A 43-year-old Scotland native who was given a bionic penis after losing his own organ in an accident when he was a child is about to lose his virginity, telling reporters that he had “waited long enough” and that it would be “a great start to the new year.”
According to the Daily Mail and the New York Daily News, Mohammed Abad of Edinburgh was equipped with the “mechanical member” in 2012 after he had lost his organic one in what has been described as a freak road accident when he was just six years old.
Following his procedure, he is now able to urinate and ejaculate normally, and he plans to take full advantage of the latter next week with a 35-year-old dominatrix named Charlotte Rose, the media outlets have reported, but not until after a dinner date in London.
Abad told The Sun that he was “really excited” about the hook-up, and Rose, who said that she will not charge him for their romantic rendezvous, said that she was “honored that he chose me to take his virginity” and that she hopes he can “find a lovely lady to settle down with.”
So, uh, how exactly does a bionic penis work?
Abad, who lost his penis and testicles after being run over and dragged by a car when he was a boy, originally had surgery to fit an eight-inch bionic replacement in 2012. However, it has only been fully functional since July 2015 following a special surgery, the Daily Mail said.
The bionic penis was created using a skin graft from Abad’s arm and has a pair of tubes under the skin. Those tubes become inflated with saline with the push of a button, the New York Daily News explained, which is how he gets an erection. Fluids come from an abdominal pouch.
A second button on the penis allows it to deflate after use, reports indicate. The device was made by researchers at University College London. It took surgeons 11 hours to attach the organ, Abad said, and afterwards he had an erection for two weeks in order to allow the penis to fully heal.
He also told the This Morning program last year that he had undergone a total of 119 operations to correct the issue, and that he doubted he would feel the same sensations during sex that other men with biological penises would. “I’m totally different,” Abad said.
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Feature Image: ITV
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