Monday, August 10, 2009

Trouble with Love

Sexual difficulties of many kinds are evidence of the destructive at work. These disturbances are widespread; Kinsey reports that i maladjustments are a factor in perhaps three-fourths of the uppe marriages which end in separation or divorce.
Occasional or chronic loss of sexual power in a man is caused by diseases of the nervous system, but these cases are ran cept for these cases, sexual impotence is given a variety of famili planations. A man is told that he is run-down, that he is preoccupation pressing problems, that financial difficulties or family worries ai cause. These superficial explanations may be true as far as thi Specific pressures may have brought his inner difficulty to the s and caused impotence. But the real trouble goes deeper.
A youthful fear of venereal disease instilled by a fearful pai childish belief in the immorality of sex, engraved on the inn mind; an attachment to a mother which was never properly outj general fears of inadequacy; even a fear of impotence itself—the? other factors may unconsciously check or suppress entirely tin- i capacity for a pleasurable sexual relationship. Whatever its cans potency is a form which the destructive drive may take.

6 comments:

  1. But every doctor knows that he has more sick people to take care of in the fall. As for spring, it has for centuries been the time for blood-letting and dosing, the traditional brimstone and molasses season.

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  2. He was one of the first, some thirty-five years ago, to seek a connection between the change of seasons and the sudden increase in pregnancies, sexual crimes, suicides, and admissions to mental hospitals which occurs between the thirty-fifth and the sixtieth parallels from April to June, and below the Equator from October to December, Among both school children and working adults, he observed, physical activity increases and intellectual activity declines.

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  3. He described the species of intoxication which seems to infect the human race in the spring, the increase of instinctual activity and the submergence of rational considerations and inhibitions.

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  4. But he con­fessed that the physical explanation was not clear. He suggested that the physiological effect of the increasing warmth of the weather was "intellectually paralyzing, the increase of light motorically stimulating." Science takes the long way round to define what any schoolboy knows is simple spring fever.

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  5. Hypothyroidism: Why are we so good at the resort? Including the fact that sea water saturates the skin of vital minerals and replenishes iodine deficiency, relevance to virtually all residents of the middle band. With the latter the easiest way: use only iodized salt - it helps the thyroid gland, responsible for the physical and mental activity, to stay on our toes. Well, other advantages of the sea provide SPA-procedures, which in the cold season is to include in their weekly program. Or at least make the house a bath with sea salt.

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  6. Yeast Infection : While scientists could not prove that the virus XMRV causes chronic fatigue syndrome. As the researchers note, a connection still there, though perhaps, patients with chronic fatigue syndrome are just more vulnerable to infection, and the syndrome has different causes.

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