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Masturbate Information
Today dedicated to the female masturbation , the site of the pleasure of women explains, personal erotic stories and experiences and shows woman 's photos, videos, sounds Real Masturbate. everything of women practising masturbate
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Masturbation
Masturbation is the manual excitation of the sexual organs, most often to the point of orgasm. It can refer to excitation either by oneself or by another (see mutual masturbation). It is part of a larger set of activities known as autoeroticism, which also includes the use of sex toys and non-genital stimulation. There are also masturbation machines used to simulate intercourse. Masturbation and sexual intercourse are the two most common sexual practices, but they are not mutually exclusive (for example, many people find the sight of their partner masturbating highly erotic). Some people are able to achieve orgasm only through masturbation and not sexual intercourse. In the animal kingdom, masturbation has been observed in many mammalian species, both in the wild and in captivity.
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My Female Masturbation
My Female Masturbation posted masturbate stories by Sue Part I
Hi my name is Sue. I have been masturbating since I was little. I
am an only child, and I would just love to have another female to do it
with. I would love to touch her body, and if at all possible, I would
want her to do the same to me. Well what I like to do when masturbating
is going totally naked. I decided to do this while my parents where on
vacation last year. What I did was I went in my room and closed the
curtains, took off my clothes and let it rip. I got into bed, and
pulled the covers up over my head, and then I started to touch my
breasts. I had both hands on them, and I squeezed them, and I felt my
clitoris rise. This felt good. Then after I did that I put one hand on
my clitoris, and with my index finger, I rubbed it in a circular
motion, and my vagina was wet. This was an awesome orgasm. As I kept on
rubbing it it got harder and the orgasms where better than ever! Then
my other hand was on my crotch, while the other one was on my clitoris,
and I started to rub both places at the same time, and it was just
beautiful! I was in heaven! Not! When I came to climax, I put the hand
that was on my crotch, well I moved it and my index finger, I put it
inside my vagina, and that was when I came. That experience was great.
I am hooked and I do it every night. The best thing was I did it at
college, and my roommate did not know anything about that. Also my
parents don't know either. I have enjoyed it since I was little, and I
will continue to. I am twenty four years old soon to be twenty five on
the 18 of April. Either way I will masturbate on my birthday.
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Posted Masturbation Stories: 05:37, 2006-Jun-4 in Masturbation-History |
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THE HISTORY OF MASTURBATION
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THE HISTORY OF MASTURBATION
While there are no direct references to masturbation in cave
paintings or other prehistoric artifacts, the practice of masturbation
by Bonobo chimpanzees, which share 98.4% percent of our DNA, provides
some confirmation that masturbation has likely been practiced since the
dawn of mankind.
The Ancient World
In the ancient world, depictions of male masturbation are relatively
common. The Egyptians, for example, celebrated masturbation as
the process by which the sun god, Atum, created the first Adam and Eve
equivalents, Shu and Tefnut. "With the hand of God, Atun
masturbated and brought forth the first pair of souls."
The Sumerians, who invented the first written Western language, make
reference to the Mesopotamian god Enki masturbating, his ejaculation
filling the Tigris River with flowing water.
Condemnation of masturbation is as old as fertility-worship and is
probably based on early man?s realization that there is safety in
numbers. A bigger tribe is more likely to gain new territory and
expand its power base. In theory, this is this reason that any
form of sexual pleasure unlikely to result in a population increase
(e.g. masturbation, homosexuality, oral/anal sex) has routinely been
denounced as wrong. While in today?s overpopulated world this
rationale no longer makes logical sense, this belief structure
continues to drive the moral attitudes of many people.
In the Judeo-Christian tradition prevalent throughout Western society,
the main Scripture quoted by Christians to denounce masturbation is
Genesis 38. In biblical times, under Jewish law, a brother was
required to procreate with his brother's widow. Onan of Judah refused,
and "spilled his seed" (i.e. ejaculate), on the ground instead. This is
the origin of the term Onanism (The Sin of Onan) which is incorrectly
used in place of masturbation ? in fact, what really happened was
premature withdrawal (i.e. coitus interruptus).
18th & 19th Centuries
It was primarily during the 1700s and 1800s when masturbation was first
associated with mental and physical deficiencies. Some prominent
physicians, scientists, philosophers, and religious leaders believed
that illnesses such as insanity, vision and hearing problems, epilepsy,
mental retardation, and general health problems were caused by
self-stimulation. In fact, over 60% of medical and mental
illnesses were blamed on masturbation.[1]
The fear of masturbation was so great that throughout the world,
extreme preventative measures were instituted including the use of
mechanical restraints, genital surgery, and physical discipline.[2] By
the 19th century the cereal magnate John Harvey Kellogg declared "sex
for anything but reproduction" to be "sexual excess." Kellogg and
others began advocating routine circumcision of males as a deterrent to
masturbation.
The term, spermatorrhea, was even invented to explain nocturnal
emissions, as no man was willing to admit to masturbating. Between 1856
and 1932, the U.S. Patent Office, awarded 33 patents to inventors of
anti-masturbation devices.
Here are some examples antimasturbation devices:
1. Simple Bondage-- For some, the simple answer was to tie the masturbators up and prevent them from touching themselves.
2. Leather-Jacket Corset-- A corset made out of leather and steel to be
used by boys, was created by Dr. Fleck in 1831. It included a metal
penis tube and "a steel band riveted to the shield permanently and
attached to the body with an encircling steel band in such a manner
that it cannot be removed and prevented access to the testicles." The
doctor once reported that "it closes with greatest accuracy, fits to
perfection, and the boy wears it continuously without having succeeded
even once in reaching his genitals or pulling the machine away from his
body so as to produce friction on his genitals."
3. Spike-lined Ring-- Created to prevent the nocturnal emissions and
any display of nighttime sexuality, spike-lined penis rings were
created in the 1950's by doctors in Boston.
4. Spermatorrhea Bandage-- These devices kept the penis tightly bound, thus making it impossible to have an erection.
5. Stephenson Spermatic Truss-- Patented in 1876, this device placed
the penis in a pouch, and then stretched and tied down between the
legs, which made erection impossible. Stephenson changed his device
slightly 21 years later, adding a metal hood under which the penis
could move freely. Any erection would drive the penis against painful
spikes.
6. Bowen Device-- This device was like a cup that was placed over the
head of the penis and attached to pubic hair by chains and clips. When
the wearer got an erection, the pubic hair would be plucked painfully
and the wearer would have to respond.
7. The Cage-- The Handbook of Medicine in 1885 offered a metal cage
that could be put around a boys genitals. It would allow erections,
which weren't seen as wrong, yet would prevent the boy from touching
himself.
8. Dr. Moodie Apparatus for Boys-- Scotch physician John Moodie
invented this truss-and-shield device in 1848. It included a penis tube
with a slot on the side for the boy to push his penis out in order to
urinate.
9. Penis-Cooling Devices-- These devices cooled an impending erection
with either air or water; Frank Orth invented both types and patented
them in 1893. He said that "the penis is inserted in the hole and
between the levers so that if during the night an erection occurs, the
dilatation of the penis spreads the levers, thus separating the jaws,
and permitting the cold water to flow through the tube to the sack or
envelope. The cold water... cools the organ of generation, so that the
erection subsides and no discharge occurs."
10. Sexual Armor-- A jacket with leather pants which supports a large
piece of steel armor. Perforations in the armor allowed urine to
escape, yet the bolted, padlocked trapdoor at the rear would have to be
opened for other business...
Information from Sex Lovers Book of Lists by Ron Louis and David Copeland http://datingfun.com/sex/masturbation/antidevices.asp
20th Century
In the 20th Century, individuals within the medical community began
questioning whether or not masturbation was independent from the
various psychiatric and medical illnesses to which it was historically
linked. During the 1950s and 1960s, with greater discussion of
sex and sexuality and lessening conservative social attitudes along
with greater medical research on the topic of masturbation, the
thought that the act of self-stimulation is associated with medical and
mental illnesses dissipated.
Beginning with the Kinsey Report of 1948, masturbation was demystified
and even discovered to be beneficial. In 1966, Masters & Johnson
(see photo) revealed the practice to be virtually universal in North
America, cutting across all boundaries of sex, age, race, and social
class. In 1971 Goldstein, Haeberle & McBride determined
masturbation to be the most common form of sexual activity among humans.
Today
It is clear that masturbation has had a dynamic and varied
history. It now almost universally accepted by the medical
community that masturbation is a common, safe, and normal practice
which occurs in infants, teenagers, and adults.
Despite this new attitude, the actual practice and discussion of
masturbation continues to be a social taboo within most
societies. Former Surgeon General Jocelyn Elder was immediately
dismissed by President Clinton in 1994 after she stated that
masturbation ?is something that is part of human sexuality and its part
of something that perhaps should be taught.?[3]
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Posted Masturbation Stories: 05:16, 2006-Jun-4 in Masturbation-History |
Masturbation stories (1) | Masturbation Link |
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Masturbation in history and society
Masturbation in history and society
Masturbation in history and society
Antiquity
Samurai being masturbated by his kagema prostituteEarly ukiyo-e print
in the shunga (erotic) style. Hishikawa Moronobu, ca. 1680; Private
collection.
Enlarge
Samurai being masturbated by his kagema prostitute
Early ukiyo-e print in the shunga (erotic) style. Hishikawa Moronobu, ca. 1680; Private collection.
There are depictions of male masturbation in prehistoric rock paintings
around the world, though these are all entirely matters of
interpretation. Most early people seem to have connected human
sexuality with abundance in nature. A clay figurine of the 4th
millennium BC from a temple site on the island of Malta, depicts a
woman masturbating. However, in the ancient world depictions of male
masturbation are far more common.
Male masturbation became an even more important image in ancient Egypt:
when performed by a god it could be considered a creative or magical
act: the god Atum was believed to have created the universe by
masturbating to ejaculation, and the ebb and flow of the Nile was
attributed to the frequency of his ejaculations. The ancient Greeks had
a more natural attitude toward masturbation than the Egyptians did,
regarding the act as a normal and healthy substitute for other forms of
sexual pleasure. They considered masturbation a safety valve against
destructive sexual frustration. The Greeks also dealt with female
masturbation in both their art and writings.
[edit]
Religion
In many religions, such as some forms of Conservative Protestantism,
Catholicism, Mormonism, Judaism and Islam masturbation is regarded as
an impure practice.
It has been reported by Rolling Stone [9] that a small Christian-right
group in America is encouraging people to wear a masturband to indicate
a commitment to abstinence from masturbation.
[edit]
Buddhism
In the Buddhist tradition, under the Five Precepts and the Eightfold
Path, one should neither be attached to nor crave sensual pleasure. For
the lay person, masturbation is therefore neither forbidden nor
encouraged[10]. Fully ordained Buddhist monks may, depending on the
tradition, be bound by hundreds of detailed rules or vows that may
include a ban on sexual relations and masturbation.
[edit]
Judaism
In the Bible masturbation is not prohibited. The Talmud however forbids
masturbation, as it leads to unnecessary spilling of semen, or the
impure thoughts of another. This prohibition is derived from the
Biblical narrative of Onan (Talmud Niddah 13a). The Talmud (ibid)
likens the act to murder and idolatry. There are those that argue,
however, that the wrath displayed by God toward Onan was invoked not
through the act of spilling semen, but through disobedience to God's
command for Onan to impregnate his wife. There is disagreement between
the poskim (decisors of Jewish law) whether masturbation is an
acceptable way of procuring semen for artificial insemination or in
vitro fertilisation. [11]
[edit]
Catholicism
The Catechism of the Catholic Church lists masturbation as one of the
"Offenses Against Chastity" and calls it "an intrinsically and gravely
disordered action" because "use of the sexual faculty, for whatever
reason, outside of marriage is essentially contrary to its purpose,
however when done with no marriage or confines involved, does not
penalize those performing the act." It is the indulgence forbidden in
the religious aspect more so over the act of masturbation.
[edit]
Protestantism
Protestant theologians only began revising previous teachings toward
the middle of the 20th century with some today even taking
pro-masturbation viewpoints. Masturbation, however, is still viewed by
some denominations as an act of self indulgence and a sin of the flesh,
making it a contentious issue to this day.
[edit]
Islam
Istimna is the Islamic term for masturbation. While often seen as
strictly forbidden in Islam, the four Sunni schools of jurisprudence
(known as maddhabs) have differing stances on the issue. Some consider
it forbidden in all cases. Some see it forbidden in certain cases but
obligatory in others. Another view is that it is Makruh but not
expressly forbidden. Scholars of Islam consider masturbation to be
forbidden (haraam), except in extenuating circumstances, although there
is no explicit statement in the Quran that forbids one from
masturbation.
[edit]
Extenuating Circumstances
Masturbation is permissible for the sake of medical tests, or if
medically necessary. Doctors make the decision on its necessity in all
cases, not legal scholars.
For example Sistani remarks on fertility tests, "As
long as it isn't an absolute necessity, masturbation is forbidden." [12]
Muslims engagement in sex outside of marriage is a major sin, which
cause the doer to be punished in this life and the Qiyama. Yet if one's
desire is so overwhelming one might perform a greater wrong by having
sex outside marriage, masturbation becomes permissible as a necessity
:"And those who are not married should try to live in chastity, until
God enriches them with His Grace"
Masturbation, like any form of sex in which seminal or vaginal fluids
have been released, breaks one's fast if performed during the daylight
hours and requires a major ablution if any seminal or vaginal fluids
were released.
According to Sheikh Hamed Al-Ali: "Masturbation
during the daytime of Ramadan breaks the fast, based on the Hadith that
a fasting Muslim gives up eating, drinking, and sexual desire for the
sake of Allah. Since masturbation is a kind of sexual desire, a fasting
Muslim must avoid it. Therefore, masturbation invalidates the fast as
does food and as it is one of the sins that if someone does it he or
she would be violating the sanctity of this month." [citation needed]
Philosophical arguments regarding masturbation
Immanuel Kant regarded masturbation as a violation of the moral law. In
the Metaphysics of Morals (1797) he made the a posteriori argument that
'such an unnatural use of one?s sexual attributes' strikes 'everyone
upon his thinking of it' as 'a violation of one?s duty to himself', and
suggested that it was regarded as immoral even to give it its proper
name (unlike the case of the similarly undutiful act of suicide). He
went on, however, to acknowledge that 'it is not so easy to produce a
rational demonstration of the inadmissability of that unnatural use',
but ultimately concluded that its immorality lay in the fact that 'a
man gives up his personality ... when he uses himself merely as a means
for the gratification of an animal drive'.
Subsequent critics of masturbation tended to argue against it on more physiological grounds, however (see medical attitudes).
Medical attitudes
Excerpt from United States patent number 745264, filed on May 29, 1903
by Albert V. Todd. It describes a device designed to prevent
masturbation by inflicting electric shocks upon the perpetrator, by
ringing an alarm bell, and through spikes at the inner edge of the tube
into which the penis is inserted. The entire patent document: Page 1,
2, 3, 4.
Enlarge
Excerpt from United States patent number 745264, filed on May 29, 1903
by Albert V. Todd. It describes a device designed to prevent
masturbation by inflicting electric shocks upon the perpetrator, by
ringing an alarm bell, and through spikes at the inner edge of the tube
into which the penis is inserted. The entire patent document: Page 1,
2, 3, 4.
Excerpt from US Patent 995600 by Jonas E. Heyser. The entire patent document: Page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Enlarge
Excerpt from US Patent 995600 by Jonas E. Heyser. The entire patent document: Page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
The first use of onanism to consistently and specifically refer to
masturbation appears to be Onania, an anonymous pamphlet first
distributed in London in 1716. In it was a bombastic but novel tirade,
drawing on familiar themes of sin and vice, this time in particular
against the "heinous sin" of "self-pollution". After dire warnings that
those who so indulged would suffer impotence, gonorrhea, epilepsy and a
wasting of the faculties (included were letters and testimonials
supposedly from young men ill and dying from the effects of compulsive
masturbation) the pamphlet then goes on to recommend as an effective
remedy a "Strengthening Tincture" at 10 shillings a bottle and a
"Prolific Powder" at 12 shillings a bag, available from a certain shop
in London.
One of the many horrified by the descriptions of malady in Onania was
the notable Swiss physician Samuel-Auguste Tissot. In 1760, he
published L'Onanisme, his own comprehensive medical treatise on the
purported ill-effects of masturbation. Citing case studies of young
male masturbators amongst his patients in Lausanne, Switzerland as
basis for his reasoning, Tissot argued that semen was an "essential
oil" and "stimulus" that, when lost from the body in great amounts,
would cause "a perceptible reduction of strength, of memory and even of
reason; blurred vision, all the nervous disorders, all types of gout
and rheumatism, weakening of the organs of generation, blood in the
urine, disturbance of the appetite, headaches and a great number of
other disorders."
Though Tissot's ideas are now considered conjectural at best, his
treatise was presented as a scholarly, scientific work in a time when
experimental physiology was practically nonexistent. The authority with
which the work was subsequently treated?Tissot's arguments were even
acknowledged and echoed by luminaries such as Kant and
Voltaire?arguably turned the perception of masturbation in Western
medicine over the next two centuries into that of a debilitating
illness.
This continued well into the Victorian Era, where such medical censure
of masturbation was in line with the widespread social conservatism and
opposition to open sexual behavior common at the time. [13] There were
recommendations to have boys' pants constructed so that the genitals
could not be touched through the pockets, for schoolchildren to be
seated at special desks to prevent their crossing their legs in class
and for girls to be forbidden from riding horses and bicycles because
the sensations these activities produce were considered too similar to
masturbation. Many "remedies" were devised, including eating a bland,
meatless diet. This approach was promoted by Dr. John Harvey Kellogg
(inventor of corn flakes) and Rev. Sylvester Graham (inventor of Graham
crackers). The medical literature of the times describes procedures for
electric shock treatments, infibulation, restraining devices like
chastity belts and straitjackets, cauterization or?as a last
resort?wholesale surgical excision of the genitals. Routine neonatal
circumcision was widely adopted in the United States and the UK at
least partly because of its believed preventive effect against
masturbation (see also History of male circumcision). In later decades,
the more drastic of these measures were increasingly replaced with
psychological techniques, such as warnings that masturbation led to
blindness, hairy hands or stunted growth. Some of these persist as
myths even today.
It has been suggested by some that the sexual repression of the Victorian Era is a partial or complete cause of World War One.
What might be a typical late 19th century professional's attitude to
chronic masturbation is contained in Daniel Hack Tuke's 1892 A
Dictionary of Psychological Medicine: "This habit, when long and often
indulged in defiance of reason and conscience, seems more than any
other to acquire a mastery over its victim, and the nervous exaustion
which by its very nature it produces makes him less and less able to
resist it. Gradually the appearance, manner, and character become
altered, and the typical signs of habitual masturbation are developed.
The face becomes pale and pasty, and the eye lusterless. The man loses
all spontaneity and cheerfulness, all manliness and self-reliance. He
cannot look you in the face because he is haunted by the consciousness
of a dirty secret which he must always conceal and always dreads that
you may discover. He shuns society, and has no intimate friends, does
not dare to marry, and becomes a timid, hypersensitive, self-centered,
hypochondriac."
Medical attitudes toward masturbation began to change at the beginning
of the 20th century when H. Havelock Ellis, in his seminal 1897 work
Studies in the Psychology of Sex, questioned Tissot's premises,
cheerfully named famous men of the era who masturbated and then set out
to disprove (with the work of more recent physicians) each of the
claimed diseases of which masturbation was purportedly the cause. "We
reach the conclusion," he wrote, "that in the case of moderate
masturbation in healthy, well-born individuals, no seriously pernicious
results necessarily follow."
Robert Baden-Powell, the founder of The Scout Association, incorporated
a passage in the 1914 edition of Scouting for Boys warning against the
dangers of masturbation. This passage stated that the individual should
run away from the temptation by performing physical activity which was
supposed to tire the individual so that masturbation could not be
performed. By 1930, however, Dr. F. W. W. Griffin, editor of The
Scouter, had written in a book for Rover Scouts that the temptation to
masturbate was "a quite natural stage of development" and, citing
Ellis's work, held that "the effort to achieve complete abstinence was
a very serious error."
In 1994, when the first African-American female Surgeon General of the
United States, Dr. Joycelyn Elders, mentioned as an aside that perhaps
it ought to be mentioned in school curricula that masturbation was safe
and healthy, she was forced to resign, with opponents asserting that
she was promoting the teaching of how to masturbate. Many believe this
was the result of her long history of promoting controversial
viewpoints and not due solely to her public mention of masturbation.
Her case led to the coining of a new and humorous slang term for
masturbation: Firing the surgeon general.
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Posted Masturbation Stories: 05:13, 2006-Jun-4 in Masturbation-History |
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A Brief History of Masturbation
A Brief History of Masturbation
A Brief History of Masturbation
Masturbation has been frowned upon throughout history and in
nearly ever culture. In ancient times of high infant mortality and low
life expectancy, stigmas about self-love were rooted in the belief that
it endangered the survival of the species. Men were also believed to
have a finite amount of sperm, and thus masturbation was thought of as
wasteful. Of course, the 50,000 sperm men produce per minute are more
than enough to go around!
Masturbation was also associated with many physical symptoms;
psychiatrist Benjamin Rush called it "self-pollution," claiming that it
caused headaches, epilepsy, nosebleeds, memory loss, heart murmurs,
blindness, and even psychosis. In the 1800s, Sylvester Graham led a
health food crusade based on the idea that sexual excess including
masturbation, erotic dreams and intercourse more than once a month was
caused by rich and spicy foods. He prescribed a bland and boring diet;
the Graham cracker, in fact, is a sweetened version of his invention.
Corn Flakes were originally designed by John Harvey Kellogg to promote
health and decrease sex drive!
In the Victorian Era it was commonly held that, unlike any decent
woman, men had an excess of sexual desire and lust. Extramarital sex,
homosexuality, oral sex and masturbation were gravely taboo. This is
not to say that this side of human sexuality disappeared, of course; it
was simply denied, discouraged and condemned. Masturbation is still
forbidden today in certain religions and cultures, and even punished or
prevented through castration and female circumcision in some areas of
the world. As late as 1940, a pediatric text in the US proclaimed
masturbation and any other non-reproductive erotic outlet as harmful to
the growth of society.
Today we live in a time of overpopulation, when sexuality is no longer
tied exclusively to reproduction. We now know that masturbation does
not cause disease; in fact, it is widely believed to promote health and
well-being. Most problems associated with self-love today are
psychological; many people still suffer needlessly from guilt, shame
and feelings of isolation.
The 1948 Kinsey Report showed that intercourse, let alone masturbation,
was an activity as much to do with pleasure as it was to do with
procreation. It turned many ideologies on their ears and raised a great
deal of controversy. If the vast majority of the population had
masturbated, then why should anyone be ashamed of it? Though not
completely "out of the closet" or accepted across cultural barriers, it
is increasingly accepted as a natural, healthy, and fundamental part of
human development and
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Posted Masturbation Stories: 05:09, 2006-Jun-4 in Masturbation-History |
Masturbation stories (1) | Masturbation Link |
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