Well, I believe that the future gains will come from the same occurrence that happened during your quick growth.
Your newbie gains were big and easy because the connective tissue in your penis was “fresh”, and resistance to a certain amount of force had not been built up.
Also, I believe that some scar tissue is created when we develop gains. Not all members agree about scar tissue being created. Further more, not all members agree that elongation of the connective tissue occurs by micro-tears/microtruama, which is healed by a process of inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. I’m not suggesting that everyone should try the IPR routine, but I am suggesting that the process of IPR is how the connective tissue heals.
Massaging an area reduces scar tissue. I believe that scar tissue is not felt because the microtears are very tiny.
Here’s the information that I believe is direct evidence that IPR occurs. Ultimately the total length of the connective tissue as a whole is changed, and is known as plastic deformation in biomechanics.
Quote
Healing of the most connective tissue except bone, epithelium and endothelium occur by tissue repair. Thisis often accompanied by fibrous scar, which is the typical patching material for wound repair. Repair responses varyconsiderably in different injured tissues. After an injury, the healed tissue is never same as it was before. Tissue repair starts at 48 hours after injury and lasts up to 6 to 8 weeks, fibroblasts begin wound repair and collagensynthesis. Collagen has the property of gradually shortening when it is truly formed. This contracture occurs fromthe third week to the sixth month. New scar tissue will always shorten unless it is repeatedly stretched.Remodelling, also known as maturation, involves increased collagen density and organization, resulting inincreased tensile strength. This process begins as early as 3 weeks following injury and continues for a year or longer.
Nevertheless, since new collagen (type III) is added to repair the microtear, the end result may be categorized as “growth”. You added more collegen in the end, but it was put there just to fill in a space created by the tissue becoming “stretched”. We do not coax “growth” in the connective tissue, which makes up 47% of the penis. We may coax growth in the skin to some extent, but I’m not sure how that occurs, or how the smooth muscle, veins, arteries, or capillaries become longer/larger.
That information is from this site:
I’ve been waiting to post that quote on the IPR thread or other important “science of PE threads”.