These (copulins) hormone-like pseudo-psychological chemicals are emitted by female
primates, and allow the female to affect--and even control--the male
hypothalamus. Copulins are a mixture of vaginal acids suspended in
vaginal fluids and are secreted near the presence of male semen, or
become airborne and transmitted to nearby males.
Research since the mid to late 90s has proven that copulins can affect
and even control a male's brain. It's long been known that a female's
"pheromones" can affect certain male behavior. Pheromones will affect
how a male behaves sexually toward the female, but copulins will affect a
male's dominant/submissive behavior. Each female's copulins will
affect each male's behavior differently and at different levels. A
female whose copulins have a strong effect on a particular male may
notice the male wanted to please her, offer gifts, and do what she
wants. This is not a sexually driven need to please, but an unconscious
reflex, and the female may notice there is no limit to what the male
will do for her.
Cumulative effects of copulins on male behavior
Stage 1)
Initial copulin introduction.
The first time a female’s copulins are introduced into a male’s
hypothalamus, the effects are usually anticlimactic. Typical reaction
ranges from no effect, a general feeling of well-being, or a state of
relaxation. Because copulins are similar to pheromones, the male may
also find the female more attractive, but this is very rare. The most
common reaction is no reaction. At this stage--which can last just one
instance, or many—the male’s polypeptides in the hypothalamus are
unaffected, and the receptors in the hypothalamus ignore the copulins.
Stage 2)
Initial copulin reception
At this stage, the male brain begins to receive copulins as input.
As with all these stages, there is no line in the sand for when the
first stage ends and the next stage begins. Some couples never reach
this stage. The male’s receptors have begun to accept copulins as
neurotransmitters; that is to say, the brain is no longer ignoring the
copulins, and is actually being affected by them. The male’s
polypeptides continue to do their job, however, so the male is now
receiving mixed signals. He may feel slightly confused, but he will
still be able to differentiate between his own thoughts and ideas, and
those that are foreign. The female’s input may now sound like better
ideas than they did before, but the male does still know these are the
female’s ideas and not his own.
Furthermore, this is the stage where the male begins to develop
recurring behaviors during coupling. Many of the occurrences during
this time will become permanent. For example, if the male says
something in particular, it may stick, and he will say this same phrase
during subsequent couplings. I know of one couple where the male always
recites the same joke each time they couple, always after about 20
minutes. This example is somewhat uncommon, for usually the repeated
behavior will be something quite ordinary (like saying “I love you.”).
It may seem ordinary, but later becomes unusual in that the behavior
repeats at about the same time every coupling. The behavior is
normal—the pattern is odd. This is a learned behavior, and is caused by
when the copulins make their first communication with the
hypothalamus. The hypothalamus remembers the copulins when they become
present again, triggering whatever behavior the male exhibited that
first time. Although at this time the male is aware of his behavior, it
is a triggered, habitual response, requiring little thought.
The first phases of addiction begin at this stage as well. As stated
before, copulins appear to be highly addictive. What is not known is
whether it is a chemical or psychological addiction, or both. This
addiction starts out as nothing more than a desire to “do that again
sometime”, and this desire is strongest immediately after coupling,
quickly weakening as time goes by. We’ll see how this addiction pattern
flips in later stages.
In the late phases of this stage, the male may begin exhibiting
submissive behavior toward the female, or at least the desire to
please. Many females express their belief that this was caused by the
intimacy and eroticism of the situation, and the male’s desire to please
in order to garner sexual gratification. I disagree with this, but at
this point have no way to prove or disprove my assertions.
Stage 3)
Copulin ascendancy
This advanced stage occurs with couples who have been together a long
time, or when the male’s hypothalamus has been affected by copulins
non-stop for an extended time (several weeks or months). What’s
important to remember is that these stages continue to advance, no
matter the length of time between couplings. So, coupling two days in a
row will have the same effect as coupling a second time after a year
since the first time.
At this stage, the more aggressive copulins are favored as
neurotransmitters over the male’s polypeptides, and the female’s input
is primary as the copulins now direct the hypothalamus. This is not to
say that the male is unable to think for himself, but what happens is
that all input from the male is regulated at the hypothalamus level.
The hypothalamus acts a relay station, processing two-way information.
First, outside stimulus is first processed at the hypothalamus, which in
turn tells the rest of the brain how to respond. Second, brain
activity sends information to the hypothalamus, which in turn tells
another part of the brain how to respond. The male brain can think for
itself, unless it is in conflict with input from the female. The male
can think of anything at all at this time, but as soon as input is
received from the female, the brain focuses entirely on that input, and
all thoughts that are contrary to the female’s input are halted. For
example, the male might be thinking about playing golf on Tuesday, even
though he knows the female doesn’t like him to play golf. If the female
stated that he won’t think about golf anymore, and will instead think
of her, the male will find himself incapable of thinking of golf while
the copulins are present.
At this stage also is when copulins begin to desensitize nerves in
the male genitalia. It’s not understood why copulins don’t have this
effect initially, but I’ve speculated that it’s similar to a resistance
breakdown. The more frequent copulins are in contact with nerve
endings, the stronger their ability to anesthetize the nerves. At this
stage, the male will experience mild tingling in the genitalia, and
sometimes just below the navel.
In this stage or the next, as copulins flood the hypothalamus, the
male may also experience hyperactive motor activity; his body may
tremble, and his breathing can become short and irregular. Because the
hypothalamus regulates motor activity, I can only assume this is a side
effect of the “switch over” from polypeptide to copulin
neurotransmission.
Stage 4)
Copulin dominance
Few couples achieve this level of copulin dominance in the male
hypothalamus, and if it does happen, it is because the female has made a
conscious effort to keep her copulins active in her mate’s
hypothalamus. In short, this stage is not reached by accident. At this
stage, the hypothalamus completely ignores the male’s polypeptides
while copulins are present, even if the female gives no input. Although
the male is not forming too many original thoughts, the brain is still
communicating ideas back and forth; however, these ideas are completely
regulated by what the male already knows the female expects. Using the
example above, the male might think in the forefront, “What am I going
to do on Tuesday?” Without ever considering golf, the male will answer
himself by immediately thinking what the female would want. What’s
important is that the male isn’t making a conscious effort to put
himself in his mate’s shoes, but truly thinks he has formulated this
idea on his own. Past communication has already established that the
female doesn’t want him to play golf, and so the copulins allow only
those thoughts that promote non-golf activities to reach the conscious
level. This level is the classic copulin model that most people think
about when it comes to copulins and their effects.
Also at this level is when copulins can affect the male limbic system
where memories reside. Please remember that nothing is ever completely
erased from memory. In even the most severe amnesia cases, memories
have finally been accessed after many years. What is influenced is the
access to the memories, not the memories themselves. At the female’s
input, memories stored in the male’s limbic system can be locked, unable
to be accessed by the male. By the same token, these same memories can
be unlocked at a later date. Also, memories can be planted; that is,
something that never happened can be planted as a memory, or an event
can be altered. Females have often reported that when they’ve done
anything with their mate’s memories, the male conveys a sensation of
ecstasy and profound awe of the female. I’m not certain why this would
happen, but my early premise is that this process (when the copulins
manipulate the limbic system) triggers a chemical response similar to
those of psycho active drugs.
The addiction at this level has changed so that the longer the male
is without copulins, the more he craves it. He may crave copulins a day
later, but a week later he will think about it often (he will think
about coupling, or whatever activity has transmitted copulins in the
past), and month later he may become constantly agitated. The few males
I’ve interviewed on this admitted that they had no idea why they had
grown increasingly upset, and were unaware that they were addicted to
copulins.
Females report that males at this stage, as copulins are
transmitting, steadily become “dumber”, repeating themselves or the
female’s words, slurring, or mixing words up. Late in the coupling,
females state that the male will typically become incoherent and finally
go silent. Once a hypothalamus is flooded with copulins, the male
brain is just sitting on idle, with only the bare minimum of thought
process. In this state, the male is probably not thinking of anything
at all, but any input from the female will become the male’s singular
focus. This is the best occasion for accessing the limbic system
effectively.
Stage four is also where we begin to see the male’s behavior capable
of being modified, even after copulins are no longer present. The
female can plant ideas during coupling (later stages of the session) and
the male will act upon them at a later date, completely convinced they
are his own idea, even if the male has not had copulins in his system
for an extended period. Just as in hypnosis, trigger words can be used
to “trigger” the male to respond in a predetermined fashion. What is
happening here is that the copulin/hypothalamus communication creates
new behavior models for the male. We all have behavior models from
birth, and each person’s model is different, of course. When somebody
says “chocolate”, my mouth begins to water, and I may hear my tummy
rumble. My sister, however, may grimace at the word “chocolate”, for
she is allergic to it and has learned that chocolate is a bad word.
These are automatic responses, and the male’s response to a trigger
word, or modified behavior during a coupling session, is the same—an
automatic, unthinking response.
Whether this behavior modification via copulins is permanent or not
is unknown; to date, no male research subject has slipped out of the
behavior model set up by the female partner. Finding enough couples
that have reached stage four willing to participate in a long term,
controlled study has proven difficult.
The male at this level of copulin dependency may begin to see his
female partner as something more than she is. He may attribute her
seeming powers to something supernatural, divine, or having some kind of
superiority over himself. Many males have stated that they learned
their mate was superior to them in all ways, even when it was obvious
this was not the case. One well-muscled male, who was considerably
larger than his wife, believed she was physically stronger than he was.
Another common testimony by males is that they feel their mate
possesses a commanding voice, and can make things happen just by the
power of her words. This sort of admiration the male has for his female
partner can border on deification, and one male candidly asserted that
his wife could electrocute him if she was so inclined. There is no way
of knowing whether these notions of supernatural power were planted by
the females, or were the unwitting fabrications by awestruck males, but
after extensive interviews with the female subjects, it’s obvious that
the males do at least elevate the female to a level of superiority.
At this stage, we see an increase in the occurrence of hyperactive
motor activity when the copulins flood the hypothalamus. Also, the male
will experience more numbness than before, with the genitalia become
totally desensitized, and varying levels of numbness from upper thigh to
just below the ribcage. Tingling sensations may travel up the spine,
or in the palms and feet. A few testimonials report the same sensation
in the back of the head, or rash-like discoloration on the cheeks, neck,
or upper chest.
Late in this stage, the testicles appear to produce less sperm than
in earlier stages, and on average, contain more copulins than before.
The copulins have apparently directed the hypothalamus to, in turn,
switch off sperm production. This then permits more volume of copulins
to be stored in the testicles.
Stage 5)
Persona Assimilation
In my early studies of couples, I had mapped levels one through four,
but in recent years, keeping in touch with many of those couples, I
realized there was need for a new level. The couples in question had
all maintained a stage 4 for five years or more. That is to say that
the males had been receiving copulins regularly for many years. My
initial assessment was that the levels of effect reached a plateau, and
nothing new developed in male behavior. Couples had gone four years of
almost daily coupling without noticing any positive change in the male’s
behavior. All males exhibited the highest levels of behavior as
described in stage 4 above. In 2002, I started receiving accounts of
new behavior, and the next year, these accounts increased. By early
2004, I was convinced that all of the study couples had risen to a new
stage, beyond that described before. This stage is based on testimony,
not on actual controlled study.
Females reported that their male partners were acting on behalf of
the female, as though anticipating the female’s needs before those needs
were voiced. “It’s as though he’s reading my mind now,” one female
said. The behavior described verges on how subconscious communication
might work, and I received several emails asking if this was some sort
of extrasensory perception, or something from the X-Files. One female
asked if she and her husband were now communicating like animals, using
some sixth sense. Let me assure you that there’s a less fantastical
explanation.
My presumption is that the male has learned his partner’s traits so
well that he “knows” her as well as she knows herself. This is not
caused by anything mysterious, but rather, because the male has made the
female his primary focus-- at such a high level, for an unbroken and
extended time—he has assimilated the female’s values, character, manners
and patterns. Before, the male performed what the female instructed
because he was instructed to do so; however, at this stage, the male
performs without instruction because that is what the female would do,
or would want done. Of course, at stage four, the female could instruct
the male to always do whatever needs to be done, but if anything new
was thrown into the mix, the male would not act upon it. For example, a
female described how she had her husband scrub the inside of the
refrigerator every Saturday morning at 8:30 AM, which he faithfully
performed for 38 months without fail. When the refrigerator was
replaced, and the old one sat on the curb for pick up, that following
Saturday, the male dutifully went out and scrubbed the old refrigerator
as always, even though the appliance was now empty and destined for the
dump. In stage five, the male thinks before acting. What has happened
is that we’ve come full circle.
Before a male is introduced to copulins, or is in the early stages,
he thinks for himself without input from the female. Later, the male
thinks, but with the female’s input. Finally, at stage four, the male
acts upon the female’s input without thinking. At stage five, the male
is again thinking without input from the female, but what’s different
from the first stage is that the male is thinking what the female would
think. The male has effectively become an extension of the female,
where the female is the mind, and the male is the body that acts out the
mind’s instructions. To test my theory, I have asked the female
couples reporting this stage to try and mix things up for an entire
week, to confuse the males with unexpected instructions. All females
reported that when they told their partner to do something
uncharacteristic, the male continued to do things “the right way”. For
instance, a female described her partiality for tidiness—a neat freak,
in her own words. She then instructed her male to leave dishes out,
toss dirty clothes on the floor, and not pick up anything that had been
left out. The male did as instructed. “But,” she says, “then the mess
started getting on my nerves, and without me saying a word, he
immediately cleaned up the mess. I had planned on cutting your
experiment short and having him clean up the mess the next day, but it
was as though he picked up on my feelings or thoughts and acted on
them.” Why this persona assimilation occurs could be attributed to
repetition, as stated above, but it also could be attributed to
something biological, and I hope to begin a controlled study of this
late this year.
The last characteristic of this phase is that male ejaculation no
longer appears to have any effect on copulin-induced behavior (see the
page on How Copulins Work). In stages one through four, ejaculation
eliminates copulins from the hypothalamus, but in stage five, it appears
that either the copulins remain in the hypothalamus after ejaculation,
or the hypothalamus has been trained to block the influence of
testosterone. Without proper data, I can only guess what is happening
at the chemical level.
How do copulins get from the female to the male?
TRANSMISSION OF COPULINS: There are two ways
copulins can transmit from female to male: through the air, and by
direct genital contact. copulins and their "support" fluids are
produced in the vaginal walls, and a small amount of copulins exists at
all times within the vagina, usually near the opening. When a woman
breathes, the movement causes minute amounts of copulins to become
airborne. If she is stationary for an extended period of time, the
copulins will eventually exist in the air around her; however, it
appears to take some time for copulins to escape clothing fabric and
actually become airborne. Like pheromones, airborne copulins are
transmitted from female to male via the male's VNO organ inside the
nasal cavity.
1) The first role of copulins is to detect the
presence of male semen. When semen comes into contact with the vagina,
the copulins trigger the vaginal walls to produce more copulins, and
their supporting fluids (see below).
2) Once the copulins detect
male semen, the vaginal entry produces lubrication to promote penile
entry into the vagina. This is the same fluid that is produced to help
intercourse. If intercourse begins immediately, the copulins have no
time to take any effect.
3) As the vaginal walls begin to
secrete copulins, they are also triggered to expand. This expansion
within the vagina creates a vacuum, helping to facilitate the "drawing
in" of the penis.
4) If the penis duct remains relatively
immobile against any portion of the vaginal wall or entry, the vaginal
walls begin to produce copulins at the location of the penis duct
(detection of semen). Note that if the penis does not enter the vagina,
copulin transmission is relatively slow. Most males experience some loss
of feeling as copulins--which are found to have anesthetic
qualities--enter the penis. My theory is that this is for those
situations where the female needs to get this done without the male
knowing it (see my answer to question below).
5) The vagina
walls continue to contract and expand in attempts to draw the penis into
itself. This is an involuntary muscle response, but also serves to
stimulate the penis to become erect.
6) Once the penis is within
the vagina, a viscous fluid is produced around the penile shaft. This
fluid is non-lubricating, and actually holds the penis in place. Note,
this fluid is not copulins themselves, but a fluid that is triggered
merely by the presence of something immobile within the vaginal cavity.
The penis continues to try to lubricate the vagina with semen, but we'll
get to that in a moment....
7) Now the vagina has the penis
where it wants it, and the fun begins. It has long been known that the
vagina of primates produces a hormone, progestogen, that shrinks tissue.
Researchers postulated that this was for childbirth, to help shrink
hemorrhaging infant tissue. However, it has never been explained why
progestogen was never present during childbirth, and why it only was
found in women who had had intercourse. It is now known that progestogen
shrinks the interior walls of the penis. This does not shrink the penis
itself, but rather the tissue inside, causing the walls of the penis to
pull away from themselves. The penile duct widens and opens. As the
penile duct opens, so too the progestogen enters, further opening the
penile duct.
8) While the penile duct is being opened, the
vaginal walls begin secreting a much thicker fluid, thicker even than
the fluid holding the penis in place. The fluid is chemically attracted
to semen. In short, the fluid enters the penis, follows the semen down
the shaft and directly into the gonads. This process can take as long as
fifteen minutes, and requires that the vagina produce up to and
exceeding 100 milliliters (a little less than half a cup) of this fluid
in order to completely fill the penile shaft and gonads. This is over
twenty times as much fluid as is ejaculated by the male during sexual
intercourse.
9) Once this unbroken connection between the vaginal
wall and gonads is established, the copulins begin traveling down this
strand of fluid, to the gonads. Dr. McClintock described this fluid as
having the same viscosity as thick honey. My research did not cover this
process as it has been well documented by many other researchers.
10)
As the copulins travel into the gonads, the vaginal walls begin to
contract involuntarily. Normally this would facilitate pushing out the
penis, but because the penis has been secured by the sticky fluid from
earlier, the pressure causes the copulins and its transmittal fluid to
surge into the penis. Fluid and copulin production increases, and
measurements of total fluid level is up to a 100 milliliter per hour.
11)
Where does all this fluid go? Most of the fluid is absorbed and
concentrated in the gonads. The gonads are of a spongy tissue, and when
the fluid enters the gonads, it becomes more concentrated. The excess
fluid is absorbed by the surrounding tissue. In any case, all copulins
suspended within the fluid eventually make it into the bloodstream.
However, the more fluid that is held within the gonads, the longer the
copulins continue to enter the bloodstream. Two-tenths of a liter of
this fluid concentrated within the gonads will send copulins into the
bloodstream for 24 to 36 hours.
12) When copulins reach the
gonads, they are then either immediately absorbed into the bloodstream,
or stored for later. If the gonads become full, they cannot produce
their own hormones (testosterone and androstenone) until the fluid has
been completely absorbed by the body.
13) Once in the
bloodstream, copulins travel throughout the male body. Only until they
have reached the hypothalamus do they attach themselves to anything and
end their journey.
EFFECT OF COPULINS ON THE MALE SUBCONSCIOUS: When copulins are present within the male hypothalamus, many changes occur.
1)
copulins "disguise" themselves as the male's polypeptides, which are
neurotransmitters--the link of communication between the hypothalamus
and the rest of the brain and body. Because copulins are more
"aggressive" than polypeptides, they easily supplant the host's
neurotransmitters. Moreover, copulins appear to be addictive.
2)
By controlling the hypothalamus' communication link with the rest of the
body, it also can access the nearby limbic system, which is the brain's
center for the retaining of memories. The copulins shut off the link to
the limbic system, thereby preventing any current activity from being
remembered. The male will have hazy memories of well-being, but cannot
remember anything while the limbic system is not communicating.
3)
Now here is the process that is still not fully understood: Once the
copulins have replaced the polypeptides, the sensory input of the male
is controlled. Although the male can receive any normal sensory input
(sight, smells, auditory, etc.), the female can vocally change what the
male perceives and/or remembers. Research has demonstrated that only the
voice of the female who produced the copulins can have any effect.
Males shut out all other voices and did not respond to other females'
voices in the lab, nor voices from a speaker. How the hypothalamus is caused to filter all but a single voice is what is not understood. During this time, the female can vocally do the following: A) Change, remove, or insert memories. B) Tell the male what he sees, hears, feels, smells, tastes. C) Insert subconscious thoughts that will surface as male "ideas" or behavior later. D)
Plant trigger words or actions that can cause thoughts, actions, or
sensations in the male at later dates (days, weeks, even months).
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