SEXUALITY, ILLNESS, AND HEALTH: JUGGLING SEX FOR HEALTH
“We were sitting in your waiting room and got to talking with this older couple who said they were in your super marital sex program. They said they were your oldest couple.” The young wife was reviewing the first visit to the clinic and her husband was nodding.
“They told us about the tests and the recommendations. They said something about a posture of the future. You know us. We thought that maybe that would get us pregnant, but they just wouldn’t tell us. They laughed and said we would have to find out for ourselves. When your secretary came to get them, they turned to us and the husband said, ‘We love it. You’ll find it. But first, try these juggling bags. Dr. Pearsall gave them to us. They work like magic’ ”
“Well,” she continued, “we persons in fertility will try anything. We would stand on our heads if it would work. We took those things home and laughed like crazy. We got so daffy at home that we got carried away. We had sex on the wrong night. We had never—I mean never—done that. Some weeks later, we got pregnant. When we came to your office to see you, we met the same people. I gave him the bags back and told him that they worked. He laughed and took his wife’s hand. “Do you think we should juggle tonight? Two seventy-year-olds might just juggle themselves more than they could handle.”
Removing the burden of fear, pressure, and misunderstanding that can accompany health problems is the first step to protecting your sexual rights. To review this issue, try the next opportunity.
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