Urine--Good to the last drop!!

Obviously someone just like you. :eek:

Hi M Peterson! Welcome to this hive of intelligence and silliness.

As a fee-paying member of the gay community (joke, Joyce) I can attest that it’s true that in my circles most folk would know about or joke about watersports, many have tried it out (we’re earnest pioneers in the realms of sex, us gay boys) but very few have an interest in continuing activity of this sort.

Those who like it really like it. I’m certain it is partly to do with breaking taboos - the more shame, the more delight in embracing the shame.

It is an activity that involves planning and clean-up in order to avoid mess and odour, of course, and the conflict between that and the spontaneity that both sex and micturation involve is a tricky one to master. It is not especially harmful healthwise, or disgusting to the participants.

I can declare with confidence that there’s no significant connection with transvestitism. You just may have been lucky with the transvestites you’ve met. (Also a joke)

From the shelves of my local adult bookstore, this is quite an interest for some straight men. There are certainly many books dedicated to photo stories of naughty water sports ladies and men. Although, I suspect, without evidence, that there are fewer women who enjoy it than men.

Redboss

Doctors did it to arrive at a diagnosis.

OK, perhaps I could have phrased my intended question more clearly:

Who was the first to have associated the sweetness of urine with this endocrine disorder, and why were they tasting urine in the first place?

I thought piss taster was actually a profession for a while, their speciality being to diagnose problems just as bughunter is describing.

This page says

Oh, and the free part of Britannica also talks about the ancient Greeks determining the diagnosis and prognosis of sickness from “observation, including bodily signs and excretions.” It sounds like it was 5th century BC Greeks who were the first to associate sweet urine with the symptoms of diabetes. It’s not that big a logical leap to taste the urine–people with untreated diabetes mellitus pee a lot, so it makes sense to test out that pee with whatever methods you have available.

Particularly if it smells yummy.

Great, now I’m thirsty.

Hey!!! Drinking your own urine? No big deal, any dweeb can do that. Now, drinking someone elses urine… THAT proves your a MAN
rande…

Tibetan doctors have long used a patient’s urine as a diagnostic method, and since their science predates modern machines, the physician is the primary instrument. The body of knowledge they’ve accumulated in the past millenium about differential diagnosis by this means is quite complex; very astute and rational. A physician examines the early morning urine for color, vapor, odor, bubbles, sediments and albumin. Early morning urine is used to avoid the overt effects of the night-before meal, which might hinder an accurate diagnosis. The doctor will ask the patient to forgo certain substances the night before diagnosis as well.

A bit of the complexity can be found here. I’ve seen the Tibetan teaching charts, and they’re so specifically specific that most Western med students would probably flee from the profession. In lieu of modern diagnostics, though, this method makes quite good sense.