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'The
Real Sexual Epidemics'
Stephen Mason. Sunday, February 09, 2003
Source:
Betterhumans http://www.betterhumans.com/Features/Columns/Guests/column.aspx?articleID=2003-02-09-5
The American Medical Association recently
published what is considered by experts to be the most comprehensive sex survey in 50 years. Not
since Alfred Kinsey's landmark studies in 1948 have researchers gathered so much reliable information on the sexual health of
the US. Their findings, presented by the study's lead author Edward Laumann (a sociologist at the University of Chicago), represented years of work that
included in-depth interviews with 1,749 women and 1,410 men. The results were not good. In fact, the problem appears to be twice the
magnitude experts had predicted. It is no exaggeration to say that North Americans are in the midst of a sexual epidemic -- one that will probably
get worse in the future.
Before you run out to get tested, sit down and relax for a minute. The bad
news is that there's an epidemic. The good news is that you're not hopelessly infected.
Why? Because the disease diagnosed in 43% of the women and 31% of the men is sexual dysfunction. Now think about that.
Can you imagine the media response, the blaring headlines and grim-faced television news anchors, if
the results were the opposite; what if researchers had discovered that sex was in some way hazardous to your health?
If anything, it's a lack of sex that can be deadly. The British Medical Journal just reported on a long-term study of nearly a thousand men between
the ages of 45 and 59. In this age of "Just Say No" and "If It
Feels Good It Must Be Bad" it's perhaps not too surprising that the findings have not
received the attention they deserve. You see, the data showed that the amount of sexual activity enjoyed by a
man is directly proportional to both his health and longevity. Men who reported twice as much sex were half as likely to die prematurely.
Archaic religious and political restrictions on apparently essential sexual behaviour may actually be taking years off people's lives. Yet it's the
greatly exaggerated and often wholly imaginary "Wages of Sin" that continues to make the front page. The fact that it's abstinence that turns
out to be the really risky behaviour and that sexual dysfunction has reached epidemic proportions gets short shrift.
Of the women taking part in Laumann's study, 33% said they never wanted to have sex, 26% said they didn't experience orgasm when they did have sex and
23% said sex simply wasn't pleasurable. On the other side, 33% of the men said they had persistent problems during sex, 14% said they didn't want to
have sex and 8% said they derived no pleasure from sex.
Tie this to the fact that subjects diagnosed as suffering from sexual dysfunction also tended to describe their relationships as unsatisfactory
and their lives in general as unhappy and the devastating nature of the problem becomes apparent.
Domeena Renshaw of the Loyola University Medical Center, author of 7 Weeks
to Better Sex, says that although the numbers were twice what the experts had predicted, she was not surprised considering the increasingly long
lines of couples waiting for treatment at the sexual dysfunction clinic she has run since 1972. Many of her patients have never had sex, including one
couple who had been married for 23 years.
Raymond Rosen of the R.W. Johnson Medical School in New Jersey was appalled by the sheer size of the sexual dysfunction epidemic. "It's
terrible,"
he says. For years Americans have been "getting their information about sex
from magazines bought at the grocery store checkout." And those
"Americans" include many so-called "experts" who then dispense their ill-gotten
notions to millions.
From the radio's Pop Psych gurus to the newspaper's Love Lore columnists, the message mirrors the Uptight Right's "Sex Is Dirty" credo. That God
ever invented sex in the first place was clearly a mistake so they continue to create caveats that will at least make it as unpleasant as possible.
And when one of the more notorious of these screwball hypocrites got caught with pictures and both her legs spread across the Internet, support
from the clinically dysfunctional was so complete that barely a single moralizing moment of her coast-to-coast broadcast was lost.
When Pfizer's director of sexual-health products, David Brinkley, was asked about the different stories he's heard in the year since his company
began the commercial production of Viagra, he was quoted as saying "People are
strange when it comes to sex."
Indeed. They love to wax lyrical when it comes to the birds and the bees and especially those little ducks they say mate for life; a "natural"
role model humans would be well-advised to follow. But mention gay giraffes or masturbating monkeys and suddenly an equally "natural" behaviour
becomes bestial.
Recorded history goes back about 10,000 years. Cave paintings go back about twice as far while communal living goes back twice that and
ancestors indistinguishable (given a haircut and shave) from modern humans go back
twice that. Half the people who ever lived are alive today. What this means is that there is a whole world of human behaviour separated by time and space.
The notion that love and marriage and sex go together and last forever is just the latest blip on the screen; a passing fad that, when taken
seriously, results in a third of all males and almost half of all females unhappy with their lives dissatisfied with their relationships and sexually
dysfunctional. That an individual can passionately adore a person, find a person a wholly
compatible partner and still be blown away by an anonymous body in a pile of bodies is so common to the
human experience that you would think it would be accepted apriori, yet women who enjoy sex are sluts and men who
enjoy variety are philanderers.
It has been said that those who don't study history are condemned to repeat it; a sentiment paraphrased (sort of) by Yogi
Bera's, "It's deja vu all over again." Yet from Joe McCarthy's equivalent of the Salem witch trials to the Drug
War's attempt at prohibition, people continue to ignore the lessons of the past.
Perhaps one day, in the distant future, students of history will read about
Holland's Tulip Mania, Great Britain's South Sea Island Bubble and the West's 20th Century Sex Epidemic. But until that time, the future of sex
appears to be decidedly unsexy.
Dr. Stephen Mason is a psychologist living in Southern California. He is a former university professor, syndicated columnist, talk radio show host
and comedy writer for Joan Rivers. He is a member of MENSA, a recipient of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the
Paranormal's Citizen Sane award, and once appeared as a centerfold in Playgirl magazine.
Currently, he serves as Media Affairs Director of The Lifestyles Organization. Address comments and column suggestions to him directly at
DrSBMason@aol.com Find products: In Association with Amazon.com
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