Dein Warenkorb
😊 Product added to cart successfully   Product removed to cart successfully
Dein Einkaufswagen ist leer!
Weiter shoppen
1 von 2

Modern Sex Techniques

Normaler Preis
$16.99
Verkaufspreis
$16.99
Normaler Preis
Modern Sex Techniques If you think you are well-educated about sex,  think again. This book is not about pornography but a genuine sexuality course that will bust all the myths...
Anbieter:
Art.-Nr: 225822

Stichworte: 10 18 Case Tractors
Modern Sex Techniques
Modern Sex Techniques
If you think you are well-educated about sex, 
think again. This book is not about pornography but a genuine sexuality course that will bust all the myths about sexuality as well as answer once and for all everyone's nagging questions about it.
This book is about preserving marriage and keeping it happy as well as a tool for educating the youth about sexuality. The author believes that "only the solid structure of the home form the basis for a re-establishment of the ancient standards of virtue".
NOT so long ago, the British Bar Association admitted that the principal factor responsible for English divorces is sexual incompatibility.
The Association is to be praised for having undertaken an analysis of the unfortunate and important divorce problem and for having made public its findings.
There is no doubt in the author's mind that similar studies made in other countries would result in like conclusions; sex is governed and controlled by a natural and universal law which is common to all individuals, and all persons are subject to its influence in greater or lesser degree.
Whether one cares to admit it or not, it is a fundamental and vital force in preserving the home and family. Its destructive effect upon marriage results primarily from the fact that proper sexual procedure is taken for granted, that it is regarded as an uncomplicated phenomenon. 
This has tended to breed ignorance injurious to the permanency of marriage and has marred the future happiness of many women.
If this thesis be accepted, then the vital problem which it poses must be solved through intelligent, practical, codified, and instructive discussion capable of being understood and followed by the layman with beneficial results.
The purpose of this book, then, is to concentrate on the subject of sex, to do it with unprecedented and yet inoffensive frankness that leaves nothing for imaginative guesswork, and to take up the matter where previous treatments leave it.
Its motives are simple: to enlighten and protect the innocent, further to educate the experienced, to adjust the sexually incompatible, and to strengthen the foundation of the home.
It emphasizes the problems faced by women only because they are the principal sufferers of their own and man's sexual ignorance.
Few mothers possess sufficient experience or a taste for the type of frankness necessary to impart adequate sexual knowledge to their daughters.
Few fathers are qualified to advise their offspring, because the average man boasts of a far broader pre-marital sex life than he has actually experienced, and his wild oats have been sown largely in the fields of his imagination.
It is little to be wondered, then, that with generation following generation, this situation fails to improve and, if anything, grows considerably worse, as our increasing divorce rate testifies.
Even assuming that both parents are sufficiently informed, the problem of educating the child usually remains insurmountable: to impart a complete knowledge of the subject is a task which grates upon the delicate sensibilities of the average father and mother.
It becomes almost impossible when a widow is confronted with an adolescent son, or a widower with his growing daughter, especially when the children are rapidly approaching the age for matrimony.
Many parents will immediately protest the validity of these assertions and will claim to have educated their children effectively by following the formulas laid down by competent authority.
Such contentions are very seldom reliable, because parents themselves are usually ill-informed and because it is invariably impracticable for those occupying a parental relationship to tell the child everything he or she should know. 
Such explanations poorly made by parents can definitely shock the adolescent mind; complete frankness implies a discussion of the details of personal sex experience which few parents can bring themselves to undertake even on the eve of a child's marriage.
It must be emphasized here that such intimate revelations by parents may, to a son or daughter, take on a character of indecency which does not exist when coming from a third person.
Many readers will recall their discomfiture when, as children, they first fully realized that childbirth was the result of intercourse between their parents. While admitting that other persons may engage in such practices, most children reject the thought that their own fathers and mothers have similarly indulged themselves.
However, this is only the most prominently emphasized phase of the broad cycle of behavior involved in our physical relationships. Suppose that a child who has just become aware of his parents' sexual activity were called upon to ponder over the additional knowledge of the more intimate preliminaries to intercourse.
Such added awareness could result only in absolute incredulity and disgust. Nevertheless, the child, particularly a daughter, should be acquainted with the varied forms of perfectly normal sexual outlet to which he or she may be introduced on the nuptial night.
With respect to the girl, a definite knowledge of normal sexual practices may prevent her from regarding her newly acquired mate as a loathsome degenerate.
Actually, it is far better for a child to acquire intimate information of this character from a text, from something with which he or she has a purely impersonal relationship. Only in this manner can maturing children be brought to realize that those who indulge in sexual activity are normal human beings engaging in a perfectly normal function.
This volume is designed, among other objectives, to achieve this purpose. Even parents with the proper ability and background find that propriety alone will not allow them to touch upon the vast variety of intimate and vital information which everyone should have but very few possess.
There is, in addition, a broader field of knowledge which parents must have if they are adequately to protect their maturing children.
This is not to imply, of course, that parents should ignore the problems and questions of their children when they come directly for information, or that they should always be referred to a book dealing with the subject.
These matters in which a child approaches his father or mother are usually not complicated, are easily disposed of, and do not involve a complete exposure of the adult's sex life.
An individual of normal intelligence can perceive immediately to what extent he may become involved and whether he will be forced beyond his limitations.
Furthermore, when the adolescent reaches the point where he or she voluntarily seeks specific information of the parent, it is certain that the child has already acquired a sufficient background from outside sources to be ready to absorb a more explicit, accurate, and advanced account of the subject.
These pages contain none of the customary and conventional superficialities and generalities which have been endlessly repeated and paraphrased. They consider only perfectly normal people, usual situations, and constant factors. Neither does this book discuss abnormalities of any kind, either in practice or among individuals.
Such exceptions to natural behavior, although they appear numerous when taken collectively, are, nevertheless, minor when compared with the preponderantly normal. The possibility that the average family will be touched by these exceptions is too remote to be considered, and there is little to be gained from such a secondary discussion.
Nor is this a tome on biology or physiology, purporting to be a commentary on sexual problems but instead embodying chapters on the development of the fetus, pages on inconsequential anatomy, and a comparatively few lines on the vital aspects of sexual procedure.
Only such sketches as are absolutely necessary for a proper consideration of the matter herein discussed are included, and they are few in number.
It might be emphasized, also, that, regardless of the page length of any previous worts on the subject of sexology, few, if any, when robbed of the supporting amount of material entirely irrelevant to the sex act, will contain a discussion of practical matters—matters in which the layman is chiefly interested—that compares in size with the pertinent detail and coverage of this volume. Therein lies its unique value.
This text, then, is to be regarded essentially as an instrument the purpose of which is to relieve one of the major threats to the stability of the home: sexual incompatibility. 
In a world of chaos and in an era in which national and international integrity have fallen to a low level, there remains only the solid structure of the home to form the basis for a re-establishment of the ancient standards of virtue.
Any contribution which may cement the husband-and-wife or father-and-mother relationship and which will interfere with the constant grinding of the divorce mill, should be valuable, since a separation of the marital ties encourages looseness, and looseness leads to a complete breakdown of moral fiber. 
Ironically, a dissolution of the marriage vows is too frequently unnecessary, and an early understanding of the sex problem would eliminate the one outstanding factor that eventually contributes to a parting of the ways.

Buy this book by clicking on the Paypal Button below




CONTENTS


Introduction 9

Chapter 1. INITIAL INTERCOURSE 17Importance of procedural knowledge on the bridal night —Chastity unrelated to the hymen—Preliminary knowledge advisable—Rupturing the hymen—The first intercourse—Disagreeable possibilities—How to meet them

Chapter 2. ADULT SEXUAL BEHAVIOR 29
Popular misconceptions

Chapter 3. THE EROGENOUS ZONES 35
Methods of stimulation, female preferences—Women as varieties of physical sexual factors—The female genitals, with specific emphasis on the clitoris—Insensitive vaginal area perfectly normal—Unrelated to female masturbation—The "lowly passionate"—The "moderately passionate"—The "highly passionate"—Sexual problems of each type

Chapter 4. THE TECHNIQUE OF FOREPLAY 55
Psychological factors affecting female sexual temperament—Elements of foreplay—Women in general during foreplay—Responsiveness of the "highly passionate" during foreplay; foreplay methods applying to them— Responsiveness of the "lowly" and "moderately passionate" during foreplay; foreplay methods applying to them —A distinctive type

Chapter 5. THE NATURE OF INTERCOURSE 68
How to detect cooling—Artificial lubrication—The "highly passionate" in response to intercourse—The "lowly" and "moderately passionate" in response to intercourse

Chapter 6. THE TYPE OF ORGASM 78
Orgasms diagrammed and explained—Interpreting body twitching—Recognizing the female orgasm—The simultaneous orgasm—Orgastic intensity discussed—Male and female passion compared

Chapter 7. THE IMPORTANCE OF DIGITAL CONTACT 95
The penis poorly equipped for this purpose—Digital clitoral contact more important than contact by the penis—Importance of the male finger in fully satisfying the "highly passionate," "moderately passionate," and "lowly passionate"—Additional foreplay technique employed in fully satisfying the "highly passionate"—Methods of stimulating the clitoris—Technique employed in arousing women of slow response

Chapter 8. THE TECHNIQUE OF COITUS 103
How to detect cooling—Stimulating the "highly passionate"—Intercourse with the "highly passionate"— Satisfying the "highly passionate"—Orgastic possibilities of the "lowly" and "moderately passionate"—Digital clitoral contact the primary factor—The "rise-and-fall" technique—Intercourse procedure detailed regarding the "lowly" and "moderately passionate"—A hopeful possibility—Its relationship to compatibility—A wife's responsibility—Sexual technique involved

Chapter 9. THE SEXUAL REACTIONS OF THE MALE 123
The male as a simple sexual machine—Male sexual behavior discussed—Orgastic intensity discussed
Chapter 10. POSITIONS IN INTERCOURSE 129
No great variety—Advantages and disadvantages—Effect of variations in female physical structure

Chapter 11. THE SEX ACT SYSTEMATIZED 134
Cardinal rules to be observed in performing sexual intercourse—Bedroom manners

Chapter 12. ORAL CONNECTION 139
Oral connection never frankly discussed—Practice extensive—Not a perversion—Not unhygienic—The European attitude—European hygiene

Chapter 13. CONTROLLING THE MALE ORGASM 144
Man constructed sexually opposite of woman—Nature's conspiracy against the female—Types of male self-control—Premature ejaculation—Masturbation unrelated to premature ejaculation—Control difficulty facing the male—The "karezza"—Mental enjoyment transcending the physical—The senses and their control—Women incompetent in the use of hands—Male alternatives in satisfying the female—"Automatic" control—Effects of alcohol—Intercourse too infrequent—Coitus interruptus unsatisfactory—Failure of many men to attain erection of the penis largely psychological

Chapter 14. THEORY OF THE SAFE DAYS 168
Modern conception of the operation of the menstrual cycle—Difficulty of determining the "safe days"-^Ad-vantage of such knowledge—Intercourse during the menstrual flow

Chapter 15. SEXUAL INCOMPATIBILITY 176
A letter from a reader—Its analysis—The power of sex —The seriousness of marriage—Sexual ignorance—Maleand female contrasted—The wife a source of sexual disappointment—The danger of self modesty—A husband's responsibility—The importance of discussion—A suggested approach—Women sexually apathetic—How to discourage apathy—The lack of sexual honesty—Its affect upon a wife—The importance of proper conditioning—The danger of bad breath

Chapter 16. SEXUAL READJUSTMENT 196
A sexual questionnaire—Its analysis—Method of scoring

Chapter 17. THE CASE AGAINST CIRCUMCISION 203
Circumcision unnecessary—The practice by gentiles only discussed—Medical reasons for it—Practical reasons against it

Chapter 18 SEXUAL MISCELLANY 211
Sexual aversion—Its danger in women—Male approach to the problem—Possible causes—False modesty —Women reticent—The European attitude—Obstacles to sexual compatibility—All types susceptible—The ideal situation—No one elected to establish sexual conventions—Sexual duties of a wife—Arousing the male— Removing mental block in a woman—Hypnotherapy —Not dangerous—Its advantages—The science of the future—Breaking up sexual routine—Voluntary confessions unnecessary—A menace to future happiness
Sale

Unavailable

Sold Out