Ron Low - circumcised at birth in 1962 - demonstrates the Cuff used with the TLC-X foreskin restoration tugger.
The advantages are:
- There are no small washers to lose.
- Light weight has little impact on the chosen tugging force.
- Weights are secured high and snug against the retaining cone for inconspicuous daytime wear.
- Your-Skin Cone won't lift upon inflation, causing TLC Air devices to leak.
Drawbacks include:
- It's possible to accidentally clamp the Cuff too snugly against the Your-Skin Cone. Never tolerate pain.
The foreskin plays an important role in normal function. The skin that is commonly removed in circumcision is imbued with thousands of specialized nerve endings, highly sensitive to light touch. The restored skin protects the glans and adjacent mucosa, keeping these parts supple and sensitive. The normal or restored sheath of slack skin provides a mobility that lets the skin glide during intimacy and manipulation, affording the natural mode of frictionless stimulation.
Non-surgical foreskin restoration involves tensioning the skin which induces the skin tube to grow longer so the surviving skin can function somewhat like a foreskin. Although there is no evidence that specialized nerve ending organelles regenerate, those nerve endings which remain can function more as seemingly "intended" by nature because the skin sheds thickened surface layers, stays moist, and slinks around to cause a bending and straightening of the skin which the nerve endings are seemingly "designed" to respond to.
For help getting started with foreskin restoration, visit TLCTugger.com to see a wide range of tugging devices available, and Foreskin-Restoration.net/forum, a free online support group, to discuss restoration with thousands of experienced restoring men.
To learn about protecting infants from forced genital cutting visit Circumstitions.com or IntactAmerica.org, or look for Intactivists on Facebook.
This and other instructional videos can be viewed at TLCTugger.com by clicking Instructions.