on the topic.
The Liver - Gut- Prostate Connection 💪🏾😤
Your Gut Is Not the Whole Hormone Story A lot of men online are starting to hear some version of this: “Your liver clears estrogen. Your gut puts it back.” Now on the surface, that sounds smart.Technical.Hidden.Advanced. And that is exactly why it spreads. There is enough real biology inside that sentence to make it sound powerful. But then the internet does what it always does: it takes one real mechanism and turns it into the whole story. That’s backwards. The Real Biology Yes, the liver processes hormones. One of the jobs of the liver is to help package certain compounds, including hormones, so they can be moved toward elimination. In plain language, the liver helps make them easier for the body to get rid of. Then the story continues in the gut. Certain gut bacteria can produce enzymes that influence what happens to some of those packaged compounds. In other words, the gut can affect whether part of that hormone material stays headed toward the exit or gets influenced along the way. So yes, there is a real liver-gut connection.That part is worth respecting. But here is where men get misled: A real mechanism is not the same thing as the whole diagnosis. Why Men Get Confused by This Topic Men hear one advanced-sounding concept and immediately think they found the reason their hormones are off. Now suddenly the whole problem is: - gut bacteria - one enzyme - estrogen recycling - a hidden root cause nobody told them about That sounds exciting. But the body does not usually break down that neatly. Because if a man’s hormone balance is off, especially after 40, the bigger drivers are often still the same ones men keep ignoring: - more belly fat - poor sleep - insulin resistance - low movement - more alcohol - poor food quality - chronic stress - fatty liver tendencies - overall metabolic drag That is the bigger conversation. The Prostate and Hormone Balance Do Not Live in Separate Boxes For our audience, this matters because men dealing with prostate issues, weak erections, lower libido, rising belly fat, and declining vitality often want a single villain. But the prostate is not failing in isolation.
1
0
The Liver - Gut- Prostate Connection 💪🏾😤
1-10 of 23
Gerard Fairley
2
3points to level up
@gerard-fairley-2419
I help men pee less frequent

Active 43m ago
Joined Apr 9, 2026
miami, fl