He giveth His Beloved Sleep
The
healing magic of sleep is known to all. Sleeplessness is a punishment for
so many different violations of nature's laws, that it is perhaps one of
the most prevalent of humanity s innumerable sufferings.
While most of the aspects of sleep and sleeplessness have received much
attention from specialists in human physiology, the relation between sleep
and coitus appears to be but little realized.
Yet there is an intimate, profound and quite direct relation between the
power to sleep, naturally and refreshingly, and the harmonious relief of
the whole system in the perfected sex-act.
We see
this very clearly in ordinary healthy man.
If, for some reason, he has to live unsatisfied for some time after the
acute stirring of his longing for physical contact with his wife, he tends
in the interval to be wakeful, restless, and his nerves are on edge.
Then,
when the propitious hour arrives, and after the love- play, the growing
passion expands, until the transports of feeling find their ending in the
explosive completion of the act, at once the tension of his whole system
relaxes, and his muscles fall into gentle, easy attitudes of languorous
content, and in a few moments the man is sleeping like a child.
This excellent and refreshing sleep falls like a soft curtain of oblivion
and saves the man's consciousness from the jar and disappointment of an
anti-climax.
But not only is this sleep a restorative after the strenuous efforts of
the transport, it has peculiarly refreshing powers, and many men feel that
after such a sleep their whole system seems rejuvenated.
How fare women in this event? When they too have had complete satisfaction they similarly relax and slumber.
But as things are today it is scarcely an exaggeration to say that the majority of wives are left wakeful and nerve-racked to watch with tender motherly brooding, or with bitter and jealous envy, the slumbers of the men who, through ignorance and carelessness, have neglected to see that they too had the necessary resolution of nervous tension.
Many married women have told me that after they have had relations with their husbands they are restless, either for some hours or for the whole night; and I feel sure that the prevalent failure on the part of many men to effect orgasms for their wives at each congress, must be a very common source of the sleeplessness and nervous diseases of so many married women.
The relation
between the completion of the sex act and sleep in woman is well indicated
in the case of Mrs A., who is typical of a large class of wives.
She married a man with whom she was passionately in love.
Neither she nor her husband had ever had connection with anyone else, and,
while they were both keen and intelligent people with some knowledge of
biology, neither knew anything of the details of human sex union.
For several years her husband had unions with her which gave him some satisfaction
and left him ready at once to sleep.
Neither he nor she knew that women should have an orgasm, and after every
union she was left so "on edge" and sleepless that never less than several
hours would elapse before she could sleep at all, and often she remained
wakeful the whole night.
After
her husband s death her health improved, and in a year or two she entered
into a new relation with a man who was aware of women s needs and spent
sufficient time and attention to them to ensure a successful completion
for her as well as for himself.
The result was that she soon became a good sleeper, with the attendant
benefits of restored nerves and health.
Sleep
is so complex a process, and sleeplessness the resultant of so many different
maladjustments, that it is, of course, possible that the woman may sleep
well enough, even if she be deprived of the relief and pleasure of perfect
union.
But in so many married women sleeplessness and a consequent nervous condition
are coupled with a lack of the complete sex relation, that one of the first
questions a physician should put to those of his women patients who are
worn and sleepless is: Whether her husband really fulfills his marital
duty in their physical relation.
From their
published statements, and their admissions to me, it appears that many
practicing doctors are either almost unaware of the very existence of orgasm
in women, or look upon it as a superfluous and accidental phenomenon.
Yet to have had a moderate number of orgasms at some time at least is a
necessity for the full development of a woman s health and all her powers.
As this
book is written for those who are married, I say nothing here about the
lives of those who are still unmarried, though, particularly after the
age of thirty has been reached, they may be very difficult and need much
study and consideration.
It is, however, worth noticing how prevalent sleeplessness is among a class
of women who have never had any normal sex-life or allowed any relief to
their desires.
There is little doubt that the complete lack of a normal sex relation is
one of the several factors which render many middle-aged unmarried women
nervous and sleepless.
Yet for
the unmarried woman the lack is not so acute nor so localized as it is
for the married woman who is thwarted in the natural completion of her
sex-functions after they have been directly stimulated.
The unmarried woman, unless she be in love with some particular man, has
no definite stimulus to her sex desires beyond the natural upwelling of
the creative force.
The married
woman, however, is not only diffusely stirred by the presence of the man
she loves, but is also acutely locally and physically by his relation with
her.
And if she is then left in mid-air, withoi natural relief to her tension,
she is in this respect far worse than the unmarried woman.
When a
wife is left sleepless through the neglect of the mate who slumbers healthily
by her side, it is not surprising if she spends the long hours reviewing
their mutual position; and the review cannot yield her much pleasure or
satisfaction.
For deprived of the physical delight of mutual orgasm (though, perhaps,
like so many wives, quite unconscious of all it can give), she sees in
the sex act an arrangement where pleasure, relief and subsequent sleep,
are all on her husband's side, while she is merely the passive instrument
of his enjoyment.
Nay, more than that: if following every union she has long hours of wakefulness,
she then sees clearly the encroachment on her own health in an arrangement
in which she is not merely passive, but is actively abused.
Another
of the consequences of the incomplete relation is that often, stirred to
a point of wakefulness and vivacity by the preliminary sex- stimulation
(of the full meaning of which she may be unconscious), a romantic and thoughtful
woman is then most able to talk intimately and tenderly to speak of the
things most near and sacred to her heart.
And she may then be terribly wounded by the inattention of her husband,
which, coming so soon after his ardent demonstrations of affection, appears
peculiarly callous.
It makes him appear to her to be indifferent to the highest side of marriage
the spiritual and romantic intercourse. Thus she may see in the man going
off to sleep in the midst of her love-talk, a gross and inattentive brute
and all because she has never shared the climax of his physical tension,
and does not know that its natural reaction is sleep.
These
thoughts are so depressing even to the tenderest and most loving woman,
and so biter to one who has other causes of complaint, that in their turn
they act on the whole system and increase the damage done by the mere sleeplessness.
The older school of physiologists dealt in methods too crude to realize
the physiological results of our thoughts, but it is now well known that
anger and bitterness have experimentally recognizable physiological effects,
and are injurious to the whole system.
It requires
little imagination to see that after months or years of such embittered
sleeplessness, the woman tends not only to become neurasthenic but also
resentful towards her husband.
She is probably too ignorant and unobservant of her own physiology to realize
the full meaning of what is taking place, but she feels vaguely that he
is to blame, and that she is being sacrificed for what, in her still greater
ignorance of his physiology, seems to her to be his mere pleasure and self-indulgence.
He, with
his health maintained by the natural outlet followed by recuperative sleep,
is not likely to be ready to look into the gloomy and shadowy land of vague
reproach and inexplicable trivial wrongs which are all the expression she
gives to her unformulated physical grievance.
So he is likely to set down any resentment she may show to "nerves" or
"captiousness;" and to be first solicitous, and then impatient, towards
her apparently irrelevant complaints.
If he
is, as many men are, tender and considerate, he may try to remedy matters
by restricting to the extreme limit of what is absolutely necessary for
him, the number of times they come together.
Unconsciously he thus only makes matters worse; for as a general rule,
he is quite unaware of his wife's rhythm, and does not arrange to coincide
with it in his infrequent tender embraces.
As he is now probably sleeping in another room and not daring to come for
the nightly talks and tenderness which are so sweet a privilege of marriage,
here, as in other ways, his well-meaning but wrongly conceived efforts
at restraint only tend to drive the pair still further apart.
To make plain the reasonableness of my view regarding sleep, it is necessary to mention some of the immensely profound influences which it is now known that sex exerts, even when not stimulated to its specific use.
In those
who deprived of their sex-organs, particularly when young, many of the
other features and organs of the body develop abnormally or fail to appear.
Castrated boys (eunuchs) when grown up, tend to have little or no beard,
or moustache, to have high-pitched voices and several other characters
which separate them from normal men.
The growth
of organs and structures so remote from the sex-organs, as, e.g., the larynx,
have been found to be influenced by the chemical stimulus of secretions
from the sex-organs and their subsidiary glands.
These secretions are not passed out through external ducts but enter the
blood system directly.
Such secretions passing straight from the ductless glands into the vascular
system are of very great importance in almost all our bodily functions.
They have recently been much studied, and the general name of Hormones
given to them by Prof. Ernest H. Starling.
The idea
that some particular secretions or "humours" are connected with each of
the internal organs of the body, is a very ancient one; but we have even
yet only the vaguest and most elementary knowledge of a few of the many
miracles performed by these subtle chemical substances.
Thus we know that the stimulus of food in the stomach sends a chemical
substance from one ductless gland in the digestive system chasing through
the blood to another gland which prepares a different digestive secretion
further on.
We know that the thyroid gland in the neck swells and contracts in very
sensitive relation with the sex organs; we know that some chemical secretion
from the developing embryo, or the tissue in which it grows, sends its
chemical stimulus to the distant mammary glands of the mother; we know
that if the ovaries of a girl or the testes of a boy are completely cut
out, the far-reaching influences their hormones would have exerted are
made evident by the numerous changes in the system and departures from
the normal, which result from their lack.
But we do not know, for physiologists have nor yet studied the degree and character of the immense stimulus of sex-life and experience on the glands of the sex-organs, or how they affect the whole of the human being's life and powers.
The "Mendelians"
and the "Mutationists," who both tend to lay so much (and I think such
undue) stress on morphological hereditary factors, seem at present to have
the ear of the public more than the physiologists.
But it is most important that every grown up man and woman should know
that through the various chemical substances or 'messengers (which Starling
called the hormones) there is an extremely rapid, almost immediate, effect
on the activities of organs in remote parts of the body, due to the influences
exerted on one or other internal organ.
It is
therefore clear that any influences exerted on such profoundly important
organs as those connected with sex must have far-reaching results in many
unexpected fields.
What must be taking place in the female system as a result of the completed
sex act?
It is
true that in coitus woman has but a slight external secretion, and that
principally of mucus.
But we have no external signs of all the complex processes and reactions
going on in digestion and during the production of digestive secretions.
When, as is the case in orgasm, we have such intense and apparent nervous,
vascular and muscular reactions, it seems inevitable that there must be
correspondingly profound internal correlations.
Is it
conceivable that organs so fundamentally placed, and whose mere existence
we know affects the personal characters of women, could escape physiological
result from the intense preliminary stimulus and acute sensations of an
orgasm?
To ask this question is surely to answer it.
It is to my mind inconceivable that the orgasm in woman as in man should
not have profound physiological effects.
Did we know enough about the subject, many of the "nervous breakdowns"
and neurotic tendencies of the modern woman could be directly traced to
the partial stimulation of sexual intercourse without its normal completion
which is so prevalent in modern marriage.
This subject,
and its numerous ramifications, are well worth the careful research of
the most highly trained physiologists.
There is nothing more profound, or of more vital moment to modern humanity
as a whole, than is the understanding of the sex nature and sex needs of
men and women.
I may
point out as a mere suggestion that the man's sex-organs give rise to external
and also to internal secretions.
The former only leave the glands which secrete them as a result of definite
stimulus; the later appear to be perpetually exuded in small quantities
and always to be entering and influencing the whole system.
In women we know there are corresponding perpetual internal secretions, and it seems evident to me that there must be some internal secretions which are only released under the definite stimulus of the whole sex-act.
The English and American peoples, who lead the world in so many ways, have an almost unprecedentedly high proportion of married women who get no satisfaction from physical union with their husbands, though they bear children, and may in every other respect appear to be happily married.
The modern
civilized neurotic woman has become a by-word in the Western world.
Why?
I am certain that much of this suffering is caused by the ignorance of both men and women regarding not only the inner physiology, but even the obvious outward expression, of the complete sex-act.
Many medical
men now recognize that numerous nervous and other diseases are associated
with the lack of physiological relief for natural or stimulated sex feelings
in women.
Ellis quotes the opinion of an Austrian gynaecologist who said that, "of
every hundred women who come to him with uterine troubles, seventy suffer
from congestion of the womb," which he regarded as due to incomplete coitus.
While a writer in a recent number of the British Medical Journals published
some cases in which quite serious nervous diseases in wives were put right
when their husbands were cured of too hasty ejaculation.
Sleep, concerning which I began this chapter, is but one of innumerable indications of inner processes intimately bound up with the sex-reactions.
When the sex-rite is, in every sense, rightly performed, the healing wings of sleep descend both on the man and on the woman in his arms.
©
1990, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000
Irene
Stuber, PO Box 6185, Hot Springs National Park, AR 71902.
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