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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52888 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52888)
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-Project Gutenberg's What Every Girl Should Know, by Margaret H. Sanger
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: What Every Girl Should Know
-
-Author: Margaret H. Sanger
-
-Release Date: August 24, 2016 [EBook #52888]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT EVERY GIRL SHOULD KNOW ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _What Every Girl Should Know_
-
-[Illustration]
-
- BY
-
- Margaret H. Sanger
-
- AUTHOR OF
-
- “How Six Little Children Were Taught the Truth.”
-
-
-
-
- SENTINEL PRINTING CO.
-
- PRINTERS AND
- PUBLISHERS
-
- READING, PENNA.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Dedication
-
-
- TO THE WORKING GIRLS
- OF THE WORLD
- THIS LITTLE BOOK
- IS
- LOVINGLY DEDICATED
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
- CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION.
-
- CHAPTER II. GIRLHOOD.
-
- Part I. Physical Growth.
-
- Part II. Mental Development.
-
- CHAPTER III. PUBERTY.
-
- Part I. General Organs, Uterus, Ovaries, Etc.
-
- Part II. Menstruation and Its Disorders.
-
- CHAPTER IV. SEXUAL IMPULSE.
-
- Part I. Masturbation
-
- Part II. Sexual Impulse in Animals—In Men. Its Significance in
- Love.
-
- CHAPTER V. Reproduction.
-
- Part I. Growth of the Life Cell in the Uterus.
-
- Part II. Hygiene of Pregnancy—Miscarriage.
-
- CHAPTER VI. SOME OF THE CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.
-
- Part I. Continence in Young Men.
-
- Part II. Gonorrhoea.
-
- Part III. Syphilis.
-
- CHAPTER VII. MENOPAUSE.
-
-
-
-
- What Every Girl Should Know
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-Students of vice, whether teachers, clergymen, social workers or
-physicians, have been laboring for years to find the cause and cure for
-vice, and especially for prostitution. They have failed so far to agree
-on either the cause or the cure, but it is interesting to know that upon
-one point they have been compelled to agree, and that is, that
-=ignorance of the sex functions= is one of the strongest forces that
-sends young girls into =unclean= living.
-
-This, together with the knowledge of the rapidly increasing spread of
-venereal diseases and the realization of their subtle nature, has
-awakened us to the need of a saner and healthier attitude on the sex
-subject, and to the importance of =sex education= for boys and girls.
-
-This need has shown itself so clearly that the question no longer seems
-to be, “Is there need of instruction?” but, “Who shall instruct?” Shall
-the mother or teacher instruct? When shall such instruction be given? In
-childhood, or in puberty? These are the points now under discussion.
-
-To the writer the answer is simple. The mother is the logical person to
-teach the child as soon as questions arise, for it is to the mother that
-the child goes for information before he enters the schoolroom. If,
-therefore, the mother answers his questions truthfully and simply and
-satisfies his curiosity, she will find that the subject of sex ceases to
-be an isolated subject, and becomes a natural part of the child's
-general learning. A woman does not need to be a college graduate, with a
-special degree in the study of botany, before she can tell her child the
-beautiful truth of its birth. But she does need to clear her own mind of
-prudishness, and to understand that the procreative act is natural,
-clean and healthful; that all nature is beautified through it, and
-consequently that it is devoid of offensiveness.
-
-If the mother can impress the child with the beauty and wonder and
-sacredness of the sex functions, she has taught it the first lesson, and
-the teacher can elaborate on these teachings as the child advances in
-school. All schools should teach anatomy of the sex organs and their
-physiology, instead of teaching the human body in the neuter gender as
-has been done up to this time.
-
-The whole object of teaching the child about reproduction through
-evolution is to clear its mind of any shame or mystery concerning its
-birth and to impress it with the beauty and naturalness of procreation,
-in order to prepare it for the knowledge of puberty and marriage.
-
-There must of necessity be special information for the pubescent boy and
-girl, for having arrived at the stage in their mental development they
-no longer take for granted what has been told them by the parents, but
-are keen to form their own ideas and gather information independently.
-It is right, therefore, to give them the facts as science has found
-them.
-
-There are workers and philanthropists who say there is too much stress
-put upon the subject of venereal diseases; that the young girl after
-learning or hearing of the dangers she is likely to encounter in the
-sexual relation, is afraid to marry and consequently lives a life
-unloved and alone.
-
-“Your treatment of this subject is dangerous,” said a very earnest
-social worker a few weeks ago. “Such knowledge will prevent our young
-girls from marrying.”
-
-To which I replied that my object in telling young girls the truth is
-for the definite purpose of preventing them from entering into sexual
-relations whether in marriage or out of it, without thinking and
-knowing. Better a thousand times to live alone and unloved than to be
-tied to a man who has robbed her of health or of the joy of motherhood,
-or welcoming the pains of motherhood, live in anxiety lest her sickly
-offspring be taken out of her life, or grow up a chronic invalid.
-
-I have more faith in the force of love. I believe that two people
-convinced that they love each other and desire to live together will
-talk as frankly of their own health and natures as they do today of the
-house furnishings and salaries. Their love for each other will protect
-them from ill health and disease, and prompt them to procure of their
-own accord, a certificate of health if each has the right information
-and knowledge.
-
-There are, however, different phases of nature, the knowledge of which
-binds and cements the love of two people, other than venereal diseases,
-for these diseases are only symptoms of a great social disorder.
-
-Every girl should first understand herself; she should know her anatomy,
-including sex anatomy; she should know the epochs of a normal woman's
-life, and the unfoldment which each epoch brings; she should know the
-effect the emotions have on her acts, and finally she should know the
-fullness and richness of life when crowned by the flower of motherhood.
-
-This knowledge I shall endeavor to give in the following articles.
-Fragmentary the articles must of necessity be, for there are volumes
-written on each subject.
-
-I shall try to free the subjects from technicalities and give the
-opinions of writers who have made these subjects their life studies and
-also the facts as I myself have learned them.
-
-It is not my intention to thrust upon any one a special code of morals,
-or to inflict upon the readers my own ideals of morality. I only presume
-to present the facts for you to accept according to your understanding.
-
-The first subject will deal with the girl during the age when sex first
-manifests itself, in that most fascinating, interesting and puzzling
-period of a woman's life—the budding period, called girlhood.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-
- GIRLHOOD—PART I.
-
-
- The Physical Manifestations
-
-It has been said that the American girl between the ages of 12 and 18 is
-the most neglected girl in the world. Just why this is so, it is
-difficult to say, but I doubt whether she is alone in this neglect, for
-this is known as the =adolescent period=, and it is only within the last
-few years that the mental and physiological aspect of this period has
-been at all considered, or its importance recognized in any part of the
-world.
-
-The =adolescent period= is the time occupied between the ages of 12 and
-22, when the physical development comes suddenly into prominence; when
-the mental faculties become independently active, and the sex of the
-individual strongly manifests itself. It is a period of the greatest
-importance to the girl herself, for her physical, mental and moral
-development during this time will have an important effect on her future
-life.
-
-It is also a period of the greatest interest to the mother, provided
-there is sympathy, confidence and understanding between them. Too much
-importance cannot be attached to the necessity of an early confidence
-between the girl and her mother before this period arrives for this will
-give a girl a sense of superiority, a poise, an understanding of herself
-and her nature. She will then be prepared for the changes taking place
-within herself, and consequently be practically immune from the
-influence of a bad environment, which otherwise might affect her in a
-way detrimental to her health and happiness. Up to this period there is
-very little manifestation of sex.
-
-Fortunately, we have come to recognize that healthy outdoor play is as
-good for the little girl as it is for the boy, and the ideas of our
-grandmothers' day—that boys were to play ball, ride horseback, swim,
-shoot, etc., while the girl's play was restricted to sedentary pursuits,
-such as sewing, doll playing, etc.—have been placed on the relic heap,
-and the girl of today keeps pace with her brother in physical freedom
-and activity.
-
-With the passing of those ideas passed also our ideal of the delicate
-girl, with a cough, small waist and dainty appetite, and the girl
-physically strong and healthy, with a broader view of life, has taken
-her place.
-
-About the age of 12 there comes a sudden change in the girl, her dresses
-are outgrown, her form assumes shape, her bust and limbs develop, and,
-in the words of Stanley Hall, “hips, thighs, limbs, shoulders and arms
-round out into contours more or less beautiful, curves always
-predominating over angles.” Thus we come to realize that the little girl
-has left us.
-
-The physical development is not alone in this work, for the mental and
-moral instincts are developing so rapidly that it is difficult to
-understand this new and lovely creature who is neither the child of
-yesterday nor the woman of tomorrow.
-
-There is often very little patience shown the adolescent girl, for
-neither parents nor teachers have been aware that this is a separate and
-distinct stage—this passing from childhood into womanhood—and as such
-must be recognized.
-
-Let us first take the bony structure. It is a well known fact that there
-is not sufficient lime salts in the system to complete the bony
-structure until the 25th year. The bones are not completely hardened,
-which is one of the reasons that so many deformities have their
-foundation laid at this time.
-
-The first and most noticeable change in the girl at this age is the
-increase of height, which begins at the 13th year and ends about the
-15th. There are girls who begin earlier and continue to grow for several
-years after this age, but it is with the average we deal, and the growth
-after the age of 15 is not so perceptible.
-
-Many girls show almost no other signs of womanly development until after
-this growth has ceased. The bones at this time are soft enough to yield
-to pressure (being cartilaginous), which makes the wearing of a corset
-especially dangerous, for the pressure on the ribs interferes with the
-development of the lungs and tuberculosis is more easily contracted.
-Corsets should not be worn before the 21st year if possible, and then
-very loosely, for tight lacing is more harmful at this age than a few
-years later. Those who have made careful investigations of the harmful
-effects of corsets claim that not only are the chest and walls of the
-abdomen injured, but the development of the sexual organs is seriously
-hampered, causing many functional diseases, commonly painful and
-irregular menstruation, caused by arrested development of the cervix.
-
-The girl who scoffs at the idea of the Chinese women binding up their
-feet, is doubtless ignorant of the knowledge that to bind up their own
-thoracic and pelvic structures, i. e., the chest and abdominal portions
-of her body, in tight corsets is doing greater harm to her health and
-injury to her development than the binding of the feet could possibly
-do. Ellis brings forth a few words on this subject which shows that the
-habit of binding the feet of the Chinese women is based on the same
-ideas as the European woman has when she deforms her waist—they are both
-done for sexual attractiveness.
-
-A Chinese woman's foot is more interesting than her face—to her husband.
-
-No man of good breeding would look at a Chinese woman's foot in the
-street; such an act is most indelicate.
-
-This question of corsets every girl should consider seriously.
-
-As this rapid growth begins, the girl often finds it difficult to hold
-herself up straight, her shoulders become stooped, her head and neck are
-thrust forward in a most ungainly manner. As she becomes conscious of
-this, instead of correcting it, she is likely to slouch and assume the
-most awkward habits. Her arms seem longer to her; hands, legs and feet
-become new burdens to carry, and the desire to hide the hands behind the
-back, to fold the arms, to bend one knee in order to lessen the length
-of the body, and to lean on something while talking, are all signs of
-this consciousness.
-
-With the invention of modern machinery and the monotony of specialized
-work in the mills and factories, it is natural that this should bring
-with it, if not entirely new diseases and deformities, at least a
-greater number than have heretofore been known. Consider the little
-children in the cotton mills, standing for long periods, with the weight
-of the body thrown on one foot—a position, which causes curvature of the
-spine. Again consider the young girls still in their “teens” bending
-over sewing machines from morning until night from year to year; their
-premium for this work is right sided lateral curvature. Sitting with one
-leg crossed over the other as in sewing, carrying books under the arm to
-and from school, lifting and carrying heavy burdens, bundles, or small
-children, such as the abused and deformed “little mothers” spend their
-play time in doing—all cause curvature of the spine.
-
-Curvature is one of the most common deformities. Any position which
-throws the spinal column out of its natural line for any length of time
-is likely to produce it.
-
-Regular exercise in the open air will do much to prevent this, together
-with walking and dancing. If curvature is already noticeable, then it is
-best to get professional instructions and follow them closely.
-
-Next to the rapid bony development, the changes in the heart and
-circulation are most noticeable. The heart grows more rapidly during the
-adolescent age than the arteries do, which increases the supply of blood
-in the arteries and causes general circulatory disturbance of which we
-see many outward signs such as blushing, nose bleed, headache, cold feet
-and hands, anaemia, loss of appetite, or an appetite so capricious as to
-drive one frantic trying to satisfy it, for it jumps from ice cream soda
-to dill pickles, according to whim. Some of these symptoms require
-special attention, particularly in the case of the girl at school or in
-an office, who finds her work a great effort, tires easily, and becomes
-pale and nervous. Such a girl should spend as much time as possible in
-the open air, and build up on milk and eggs. Sometimes a simple iron
-tonic will do much to overcome these disturbances.
-
-Pimples on the face are also very common at this period. Physicians
-assert that with cleanliness of the skin and regularity of the bowels,
-these symptoms will disappear without the aid of medicines or cosmetics.
-The above mentioned symptoms are of great annoyance to the adolescent
-girl, who is just developing pride in looking neat and keeping up an
-appearance of daintiness, and she goes to unending trouble to rid
-herself of facial blemishes, which often seem to grow worse and if
-tampered with, leave ugly scars.
-
-The nervous system also undergoes great changes at this age, and the
-growing girl is subject to various forms of nervous affections,
-stammering, jerking, restlessness, etc. These are symptoms which, if
-allowed to continue unattended, may develop into permanent disorders. In
-short, the adolescent girl needs constant watchfulness and attention.
-
-
- GIRLHOOD—PART II.
-
-The organs of sense are also awakened to activity in the adolescent
-girl. The sense of smell becomes extremely acute; offensive odors are
-=very= offensive, while pleasant ones are greatly enjoyed and desired.
-Thus we find perfumes used lavishly in girlhood, and alas! too often
-indiscriminately.
-
-With the development of the other senses the sense of color is awakened.
-The girl, who, yesterday allowed her elders to choose clothing and
-colors for her, at this time becomes most exacting in her own selection
-of ribbons and dresses. Sunsets and forests have become beautiful, and
-often the girl with artistic talent decides at this age to choose her
-life work. Laces, jewelry, trinkets, ribbons and shop windows become her
-world. Indeed, so great is her desire to possess ornaments that she has
-been known to resort to petty thievery, when unable to avail herself of
-the means to obtain them otherwise. Certain authorities, who have made
-vice and kindred subjects a study, assert that it is this great desire
-for trinkets, silk petticoats, etc., which induces girls to sell their
-bodies and enter prostitution. Such authorities fail to see the economic
-significance of these unsatisfied desires. There is something wrong with
-a system of society which allows its women to sell their bodies for such
-trifles, the desire for which is part of their natural development.
-
-Is flesh and blood and the virtue of the mothers of the future so cheap
-in this land of plenty that it can be sacrificed for such passing whims?
-It is impossible to suppress that inherent and natural desire in the
-adolescent girl to adorn and beautify herself. She must and will do it.
-
-The girl of wealth, of the so-called upper class, can beautify herself
-and adorn her body with the costliest jewels and fabrics. All eyes are
-upon her in admiration of her exquisite taste and attractive appearance.
-Yet this same manifestation in a working girl is condemned. Any attempt
-on the part of a working girl to give expression to the desire to be
-beautiful is considered “dangerous to her welfare”; is spoken of as her
-“awful desire for trinkets.”
-
-The women of wealth set certain standards for themselves and their
-class, but separate and distinct standards for the women of the working
-class. It is about time the reformers and philanthropists do something
-other than deal with the symptoms of the great social unrest, and some
-of the latest reports of vice investigators have been compelled to face
-some of the most fundamental causes, and acknowledged these causes.
-
-A craving for beauty and pleasure, dancing, music, singing and laughter,
-an innate hereditary desire to adorn and beautify herself, which comes
-down to her from primitive woman, together with a burning desire for and
-love of romance, characterize the adolescent girl and often remain with
-her far beyond the adolescent age.
-
-When the imagination is thus aroused it is not unusual to learn that the
-young girl yields to it, tells strange tales about herself, and is,
-therefore, often accused of lying. But this and petty thievery disappear
-as reason and will power are developed.
-
-The change of voice in a girl is not so distinct as in a boy, but the
-voice gradually becomes softer, fuller and of a more womanly pitch,
-though the change is quite unnoticeable while it occurs.
-
-The hearing becomes keener, noises which a few months ago were
-considered a joke are now disturbing (such as father's loud sneeze).
-Music and singing have charms, which in childhood were unappreciated.
-
-Parents and teachers who do not appreciate the change taking place
-within the girl at this period, have small patience with such doings,
-calling her “giddy” and “affected” when in reality it is all part of her
-development and can be guided and directed into beautiful channels.
-Together with her personal adornment comes interest in her surroundings.
-New and elaborate decorations furnish her bedroom, and toilet
-accessories become objects of pride. Primitive colors are displayed,
-largely in curtains, bed coverings, wall paper, etc., all of which
-explain the independent ego in the stage of transition.
-
-There are many forms of disturbance which the girl suffers at this
-period, such as hysteria and insanity, which, however, we will not dwell
-upon here. Enough has been said on the subject to impress upon my
-readers the cause of these physical and mental disturbances, and to
-realize that special care and consideration should be given at this
-particular age of the girl.
-
-The emotional nature also plays a most prominent part in the developing
-girl, and justice, I feel, would not be shown her here, unless we cover
-briefly this most interesting part of her nature. One of the strongest
-emotions which very few girls, passing from childhood into womanhood,
-escape, is the religious awakening of one kind or another. It is said by
-some investigators that 80 per cent. of the conversions of women in the
-churches take place before the age of 20. From 30 to 40 years only a
-very small percentage occur—something like 1 or 2 per cent.
-
-It is also shown that more young girls join church than boys. Some girls
-seem almost consumed by the desire to do good and be good in every
-thought and word and act, and have been known to go through various
-forms of self punishment, such as fasting, sacrificing pleasure, etc.
-Again, others spend hours in absolute devotion to the neglect of health
-and studies. It is very easily seen why the church takes its “flock,”
-while still in the adolescent period, for at no subsequent time is the
-girl's mind so plastic or impressionable. If the same girl who enters
-the convent at 18 years had waited until 22, she would very likely not
-have entered, for the mental changes are most intense from 16 to 18
-years of age.
-
-Another common emotional awakening of girlhood is the affections. In
-boys this awakening causes them to gather together in gangs. They follow
-their leader whom they greatly admire and obey. In girls it assumes a
-more simple form, the devotion to a girl friend of her own age, and the
-affection between them is deep and intense while it lasts. They tell
-their most private thoughts in secret to each other, dividing all
-honors, pleasures and gifts; they are almost inseparable, and I have
-known a girl whose affection was so deep for her “chum” that she wore
-mourning when the chum's father died.
-
-Another form of affection which the girl of this age manifests is that
-for an older woman, often a teacher or neighbor. Parents sometimes look
-askance at this relation, and rightly so, for a friendship can be
-beneficial or harmful according to the character of the older woman. But
-with all these interests there is nothing so all-absorbing or so
-interesting to the adolescent girl as =herself=. She has become
-conscious of =self=. Now she burns with ambition to go out into the
-world and do mighty things. She feels sure she will be a great singer,
-or a dancer, or, perhaps, an actress. Again, she feels she will write a
-wonderful book—about herself—or at least she will be the heroine. Or she
-will write a wonderful tragic play; or she will nurse on the
-battlefields and care for the sick and dying. These, together with
-thousands of other desires, burn in her mind, and can be increased or
-lessened according to the character of the books she reads. The
-literature placed in a girl's hands at this age has as great an
-influence on her thoughts and acts as her companions.
-
-In early adolescence this self-consciousness manifests itself in
-modesty, blushing, giggling, physical awkwardness, mentioned earlier on
-this subject, all signs that the girl is conscious of that inner
-self—the ego.
-
-It is at this stage when the mother tries to explain what the menstrual
-period means to the girl that she is met with icy indifference. She
-refuses to talk on this subject, or anything pertaining to the sex
-subject, because she has just become conscious of her sex, and
-everything connected with it seems offensively personal.
-
-She most likely has received her sexual information from some one else,
-and the mother is astonished at the stubborn silence on the part of her
-daughter. She fails to realize that some one else has that confidence
-which belongs to her and which she should have gained many years
-earlier. There is a strong tie between the adolescent girl and her
-sexual informant. The influence of an older girl over a younger, between
-whom there are confidences regarding sex, is surprisingly great. The
-mind at this age is very susceptible to influences of any kind, and the
-ideals instilled into a girl's mind are of paramount importance.
-
-These are only a few of the disturbances of the adolescent girl. But
-they are sufficient for us to know that at the bottom of all these
-disturbances is the mysterious influence of sex gradually unfolding
-itself and finally claiming its own.
-
-At the time these emotions are in full sway along comes a newer and
-deeper one. The boy with whom she has played for the past several years,
-run races, played house, ball and games, one day looks into her eyes—and
-something happens.
-
-Perhaps that look was accompanied by a pull at her hair, a pinch on her
-arm, or a hit with an apple core, but the glance was one which awakened
-within her a new instinct; the consciousness of sex, and upon her
-horizon man appears.
-
-Those who have investigated boy and girl love affairs seem to be of the
-opinion that they are invariably of short duration. Out of 100 high
-school girls interrogated, two had married while at school, and one of
-these had received a divorce shortly after. This goes to prove that the
-boy a girl is willing to elope with, or even starve for at 18, is quite
-forgotten at the age of 25.
-
-When girls marry between the ages of 19 and 20—the years when they are
-developing in body, mind and character, they are at a loss to understand
-themselves, because they are ignorant of the fact that the wonderful
-instinct of sex is making itself felt. For thousands of years this
-instinct has been in the germ of life. When they have reached that age
-nature is preparing them to proclaim its right, to perform their natural
-functions, to propagate.
-
-As the knowledge of the sex functions is one of the most important to
-the health and happiness of the girl, we shall now consider the girl in
-the period when nature has developed and prepared her to carry out its
-plan, in the Age of Puberty.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
-
- PUBERTY—PART I.
-
-Puberty is the age at which the girl or boy becomes capable of
-reproduction. Writers differ in the use of the word. Many use it to
-denote the whole period of time during which the procreative ability
-continues, which is usually from the fourteenth to the forty-fifth year.
-There are still other uses of the word, but we will use it as the age
-when the boy or girl becomes sexually matured or ripe, the first
-indication of which is the menstrual flow in the girl and seminal
-emissions in the boy.
-
-This sign of puberty is celebrated by initiations among the savage
-peoples, mostly for the purpose of trying the powers of endurance in the
-boy or girl. The boy is taken away among strange tribes, is subjected to
-the greatest physical pain and hardship, and among some tribes is
-circumcized. The girl is often subjected to a vaginal incision and
-should she cry out or show any sign of suffering she is disgraced among
-the women of her tribe and promptly expelled from the settlement. In
-Ellis' Psychology of Sex the author relates of the Yuman Indians of
-California how the girls prepare for marriage at the first sign of
-menstruation by being wrapped in blankets and placed in a warm pit for
-four days and nights. The old women of the tribe dance about them and
-sing constantly; they give away coin, cloth and wheat to teach the girls
-generosity, and sow wild seeds broadcast over the girls to cause them to
-be prolific. These and various other initiations are practiced by nearly
-all savage tribes. The boys and girls receive their sex knowledge at
-this time, and are instructed in the duties of married life.
-
-The girls are fully informed of menstruation. It has been said the
-knowledge of sexual relations is openly discussed and naturally taught;
-that, therefore, it has no glamour for them, and in consequence the
-women of these tribes are virtuous.
-
-Perhaps you will wonder what bearing all this has on What Every Girl
-Should Know. I relate it only to show that the savages have recognized
-the importance of plain sexual talks to their young for ages, while
-civilization is still hiding itself under the black pall of prudery.
-
-When we speak of puberty it is necessary to have some knowledge of the
-organs of reproduction and their structure. So far the physiology taught
-in the public schools has not treated of these organs. In order to get
-books on this subject a girl is met with the question: “Are you a nurse
-or physician?” If not the books are denied her. Consequently the average
-girl is kept in ignorance of the function of these organs, and is at a
-loss to know where to go for clean information. It is necessary,
-therefore, to give this information here, without mincing words, if
-there is any benefit to be derived from the following subject. It is
-very simple for the girl to learn the correct names of these organs and
-call them by such names. They are the ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus,
-vagina and breasts. The breasts were not always classed as reproductive
-organs, but later writers recognize their relation to them, and as such
-they are now included.
-
-Let us first take the ovaries, which are two small
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FIG. I.
-
- UTERUS—TUBES AND OVARIES.
-]
-
- To the right the ovary and tube have been laid open.
-
- a—Uterus.
- b—Ovary.
- c—Fallopian Tube.
-
-glands about the size and shape of an almond, placed one on each side of
-the extreme lower part of the woman's abdomen. They are imbedded in
-large ligaments and tissues which also help to hold the uterus (the
-womb) in place. Inside the ovaries are thousands of little eggs called
-ovules, which have been there since the birth of the girl. It is claimed
-there are from twenty to fifty thousand ovules in the ovary at birth.
-The work of the ovary is to develop and mature these eggs, and send them
-on to be fertilized. At the time of puberty, these eggs are all in
-different stages of development. Those in the center of the ovary ripen
-first and burst through the outer cover of the ovary (which is like a
-capsule and at the time of menstruation becomes swollen and congested).
-The ovule is caught by the fringy ends of the fallopian tubes which are
-in a constant lashing motion, which motion sends the egg through the
-tube to the uterus.
-
-The fallopian tubes are about four and one-half inches in length and
-join the ovaries to the upper and outer angle of the uterus. Its duties
-are to convey the ova from the ovary to the uterus. Sometimes the sperm
-cell from the male comes up into the tube to meet the egg and it is
-fertilized here. The union of the two cells usually occurs in the outer
-end of the fallopian tube; but this is not the nest nature has prepared
-for the egg's development, and unless it returns into the uterus it
-causes serious trouble and an operation is necessary. Impregnation in
-the tube is very rare, but it is possible.
-
-The uterus, often spoken of as the womb, is a hollow muscular organ into
-which the egg comes from the tubes to be fertilized—four to eight days
-from ovaries to uterus. After fertilization it remains here, is
-nourished and developed until it can develop no more. Then it is thrown
-out by the contraction of the muscles, which process we call the birth
-of a child. The uterus is about three inches long, its shape is like a
-pear with the small end downward. It is not fastened to any of the bony
-parts, but is held in place by the ligaments and tissues, which also
-allow it to move with different movements of the body. One of the most
-interesting features about the uterus which is so small in its cavity is
-that it can stretch to accommodate the growing child within it to the
-length of nineteen to twenty-one inches. This is because it is one and
-one half inches thick and composed of layers of muscles which are tough
-and yet elastic. At the upper side of the uterus are the openings into
-the fallopian tubes. At the small end of the uterus is another opening
-leading into the vagina. It is through this opening the sperm of the
-male comes in order to fertilize the egg. Thus you can readily see the
-uterus is the nest or cradle where the egg is to live until it becomes
-strong enough to subsist on other nourishment.
-
-The vagina is a muscular tube-like passage which extends from the small
-part of the uterus (called the neck) to the outer surface of the body,
-where its opening is usually partly closed in virgins by a thin membrane
-or film known as the hymen. The walls of the vagina are also very thick
-and elastic. This is sometimes called the birth canal. The hymen was for
-years a subject for discussion in the professional world among
-physicians. In my talks to girls I find it a subject of great interest
-and often anxiety to many of them, for the average girl seems possessed
-with the old idea that the presence of the hymen is necessary to marital
-happiness. The time was not long ago when its absence was considered
-cause for serious discord between husband and wife, and I have been told
-that under the old law its absence was sufficient ground for divorce.
-
-Fortunately, modern science has thrown some light on this subject and
-disproved the theory that its absence was necessarily due to a woman's
-having had sexual relations. There are cases on record of women who have
-lived four and five years in prostitution who were found with perfectly
-preserved hymen. It is important to know that it differs in size and
-shape in women. Also, that in some women it has been entirely absent
-since birth. Many little girls and babies have no hymen. It can be
-destroyed by accident or injured by operations, or examinations where
-the physician did not use the greatest care. In some women it is easily
-destroyed; in others it is more difficult. It is not at all uncommon for
-a physician to find the hymen unruptured when he comes to deliver the
-first born child. All of which goes to prove that neither its presence
-nor its absence is necessarily the sign of virginity.
-
-Now that we have some idea of the situation of the reproductive organs
-and their relations to one another we shall be ready to consider in
-greater detail the ovule or egg in the ovary.
-
-
- PUBERTY—PART II.
-
-Beginning with puberty the eggs from the ovary are expelled as they
-ripen or mature. This process is called ovulation and occurs about every
-twenty-eight days. It is closely related to menstruation, but it is not
-menstruation as you will soon learn. Some writers say the egg is
-expelled at other times than at the menstrual periods; another writer
-asserts that one passes every six hours, alternating male and female.
-There are many views and ideas on the subject of ovulation, but I will
-tell you of the most generally accepted theory, that the egg is expelled
-from the ovary every twenty-eight days.
-
-When the egg ripens, the ovary discharges it and sends it on to find its
-way through the tubes to the uterus. Here we find the blood supply of
-the uterus greatly increased in preparation for the egg. We find the
-inner lining of the uterus becomes very soft and smooth so that the egg
-can very easily find a place in which to lodge itself after it has been
-fertilized. We also find that the cells swell and multiply, all in
-preparation to welcome and nourish the incoming egg or ovum. If the egg
-is fertilized by the male, it then remains in the uterus to develop. If
-not, it is thrown out, together with all the preparation made to receive
-it. The cells burst and discharge their contents; the mucus, blood,
-cells and all come away in what is called the menstrual flow.
-
-At one time woman was thought to be the only creature which menstruated.
-But science now tells us that all warm blooded animals which walk erect
-menstruate. The discharge is chiefly due to the position which in
-standing upright, throws the large part of the uterus higher than the
-neck. In animals, such as dogs, cats, etc., the same process goes on,
-but the position of these animals keeps the large part of the uterus
-lower than the small part, where the blood is retained and then
-reabsorbed into the system.
-
-This process goes on every four weeks in girls after they reach the age
-of puberty and continues at regular periods as long as the egg is not
-fertilized until the reproductive age is over, which is usually between
-the forty-fifth and fiftieth year. If, however, the egg is fertilized
-the menstrual flow ceases and this blood supply goes to nourish the new
-life in the uterus. It does not appear again until after the birth of
-the child, and usually ceases while the child depends upon the milk from
-the mammal glands.
-
-The age at which this process (menstruation) first takes place in girls
-differs in individuals. Climate has some effect upon it, for girls in
-warm or Southern climates mature earlier than in colder places. In this
-climate the average girl reaches puberty at fourteen years of age. Some
-have been known to reach it as early as the eleventh and others not
-until the eighteenth year, all in the same place and yet normal and
-healthy, which shows there is no reason for anxiety if the girl does not
-menstruate at fourteen, provided she is developing normally and is in
-good health. During the first few years after its appearances the
-periods are likely to be irregular. This is because the sexual organs
-are not fully developed. Often the period does not occur after the first
-time for three, five, eight months and sometimes a year. This
-irregularity continues for two or three years. Cases of girls coming
-from Europe have been known where the period was perfectly established
-over there, but after arriving in this climate the menstrual flow did
-not occur again for a year and over. Usually this irregularity lasts
-only a few months, and when once it has become regular, there should be
-no worry over its arrival a day or two earlier or later.
-
-The length of time the period lasts differs in women also. The average
-length of time is four or five days, yet there are women in which it
-lasts fully a week, and others but a few hours. The length of time
-should not be of as much concern as the amount of discharge which is
-expelled each time. It is, of course, difficult to estimate this, but
-physicians claim that more than three protectives in twenty-four hours
-should not be used. In all women the flow is most profuse during the
-first two days.
-
-The care of the health should receive more attention during the first
-two days than is usually given it. To the girl who has to work from
-early morning until late at night, these two days are unusually hard on
-her nerves and on her general health, and I regret that I have no new
-message for her to help lighten the burden, which under the present
-atrocious industrial system makes it so hard for her.
-
-Physicians say there should be no need of interrupting the regular
-routine of the day at this time more than any other. There are a few
-strong women to whom this period makes no difference, but the average
-girl in this country spends two days of pain and discomfort. Out of
-1,000 girls questioned, only 16 per cent. were entirely free from pain,
-which proves that the time has come for women to cease being ashamed of
-this function, and insisting upon at least one day's rest at the expense
-of her employer. Some of the old biblical ideas instilling into the
-man's mind, that a woman is unclean at this time has been the cause of
-much hardship and many sneers endured by a woman during these periods.
-The consequence has been that she will bear the most intense pain rather
-than allow the men working with her to suspect that she is menstruating.
-It is all nonsense and wrong, and it is time women should band together
-in one great sisterhood to protect one another from being slowly drained
-and exhausted of their powers of motherhood for the benefit of their
-exploiters. Women who belong to unions should demand that this day be
-given them and their sisters. Girls continue to suffer pains in the
-abdomen and back, pains running down the limbs, headache, often nausea,
-besides being nervous and irritable, yet hang on a strap in an
-overcrowded street car, stand or sit all day in the shop or at the
-machine and utter no protest. They know, too, they are not alone in this
-suffering, for they see about them day after day hundreds of other women
-enduring the same pain, yet they remain silent.
-
-How long will you endure this, working women?
-
-There is one thing to remember, that the greatest strain comes on the
-nervous system at this period. One of the best ways to assist in
-building up the nerve strength is in sleep and rest and for the girl who
-dares not remain away from the shop fearing to lose her “job” the next
-best thing is to get to bed early, for there's nothing that builds up
-the exhausted nerves like sleep.
-
-Fortunately, the girl at school has some consideration shown her at this
-time, and it is well that this is so, for until the period becomes
-established there is special danger of overdoing in school work, which
-often causes St. Vitus dance and other nervous disorders.
-
-I believe in the regular warm tub bath, or cold sponge followed by a
-good rubbing all over the body at this time, together with nine or ten
-hours' sleep, and light, nourishing food without stimulant. If the
-bowels are active, it often lessens the pain considerably, and it is
-very important that every girl attend to this if she has any regard for
-her health. There are a few abnormalities of the menstrual function
-which I will not take the space to state here. Before leaving the
-subject, I wish to impress upon the reader that most abnormalities, such
-as too little or too much flow, or very great exhausting pain are
-usually caused, not by any disease of the generative organs, but more
-often a disturbance of the general health, which can often be treated
-and cured by building up the system.
-
-Every girl should learn the laws of menstruation and its hygiene and
-have a full understanding of the same. The menstrual function occurs
-only in the female at puberty, but at the same time there comes to both
-boys and girls, or male and female, a mysterious and impelling
-influence, which has great power over the lives of both during the
-adolescent period unless they understand and control it. This is known
-as the Sexual Impulse.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
-
- SEXUAL IMPULSE—PART I.
-
-The sexual impulse is the strongest force in all living creatures. It is
-this that animates the struggle for existence; it is this that attracts
-and unites two beings, that they may reproduce their kind; it is this
-that inspires man to the highest and noblest thoughts; it is this also
-that inspires man to all endeavors and achievements, to all art and
-poetry; this impulse is the creative instinct which dominates all living
-things and without which life must die. If, then, this force, this
-impulse plays so strong a part in our lives, is it not necessary that we
-know something about it?
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the time of puberty there comes both to boys and girls, two
-impulses—one, the desire to touch or caress; to come in contact with, to
-write or to speak to, an individual of the opposite sex. This impulse is
-much stronger in girls than in boys. The other is the impulse that
-impels the individual to discharge the accumulation of ripe sex cells,
-and relieve himself of the nervous tension which this accumulation
-produces. This impulse is stronger in boys than in girls. One writer
-states that this is an unconscious desire for relief from physical
-congestion, not differing greatly from the sense of relief which the
-emptying of the bladder or rectum produces.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These two impulses together, according to Moll, constitute the Sexual
-Impulse, and this constitutes the foundation upon which love, the
-greatest of all emotions, is based.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the time of puberty, we learned from the last article, that the first
-manifestations of sexual maturity in the girl is the appearance of the
-menstrual flow. But also at puberty there comes the sexual impulse,
-which evidences itself during sleep, in a filmy substance dropping from
-the mouth of the uterus. This “detumescence” does not appear very often
-in young girls, but later in life when sex instinct becomes stronger it
-occurs during sleep, especially in young widows having experienced
-sexual relations. They are, however, seldom aware of its taking place;
-consequently, it has not the danger which it presents to the boy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the preceding article on puberty, we discussed only the girl at
-puberty, but here it is necessary to understand that during puberty many
-changes take place in the boy, such as change of voice, the growth of
-hair on the face, various parts of the body, and most important, the
-discharge of the sexual fluid commonly known as seminal emissions. This
-latter symptom appears in every normal healthy boy on reaching the age
-of puberty, but unlike the menstrual period which occurs at a stated
-period in girls, the seminal emissions do not depend upon a special
-period; they occur at different times, often twice a month. Unlike
-menstruation, which in the girl lasts from two to seven days, the
-discharge lasts only a few seconds, and is not accompanied by pain. This
-expulsion is considered perfectly normal, and is not a sign of physical
-or sexual weakness, but a sign that a surplus accumulation of ripe sex
-cells are present and have come to their full development and overflow.
-Nature takes care of this and uses all of this life-giving fluid
-according to the needs of the individual, casting off the surplus.
-
-It is this symptom that alarms young boys at puberty. It is this
-overflow which enables quack doctors to play upon the innocent and
-ignorant boy, telling him that it is an indication of weakness. And it
-is also this—as the result of telling older boys about it—that leads
-boys to houses of prostitution; for they are told by their ignorant
-advisers that they must have sexual relations or endanger their sexual
-capacity.
-
-It is also this overflow which, occurring in sleep awakens the boy, and
-he is conscious of what has occurred; he is conscious also of a
-pleasurable sensation which this sense of relief produces, and unless
-warned against it he will try at some later time to bring on this relief
-by friction or mechanical means, which is known as masturbation—often
-called self-abuse. The age of puberty is one of the periods in an
-individual's life in which it is easiest to acquire this habit, in girls
-as well as in boys, although the girl may not be conscious of any
-sensation, through the accumulation of the “detumescence”. Yet there is
-the same nervous tension that exists in boys, due to congestion of the
-now fully developed genital organs, perhaps slighter in intensity, but
-it is there and the girl becomes conscious of it.
-
-In talking to older girls about sex, menstruation, etc., she is often
-led into the habit of masturbation. Cases have been known where children
-formed this habit in infancy almost, through the ignorance of nurses or
-even mothers, who, not aware of the consequences, have kept babies from
-crying by gently patting or rubbing the sexual parts. It may be caused
-also by uncleanliness, itching, tight clothing, etc.
-
-When the habit is formed in very small children, it can be exercised in
-the very presence of the parents, but they being ignorant of the habit
-itself, or the consequences, interpret the actions as “baby ways”.
-Again, the habit is formed upon entering school. It is said no school is
-free from it; and it is a fact that no institution today is free from
-pupils who practice masturbation.
-
-In public schools are found groups of perverted boys and girls whose
-depraved ideas sooner or later permeate the place. A recent issue of a
-conservative woman's journal says: “In absolute filth of conversation
-nothing could equal the talk of boys and girls during recess in our
-schools. What is still worse is that the child is generally instructed
-in masturbation, prostitution and sometimes sexual perversity.”
-
-This subject of masturbation is at present under discussion from many
-points of view among the medical profession; some claiming, that, as
-with venereal diseases, we lay too much stress on the matter, and
-exaggerate the harm done to the individual by it. One writer plainly
-states that it is of such common practice that out of a hundred young
-men and women, ninety-nine are addicted to it, and the hundredth one is
-lying. Another says that out of a hundred men and women arriving at the
-age of 25, ninety-nine have practiced it at some time.
-
-By these examples such writers would try to prove that because
-ninety-nine people out of one hundred are not in insane asylums the
-practice cannot be as harmful as it is stated by others to be.
-
-Let us take a sane and logical view of this subject.
-
-In children, before they have reached the age of puberty, prior to the
-development of the sexual organs, it stands to reason that to abuse
-these organs before they are strong enough to be exercised must weaken
-them for their natural functions. Again, masturbation, unlike the sexual
-act, can be practiced individually and at all times and nearly anywhere.
-This gives the individual unlimited opportunity for indulgence, and
-consequently drains and exhausts the system of the vitality necessary
-for full development.
-
-In the boy or girl past puberty we find one of the most dangerous forms
-of masturbation, i. e., mental masturbation, which consists of forming
-mental pictures, or thinking of obscene or voluptuous pictures. This
-form is considered especially harmful to the brain, for the habit
-becomes so fixed that it is almost impossible to free the thoughts from
-lustful pictures. Every girl should guard against the man who invariably
-turns a word or sentence into a lustful, or commonly termed, “smutty”
-channel, for nine times out of ten he is a mental masturbator.
-
-Perhaps the greatest physical danger to the chronic masturbator is the
-inability to perform the sexual act naturally. The strong physical
-irritants which are used are likely to produce catarrhal disease of
-these organs in both sexes, producing such irritating sensations that
-relief is demanded, and this can be obtained only by repeating the
-habit, and so it continues. The individual promises himself over and
-over again after such exercises to overcome the habit, but his will
-power gradually becomes destroyed and the impulse continues. He knows
-and intuitively feels such practice degrades him and destroys his
-character; he feels he is losing control of himself, and also realizes
-that his health, especially his nervous system is being undermined.
-
-In my personal experience as a trained nurse while attending persons
-afflicted with various and often revolting diseases, no matter what
-their ailments, I never found any one so repulsive as the chronic
-masturbator.
-
-It would not be difficult to fill page upon page of heart-rending
-confessions made by young girls, whose lives were blighted by this
-pernicious habit, always begun so innocently, for even after they have
-ceased the habit, they find themselves incapable of any relief in the
-natural act. This causes a nervous and excited condition in the girl,
-tossing about nervously for hours after. It is much more difficult for a
-girl to overcome the habit than a man. The effects are more permanent in
-her.
-
-Before closing this subject, however, I want to tell of a case of an
-eight year old boy I attended during an attack of measles. I found he
-was shy and unresponsive, and at times very nervous and irritable with a
-strong liking to be alone. I observed him closely for a few days and
-reported the results of my observation to the attending physician. He
-was convinced of the truth, that the little fellow was masturbating. The
-physician assigned me to the task of talking to the child, who
-acknowledged that he was “touching” himself and had been ever since he
-could remember. The little fellow's mother had died when he was in
-infancy, leaving beside himself a brother a year older with whom he
-slept. I explained to him the danger as well as I could and the result
-was that I was awakened in the night by whisperings and found the little
-fellow asking the older brother to tie his hands to the bedpost. This
-the older brother did with a handkerchief, and the child went to sleep
-in this way every night during the few weeks I was attending him. The
-first few nights he was awake practically all of the time struggling to
-overcome this habit, which he finally overcame completely.
-
-At puberty every boy and girl should be taught these dangers and
-temptations and also how to avoid them, by keeping active, mentally and
-physically, going to bed only when sleepy, avoiding intoxicating drinks
-and stimulants.
-
-We have strayed some distance, I know, from the beginning of our
-subject—Sexual Impulse—to treat of its perversion (masturbation), but we
-shall now take up the normal natural impulse and see what there is that
-every girl should know.
-
-
- SEXUAL IMPULSE—PART II.
-
-In the first part of this article we learned that the sexual impulse is
-a combination of the two impulses: the one which impels the discharge of
-ripe sex cells, strongest in the boy, and the other which impels the
-individual to touch or caress an individual of the opposite sex,
-strongest in the girl.
-
-Every girl has in mind an ideal man. This ideal begins to form sometime
-in the early adolescent age. He is usually distinct in her mind as to
-his physical qualities, such as dark or light hair, or brown or blue
-eyes. He is always a certain physical type and often remains an ideal to
-her through life. At the forming period of the type she will be
-attracted toward many men who seem to answer the ideal type, but as she
-reads and develops through the various stages of the adolescent period,
-the ideal changes and grows with her. As she reaches the romantic stage
-the ideal must be brave, daring, courteous. If she is inclined toward
-outdoor sports he must be athletic. And so it goes on until the
-twenty-third year, when the average girl has a fairly settled idea of
-the man who would suit her as a mate through life.
-
-When the sexual impulse makes itself felt strongly in the adolescent boy
-or girl, they, feeling satisfied with the physical beauty and perfection
-of the other, marry, they are unconscious that the incentive to love
-when based on physical attraction alone is soon destroyed. For sickness,
-poverty or disease will affect even the most seemingly perfect physical
-attraction.
-
-Let us not confuse the sexual impulse with love, for it alone is not
-love, but merely a necessary quality for the growth of love.
-
-No sexual attraction or impulse is the foundation of the beautiful
-emotion of love. Upon this is built respect, self-control, sympathy,
-unity of purpose, many common tastes and desires, building up and up
-until this real love unites two individuals as one being, one life. Then
-it becomes the strongest and purest emotion of which the human soul is
-capable. There is no doubt that the natural aim of the sexual impulse is
-the sexual act, yet when the impulse is strongest and followed by the
-sexual act without love or any of the relative instincts which go to
-make up love, the relations are invariably followed by a feeling of
-disgust. Respect for each other and for one's self is a primary
-essential to this intimate relation.
-
-In plant and animal life the reproductive cell of the male is the active
-seeker of the passive female cell, imbued with the instinct to chase and
-bodily capture the female cell for the purpose of reproduction.
-
-This instinct man, as he is today, has inherited, and, as with the lower
-forms of life, the senses are intensely involved. It is kept alive by
-the sense of sight, sound and smell, and reaches its highest development
-through the sense of touch. It is heightened by touching smooth and soft
-surfaces—which is said to account for the pleasure of kissing.
-
-In the early part of this article I spoke of the desire to touch being
-stronger in girls than in boys. This desire leads a girl to kiss and
-fondle a man without any conscious desire for the sexual act; whereas in
-the man, to be touched and caressed by the girl for whom he has a sexual
-attraction, stimulates the accumulation of sex cells, and the desire for
-the sexual act becomes paramount in his mind. Many a young girl bubbling
-over with the joy of living, innocent of any serious consequences, is
-oft-times misjudged by men on account of these natural actions. But she
-soon puts on her armor of defense, and stifles and represses any
-outbursts of affection.
-
-Society, too, condemns the natural expression of woman's emotion, save
-under certain prescribed conditions. In consequence of this, women
-suppress their natural desires and direct this great force into other
-channels, participating in the bigger and broader movements and
-activities in which they are active today.
-
-This is one reason why the type of the so-called “old maid”, so
-characteristic of the generation past, has disappeared. These great
-maternal powers are being used up in the activities of modern life.
-Instead of allowing it to remain dormant and make her odd and whimsical,
-the modern woman turns her sexual impulse into a big directing force.
-
-That the male creature is the pursuer of the female in all forms of
-life, there is no question, but that the female has the choice of
-selection and uses fine discrimination in her choice, cannot be denied
-either. This instinct of selection seems to lie dormant in women of
-today, for at puberty nature calls to every girl to make a selection
-suitable to her nature. Yet few girls follow this instinct on account of
-the specter of economic insecurity which looms up before them. Instead
-of asking themselves: “Are we mateable and sympathetic?” they ask:
-“Shall we have enough food, clothing and shelter?”
-
-Indeed, girls, this system increases our degradation, and places us in
-ideals lower than the animals. All over the civilized world today girls
-are being given and taken in marriage with but one purpose in view: to
-be well-supported by the man who takes her. She does not concern herself
-with the man's physical condition; his hereditary taints, the
-cleanliness of his mind or past life, nor with the future of the race.
-
-There will no doubt be a great change in woman's attitude on this
-subject in the next few years. When women gain their economic freedom
-they will cease being playthings and utilities for men, but will assert
-themselves and choose the father of their offspring. As Bernard Shaw
-tells of her in one of his greatest plays, she will hunt down her ideal
-in order to produce the Superman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There seems to be a general tendency on the part of the woman who is
-demanding political freedom, to demand sexual freedom also. When a girl
-reaches the age nearing thirty her natural development tends toward
-sexual freedom. It seems as though nature, knowing the time of
-reproduction is drawing to a close, calls with all the fury of her
-strength to complete its development and procreate.
-
-It is at this age where physicians claim a woman awakens to the sexual
-desire, and it is at this age that women seek affection, or
-gratification with a “lover.” To her there is nothing to say; she is
-mature, developed and can judge for herself where best her happiness
-lies.
-
-But to the young girl at the age of say twenty, or even younger,
-immature, mentally undeveloped, there is something she should know, and
-that is that every physical impulse, every sensual feeling, every
-lustful desire will come to her whitewashed with the sacred word “Love”.
-
-Neither the boy nor the girl knows the difference between the sexual
-impulse and love. A boy meets a girl he feels a great attraction for
-her, he feels the sexual impulse throbbing within him, he is full of
-this life-giving current, he feels it throughout his being; he walks
-lighter and straighter, he feels it in his voice, in his laughter; he
-grows tenderer within himself, and to women. He feels all this and is
-sure it is a love that will never die. If there is an attraction on the
-girl's part there is no difficulty in persuading her that this feeling
-is love.
-
-But it is not love; it is the creative force or sexual impulse scattered
-through his being and the sexual act brings it to a focus.
-
-If motherhood comes to the girl through this relation, she has developed
-and the experience has enriched her life. But today the girl has an idea
-she has escaped the greatest disgrace when she has avoided motherhood.
-If the relation was based on physical attraction alone, a few abortions
-and the monotony of every day life soon remove this, and the man goes
-elsewhere in search of this wonderful sensation which he felt at first,
-but did not know how to keep or how to use.
-
-The girl, however, has become a new being, sexually awakened and
-conscious of it, but ignorant of the use of the forces she possesses,
-she plunges forth blindly, with social and economic forces against her,
-and prostitution beckoning at every turn. So she soon passes with the
-crowd on the road to the Easiest Way. This is the story of thousands of
-young girls living in prostitution.
-
-Women should know that the creative instinct does not need to be
-expended entirely on the propagation of the race. Though the sex cells
-are placed in a part of the anatomy for the essential purpose of easily
-expelling them into the female for the purpose of reproduction, there
-are other elements in the sexual fluid which are the essence of blood,
-nerve, brain and muscle. When redirected into the building and
-strengthening of these, we find men or women of the greatest endurance
-and greatest magnetic power. A girl can waste her creative powers by
-brooding over a love affair to the extent of exhausting her system, with
-results not unlike the effects of masturbation and debauchery.
-
-The sexual impulse is natural. It is natural in animals, degenerates,
-and in man. But in man it is mixed with other essentials which,
-together, are termed love. These essentials are derived from man's power
-of reasoning by which he is known as a higher species and through which
-he differs from the animals.
-
-When man emerged from the jungle and stood upright on his hind legs, the
-shape of his head and his face changed from the long jaw and flat head
-of the animal to the flat face and high head of the man. All progress
-from that time forward was made along mental lines. According to
-universal law then in existence he should have been limited to a
-geographical area and killed by the extreme heat or cold or starved for
-one kind of food if it were not obtained, but against all these he
-fought, because he became endowed with such attributes as reason,
-knowledge and will-power. Instead of using his creative powers solely in
-hunting food and reproducing his species, he used this force in making
-plans for his self-preservation. He built rafts and boats to cross
-rivers and streams; he devised methods of clothing himself against
-extreme heat and cold and discovered various ways of preparing food for
-different climates suitable for his various needs. In other words he
-conserved his creative force and redirected it into its channels which
-have resulted in giving him precedence over all other living creatures.
-For man has developed a conscious mind which asserts itself by
-reasoning, which in turn has developed his brain power.
-
-It is said a fish as large as a man has a brain no larger than the
-kernel of an almond. In all fish and reptiles where there is no great
-brain development, there is also no conscious sexual control. The lower
-down in the scale of human development we go the less sexual control we
-find. It is said the aboriginal Australian, the lowest known species of
-the human family, just a step higher than the chimpanzee in brain
-development, has so little sexual control that police authority alone
-prevents him from obtaining sexual satisfaction on the streets.
-According to one writer, the rapist has just enough brain development to
-raise him above the animal, but like the animal, when in heat, knows no
-law except nature, which impels him to procreate, whatever the result.
-Every normal man and woman has the power to control and direct his
-sexual impulse. Men and women who have it in control and constantly use
-their brain cells thinking deeply, are never sensual.
-
-It is well to understand that the natural aim of the sexual impulse is
-the sexual act and the natural aim of the sexual act is reproduction,
-though it does not always result in this. It is possible for conception
-to take place without love, it is even possible that there is no
-conscious knowledge to procreate before or during the act, yet this does
-not disprove the fact that nature has designed it for the purpose of
-reproduction, no matter what uses man has put it to today. This subject
-of procreation we shall discuss next.
-
-Every girl should know that to hold in check the sexual impulse, to
-absorb this power into the system until there is a freely conscious
-sympathy, a confidence and respect between her and her ideal, that this
-will go toward building up the sexual impulse and will make the purest,
-strongest and most sacred passion of adult life, compared to which all
-other passions pale into insignificance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-
- REPRODUCTION—PART I.
-
-In teaching children or young persons the process of reproduction one of
-the cleanest, most natural and beautiful methods of doing this is to
-tell them the process which goes on in the various forms of life in the
-flower, fish, frog, bird and to lead up to the highest and most complex
-of all living creatures—man.
-
-They watch the butterfly and bee carry a load of pollen from the father
-buttercup to fertilize the seeds within the mother flower. They watch
-Mr. and Mrs. Frog awaken from their long winter nap, and stirred by the
-life-giving impulse within them, start for the breeding pond. They watch
-Father Thrush win his mate and patiently stand guard over her during the
-tedious hatching days. They are told and see that the flowers depend
-upon outside forces to bring the pollen from the male to the female to
-fertilize the seeds before the seeds could grow. They are taught that
-the mother fish lay her eggs in the water first and that the father
-fish, unlike the flowers, being able to move about, carries the pollen
-(which is now a fluid) to the seeds himself. They are told that Father
-Frog, being a higher creature, fertilized the eggs before they reached
-the water, and Father Thrush being still higher in the scale fertilized
-the eggs before they left the mother's body. That the higher the species
-was, the greater the care required to preserve that species.
-
-In this way the mind is prepared for the information which should
-follow.
-
-The girl at puberty should be taught this process and something of what
-goes on within the womb after the ovum has been fertilized. She should
-know that all organic life is the result of a simple cell; that man is a
-community of cells, banded together and depending upon each cell to
-carry on its work, for the benefit of the whole.
-
-Let us first, then, get an idea of a cell and what it is and what it
-does. A cell is a tiny portion of living matter having in its center a
-spot or nucleus which represents the point of germination; it is
-separated from its sister cells by partitions of cell membrane.
-
-A simple cell is formed by the fusion of two germ cells when they meet
-to exchange nuclear elements. After this fusion they are able to proceed
-with fission, which means splitting into parts, and it is the subsequent
-cellular growth of the fused germ-cell that constitutes reproduction.
-
-There are two kinds of reproductive cells, the ova in the female and the
-spermatozoa in the male.
-
-When the sexual act takes place, there is deposited into the vagina a
-secretion known as semen. According to Sutkowsky, each deposit or
-ejaculation contains 50,000,000 of spermatozoa.
-
-About the same time in the act there occurs in the female, spasmodic
-contractions of the muscles of the uterus which draws in a small amount
-of the sperm which the male has left there.
-
-The sperm cell of the male under the microscope shows that it contains
-both head and tail.
-
-The tail enables it to move and advance with a tadpole-like motion
-toward the ovum.
-
-As in the lower forms of life, the male cell has within it the instinct
-to chase and capture the female cell. Consequently, it does not depend
-upon the uterine contractions of the female to enable it to reach the
-ovum for fertilization. The vagina being a corrugated or wrinkled tube,
-hides and secretes the sperm cell for days, unless it is removed with
-water or killed by poisonous injections.
-
-When, however, the sperm comes near the ovum it is drawn to it as to a
-magnet.
-
-The ovum being carefully protected by nature within the ovaries, leaves
-its sister cells and travels alone. The sperm cell, however, having more
-dangerous paths to travel, must provide against the uncertainty of doing
-its great work by going in numbers, though it takes but one single cell
-to produce human life.
-
-A number of the male cells go to meet the ovum, but only one enters it.
-Almost at the moment the head enters the ovum it becomes completely
-absorbed by the ovum and all trace of it is lost.
-
-This union of the two cells is called fertilization, fecundation,
-impregnation, or conception. Any of these terms may be used. This union
-usually takes place in the tube, but the fertilized egg does not remain
-there; it wanders along and finds its way into the uterus.
-
-Now that the ovum has been fertilized, it readily becomes attached to
-the soft lining of the uterus which has been specially prepared to
-receive it. No menstruation occurs. The woman is now pregnant. A new
-being is created, and marvelous changes will now take place within the
-tiny cell clinging so weakly to the lining of the uterus. At this time
-the ovum is so small it can scarcely be seen by the naked eye, but in
-two weeks it has grown to the size of a pea; in four weeks to the size
-of a walnut, and in eight weeks to the size of a lemon. At this time it
-is three inches long and is completely formed, the head being much
-larger in proportion to the rest of its body. What has happened to the
-ovum in these few weeks is briefly this: All the changes in the
-evolution of the animal kingdom, that man had to pass through to arrive
-at his present shape, the human embryo goes through step by step within
-the uterus in a very short period. Immediately after fertilization the
-ovum begins to divide into sections or lobes, into 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, etc.
-cells until they are almost countless. Each cell splits in the middle of
-the nucleus, forming two complete new cells and so on.
-
-The next stage is represented by this mass of cells forming themselves
-into a shape like a hollow ball. The third stage is the meeting of the
-two layers of cells, as if the ball had collapsed, and these two layers
-meet and unite as one, stretch and flatten out like a worm. After this
-stage things become more complicated; new organs begin to develop, line
-marks for the backbone and intestinal canal show themselves, as do the
-bony and muscular structure of the skeleton.
-
-A slight pulsation is observed, showing the development of the heart.
-The head fold is formed by a gradual bending of the spinal column at the
-front end of the ovum, which we will now call the embryo. There are also
-formed at this time, processes which soon become arms and legs, there is
-a furrow on the face, pits for the eyes; all of which has happened in
-less than four weeks.
-
-From this time forward development is rapid; the bones, which up to this
-time have been soft matter, grow harder, and all organs which were only
-outlined,
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FIG. II.
-
- Foetus in the Uterus at two months' pregnancy.
-]
-
-now become definitely formed. At the end of the fourth month it has
-grown to its natural shape. The remaining months it increases in size
-and gains strength. The uterus becomes enlarged, rises out of the pelvis
-and occupies the abdominal cavity. It takes forty weeks or 280 days to
-complete the growth of the human embryo, although the time may be two
-weeks more or less and yet be normal.
-
-Let us see how the child has been fed all this time. When the ovum is
-fertilized and up to the eighth week it is fed by delicate branched
-threads, which form a covering for it. These threads are called “villi”,
-and dip into the uterine surface for nourishment from the mother to
-supply the embryo.
-
-About the eighth week these “villi” have grown greatly intertwined into
-a mass of spongy tissue full of blood vessels called the placenta
-(afterbirth). This fastens itself to one side of the uterus, takes
-oxygen as well as nutriment from the mother and sends it through the
-umbilical cord to the child, the point of attachment being at the navel,
-the depression left on the belly of the child by the cutting of the
-umbilical cord at birth. In the same way it takes the waste product from
-the child to the mother, and she, in turn, throws them out of her system
-through the kidneys, bowels and skin. The child and placenta are both
-encased within a membraneous sac, which secretes and serves to hold a
-watery fluid in which the child swims.
-
-The child is folded together with legs on the thighs and thighs on the
-belly, arms on the chest and head bent forward over the breast. Toward
-the end of the term it moves about slightly, often stretches a little,
-and has periods of rest when it scarcely moves, and again periods of
-great activity. A mother first feels the child move in the fourth or
-fifth month. Often the young mother at this time begins to worry over
-her acts lest something she should do might deform the precious charge
-she carries. This, as you can readily understand from its early
-development, is impossible, for by the end of the second month the child
-has been formed, and no mental impressions of the mother can alter its
-shape. Just as the nucleus of the male sperm has within it all the
-contributions which the father of the child can give it, until after it
-is born, so does the mother give it its physical qualities right at the
-beginning.
-
-Whatever is to be inherited from the father must be within the substance
-of the spermatozoon at the time the ovum is fertilized. He has no
-further pre-natal influence over it.
-
-It is interesting to observe that the children of so-called great men
-are seldom above the average in intelligence, where, on the other hand,
-almost all men of great minds have had intelligent mothers.
-
-How great or how little influence a mother has over her child through
-her thoughts has not been proven, nor has the subject of determining or
-influencing sex of the unborn child been settled.
-
-At the end of nine months the child's development is complete and it is
-ready for its journey to the outside world. The process of this journey
-is called “labor”—a word which will describe the mother's share in it.
-When this occurs before the embryo is able to live outside the uterus it
-is known as abortion.
-
-
- REPRODUCTION—PART II.
-
-In the first part of this essay I said that if the process of labor
-occurs before the seventh month (which is the earliest time the foetus
-can live for any length of time outside the womb) it is known as
-abortion or miscarriage. When labor occurs later than this or within two
-weeks before term, it is known as premature labor.
-
-The average girl in using the word abortion, has in mind a criminal act,
-whereby the process of pregnancy is purposely interrupted. She prefers
-the word miscarriage.
-
-There is also a belief among girls that a miscarriage occurring in the
-early stages of pregnancy can be brought about without bad results or
-any serious consequences to her health.
-
-It is a mistake to regard an abortion as of slight importance, for any
-interruption in the process of pregnancy is always more dangerous than
-the natural labor at full term. One writer claims there are more women
-ill in consequence of abortion than from full term childbirth, on
-account of which there are so many women who are semi-invalids.
-
-There can be no doubt that the often excessive loss of blood leaves the
-woman in a weak and rundown condition, thereby lessening her powers of
-resistance to other diseases.
-
-The shock to the woman's system is greater than that produced by natural
-labor, and consequently leaves her in a hysterical and often critically
-nervous state for some time after.
-
-The causes of abortion are many. Among them are overexertion,
-overexcitement, shock, fright, fall, great anger, dancing, fatigue,
-lifting heavy weights, purgative medicines and excessive sexual
-intercourse.
-
-The dangers resulting from abortion are blood poison, hemorrhage—even
-lockjaw has been known to be the result of abortion, also the danger
-that one miscarriage is likely to follow another, and disables a woman
-to carry a child to the full term.
-
-If there is the same care and treatment given the woman who aborts as
-the woman in childbirth, she will naturally be less likely to suffer
-serious results than if no medical attention were given her.
-
-One of the most common disturbances of pregnancy is nausea, more
-commonly called “morning sickness,” because it is felt in the morning
-when the woman first assumes the erect position. As a rule, this lasts
-only during the early months.
-
-About the latter part of the fourth month, or often not before the fifth
-month, movements of the foetus are felt. These movements are called
-“life”, and women are glad of this signal that all is progressing
-naturally. One writer said a woman had described the first feeling of
-life as “the trembling movements of a bird within the hand.”
-
-There are often many nervous manifestations accompanying the pregnant
-woman, such as headache, neuralgia, toothache and as a usual thing,
-constipation is always present, and should receive attention. The teeth
-also should receive attention at this time for they decay easily on
-account of the secretions in the mouth which are increased during
-pregnancy.
-
-The breasts enlarge in the early months of pregnancy, and there is a
-fullness and tingling felt often in the fifth week. The nipples become
-erect and the skin around the nipple becomes dark brown. These are only
-a few of the disturbances of pregnancy, but enough to show that other
-organs beside the uterus are tested in strength and how important it is
-to have a good healthy body. In fact, every tissue and fiber in the
-woman's body feels the impetus of pregnancy, and all kinds of physical
-changes occur. Like in June, “Every clod feels a stir of might, an
-instinct within it that reaches and towers.”—Howell.
-
-One of the common questions asked by young women in early married life
-is how to tell if they are pregnant.
-
-This is not always easy, but there are a few points on which a diagnosis
-is based, namely: in a healthy woman (during the reproductive age) the
-function of menstruation stops, together with the morning sickness, and
-the enlargement of the breasts with dark color around the nipples. These
-are early indications that pregnancy exists. I am not going to take the
-time nor space to explain that all three of the above named can exist in
-nervous women, even when pregnancy does not exist. It is, as I said
-before, with the average healthy girl I am dealing, not with the
-exception. The only certain signs of pregnancy are the hearing of the
-heart-beats of the child and its movements.
-
-Another question which troubles a young woman is how to count the time
-when she will be confined. This, too, is difficult to say, for an error
-of two weeks earlier or later is possible, because the time of
-conception is seldom definitely known. Experience has given a method of
-arriving at an approximate date which is used and which answers the
-purpose fairly well, though it is by no means perfect. Add seven days to
-the first day of the last menstruation and count nine months forward.
-For example: Mrs. A. menstruated last, beginning October 5 add seven
-days; this brings the date to October 12; add nine months, which brings
-the date of confinement to July 12. It is well to have everything
-prepared two weeks before this date so that the woman can be as much as
-possible in the open air during the remaining waiting days.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The dress of the pregnant woman should receive serious attention. In the
-first place, it should be simple and warm, without bands restricting the
-circulation of any part of the body, like skirt bands, round garters,
-corsets and tight shoes. The secret of a comfortable outfit for the
-expectant mother is to have all clothing hang from the shoulders.
-Combination underwear can be bought as reasonably as the separate
-drawers and shirt. There should be no pressure on the womb from above,
-rather let all support come from below. The corset gets in its harmful
-work by pressing down the uterus into the pelvis, thus displacing the
-abdominal organs and crowding them together in such a way as to cause
-injury to the uterus as well as to the child itself. The muscles of the
-uterus and abdomen are weakened and from this results that horror of all
-women: the “high stomach.” Some women, especially those having borne
-children, prefer to wear in the latter days of pregnancy an abdominal
-supporter. If it is well fitted to the body it helps to assist the
-abdominal muscles in carrying the weight and affords great relief. If
-women would devote to making themselves comfortable during pregnancy as
-much time as they give on the baby's outfit, they would profit by it.
-Instead of wearing any old worn-out dress, ill-fitting and out of style,
-make one “maternity” dress to fit the figure. This can, of course, be
-let out in size as the figure grows. It can be made of some pretty,
-inexpensive material and gives such comfort and ease to the mind as well
-as to the body that the woman who has once had one will never again do
-without it.
-
-The food also should be simple. In fact, there are few restrictions to
-be placed on food unless so ordered by the physician. One common mistake
-of women is that they believe they are eating for two persons, and
-consequently, must gorge themselves, which, of course, results in
-indigestion. Physicians advise a small amount of meat once a day. Plenty
-of water, milk and cereals, fruit, vegetables and especially fruit,
-which loosens the bowels. Rich pastry or starches fried in fat should
-not be eaten, because they are hard to digest. There is no reason why
-the diet should be at all strict unless a woman is under the special
-care of a physician. She should take a moderate amount of exercise every
-day, but should not get tired. Walking in the open air in the sunlight
-is best. Avoid dancing, swimming and all violent exercise; sewing on the
-sewing machine should be restricted. Fainting in the early months is
-often caused from bad air in overcrowded and overheated rooms, also from
-an empty stomach when the woman is too busy to notice nature's call for
-nourishment.
-
-It is now generally agreed that alcohol taken by the mother during
-pregnancy, has very bad effects on the offspring.
-
-There is little more to be said here except that a pregnant woman should
-be mentally and physically active, though not fatigued. And of all
-things she should keep out of the hearing of old superstitions, which
-have a sign for every act and keep a young woman constantly worried. She
-should not be allowed to worry over her approaching labor, and as far as
-possible be kept cheerful and happy. Another question which concerns
-every expectant mother, is, if there is any danger in sexual intercourse
-during pregnancy.
-
-At the end of the period the child and the placenta are expelled from
-the uterus. The uterus gradually returns to its former size. It requires
-about six weeks for this to occur and it is very important that there
-should be no heavy lifting and overwork at this time. As a rule after
-childbirth, the woman's form becomes matured and more developed. The
-facial expression takes on a kinder, a maternal look, the whole nervous
-system is awakened to sympathy, pain or grief bringing tears to the eyes
-quicker than ever before. Especially is this true for the first few
-years following.
-
-The important thing is that the care of the pregnant woman should be
-begun in girlhood. If we are going to be and have mothers, then we
-should give attention to the development of the organs which make us
-mothers.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
-
- SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART I.
-
-When the boy arrives at the age of puberty, he is in greater danger than
-a girl of being not only led astray by companions, but being actually
-sent into unclean living by those nearest and most interested in his
-welfare—HIS PARENTS.
-
-The reason of this is that there has been and still is a false idea
-clinging to many parents that as soon as the boy has seminal emissions,
-it is a signal that he must have sexual relations or suffer in health.
-
-That the seminal emissions are not harmful and that they grow less
-frequent as the boy grows older is a fact of which few mothers seem to
-be aware.
-
-We cannot blame the mothers of the past for not informing their sons of
-this physical condition, for few of them knew it themselves. Mothers
-have been as ignorant as the boys of their sex functions as well as
-other functions of the body.
-
-They accepted sickness, disease, and even death without a question,
-placing their faith and confidence entirely in the hands of the medical
-profession, who, like the rabbis and high priests, made a church of
-their knowledge.
-
-Fortunately this condition of affairs is changing, and the knowledge of
-the human body, which for ages has been most carefully locked within the
-medical libraries, is fast taking up its abode in the homes of the
-people—where it belongs.
-
-It is said that in Japan or China, the duty of a physician is to keep
-his patients in good health, receiving payment only when they are well.
-
-Certainly this sounds like civilization.
-
-Only a few weeks ago I had occasion to talk to a woman about her oldest
-son, whom I considered sick from overwork and lack of nourishment. She
-informed me, however, that this was not so, and whispered confidently
-that he was 16 years old and “in that age when he needs a woman.” She
-further remarked that she and “the papa” had talked it over with the
-result that the father had told the boy, when he had “the desire for a
-woman,” that he, the father, “would give him money enough to get one.”
-
-Think of that boy's attitude toward women, and the danger to become
-affected with venereal diseases that he was likely to contract. Yet both
-parents had the sincerest wish to do their best for that boy; they gave
-the best advice they knew.
-
-One of the most common errors I have found among people, even those
-educated in other lines of thought, is that the sexual organs will
-become useless unless they are used in early manhood. This is considered
-untrue by the best authorities on the subject, for it is known that the
-essential organs of reproduction are glands, not unlike the tear glands
-of the eyes or the milk glands of the breasts. The tear glands do not
-atrophy even if one does not cry for years, nor the milk glands during
-the entire period of reproduction. The same can be said of the sexual
-glands.
-
-Another idea which is fast being uprooted is that the sexual act is an
-appetite, not unlike that of hunger and thirst, which must be fed by the
-boy sowing his “wild oats” first before settling down to marriage. It is
-now a recognized fact that it is no more necessary for a boy to “sow
-wild oats” than it is for a girl, and women are today demanding of men
-the same cleanliness of body and mind which men have heretofore
-considered necessary only in women.
-
-It is now the unreserved opinion of the foremost medical men of the day
-that a man does not suffer in health from living a continent life, nor
-is he a “mollycoddle” from so doing.
-
-Hutchinson says: “The belief that the exercise of the sex functions is
-necessary to the health of the male at any age is a pure delusion, while
-before full maturity it is highly injurious.”
-
-Ruggles says: “Sexual abstinence is compatible with perfect health and
-tends to increase virility (which means manhood) through the
-reabsorption of the semen.”
-
-The ancient Teutons were aware of this, for it is said that it was
-considered a most shameful thing for their young men to have sexual
-relations with a woman before their twenty-sixth year. From observation
-and experience they were convinced that men were not sexually mature
-much before this age, and no one will dispute they were strong and
-manly.
-
-Statistics show that 65 per cent. of men infected with venereal diseases
-(which means diseases due to sexual intercourse) are contracted between
-the ages of 15 and 21 years; and 25 per cent. are contracted in the 21st
-and 23rd years.
-
-Writers claim that from statistics they have found men are not sexually
-mature before the twenty-fifth year and women not before the twentieth
-year. Yet we find them both reeking with sexual diseases before this
-age.
-
-According to Sanger's “History of Prostitution,” it is claimed that
-three-eighths of the prostitutes enter the life before the twentieth
-year in New York City. It is safe to say this is a conservative
-estimate, for the more recent investigations in Chicago and other cities
-show a very much higher percentage. However, this, together with the
-statistics of venereal diseases mentioned above, show that it is before
-the boy and girl are sexually mature that there is the greatest
-difficulty in directing the impulses and controlling the passions.
-
-Chassaignac says that the more healthy and normal an individual is, the
-better can he not only control his passions, but the less likely is he
-to be disturbed by continence.
-
-Just one more word on the subject of continence, and that is that it is
-not at all unusual to find men determined to remain continent until they
-find their ideal woman. Nor for athletes in training engaged in
-contests, nor for sailors on long sea voyages, and many others for long
-periods of time is continence impossible; in fact, they are better for
-it.
-
-This knowledge was not lost sight of in ancient times.
-
-Reference is made to it in the Bible, in the sending of women
-prostitutes into the camps of the enemy the night before an expected
-battle, in order to exhaust or decrease the vitality of the soldiers.
-
-When one finds an individual who realizes the force of the sexual
-impulses and knows how to conserve them, you usually find a person who
-does not drain or exhaust these forces, but uses them in creative work.
-
-Every girl should look upon the man who indulges freely in the sexual
-relations =without Social responsibility=, as a prostitute far more
-degraded than the unfortunate girl who is compelled to sell her body to
-sustain life.
-
-Every girl should know something about the physical makeup of a boy as
-well as of her own, for upon the well-being of both does the future race
-depend. To be a real mother a woman must understand a boy's emotions and
-development, if she would sympathize with him. And when she does
-understand, she will not send him to buy a woman for physical
-satisfaction.
-
-It is this ignorance of parents, together with the silence of the
-medical profession, which is largely responsible for the terrible spread
-of venereal diseases which exist today.
-
-When a few years ago Dr. Morrow stated that there is more venereal
-diseases among innocent, virtuous wives, than among prostitutes, this
-statement should have resounded throughout the walls of every home in
-the land, instead of which it is kept intact within the covers of large
-volumes, where only those wearing cap and gown have access to it.
-
-It is claimed that out of 1,000 married men in New York 800 have
-gonorrhoea, and 90 per cent. of these have not been cured and can infect
-their wives. The result is that at least three out of every five married
-women in New York have gonorrhoea.
-
-This seems astounding and exaggerated, but the following quotation is
-taken from an authority and is considered quite conservative: “Over 90
-per cent. of our young men stray from the path of virtue before
-marriage; 60 per cent. contract venereal diseases which are difficult to
-cure; more wives than prostitutes have venereal diseases; one-eighth of
-all diseases in New York hospitals are venereal; 20,000 infected persons
-walk the streets daily.”
-
-It seems to me that the above facts are sufficient to warrant every girl
-and boy knowing something about these diseases.
-
-
- SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART II.
-
-The two venereal diseases which I will tell you something of here are
-those most commonly known to all—gonorrhoea and syphilis.
-
-Gonorrhoea is an inflammation of the urethra (water passage)
-characterized by redness, swelling, smarting pain on the passing of
-water, and accompanied by thick purulent (poisonous) discharge, at first
-creamy in color, and later a greenish yellow. It is considered by the
-highest authorities as solely a sexual disease in adults, depending
-almost exclusively upon sexual intercourse as its mode of origin and
-infection. In children, however, it is not the rule, especially in
-infants and little girls, who can be infected by the hands of the mother
-or nurse being soiled with the discharge, also where the fresh discharge
-is on towels, toilets, etc. It starts an inflammation of the outer
-delicate parts but seldom enters the urethra.
-
-In former days gonorrhoea was considered an ordinary catarrhal
-inflammation, “no worse than a bad cold,” the old saying went. It was
-thought to originate in women with the discharge at the end of the
-menstrual period, or leucorrhoea; in fact any secretions from the
-uterus, of an irritating character, were thought to be sources of
-gonorrhoea. However, with the discovery of the microbe “gonococcus”, in
-1879, by Dr. Neisser, it is now an established fact that the disease
-comes from a source where there is either latent or chronic gonorrhoea,
-which, of course, means that the gonococcus is present. It is considered
-a conservative estimate that at least 50 per cent. of the adult
-population in this country have suffered from gonococcal infection. More
-men than women have been and are infected.
-
-The first symptoms of the disease appear from three to seven days after
-infection, and under proper treatment the discharge may disappear in six
-or eight weeks.
-
-If the man or woman places himself under the care of a specialist within
-forty-eight hours after infection, the disease is often of much shorter
-duration. When allowed to become chronic, it is called gleet. Too much
-emphasis cannot be put upon the danger of placing any one with this
-disease into the hands of the doctors who advertise so conspicuously,
-claiming rapid and complete cures for all sexual diseases. Experience
-has found that thousands of boys and young men, attracted by such
-alluring promises as only the quack can put forth, have been under such
-treatment, only to find later that the disease was allowed to remain in
-the tissues, the discharge only having been dried up. The germs were
-allowed to continue their work on up into the bladder, kidneys, joints,
-heart and even to the brain. The germs can live for years in the body
-hidden away in the gland ducts, the mucous membrane of the organ first
-attacked being in a normal state, yet when a condition arises when the
-vitality of the tissues in which the germs are lodged is lowered, or
-which gives the germs themselves more nourishment or stimulus, such as
-alcohol or excessive intercourse, they almost always become active
-again.
-
-In women the small part of the womb (cervix), as well as the urethra,
-are favorite places of attack. When the disease attacks the cervix a
-woman may not be conscious of it, and so, unless prominent symptoms
-attend it, she may infect many persons in the meantime. In man, on the
-other hand, the disease cannot be present without his knowing there is
-something wrong, and it should be impressed upon him that it is a moral
-obligation on his part not to have sexual relations until he has been
-examined and pronounced cured by a specialist in genito-urinary
-diseases.
-
-Your general practitioner will always recommend to you a specialist if
-you ask him to. When the disease attacks the uterus and ovaries it very
-often blocks the fallopian tubes and prevents the impregnation of the
-ovum. It is said that over one-third of the childless marriages are due
-to gonorrhoea in women, innocently contracted from their husbands. Both
-men and women can become sterile from this disease. The seminal tubes in
-the man become blocked, thus disabling him from impregnating the ovum.
-
-Again, when the disease attacks the organs of generation, unless
-speedily attended to, the organs get into a chronic state of
-inflammation. The disease is, therefore, more difficult to reach, the
-chances of cure more difficult, and it usually means an operation for
-the woman.
-
-The great mass of ailing women who trace their misery back to never
-seeing a well day since marriage, can be classed among those suffering
-with this disease, as can also that army of women whose illness is
-classed among “female disorders.”
-
-A curious point to know is that a man may have a hidden or latent
-gonorrhoea, of which he is not aware, for it gives him no trouble, and
-may infect a clean, healthy woman during sexual relations, and she in
-turn, can infect him with the same disease, acting like a fresh
-infection, giving rise to pain and discomfort. The great majority of
-infections in women are contracted from men who believe themselves
-cured, being under the false impression that they are cured because the
-discharge has ceased.
-
-At a lecture given by a well-known physician in this city last winter,
-the physician advised every girl whose sweetheart, lover or expected
-husband had a history of inflammatory rheumatism of the joints, back of
-him, that as she values her life and future health, not to marry that
-man without a thorough examination by a specialist in these diseases. He
-declared: =No young man should have inflammatory rheumatism=. This
-statement is considered somewhat exaggerated by some making more recent
-investigations, yet all seem to agree that a very large majority of
-cases of inflammatory rheumatism of the joints have the gonococcus
-present.
-
-If the woman is not made sterile by the disease and is able to carry the
-child to full term labor, then there is another danger of infecting the
-child's eyes during the process of labor, when the secretions lodge
-themselves into the delicate membrane of the eyes. Then, unless quick
-action is applied, the sight of both eyes can be lost. Over 80 per cent.
-of blindness in babies is due to this germ. It can be carried into the
-eyes of both children and adults by any means which can carry the
-discharge to the eyes. Upon the slightest suspicion that this has been
-done, medical aid should be summoned at once.
-
-There is one fortunate thing to know, that the germ cannot live for a
-great length of time outside its natural or proper environment, though
-it can for years be hidden in the body. It dries up very quickly, and
-special solutions of both bichloride and permanganate of potash will
-kill the germs with which the solution comes in contact. There is but
-one course to follow, that upon any of the symptoms mentioned above, go
-at once to a reliable physician and follow his instructions closely. And
-remember that the causes which retard recovery are alcoholic drinks,
-lack of rest, spicy food and =sexual excitement=. It is said there is no
-positive proof against this disease, except continency until marriage
-and then monogamy.
-
-A story is told of a young Irish physician, who, being asked how he
-treated gonorrhoea, replied most tersely, “with contimpt.” That this was
-for a time a general feeling is agreed, but with the knowledge that so
-many persons, especially women, contract the disease, under the moral,
-as well as legal, conditions of present society, the feeling has
-changed. A woman is infected by her husband after the marriage is
-sanctioned by the state and blessed by the church, neither taking the
-interest in the woman's future to guarantee to her a clean individual as
-a husband. Prostitution has been upheld and women segregated for man's
-sexual use, the government going to the extent of authorizing
-examinations of the women for venereal diseases to insure =man's= safety
-from these diseases. Yet there has been no such protection given either
-the woman prostitute or the wife that the man's body is free from them.
-On the other hand, every means to keep a married woman in ignorance of
-the source of her infection is made by the church, state and society in
-general. Every law to protect the man's crime is made for his use, while
-women remain unprotected victims of his guilt. And this, they say, is
-“to protect the family and the home.”
-
-Dr. James S. Wood tells a story of his experience With a young woman of
-25, married five years, when she came to him. The husband admitted
-having had gonorrhoea previous to marriage. The doctor found her flowing
-excessively, the cervix badly torn, the uterus sharply bent back and
-fixed, ovaries bound down and adherent, the tubes thickened; a
-leuchorreal discharge was present which contained gonococci, and other
-symptoms which made her sick and miserable. The doctor operated upon
-her, scraping her womb, sewing the torn cervix, opening the abdomen to
-remove the thickened appendix and inflamed ovaries and tubes. She
-convalesced beautifully, and had no bad or unusual symptoms for six
-months, at which time she returned with a renewed infection. Careful
-questioning extracted from the husband the confession that he had been
-“out with the boys,” and had had a recurrence of gonorrhoea. Most of the
-good which came from the operation was spoiled by this second infection.
-
-This is only one simple example of what is meant by preserving the home
-and family at the terrible cost of women's lives. Women should protest
-against the so-called medical secret which decrees that they be kept in
-ignorance where their health, as well as life, is directly concerned.
-That there are men in the medical profession in this country, as well as
-in Europe, who have openly protested against respecting the secret where
-another life is involved, seems a cheerful signal of a general social
-awakening in this field.
-
-In the Medical Record, April 20, 1912, Maude Glasgow says: “After
-suffering for years a woman becomes a feeble, worn-out, nervous woman;
-her life is a burden The operating table is her only hope, and she
-leaves it deformed, mutilated and sexless.”
-
-If women voluntarily exposed themselves to diseases which would sap the
-husband's vitality, making him a dependent invalid, or expose him to the
-shock of a mutilating operation, or death—would men continue to suffer?
-Would they allow the medical secret to protect women in this alleged
-“freedom”? Every girl knows he would neither protect her nor continue to
-suffer. It is women only who have allowed the double standard of morals
-to stand so long, giving men the purest and best of their womanhood, but
-not demanding the same from them. As soon as women realize the danger to
-themselves and their children which they are likely to incur from men
-who have lived promiscuously, they will revolt against such standards.
-
-Gonorrhoea differs from syphilis, and though it is not a disease which
-can be transmitted from the parent to children, as syphilis can, yet it
-is a subtle, wrecking disease and can do almost as much harm to the
-individual.
-
- WHAT EVERY GIRL SHOULD KNOW
-
-[Illustration: NOTHING!]
-
- BY ORDER OF THE
-
- POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
-
- FEB. 9, 1913.
-
- [From New York Call, after temporary suppression of article, “What
- Every Girl Should Know,” by the postal authorities.]
-
- [The particular part of the article objected to by the postal
- authorities].
-
-
- SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART III.
-
-Prominent medical authorities claim that syphilis was not known in
-Europe before the discovery of America. Others equally as prominent hold
-that it has existed for many centuries in Europe, but was confused with
-other diseases such as leprosy. It makes little difference to the girl
-or boy today just how long or where it came from; the point we do know
-is that it is here in our homes and workshops, and we should know what
-it is like and how to avoid it.
-
-A story is told of a French nobleman whose son was about to leave his
-home to live in a big city. Said the father to the son: “If you are not
-afraid of God, fear at least syphilis.” This advice might be applied
-today, for if boys or girls knew, or could see the appalling results of
-syphilis, they would surely fear it, for it is humanity's most deadly
-foe.
-
-Syphilis is an infectious disease, caused by a special microbe which is
-acquired by contagion or heredity.
-
-It is chronic in course, varied and intermittent in character, and the
-length of time it remains in the body is indefinite.
-
-It is so widespread that no country in the world is free from it,
-neither is any organ of the body exempt from its ravages.
-
-Let us take a young man indulging in promiscuous sexual intercourse, who
-cohabits with a syphilitic woman. He notices nothing wrong for about
-five weeks, when he becomes aware of a pimple on the sexual organs, to
-which perhaps he pays little attention. This grows and becomes hard at
-the base and is ulcerated on the top.
-
-About ten days after the appearance of the ulcer (or chancre) the boy
-notices that the glands of the groins begin to swell, but as there is
-little or no pain attached he still pays no attention to all this.
-
-After three, or sometimes four weeks the ulcerated opening heals, but
-leaves the hard lump under the skin. In two or even three months after
-the time of infection the first general symptoms appear. His bones ache,
-he is mentally depressed, slightly feverish at night, and a rash appears
-upon his body and sore spots in the mouth; and throat. These symptoms
-usually decide him to consult a doctor, who finds him in the second
-stage of syphilis. This condition lasts usually about two and one-half
-years, the rash often lasting a short period, and leaving, but to return
-again.
-
-The blood within and the ulcers on the body contain the poisons of the
-disease, and for three or four years the poison =can be transmitted= by
-contagion, or by heredity.
-
-The third stage is the most destructive, especially to the nervous
-system, for this disease is recognized as the greatest factor in organic
-disturbances of the nervous system.
-
-It not rarely is the cause of cerebral and spinal meningitis, paralysis
-of the legs, paralysis of one side of the body, and that most helpless
-and terrible disease, softening of the brain and many other diseases
-which affect the spinal cord, which are seldom ever cured. The majority
-of those diseased are left with physical or mental infirmities,
-rendering them public charges.
-
-There have been cases where the third stage did not develop, and as this
-stage is not distinctly separated from the second stage by a definite
-line, it may not take place for months, or even years after the first
-sore appeared. Again, this stage has been averted by careful treatment
-in the early stages, and it is here the hope of all afflicted lies.
-
-Every case of syphilis begins with the characteristic pimple or chancre,
-except inherited syphilis. The chancre always appears where the
-infection enters, and the glands swell in the same vicinity. For
-instance, if in using a pipe of a syphilitic, whose mouth contains the
-sore patches, the victim finds the chancre will appear on his lips,
-mouth or throat, and the glands of the neck will swell.
-
-It is said that almost 10 per cent. of the infections are contracted
-innocently, especially in European countries, where kissing and other
-forms of endearment are much indulged in. In this country it is not so
-common, but more women than men contract it innocently and in this
-manner.
-
-In women, too, the first symptoms are not so characteristic as in men.
-She may pay no attention to the chancre for a month, even if she does
-feel aches in the bones, she thinks she is run down, or thinks she has
-malaria; even the rash does not alarm her, and often only repeated
-miscarriages will be the only symptoms she can remember of the early
-stages. She may continue for years before the disease reaches the third
-stage. This is not always so, for in every individual the disease
-differs in character and duration.
-
-Gonorrhoea and syphilis differ in many ways. For instance, the former
-shows itself in a week or ten days after infection, where syphilis shows
-no signs for five or six weeks.
-
-Gonorrhoea is considered a purely sexual disease, because infection
-takes place only in sexual relations (except where the germ gets into
-the eyes), while syphilis can be contracted in many other ways, through
-forks, spoons, glasses or cups, towels, sponges, bathtubs, toilets,
-pipes, dental and barbers' instruments, and kissing.
-
-Gonorrhoea is considered a social danger because of its effect upon the
-sexual organs, often rendering them sterile. Syphilis is also a social
-danger, but it has direct effect upon the offspring, and upon future
-generations because its effects are visited upon the child.
-
-Sixty to eighty per cent. of the syphilitic offspring die at birth or in
-early infancy. Someone has well said, “The greatest criminal is he who
-poisons the germ cells.”
-
-In hereditary syphilis there is more difficulty in gathering facts, for
-the laws which control it are not so well understood, as yet.
-
-There is no sore or chancre in hereditary syphilis, but other symptoms
-appear which every physician recognizes and of course attends to at
-birth.
-
-Under proper treatment the danger of the father transmitting the disease
-to the child should cease in from two to five years, while the danger of
-the mother transmitting it to her offspring does not end at any definite
-time, for there have been mothers known to give birth to syphilitic
-offspring years after all disappearance of their own symptoms.
-
-The strongest features of the disease transmitted to the offspring are
-the deformities which it imparts to the bones of the head as well as of
-the body.
-
-It is said on good authority that if a patient, at the end of five
-years, has been two years without symptoms or treatment, he may be
-guaranteed for marriage. Though he can never be wholly guaranteed from
-relapses in his own person. These, however, are considered
-noninfectious.
-
-The cure of the disease depends upon the individual's environment,
-constitution and his habits, chiefly as regards alcohol and tobacco.
-
-Alcohol is considered the commonest and most active enemy of the
-patient's recovery. Men addicted to the use of alcohol are the most
-difficult to cure.
-
-There seems to be no doubt that if the disease receives the proper
-treatment there is every hope for the individual to live a normal life.
-Fouriner, a French authority, says:
-
-“Personally I could cite several hundred observations concerning
-syphilitic subjects who, after undergoing thorough treatment, have
-married and became fathers of healthy, good-looking children.” The
-question, then, to receive some attention is what means are available
-for the treatment of both syphilis and gonorrhoea.
-
-Dr. Prince A. Morrow says: “Prompt curative treatment is not only in the
-interests of the patients themselves, but especially in the interests of
-the others they might infect. But everywhere we are confronted with this
-situation: There are no special hospitals for this class of diseases;
-few general hospitals receive them in the early, curable stage; still
-fewer have special venereal wards; even the dispensary services are not
-organized with special adaption to the needs of venereal cases; few have
-night classes, so that working people who go to the dispensary must lose
-half a day, which often means the sacrifice of their employment. As a
-consequence they resort to quacks or the use of nostrums (secret or
-quack medicines). They are not cured, but go on spreading the seeds of
-contagion.”
-
-This is the condition as far as hospitals are concerned in the matter of
-venereal diseases. And in relation to private practice the average
-person's position is still more deplorable. Take, for example, the story
-of a girl who came under my care some years ago, after having suffered
-three years with the disease. She had been refused attendance in public
-hospitals in three different cities while she was working her way to New
-York. At different times she consulted physicians, only to learn that to
-be cured she must be treated regularly, and to be so treated would
-require money. Different estimates were quoted from $150 to $500 for
-treatment. As the amount of money left over after she had paid her
-expenses each week was never over $2, the possibility of a cure looked
-hopeless. She concluded to purchase patent medicines whenever she could,
-but her condition became worse, until she was picked up by a charitable
-organization, who cared for her until she died. When I saw her all her
-hair, eyebrows and eyelashes were gone, her nose and upper lip were
-almost entirely eaten away, most of her teeth were gone—in fact, to try
-to describe her condition would be almost impossible.
-
-This is only one case, but there are thousands of syphilitics who are
-wandering around unable to pay the prices which the physician asks to
-treat this disease. The same can be said of gonorrhoea, and the same
-physician who clamors against the prices of the so-called quack, forgets
-that the price he asks of the public is exorbitant in the extreme. So
-the only course for the individual to take, if he cannot pay the price,
-is to remain a menace to society. The physician assumes no
-responsibility toward society to find out if the patient is under
-treatment elsewhere; the patient can do as he pleases with his disease
-when he closes the doctor's door. This, then is the situation as regards
-society's attitude toward the venereal subject: Society seems to take a
-different attitude towards other contagious and infectious diseases,
-such as measles, chicken pox, diphtheria, etc. In these diseases, a
-physician has some responsibility toward society; he must report each
-case as it comes to his attention, to the Board of Health, who in turn
-assume some responsibility by isolating the disease.
-
-If this is necessary in these comparatively simple diseases, how much
-more important should it be to register and isolate patients suffering
-from the venereal diseases.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- MENOPAUSE OR CHANGE OF LIFE
-
-
-In the previous chapter on Puberty, it was stated that the menstrual
-function began in the average girl at fifteen years of age and continued
-until the forty-fifth or fiftieth year.
-
-At this later age it ceases, together with her sexual or child-bearing
-capabilities and is known as the Menopause or Change of Life.
-
-This constitutes a period from the beginning of irregularities in the
-appearance of the menstrual flow, until it has actually ceased, which
-period usually lasts two and one-half to three years.
-
-Thousands of women know nothing of the period which, like puberty, they
-must pass through, but are entirely ignorant of the process.
-
-It is usual for them to look toward this age with dread and foreboding;
-where a little knowledge of the nature of the process would enable them
-to enter upon this period physically prepared, which would insure their
-safe arrival through this dreaded and much-feared period.
-
-The greatest change occurring in the woman at this time is that which
-goes on in the ovaries. They cease to do their work and ovulation stops.
-
-The first indication that the woman has, that this is likely to occur,
-is by the ceasing of the menses or monthlies.
-
-Ovulation, however, very often continues for several months, even a year
-after menstruation has entirely ceased.
-
-The glandular tissues of the uterus, tubes and ovaries degenerate, which
-is said to account for the Menopause, and that of the ovaries occurs
-later than the tubes and uterus, which explains the continuance of
-ovulation after the menses have stopped.
-
-In a few women the Menopause is accompanied by very little or almost no
-discomfort at all, just a sudden stopping of the monthlies announces to
-them that this period has come.
-
-The majority, however, do not pass through this time so easily, but
-suffer for the entire period with one affliction or another.
-
-Among those symptoms most common are flushings or flashes, which are
-mostly confined to head, face and neck, are increased by heat and motion
-and followed by profuse sweating, giddiness, backache, headache,
-sleeplessness, disturbances of digestion like diarrhoea or constipation,
-blueness, depression of spirits, shortness of breath, palpitation and
-nervous irritability.
-
-But the most alarming symptom of the Menopause is hemorrhage. This is
-too often considered lightly and classed with the minor symptoms of this
-period.
-
-Whenever there is excessive bleeding, there is surely a cause and calls
-for special and immediate attention. It may be caused by an inflamed
-condition of the lining of the uterus (womb), ulceration, general
-diseases of the heart, lungs and kidneys can also be the cause of
-excessive bleeding at this period. Some authorities claim that it also
-has its cause in early or profuse menstruation, too frequent and
-difficult labors, abortions and alcoholic drinking, but the most common
-cause of hemmorhage at this time is cancer. It is a fact that cancer in
-women, from the age of 40 to 50 is more common that at any other age.
-
-Perhaps it is not generally known that cancer is now known to begin as a
-local disease, and if taken in time it can be removed so completely that
-a radical cure follows. No wonder then, that hemmorhage should be an
-alarming symptom, for if care is not taken and the dreaded disease,
-cancer, is allowed to take root, the results are too generally known to
-dwell upon. At the first signs of hemorrhages or excessive flow, a woman
-should place herself under the care of a gynecologist (specialist in the
-diseases of woman), just as a pregnant woman is under the care of a
-physician until she is entirely free from the dangers of childbirth.
-
-Women have heretofore looked to this period with dread, on account of
-the consequences which neglect has caused. It need not be dreaded for
-assuring word comes from prominent physicians who have made this special
-period a study, that the natural symptoms of the Menopause do not
-portend loss of life, reason or health. It is a period as natural to the
-woman as menstruation and with little care, these symptoms or ailments
-will cease in a few years, leaving the woman to enjoy years of good
-health.
-
-When the period is delayed beyond the fiftieth year, it calls for the
-same attention as excessive flow. These are two important signs of
-disease, and should receive immediate care. The period is, however,
-often brought about at an earlier age than is normal, by mental or
-physical shock, illness, operations, etc.
-
-The age at which it occurs often differs with climate, race and
-according to Kisch, social relations, who claims, that the sexual
-function is “generally abolished earlier in the laboring classes, who
-are compelled to work hard and have many cares,” and further states that
-a vigorous vitality causes prolongation of the menstrual process.
-
-In the average woman it does not cease at once, but has two or three
-periods of cessation, returns again for an irregular period and
-continues in this irregularity for the entire time of two and one-half
-to three years. It is important to know that the changes which are going
-on in the organs of the woman are exactly opposite from those which
-occur at puberty.
-
-At puberty the organs are increasing with life, vigor, and vitality,
-while at the Menopause they are receding or going backward.
-
-The generative organs gradually but surely shrink or atrophy after
-menstruation stops. The uterus becomes small. The vagina, whose walls
-were formerly corrugated or wrinkled, now become smooth. The orifice or
-opening of the vagina, becomes shrunken, unless it has been previously
-enlarged by child-bearing. The whole process tends to show that the
-child-bearing period is at an end, which in fact has caused much mental
-anxiety and disturbance among women to the extent of melancholy and
-insanity.
-
-It seems a very small things to give to every woman, going through this
-disagreeable period of life—a complete change of climate and rest, until
-the change has become established. Certainly she has served society to
-the best of her knowledge, often “entering into the valley of the shadow
-of death”; many times fearlessly, to give the best of herself to the
-race. It is a small thing to give in return.
-
-Tilt believes that unmarried women suffer less at this period than
-married women, and says: “As at puberty, from the ignorance in which it
-is still thought right to leave young women, so at the change of life,
-women often suffer from ignorance of what may occur, or from exaggerated
-notions of the perils which await them.”
-
-All that is needed is to keep guard on one's self—watch the diet and
-bowels. A light vegetable diet seems best at this time unless very
-actively engaged in physical exercise, then meat once a day. Keep free
-from foods difficult to digest, cheese, fried foods, hot bread, etc.,
-drink plenty of water and eat fruit to keep the bowels open; slight
-exercise in the open air, rest, sleep and freedom from mental anxiety
-are the simple rules which are generally prescribed for women at this
-time.
-
-Tilt says: “The best way to avoid the danger of this critical time is to
-meet its approach with a healthy constitution.” And again says, “All
-complaints remain chronic because there is not stamina enough to carry
-them through their stages.”
-
-It is the opinion of the foremost medical men that if women at the first
-sign of irregularities, consult a gynecologist, it would be the means of
-saving thousands of lives every year, and would prepare women to enter
-upon the post-climatic period in health and happiness.
-
-
-
-
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-In conclusion I cannot refrain from saying that women must come to
-recognize there is some function of womanhood other than being a
-child-bearing machine. Too long have they allowed themselves to become
-this, bowing to the yoke of motherhood from puberty to the grave. No
-other thought has entered the mind except to be a good mother—which has
-usually meant a slave-mother. This has been her only use, her only wish
-and hope—and when the age arrives where she cannot perform this function
-longer, she considers herself useless. No wonder she becomes melancholic
-or even insane.
-
-Fortunately the woman of today is gradually ridding herself of such
-archaic notions. More and more is she realizing that motherhood is only
-one of her capabilities; that there are certain individuals more fitted
-for motherhood than others, just as individuals are better fitted for
-nursing, teaching, etc.
-
-And further must she realize that though she is past the age of
-motherhood, yet she is still a woman with all the instincts and
-experiences which motherhood has bestowed upon her, and she can now
-begin a new development, based upon these valuable experiences, she can
-now enter into public life unhampered by the details of kitchen and
-babies, for as she completes her work and passes on, others come in to
-take her place.
-
-Being free from domestic and maternal cares enables her to give to
-society the benefit of her matured thought, seasoned and enriched by
-these experiences.
-
-She often does enjoy the best health of her life after the Menopause and
-this, together with a vista of a future of usefulness, should open to
-the woman in the post-climateric period, a new life—a new world.
-
-In completing this series of articles I cannot refrain from uttering
-just a word about the relation of the entire subject I have been
-discussing to the economic problem. It is impossible to separate the
-ignorance of parents, prostitution, venereal diseases, or the silence of
-the medical profession from the great economic question that the world
-is facing today. It is here ever before us, and the more we look into
-the so-called evils of the day the more we realize that the whole
-structure of the present day society is built upon a rotten and decaying
-foundation. Until capitalism is swept away, there is no hope for young
-girls to live a beautiful life during their girlhood. There is no hope
-for boys or girls to build up strong and sturdy bodies. There is no hope
-that a woman can live in the family relation and have children without
-sacrificing every vestige of individual development. There is no hope
-that prostitution will cease, as long as there is hunger. There is no
-hope for a strong race as long as venereal diseases exist. And they will
-exist until women rise in one big sisterhood to fight this capitalist
-society which compels a woman to serve as a sex implement for man's use.
-
-Education is necessary—education is the need of the people. For this
-will soon enable one to see that knowledge alone does not suffice, but
-that it is only through economic security that the man and the woman
-will emerge in a future civilization.
-
- (The end.)
-
-
-
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-<pre>
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-Project Gutenberg's What Every Girl Should Know, by Margaret H. Sanger
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-
-Title: What Every Girl Should Know
-
-Author: Margaret H. Sanger
-
-Release Date: August 24, 2016 [EBook #52888]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHAT EVERY GIRL SHOULD KNOW ***
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-
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='under'>What Every Girl Should Know</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_001.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>BY</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>Margaret H. Sanger</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>AUTHOR OF</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>“How Six Little Children Were Taught the Truth.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>SENTINEL PRINTING CO.</div>
- <div class='c002'>PRINTERS AND</div>
- <div>PUBLISHERS</div>
- <div class='c002'>READING, PENNA.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>Dedication</div>
- <div class='c004'>TO THE WORKING GIRLS</div>
- <div>OF THE WORLD</div>
- <div>THIS LITTLE BOOK</div>
- <div>IS</div>
- <div>LOVINGLY DEDICATED</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>Contents</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#I'>INTRODUCTION.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#II'>GIRLHOOD.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#II-I'>Physical Growth.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#II-II'>Mental Development.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>III.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#III'>PUBERTY.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#III-I'>General Organs, Uterus, Ovaries, Etc.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#III-II'>Menstruation and Its Disorders.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#IV'>SEXUAL IMPULSE.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#IV-I'>Masturbation</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#IV-II'>Sexual Impulse in Animals—In Men. Its Significance in Love.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>V.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#V'>Reproduction.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#V-I'>Growth of the Life Cell in the Uterus.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#V-II'>Hygiene of Pregnancy—Miscarriage.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#VI'>SOME OF THE CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>I.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#VI-I'>Continence in Young Men.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>II.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#VI-II'>Gonorrhoea.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>Part</td>
- <td class='c006'>III.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#VI-III'>Syphilis.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c006'>CHAPTER</td>
- <td class='c006'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c007'><a href='#VII'>MENOPAUSE.</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>What Every Girl Should Know</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 id='I' class='c005'>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c008'>INTRODUCTION</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>Students of vice, whether teachers, clergymen, social
-workers or physicians, have been laboring for years
-to find the cause and cure for vice, and especially for
-prostitution. They have failed so far to agree on either
-the cause or the cure, but it is interesting to know that
-upon one point they have been compelled to agree, and
-that is, that <strong>ignorance of the sex functions</strong> is one of the
-strongest forces that sends young girls into <strong>unclean</strong>
-living.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This, together with the knowledge of the rapidly increasing
-spread of venereal diseases and the realization
-of their subtle nature, has awakened us to the need of a
-saner and healthier attitude on the sex subject, and to
-the importance of <strong>sex education</strong> for boys and girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This need has shown itself so clearly that the question
-no longer seems to be, “Is there need of instruction?”
-but, “Who shall instruct?” Shall the mother or teacher
-instruct? When shall such instruction be given? In
-childhood, or in puberty? These are the points now
-under discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To the writer the answer is simple. The mother is
-the logical person to teach the child as soon as questions
-arise, for it is to the mother that the child goes for
-information before he enters the schoolroom. If, therefore,
-the mother answers his questions truthfully and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>simply and satisfies his curiosity, she will find that the
-subject of sex ceases to be an isolated subject, and becomes
-a natural part of the child's general learning.
-A woman does not need to be a college graduate, with
-a special degree in the study of botany, before she can
-tell her child the beautiful truth of its birth. But she
-does need to clear her own mind of prudishness, and to
-understand that the procreative act is natural, clean and
-healthful; that all nature is beautified through it, and
-consequently that it is devoid of offensiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the mother can impress the child with the beauty
-and wonder and sacredness of the sex functions, she has
-taught it the first lesson, and the teacher can elaborate
-on these teachings as the child advances in school. All
-schools should teach anatomy of the sex organs and their
-physiology, instead of teaching the human body in the
-neuter gender as has been done up to this time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The whole object of teaching the child about reproduction
-through evolution is to clear its mind of any
-shame or mystery concerning its birth and to impress it
-with the beauty and naturalness of procreation, in order
-to prepare it for the knowledge of puberty and marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There must of necessity be special information for
-the pubescent boy and girl, for having arrived at the
-stage in their mental development they no longer take
-for granted what has been told them by the parents, but
-are keen to form their own ideas and gather information
-independently. It is right, therefore, to give them the
-facts as science has found them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are workers and philanthropists who say there
-is too much stress put upon the subject of venereal
-diseases; that the young girl after learning or hearing of
-the dangers she is likely to encounter in the sexual relation,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>is afraid to marry and consequently lives a life unloved
-and alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Your treatment of this subject is dangerous,” said
-a very earnest social worker a few weeks ago. “Such
-knowledge will prevent our young girls from marrying.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To which I replied that my object in telling young
-girls the truth is for the definite purpose of preventing
-them from entering into sexual relations whether in marriage
-or out of it, without thinking and knowing. Better
-a thousand times to live alone and unloved than to be
-tied to a man who has robbed her of health or of the
-joy of motherhood, or welcoming the pains of motherhood,
-live in anxiety lest her sickly offspring be taken
-out of her life, or grow up a chronic invalid.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I have more faith in the force of love. I believe
-that two people convinced that they love each other and
-desire to live together will talk as frankly of their own
-health and natures as they do today of the house furnishings
-and salaries. Their love for each other will protect
-them from ill health and disease, and prompt them
-to procure of their own accord, a certificate of health if
-each has the right information and knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are, however, different phases of nature, the
-knowledge of which binds and cements the love of two
-people, other than venereal diseases, for these diseases
-are only symptoms of a great social disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every girl should first understand herself; she
-should know her anatomy, including sex anatomy; she
-should know the epochs of a normal woman's life, and
-the unfoldment which each epoch brings; she should
-know the effect the emotions have on her acts, and
-finally she should know the fullness and richness of life
-when crowned by the flower of motherhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>This knowledge I shall endeavor to give in the following
-articles. Fragmentary the articles must of necessity
-be, for there are volumes written on each subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I shall try to free the subjects from technicalities
-and give the opinions of writers who have made these
-subjects their life studies and also the facts as I myself
-have learned them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is not my intention to thrust upon any one a special
-code of morals, or to inflict upon the readers my own
-ideals of morality. I only presume to present the facts
-for you to accept according to your understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first subject will deal with the girl during the
-age when sex first manifests itself, in that most fascinating,
-interesting and puzzling period of a woman's life—the
-budding period, called girlhood.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>
- <h2 id='II' class='c005'>CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-<h3 id='II-I' class='c008'>GIRLHOOD—PART I.</h3>
-
-<h4 class='c010'>The Physical Manifestations</h4>
-
-<p class='c009'>It has been said that the American girl between the
-ages of 12 and 18 is the most neglected girl in the world.
-Just why this is so, it is difficult to say, but I doubt
-whether she is alone in this neglect, for this is known as
-the <strong>adolescent period</strong>, and it is only within the last few
-years that the mental and physiological aspect of this
-period has been at all considered, or its importance recognized
-in any part of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The <strong>adolescent period</strong> is the time occupied between
-the ages of 12 and 22, when the physical development
-comes suddenly into prominence; when the mental faculties
-become independently active, and the sex of the individual
-strongly manifests itself. It is a period of the
-greatest importance to the girl herself, for her physical,
-mental and moral development during this time will have
-an important effect on her future life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is also a period of the greatest interest to the
-mother, provided there is sympathy, confidence and understanding
-between them. Too much importance cannot
-be attached to the necessity of an early confidence
-between the girl and her mother before this period arrives
-for this will give a girl a sense of superiority, a poise, an
-understanding of herself and her nature. She will then
-be prepared for the changes taking place within herself,
-and consequently be practically immune from the influence
-of a bad environment, which otherwise might affect
-her in a way detrimental to her health and happiness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>Up to this period there is very little manifestation of sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fortunately, we have come to recognize that healthy
-outdoor play is as good for the little girl as it is for the
-boy, and the ideas of our grandmothers' day—that boys
-were to play ball, ride horseback, swim, shoot, etc., while
-the girl's play was restricted to sedentary pursuits, such
-as sewing, doll playing, etc.—have been placed on the
-relic heap, and the girl of today keeps pace with her
-brother in physical freedom and activity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the passing of those ideas passed also our ideal
-of the delicate girl, with a cough, small waist and dainty
-appetite, and the girl physically strong and healthy, with
-a broader view of life, has taken her place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About the age of 12 there comes a sudden change in
-the girl, her dresses are outgrown, her form assumes
-shape, her bust and limbs develop, and, in the words of
-Stanley Hall, “hips, thighs, limbs, shoulders and arms
-round out into contours more or less beautiful, curves
-always predominating over angles.” Thus we come to
-realize that the little girl has left us.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The physical development is not alone in this work,
-for the mental and moral instincts are developing so rapidly
-that it is difficult to understand this new and lovely
-creature who is neither the child of yesterday nor the
-woman of tomorrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is often very little patience shown the adolescent
-girl, for neither parents nor teachers have been
-aware that this is a separate and distinct stage—this
-passing from childhood into womanhood—and as such
-must be recognized.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us first take the bony structure. It is a well
-known fact that there is not sufficient lime salts in the
-system to complete the bony structure until the 25th
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>year. The bones are not completely hardened, which is
-one of the reasons that so many deformities have their
-foundation laid at this time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first and most noticeable change in the girl at
-this age is the increase of height, which begins at the
-13th year and ends about the 15th. There are girls
-who begin earlier and continue to grow for several years
-after this age, but it is with the average we deal, and
-the growth after the age of 15 is not so perceptible.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Many girls show almost no other signs of womanly
-development until after this growth has ceased. The
-bones at this time are soft enough to yield to pressure
-(being cartilaginous), which makes the wearing of a
-corset especially dangerous, for the pressure on the ribs
-interferes with the development of the lungs and tuberculosis
-is more easily contracted. Corsets should not
-be worn before the 21st year if possible, and then very
-loosely, for tight lacing is more harmful at this age than
-a few years later. Those who have made careful investigations
-of the harmful effects of corsets claim that not
-only are the chest and walls of the abdomen injured,
-but the development of the sexual organs is seriously
-hampered, causing many functional diseases, commonly
-painful and irregular menstruation, caused by arrested
-development of the cervix.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The girl who scoffs at the idea of the Chinese women
-binding up their feet, is doubtless ignorant of the knowledge
-that to bind up their own thoracic and pelvic structures,
-i. e., the chest and abdominal portions of her body,
-in tight corsets is doing greater harm to her health and
-injury to her development than the binding of the feet
-could possibly do. Ellis brings forth a few words on this
-subject which shows that the habit of binding the feet
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>of the Chinese women is based on the same ideas as the
-European woman has when she deforms her waist—they
-are both done for sexual attractiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A Chinese woman's foot is more interesting than her
-face—to her husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No man of good breeding would look at a Chinese
-woman's foot in the street; such an act is most indelicate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This question of corsets every girl should consider
-seriously.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As this rapid growth begins, the girl often finds it
-difficult to hold herself up straight, her shoulders become
-stooped, her head and neck are thrust forward in a most
-ungainly manner. As she becomes conscious of this, instead
-of correcting it, she is likely to slouch and assume
-the most awkward habits. Her arms seem longer to
-her; hands, legs and feet become new burdens to carry,
-and the desire to hide the hands behind the back, to
-fold the arms, to bend one knee in order to lessen the
-length of the body, and to lean on something while talking,
-are all signs of this consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the invention of modern machinery and the
-monotony of specialized work in the mills and factories,
-it is natural that this should bring with it, if not entirely
-new diseases and deformities, at least a greater number
-than have heretofore been known. Consider the little
-children in the cotton mills, standing for long periods,
-with the weight of the body thrown on one foot—a position,
-which causes curvature of the spine. Again consider
-the young girls still in their “teens” bending over sewing
-machines from morning until night from year to
-year; their premium for this work is right sided lateral
-curvature. Sitting with one leg crossed over the other
-as in sewing, carrying books under the arm to and from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>school, lifting and carrying heavy burdens, bundles, or
-small children, such as the abused and deformed “little
-mothers” spend their play time in doing—all cause curvature
-of the spine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Curvature is one of the most common deformities.
-Any position which throws the spinal column out of its
-natural line for any length of time is likely to produce it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Regular exercise in the open air will do much to prevent
-this, together with walking and dancing. If curvature
-is already noticeable, then it is best to get professional
-instructions and follow them closely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Next to the rapid bony development, the changes in
-the heart and circulation are most noticeable. The heart
-grows more rapidly during the adolescent age than the
-arteries do, which increases the supply of blood in the
-arteries and causes general circulatory disturbance of
-which we see many outward signs such as blushing, nose
-bleed, headache, cold feet and hands, anaemia, loss of appetite,
-or an appetite so capricious as to drive one frantic
-trying to satisfy it, for it jumps from ice cream soda to
-dill pickles, according to whim. Some of these symptoms
-require special attention, particularly in the case
-of the girl at school or in an office, who finds her work
-a great effort, tires easily, and becomes pale and nervous.
-Such a girl should spend as much time as possible in
-the open air, and build up on milk and eggs. Sometimes
-a simple iron tonic will do much to overcome these disturbances.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Pimples on the face are also very common at this
-period. Physicians assert that with cleanliness of the
-skin and regularity of the bowels, these symptoms will
-disappear without the aid of medicines or cosmetics.
-The above mentioned symptoms are of great annoyance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>to the adolescent girl, who is just developing pride in
-looking neat and keeping up an appearance of daintiness,
-and she goes to unending trouble to rid herself of facial
-blemishes, which often seem to grow worse and if
-tampered with, leave ugly scars.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The nervous system also undergoes great changes
-at this age, and the growing girl is subject to various
-forms of nervous affections, stammering, jerking, restlessness,
-etc. These are symptoms which, if allowed to
-continue unattended, may develop into permanent disorders.
-In short, the adolescent girl needs constant
-watchfulness and attention.</p>
-
-<h3 id='II-II' class='c008'>GIRLHOOD—PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>The organs of sense are also awakened to activity
-in the adolescent girl. The sense of smell becomes extremely
-acute; offensive odors are <strong>very</strong> offensive, while
-pleasant ones are greatly enjoyed and desired. Thus we
-find perfumes used lavishly in girlhood, and alas! too
-often indiscriminately.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>With the development of the other senses the sense
-of color is awakened. The girl, who, yesterday allowed
-her elders to choose clothing and colors for her, at this
-time becomes most exacting in her own selection of ribbons
-and dresses. Sunsets and forests have become
-beautiful, and often the girl with artistic talent decides at
-this age to choose her life work. Laces, jewelry, trinkets,
-ribbons and shop windows become her world. Indeed,
-so great is her desire to possess ornaments that she
-has been known to resort to petty thievery, when unable
-to avail herself of the means to obtain them otherwise.
-Certain authorities, who have made vice and
-kindred subjects a study, assert that it is this great desire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>for trinkets, silk petticoats, etc., which induces girls
-to sell their bodies and enter prostitution. Such authorities
-fail to see the economic significance of these
-unsatisfied desires. There is something wrong with a
-system of society which allows its women to sell their
-bodies for such trifles, the desire for which is part of their
-natural development.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Is flesh and blood and the virtue of the mothers of
-the future so cheap in this land of plenty that it can be
-sacrificed for such passing whims? It is impossible to
-suppress that inherent and natural desire in the adolescent
-girl to adorn and beautify herself. She must and
-will do it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The girl of wealth, of the so-called upper class, can
-beautify herself and adorn her body with the costliest
-jewels and fabrics. All eyes are upon her in admiration
-of her exquisite taste and attractive appearance. Yet
-this same manifestation in a working girl is condemned.
-Any attempt on the part of a working girl to give expression
-to the desire to be beautiful is considered
-“dangerous to her welfare”; is spoken of as her “awful
-desire for trinkets.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The women of wealth set certain standards for
-themselves and their class, but separate and distinct
-standards for the women of the working class. It is about
-time the reformers and philanthropists do something
-other than deal with the symptoms of the great social
-unrest, and some of the latest reports of vice investigators
-have been compelled to face some of the most fundamental
-causes, and acknowledged these causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A craving for beauty and pleasure, dancing, music,
-singing and laughter, an innate hereditary desire to adorn
-and beautify herself, which comes down to her from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>primitive woman, together with a burning desire for and
-love of romance, characterize the adolescent girl and
-often remain with her far beyond the adolescent age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the imagination is thus aroused it is not unusual
-to learn that the young girl yields to it, tells strange
-tales about herself, and is, therefore, often accused of
-lying. But this and petty thievery disappear as reason
-and will power are developed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The change of voice in a girl is not so distinct as in a
-boy, but the voice gradually becomes softer, fuller and of
-a more womanly pitch, though the change is quite unnoticeable
-while it occurs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The hearing becomes keener, noises which a few
-months ago were considered a joke are now disturbing
-(such as father's loud sneeze). Music and singing have
-charms, which in childhood were unappreciated.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Parents and teachers who do not appreciate the
-change taking place within the girl at this period, have
-small patience with such doings, calling her “giddy” and
-“affected” when in reality it is all part of her development
-and can be guided and directed into beautiful
-channels. Together with her personal adornment comes
-interest in her surroundings. New and elaborate decorations
-furnish her bedroom, and toilet accessories become
-objects of pride. Primitive colors are displayed, largely
-in curtains, bed coverings, wall paper, etc., all of which
-explain the independent ego in the stage of transition.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are many forms of disturbance which the girl
-suffers at this period, such as hysteria and insanity,
-which, however, we will not dwell upon here. Enough
-has been said on the subject to impress upon my readers
-the cause of these physical and mental disturbances, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>to realize that special care and consideration should be
-given at this particular age of the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The emotional nature also plays a most prominent
-part in the developing girl, and justice, I feel, would not
-be shown her here, unless we cover briefly this most interesting
-part of her nature. One of the strongest emotions
-which very few girls, passing from childhood into
-womanhood, escape, is the religious awakening of one
-kind or another. It is said by some investigators that
-80 per cent. of the conversions of women in the churches
-take place before the age of 20. From 30 to 40 years
-only a very small percentage occur—something like 1
-or 2 per cent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is also shown that more young girls join church
-than boys. Some girls seem almost consumed by the
-desire to do good and be good in every thought and word
-and act, and have been known to go through various
-forms of self punishment, such as fasting, sacrificing
-pleasure, etc. Again, others spend hours in absolute
-devotion to the neglect of health and studies. It is very
-easily seen why the church takes its “flock,” while still
-in the adolescent period, for at no subsequent time is the
-girl's mind so plastic or impressionable. If the same
-girl who enters the convent at 18 years had waited until
-22, she would very likely not have entered, for the mental
-changes are most intense from 16 to 18 years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another common emotional awakening of girlhood
-is the affections. In boys this awakening causes them to
-gather together in gangs. They follow their leader
-whom they greatly admire and obey. In girls it assumes
-a more simple form, the devotion to a girl friend of her
-own age, and the affection between them is deep and
-intense while it lasts. They tell their most private
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>thoughts in secret to each other, dividing all honors,
-pleasures and gifts; they are almost inseparable, and
-I have known a girl whose affection was so deep for
-her “chum” that she wore mourning when the chum's
-father died.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another form of affection which the girl of this age
-manifests is that for an older woman, often a teacher or
-neighbor. Parents sometimes look askance at this relation,
-and rightly so, for a friendship can be beneficial
-or harmful according to the character of the older woman.
-But with all these interests there is nothing so
-all-absorbing or so interesting to the adolescent girl as
-<strong>herself</strong>. She has become conscious of <strong>self</strong>. Now she
-burns with ambition to go out into the world and do
-mighty things. She feels sure she will be a great singer,
-or a dancer, or, perhaps, an actress. Again, she feels
-she will write a wonderful book—about herself—or at
-least she will be the heroine. Or she will write a wonderful
-tragic play; or she will nurse on the battlefields
-and care for the sick and dying. These, together with
-thousands of other desires, burn in her mind, and can
-be increased or lessened according to the character of
-the books she reads. The literature placed in a girl's
-hands at this age has as great an influence on her
-thoughts and acts as her companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In early adolescence this self-consciousness manifests
-itself in modesty, blushing, giggling, physical awkwardness,
-mentioned earlier on this subject, all signs that
-the girl is conscious of that inner self—the ego.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is at this stage when the mother tries to explain
-what the menstrual period means to the girl that she is
-met with icy indifference. She refuses to talk on this
-subject, or anything pertaining to the sex subject, because
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>she has just become conscious of her sex, and
-everything connected with it seems offensively personal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>She most likely has received her sexual information
-from some one else, and the mother is astonished at the
-stubborn silence on the part of her daughter. She fails
-to realize that some one else has that confidence which
-belongs to her and which she should have gained many
-years earlier. There is a strong tie between the adolescent
-girl and her sexual informant. The influence of
-an older girl over a younger, between whom there are
-confidences regarding sex, is surprisingly great. The
-mind at this age is very susceptible to influences of any
-kind, and the ideals instilled into a girl's mind are of paramount
-importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These are only a few of the disturbances of the adolescent
-girl. But they are sufficient for us to know that
-at the bottom of all these disturbances is the mysterious
-influence of sex gradually unfolding itself and finally
-claiming its own.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the time these emotions are in full sway along
-comes a newer and deeper one. The boy with whom
-she has played for the past several years, run races,
-played house, ball and games, one day looks into her eyes—and
-something happens.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps that look was accompanied by a pull at her
-hair, a pinch on her arm, or a hit with an apple core, but
-the glance was one which awakened within her a new instinct;
-the consciousness of sex, and upon her horizon
-man appears.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Those who have investigated boy and girl love affairs
-seem to be of the opinion that they are invariably
-of short duration. Out of 100 high school girls interrogated,
-two had married while at school, and one of these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>had received a divorce shortly after. This goes to prove
-that the boy a girl is willing to elope with, or even
-starve for at 18, is quite forgotten at the age of 25.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When girls marry between the ages of 19 and 20—the
-years when they are developing in body, mind and
-character, they are at a loss to understand themselves,
-because they are ignorant of the fact that the wonderful
-instinct of sex is making itself felt. For thousands of
-years this instinct has been in the germ of life. When
-they have reached that age nature is preparing them
-to proclaim its right, to perform their natural functions,
-to propagate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the knowledge of the sex functions is one of the
-most important to the health and happiness of the girl,
-we shall now consider the girl in the period when nature
-has developed and prepared her to carry out its plan, in
-the Age of Puberty.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>
- <h2 id='III' class='c005'>CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-<h3 id='III-I' class='c008'>PUBERTY—PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>Puberty is the age at which the girl or boy becomes
-capable of reproduction. Writers differ in the use of the
-word. Many use it to denote the whole period of time
-during which the procreative ability continues, which is
-usually from the fourteenth to the forty-fifth year.
-There are still other uses of the word, but we will use
-it as the age when the boy or girl becomes sexually
-matured or ripe, the first indication of which is the
-menstrual flow in the girl and seminal emissions in
-the boy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This sign of puberty is celebrated by initiations
-among the savage peoples, mostly for the purpose of
-trying the powers of endurance in the boy or girl.
-The boy is taken away among strange tribes, is subjected
-to the greatest physical pain and hardship, and among
-some tribes is circumcized. The girl is often subjected
-to a vaginal incision and should she cry out or show any
-sign of suffering she is disgraced among the women of
-her tribe and promptly expelled from the settlement.
-In Ellis' Psychology of Sex the author relates of the
-Yuman Indians of California how the girls prepare for
-marriage at the first sign of menstruation by being wrapped
-in blankets and placed in a warm pit for four days and
-nights. The old women of the tribe dance about them
-and sing constantly; they give away coin, cloth and
-wheat to teach the girls generosity, and sow wild seeds
-broadcast over the girls to cause them to be prolific.
-These and various other initiations are practiced by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>nearly all savage tribes. The boys and girls receive
-their sex knowledge at this time, and are instructed in
-the duties of married life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The girls are fully informed of menstruation.
-It has been said the knowledge of sexual relations is
-openly discussed and naturally taught; that, therefore,
-it has no glamour for them, and in consequence the
-women of these tribes are virtuous.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps you will wonder what bearing all this
-has on What Every Girl Should Know. I relate it only
-to show that the savages have recognized the importance
-of plain sexual talks to their young for ages, while
-civilization is still hiding itself under the black pall of
-prudery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When we speak of puberty it is necessary to have
-some knowledge of the organs of reproduction and
-their structure. So far the physiology taught in the
-public schools has not treated of these organs. In order
-to get books on this subject a girl is met with the
-question: “Are you a nurse or physician?” If not the
-books are denied her. Consequently the average girl
-is kept in ignorance of the function of these organs,
-and is at a loss to know where to go for clean information.
-It is necessary, therefore, to give this information
-here, without mincing words, if there is any
-benefit to be derived from the following subject. It
-is very simple for the girl to learn the correct names
-of these organs and call them by such names. They
-are the ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, vagina and
-breasts. The breasts were not always classed as reproductive
-organs, but later writers recognize their relation
-to them, and as such they are now included.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us first take the ovaries, which are two small</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>
-<img src='images/i_025.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic003'>
-<p>FIG. I.<br /><br />UTERUS—TUBES AND OVARIES.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>To the right the ovary and tube have been laid open.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c011'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>a—Uterus.</div>
- <div class='line'>b—Ovary.</div>
- <div class='line'>c—Fallopian Tube.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>glands about the size and shape of an almond, placed
-one on each side of the extreme lower part of the woman's
-abdomen. They are imbedded in large ligaments
-and tissues which also help to hold the uterus (the
-womb) in place. Inside the ovaries are thousands of
-little eggs called ovules, which have been there since
-the birth of the girl. It is claimed there are from twenty
-to fifty thousand ovules in the ovary at birth. The
-work of the ovary is to develop and mature these eggs,
-and send them on to be fertilized. At the time of puberty,
-these eggs are all in different stages of development.
-Those in the center of the ovary ripen first and
-burst through the outer cover of the ovary (which is like
-a capsule and at the time of menstruation becomes
-swollen and congested). The ovule is caught by the
-fringy ends of the fallopian tubes which are in a constant
-lashing motion, which motion sends the egg
-through the tube to the uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fallopian tubes are about four and one-half
-inches in length and join the ovaries to the upper and
-outer angle of the uterus. Its duties are to convey the
-ova from the ovary to the uterus. Sometimes the
-sperm cell from the male comes up into the tube to meet
-the egg and it is fertilized here. The union of the two
-cells usually occurs in the outer end of the fallopian tube;
-but this is not the nest nature has prepared for the egg's
-development, and unless it returns into the uterus it causes
-serious trouble and an operation is necessary. Impregnation
-in the tube is very rare, but it is possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The uterus, often spoken of as the womb, is a hollow
-muscular organ into which the egg comes from the
-tubes to be fertilized—four to eight days from ovaries
-to uterus. After fertilization it remains here, is nourished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>and developed until it can develop no more.
-Then it is thrown out by the contraction of the muscles,
-which process we call the birth of a child. The
-uterus is about three inches long, its shape is like a pear
-with the small end downward. It is not fastened to any
-of the bony parts, but is held in place by the ligaments
-and tissues, which also allow it to move with different
-movements of the body. One of the most interesting
-features about the uterus which is so small in its
-cavity is that it can stretch to accommodate the growing
-child within it to the length of nineteen to twenty-one
-inches. This is because it is one and one half inches
-thick and composed of layers of muscles which are tough
-and yet elastic. At the upper side of the uterus are the
-openings into the fallopian tubes. At the small end
-of the uterus is another opening leading into the vagina.
-It is through this opening the sperm of the male comes
-in order to fertilize the egg. Thus you can readily see
-the uterus is the nest or cradle where the egg is to live
-until it becomes strong enough to subsist on other
-nourishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The vagina is a muscular tube-like passage which
-extends from the small part of the uterus (called the
-neck) to the outer surface of the body, where its opening
-is usually partly closed in virgins by a thin membrane
-or film known as the hymen. The walls of the
-vagina are also very thick and elastic. This is sometimes
-called the birth canal. The hymen was for years
-a subject for discussion in the professional world among
-physicians. In my talks to girls I find it a subject of
-great interest and often anxiety to many of them, for
-the average girl seems possessed with the old idea that
-the presence of the hymen is necessary to marital happiness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>The time was not long ago when its absence
-was considered cause for serious discord between husband
-and wife, and I have been told that under the old
-law its absence was sufficient ground for divorce.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fortunately, modern science has thrown some light
-on this subject and disproved the theory that its absence
-was necessarily due to a woman's having had sexual
-relations. There are cases on record of women who
-have lived four and five years in prostitution who were
-found with perfectly preserved hymen. It is important
-to know that it differs in size and shape in women. Also,
-that in some women it has been entirely absent since
-birth. Many little girls and babies have no hymen. It
-can be destroyed by accident or injured by operations,
-or examinations where the physician did not use the
-greatest care. In some women it is easily destroyed;
-in others it is more difficult. It is not at all uncommon
-for a physician to find the hymen unruptured when he
-comes to deliver the first born child. All of which goes
-to prove that neither its presence nor its absence is
-necessarily the sign of virginity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now that we have some idea of the situation of the
-reproductive organs and their relations to one another
-we shall be ready to consider in greater detail the ovule
-or egg in the ovary.</p>
-
-<h3 id='III-II' class='c008'>PUBERTY—PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>Beginning with puberty the eggs from the ovary
-are expelled as they ripen or mature. This process is
-called ovulation and occurs about every twenty-eight
-days. It is closely related to menstruation, but it is not
-menstruation as you will soon learn. Some writers
-say the egg is expelled at other times than at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>menstrual periods; another writer asserts that one
-passes every six hours, alternating male and female.
-There are many views and ideas on the subject of
-ovulation, but I will tell you of the most generally accepted
-theory, that the egg is expelled from the ovary
-every twenty-eight days.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the egg ripens, the ovary discharges it and
-sends it on to find its way through the tubes to the uterus.
-Here we find the blood supply of the uterus greatly increased
-in preparation for the egg. We find the inner
-lining of the uterus becomes very soft and smooth so
-that the egg can very easily find a place in which to
-lodge itself after it has been fertilized. We also find
-that the cells swell and multiply, all in preparation to
-welcome and nourish the incoming egg or ovum. If
-the egg is fertilized by the male, it then remains in the
-uterus to develop. If not, it is thrown out, together
-with all the preparation made to receive it. The cells
-burst and discharge their contents; the mucus, blood,
-cells and all come away in what is called the menstrual
-flow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At one time woman was thought to be the only
-creature which menstruated. But science now tells us
-that all warm blooded animals which walk erect menstruate.
-The discharge is chiefly due to the position
-which in standing upright, throws the large part of the
-uterus higher than the neck. In animals, such as dogs,
-cats, etc., the same process goes on, but the position of
-these animals keeps the large part of the uterus lower
-than the small part, where the blood is retained and then
-reabsorbed into the system.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This process goes on every four weeks in girls after
-they reach the age of puberty and continues at regular
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>periods as long as the egg is not fertilized until the
-reproductive age is over, which is usually between the
-forty-fifth and fiftieth year. If, however, the egg is
-fertilized the menstrual flow ceases and this blood supply
-goes to nourish the new life in the uterus. It does not
-appear again until after the birth of the child, and usually
-ceases while the child depends upon the milk from
-the mammal glands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The age at which this process (menstruation) first
-takes place in girls differs in individuals. Climate has
-some effect upon it, for girls in warm or Southern climates
-mature earlier than in colder places. In this climate
-the average girl reaches puberty at fourteen years of
-age. Some have been known to reach it as early as
-the eleventh and others not until the eighteenth year,
-all in the same place and yet normal and healthy, which
-shows there is no reason for anxiety if the girl does not
-menstruate at fourteen, provided she is developing
-normally and is in good health. During the first few
-years after its appearances the periods are likely to be
-irregular. This is because the sexual organs are not
-fully developed. Often the period does not occur after
-the first time for three, five, eight months and sometimes
-a year. This irregularity continues for two or
-three years. Cases of girls coming from Europe have
-been known where the period was perfectly established
-over there, but after arriving in this climate the menstrual
-flow did not occur again for a year and over.
-Usually this irregularity lasts only a few months, and
-when once it has become regular, there should be no
-worry over its arrival a day or two earlier or later.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The length of time the period lasts differs in women
-also. The average length of time is four or five days,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>yet there are women in which it lasts fully a week, and
-others but a few hours. The length of time should not
-be of as much concern as the amount of discharge which
-is expelled each time. It is, of course, difficult to estimate
-this, but physicians claim that more than three
-protectives in twenty-four hours should not be used. In
-all women the flow is most profuse during the first two
-days.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The care of the health should receive more attention
-during the first two days than is usually given it.
-To the girl who has to work from early morning until
-late at night, these two days are unusually hard on her
-nerves and on her general health, and I regret that I
-have no new message for her to help lighten the burden,
-which under the present atrocious industrial system
-makes it so hard for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Physicians say there should be no need of interrupting
-the regular routine of the day at this time more
-than any other. There are a few strong women to
-whom this period makes no difference, but the average
-girl in this country spends two days of pain and discomfort.
-Out of 1,000 girls questioned, only 16 per cent.
-were entirely free from pain, which proves that the
-time has come for women to cease being ashamed of
-this function, and insisting upon at least one day's rest
-at the expense of her employer. Some of the old biblical
-ideas instilling into the man's mind, that a woman is unclean
-at this time has been the cause of much hardship
-and many sneers endured by a woman during these
-periods. The consequence has been that she will bear
-the most intense pain rather than allow the men working
-with her to suspect that she is menstruating. It is
-all nonsense and wrong, and it is time women should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>band together in one great sisterhood to protect one another
-from being slowly drained and exhausted of their
-powers of motherhood for the benefit of their exploiters.
-Women who belong to unions should demand that
-this day be given them and their sisters. Girls continue
-to suffer pains in the abdomen and back, pains
-running down the limbs, headache, often nausea, besides
-being nervous and irritable, yet hang on a strap
-in an overcrowded street car, stand or sit all day in the
-shop or at the machine and utter no protest. They
-know, too, they are not alone in this suffering, for they
-see about them day after day hundreds of other women
-enduring the same pain, yet they remain silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>How long will you endure this, working women?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is one thing to remember, that the greatest
-strain comes on the nervous system at this period. One
-of the best ways to assist in building up the nerve
-strength is in sleep and rest and for the girl who dares
-not remain away from the shop fearing to lose her
-“job” the next best thing is to get to bed early, for there's
-nothing that builds up the exhausted nerves like sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fortunately, the girl at school has some consideration
-shown her at this time, and it is well that this is
-so, for until the period becomes established there is
-special danger of overdoing in school work, which often
-causes St. Vitus dance and other nervous disorders.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I believe in the regular warm tub bath, or cold
-sponge followed by a good rubbing all over the body at
-this time, together with nine or ten hours' sleep, and
-light, nourishing food without stimulant. If the bowels
-are active, it often lessens the pain considerably, and it
-is very important that every girl attend to this if she has
-any regard for her health. There are a few abnormalities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>of the menstrual function which I will not take the
-space to state here. Before leaving the subject, I wish
-to impress upon the reader that most abnormalities,
-such as too little or too much flow, or very great exhausting
-pain are usually caused, not by any disease of
-the generative organs, but more often a disturbance of
-the general health, which can often be treated and
-cured by building up the system.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every girl should learn the laws of menstruation
-and its hygiene and have a full understanding of the
-same. The menstrual function occurs only in the female
-at puberty, but at the same time there comes to
-both boys and girls, or male and female, a mysterious
-and impelling influence, which has great power over the
-lives of both during the adolescent period unless they
-understand and control it. This is known as the Sexual
-Impulse.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
- <h2 id='IV' class='c005'>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id='IV-I' class='c008'>SEXUAL IMPULSE—PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>The sexual impulse is the strongest force in all living
-creatures. It is this that animates the struggle for
-existence; it is this that attracts and unites two beings,
-that they may reproduce their kind; it is this that inspires
-man to the highest and noblest thoughts; it is this
-also that inspires man to all endeavors and achievements,
-to all art and poetry; this impulse is the creative
-instinct which dominates all living things and without
-which life must die. If, then, this force, this impulse
-plays so strong a part in our lives, is it not necessary
-that we know something about it?</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>At the time of puberty there comes both to boys
-and girls, two impulses—one, the desire to touch or
-caress; to come in contact with, to write or to speak to,
-an individual of the opposite sex. This impulse is much
-stronger in girls than in boys. The other is the impulse
-that impels the individual to discharge the accumulation
-of ripe sex cells, and relieve himself of the nervous tension
-which this accumulation produces. This impulse is
-stronger in boys than in girls. One writer states that
-this is an unconscious desire for relief from physical
-congestion, not differing greatly from the sense of relief
-which the emptying of the bladder or rectum produces.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>These two impulses together, according to Moll,
-constitute the Sexual Impulse, and this constitutes the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>foundation upon which love, the greatest of all emotions,
-is based.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>At the time of puberty, we learned from the last
-article, that the first manifestations of sexual maturity
-in the girl is the appearance of the menstrual flow. But
-also at puberty there comes the sexual impulse, which
-evidences itself during sleep, in a filmy substance dropping
-from the mouth of the uterus. This “detumescence”
-does not appear very often in young girls, but
-later in life when sex instinct becomes stronger it occurs
-during sleep, especially in young widows having experienced
-sexual relations. They are, however, seldom aware
-of its taking place; consequently, it has not the danger
-which it presents to the boy.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>In the preceding article on puberty, we discussed
-only the girl at puberty, but here it is necessary to understand
-that during puberty many changes take place in the
-boy, such as change of voice, the growth of hair on the
-face, various parts of the body, and most important, the
-discharge of the sexual fluid commonly known as seminal
-emissions. This latter symptom appears in every normal
-healthy boy on reaching the age of puberty, but unlike
-the menstrual period which occurs at a stated period in
-girls, the seminal emissions do not depend upon a special
-period; they occur at different times, often twice a
-month. Unlike menstruation, which in the girl lasts
-from two to seven days, the discharge lasts only a few seconds,
-and is not accompanied by pain. This expulsion is
-considered perfectly normal, and is not a sign of physical
-or sexual weakness, but a sign that a surplus accumulation
-of ripe sex cells are present and have come to their
-full development and overflow. Nature takes care of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>this and uses all of this life-giving fluid according to the
-needs of the individual, casting off the surplus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is this symptom that alarms young boys at puberty.
-It is this overflow which enables quack doctors to
-play upon the innocent and ignorant boy, telling him that
-it is an indication of weakness. And it is also this—as the
-result of telling older boys about it—that leads boys to
-houses of prostitution; for they are told by their ignorant
-advisers that they must have sexual relations or endanger
-their sexual capacity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is also this overflow which, occurring in sleep
-awakens the boy, and he is conscious of what has occurred;
-he is conscious also of a pleasurable sensation
-which this sense of relief produces, and unless warned
-against it he will try at some later time to bring on this
-relief by friction or mechanical means, which is known
-as masturbation—often called self-abuse. The age of
-puberty is one of the periods in an individual's life in
-which it is easiest to acquire this habit, in girls as well as
-in boys, although the girl may not be conscious of any
-sensation, through the accumulation of the “detumescence”.
-Yet there is the same nervous tension that exists
-in boys, due to congestion of the now fully developed
-genital organs, perhaps slighter in intensity, but it is
-there and the girl becomes conscious of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In talking to older girls about sex, menstruation,
-etc., she is often led into the habit of masturbation.
-Cases have been known where children formed this habit
-in infancy almost, through the ignorance of nurses or
-even mothers, who, not aware of the consequences, have
-kept babies from crying by gently patting or rubbing the
-sexual parts. It may be caused also by uncleanliness,
-itching, tight clothing, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>When the habit is formed in very small children, it
-can be exercised in the very presence of the parents, but
-they being ignorant of the habit itself, or the consequences,
-interpret the actions as “baby ways”. Again,
-the habit is formed upon entering school. It is said no
-school is free from it; and it is a fact that no institution
-today is free from pupils who practice masturbation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In public schools are found groups of perverted boys
-and girls whose depraved ideas sooner or later permeate
-the place. A recent issue of a conservative woman's
-journal says: “In absolute filth of conversation nothing
-could equal the talk of boys and girls during recess
-in our schools. What is still worse is that the child is
-generally instructed in masturbation, prostitution and
-sometimes sexual perversity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This subject of masturbation is at present under
-discussion from many points of view among the medical
-profession; some claiming, that, as with venereal diseases,
-we lay too much stress on the matter, and exaggerate
-the harm done to the individual by it. One writer
-plainly states that it is of such common practice that out
-of a hundred young men and women, ninety-nine are addicted
-to it, and the hundredth one is lying. Another says
-that out of a hundred men and women arriving at the age
-of 25, ninety-nine have practiced it at some time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By these examples such writers would try to prove
-that because ninety-nine people out of one hundred are
-not in insane asylums the practice cannot be as harmful
-as it is stated by others to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us take a sane and logical view of this subject.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In children, before they have reached the age of puberty,
-prior to the development of the sexual organs, it
-stands to reason that to abuse these organs before they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>are strong enough to be exercised must weaken them for
-their natural functions. Again, masturbation, unlike the
-sexual act, can be practiced individually and at all times
-and nearly anywhere. This gives the individual unlimited
-opportunity for indulgence, and consequently drains
-and exhausts the system of the vitality necessary for full
-development.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the boy or girl past puberty we find one of the
-most dangerous forms of masturbation, i. e., mental masturbation,
-which consists of forming mental pictures, or
-thinking of obscene or voluptuous pictures. This form
-is considered especially harmful to the brain, for the habit
-becomes so fixed that it is almost impossible to free the
-thoughts from lustful pictures. Every girl should guard
-against the man who invariably turns a word or sentence
-into a lustful, or commonly termed, “smutty” channel, for
-nine times out of ten he is a mental masturbator.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps the greatest physical danger to the chronic
-masturbator is the inability to perform the sexual act
-naturally. The strong physical irritants which are used
-are likely to produce catarrhal disease of these organs in
-both sexes, producing such irritating sensations that relief
-is demanded, and this can be obtained only by repeating
-the habit, and so it continues. The individual
-promises himself over and over again after such exercises
-to overcome the habit, but his will power gradually becomes
-destroyed and the impulse continues. He knows
-and intuitively feels such practice degrades him and destroys
-his character; he feels he is losing control of himself,
-and also realizes that his health, especially his nervous
-system is being undermined.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In my personal experience as a trained nurse while
-attending persons afflicted with various and often revolting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>diseases, no matter what their ailments, I never found
-any one so repulsive as the chronic masturbator.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It would not be difficult to fill page upon page of
-heart-rending confessions made by young girls, whose
-lives were blighted by this pernicious habit, always begun
-so innocently, for even after they have ceased the habit,
-they find themselves incapable of any relief in the natural
-act. This causes a nervous and excited condition in
-the girl, tossing about nervously for hours after. It is
-much more difficult for a girl to overcome the habit than
-a man. The effects are more permanent in her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Before closing this subject, however, I want to tell
-of a case of an eight year old boy I attended during an
-attack of measles. I found he was shy and unresponsive,
-and at times very nervous and irritable with a strong
-liking to be alone. I observed him closely for a few
-days and reported the results of my observation to the
-attending physician. He was convinced of the truth,
-that the little fellow was masturbating. The physician
-assigned me to the task of talking to the child, who
-acknowledged that he was “touching” himself and had
-been ever since he could remember. The little fellow's
-mother had died when he was in infancy, leaving beside
-himself a brother a year older with whom he slept. I
-explained to him the danger as well as I could and the
-result was that I was awakened in the night by whisperings
-and found the little fellow asking the older
-brother to tie his hands to the bedpost. This the older
-brother did with a handkerchief, and the child went to
-sleep in this way every night during the few weeks I
-was attending him. The first few nights he was awake
-practically all of the time struggling to overcome this
-habit, which he finally overcame completely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>At puberty every boy and girl should be taught these
-dangers and temptations and also how to avoid them, by
-keeping active, mentally and physically, going to bed
-only when sleepy, avoiding intoxicating drinks and stimulants.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We have strayed some distance, I know, from the
-beginning of our subject—Sexual Impulse—to treat of its
-perversion (masturbation), but we shall now take up the
-normal natural impulse and see what there is that every
-girl should know.</p>
-
-<h3 id='IV-II' class='c008'>SEXUAL IMPULSE—PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the first part of this article we learned that the
-sexual impulse is a combination of the two impulses:
-the one which impels the discharge of ripe sex cells,
-strongest in the boy, and the other which impels the individual
-to touch or caress an individual of the opposite
-sex, strongest in the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every girl has in mind an ideal man. This ideal
-begins to form sometime in the early adolescent age. He
-is usually distinct in her mind as to his physical qualities,
-such as dark or light hair, or brown or blue eyes. He
-is always a certain physical type and often remains an
-ideal to her through life. At the forming period of the
-type she will be attracted toward many men who seem
-to answer the ideal type, but as she reads and develops
-through the various stages of the adolescent period, the
-ideal changes and grows with her. As she reaches the
-romantic stage the ideal must be brave, daring, courteous.
-If she is inclined toward outdoor sports he must be
-athletic. And so it goes on until the twenty-third year,
-when the average girl has a fairly settled idea of the man
-who would suit her as a mate through life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>When the sexual impulse makes itself felt strongly
-in the adolescent boy or girl, they, feeling satisfied with
-the physical beauty and perfection of the other, marry,
-they are unconscious that the incentive to love
-when based on physical attraction alone is soon destroyed.
-For sickness, poverty or disease will affect even the most
-seemingly perfect physical attraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us not confuse the sexual impulse with love,
-for it alone is not love, but merely a necessary quality
-for the growth of love.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>No sexual attraction or impulse is the foundation
-of the beautiful emotion of love. Upon this is built respect,
-self-control, sympathy, unity of purpose, many
-common tastes and desires, building up and up until this
-real love unites two individuals as one being, one life.
-Then it becomes the strongest and purest emotion of
-which the human soul is capable. There is no doubt
-that the natural aim of the sexual impulse is
-the sexual act, yet when the impulse is strongest
-and followed by the sexual act without love
-or any of the relative instincts which go to make
-up love, the relations are invariably followed by a feeling
-of disgust. Respect for each other and for one's self is a
-primary essential to this intimate relation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In plant and animal life the reproductive cell of the
-male is the active seeker of the passive female cell, imbued
-with the instinct to chase and bodily capture the
-female cell for the purpose of reproduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This instinct man, as he is today, has inherited, and,
-as with the lower forms of life, the senses are intensely
-involved. It is kept alive by the sense of sight, sound
-and smell, and reaches its highest development through
-the sense of touch. It is heightened by touching smooth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>and soft surfaces—which is said to account for the pleasure
-of kissing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the early part of this article I spoke of the desire
-to touch being stronger in girls than in boys. This
-desire leads a girl to kiss and fondle a man without any
-conscious desire for the sexual act; whereas in the man,
-to be touched and caressed by the girl for whom he has
-a sexual attraction, stimulates the accumulation of sex
-cells, and the desire for the sexual act becomes paramount
-in his mind. Many a young girl bubbling over
-with the joy of living, innocent of any serious consequences,
-is oft-times misjudged by men on account of
-these natural actions. But she soon puts on her armor
-of defense, and stifles and represses any outbursts of
-affection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Society, too, condemns the natural expression of woman's
-emotion, save under certain prescribed conditions.
-In consequence of this, women suppress their natural
-desires and direct this great force into other channels,
-participating in the bigger and broader movements and
-activities in which they are active today.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is one reason why the type of the so-called
-“old maid”, so characteristic of the generation past, has
-disappeared. These great maternal powers are being
-used up in the activities of modern life. Instead of allowing
-it to remain dormant and make her odd and
-whimsical, the modern woman turns her sexual impulse
-into a big directing force.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That the male creature is the pursuer of the female
-in all forms of life, there is no question, but that the
-female has the choice of selection and uses fine discrimination
-in her choice, cannot be denied either. This instinct
-of selection seems to lie dormant in women of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>today, for at puberty nature calls to every girl to make a
-selection suitable to her nature. Yet few girls follow this
-instinct on account of the specter of economic insecurity
-which looms up before them. Instead of asking themselves:
-“Are we mateable and sympathetic?” they ask:
-“Shall we have enough food, clothing and shelter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Indeed, girls, this system increases our degradation,
-and places us in ideals lower than the animals. All over
-the civilized world today girls are being given and taken
-in marriage with but one purpose in view: to be well-supported
-by the man who takes her. She does not concern
-herself with the man's physical condition; his hereditary
-taints, the cleanliness of his mind or past life, nor
-with the future of the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There will no doubt be a great change in woman's
-attitude on this subject in the next few years. When
-women gain their economic freedom they will cease being
-playthings and utilities for men, but will assert themselves
-and choose the father of their offspring. As Bernard
-Shaw tells of her in one of his greatest plays, she
-will hunt down her ideal in order to produce the Superman.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>There seems to be a general tendency on the part
-of the woman who is demanding political freedom, to
-demand sexual freedom also. When a girl reaches the
-age nearing thirty her natural development tends toward
-sexual freedom. It seems as though nature, knowing
-the time of reproduction is drawing to a close, calls with
-all the fury of her strength to complete its development
-and procreate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is at this age where physicians claim a woman
-awakens to the sexual desire, and it is at this age that women
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>seek affection, or gratification with a “lover.” To
-her there is nothing to say; she is mature, developed and
-can judge for herself where best her happiness lies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But to the young girl at the age of say twenty, or
-even younger, immature, mentally undeveloped, there is
-something she should know, and that is that every physical
-impulse, every sensual feeling, every lustful desire
-will come to her whitewashed with the sacred word
-“Love”.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Neither the boy nor the girl knows the difference
-between the sexual impulse and love. A boy meets a girl
-he feels a great attraction for her, he feels the sexual impulse
-throbbing within him, he is full of this life-giving
-current, he feels it throughout his being; he walks lighter
-and straighter, he feels it in his voice, in his laughter;
-he grows tenderer within himself, and to women. He
-feels all this and is sure it is a love that will never die.
-If there is an attraction on the girl's part there is no difficulty
-in persuading her that this feeling is love.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But it is not love; it is the creative force or sexual
-impulse scattered through his being and the sexual act
-brings it to a focus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If motherhood comes to the girl through this relation,
-she has developed and the experience has enriched
-her life. But today the girl has an idea she has escaped
-the greatest disgrace when she has avoided motherhood.
-If the relation was based on physical attraction alone, a
-few abortions and the monotony of every day life soon
-remove this, and the man goes elsewhere in search of this
-wonderful sensation which he felt at first, but did not
-know how to keep or how to use.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The girl, however, has become a new being, sexually
-awakened and conscious of it, but ignorant of the use
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>of the forces she possesses, she plunges forth blindly, with
-social and economic forces against her, and prostitution
-beckoning at every turn. So she soon passes with the
-crowd on the road to the Easiest Way. This is the story
-of thousands of young girls living in prostitution.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Women should know that the creative instinct does
-not need to be expended entirely on the propagation of
-the race. Though the sex cells are placed in a part of
-the anatomy for the essential purpose of easily expelling
-them into the female for the purpose of reproduction,
-there are other elements in the sexual fluid which are
-the essence of blood, nerve, brain and muscle. When
-redirected into the building and strengthening of
-these, we find men or women of the greatest
-endurance and greatest magnetic power. A girl
-can waste her creative powers by brooding over
-a love affair to the extent of exhausting her
-system, with results not unlike the effects of masturbation
-and debauchery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sexual impulse is natural. It is natural in animals,
-degenerates, and in man. But in man it is mixed
-with other essentials which, together, are termed love.
-These essentials are derived from man's power of reasoning
-by which he is known as a higher species and
-through which he differs from the animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When man emerged from the jungle and stood upright
-on his hind legs, the shape of his head and his face
-changed from the long jaw and flat head of the animal to
-the flat face and high head of the man. All progress from
-that time forward was made along mental lines. According
-to universal law then in existence he should have
-been limited to a geographical area and killed by the
-extreme heat or cold or starved for one kind of food if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>it were not obtained, but against all these he fought, because
-he became endowed with such attributes as reason,
-knowledge and will-power. Instead of using his creative
-powers solely in hunting food and reproducing his
-species, he used this force in making plans for his self-preservation.
-He built rafts and boats to cross rivers
-and streams; he devised methods of clothing himself
-against extreme heat and cold and discovered various
-ways of preparing food for different climates suitable
-for his various needs. In other words he conserved his
-creative force and redirected it into its channels
-which have resulted in giving him precedence over
-all other living creatures. For man has developed
-a conscious mind which asserts itself by reasoning,
-which in turn has developed his brain power.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is said a fish as large as a man has a brain no
-larger than the kernel of an almond. In all fish and
-reptiles where there is no great brain development,
-there is also no conscious sexual control. The lower
-down in the scale of human development we go the less
-sexual control we find. It is said the aboriginal Australian,
-the lowest known species of the human family,
-just a step higher than the chimpanzee in brain development,
-has so little sexual control that police authority
-alone prevents him from obtaining sexual satisfaction
-on the streets. According to one writer, the rapist has
-just enough brain development to raise him above the
-animal, but like the animal, when in heat, knows no law
-except nature, which impels him to procreate, whatever
-the result. Every normal man and woman has the
-power to control and direct his sexual impulse. Men and
-women who have it in control and constantly use their
-brain cells thinking deeply, are never sensual.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>It is well to understand that the natural aim of the
-sexual impulse is the sexual act and the natural aim of
-the sexual act is reproduction, though it does not always
-result in this. It is possible for conception to take place
-without love, it is even possible that there is no conscious
-knowledge to procreate before or during the act, yet
-this does not disprove the fact that nature has designed
-it for the purpose of reproduction, no matter what uses
-man has put it to today. This subject of procreation
-we shall discuss next.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every girl should know that to hold in check the
-sexual impulse, to absorb this power into the system
-until there is a freely conscious sympathy, a confidence
-and respect between her and her ideal, that this will go
-toward building up the sexual impulse and will make the
-purest, strongest and most sacred passion of adult life,
-compared to which all other passions pale into insignificance.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>
- <h2 id='V' class='c005'>CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id='V-I' class='c008'>REPRODUCTION—PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>In teaching children or young persons the process of
-reproduction one of the cleanest, most natural and beautiful
-methods of doing this is to tell them the process
-which goes on in the various forms of life in the flower,
-fish, frog, bird and to lead up to the highest and most
-complex of all living creatures—man.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They watch the butterfly and bee carry a load of
-pollen from the father buttercup to fertilize the seeds
-within the mother flower. They watch Mr. and Mrs.
-Frog awaken from their long winter nap, and stirred
-by the life-giving impulse within them, start for the
-breeding pond. They watch Father Thrush win his
-mate and patiently stand guard over her during the
-tedious hatching days. They are told and see that the
-flowers depend upon outside forces to bring the pollen
-from the male to the female to fertilize the seeds before
-the seeds could grow. They are taught that the mother
-fish lay her eggs in the water first and that the father
-fish, unlike the flowers, being able to move about, carries
-the pollen (which is now a fluid) to the seeds himself.
-They are told that Father Frog, being a higher
-creature, fertilized the eggs before they reached the
-water, and Father Thrush being still higher in the scale
-fertilized the eggs before they left the mother's body.
-That the higher the species was, the greater the care
-required to preserve that species.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In this way the mind is prepared for the information
-which should follow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>The girl at puberty should be taught this process
-and something of what goes on within the womb after
-the ovum has been fertilized. She should know that all
-organic life is the result of a simple cell; that man is a
-community of cells, banded together and depending
-upon each cell to carry on its work, for the benefit of the
-whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us first, then, get an idea of a cell and what it
-is and what it does. A cell is a tiny portion of living
-matter having in its center a spot or nucleus which represents
-the point of germination; it is separated from its
-sister cells by partitions of cell membrane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A simple cell is formed by the fusion of two germ
-cells when they meet to exchange nuclear elements.
-After this fusion they are able to proceed with fission,
-which means splitting into parts, and it is the subsequent
-cellular growth of the fused germ-cell that constitutes
-reproduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are two kinds of reproductive cells, the ova
-in the female and the spermatozoa in the male.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the sexual act takes place, there is deposited
-into the vagina a secretion known as semen. According
-to Sutkowsky, each deposit or ejaculation contains 50,000,000
-of spermatozoa.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About the same time in the act there occurs in the
-female, spasmodic contractions of the muscles of the
-uterus which draws in a small amount of the sperm
-which the male has left there.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sperm cell of the male under the microscope
-shows that it contains both head and tail.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The tail enables it to move and advance with a tadpole-like
-motion toward the ovum.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As in the lower forms of life, the male cell has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>within it the instinct to chase and capture the female
-cell. Consequently, it does not depend upon the uterine
-contractions of the female to enable it to reach the ovum
-for fertilization. The vagina being a corrugated or
-wrinkled tube, hides and secretes the sperm cell for days,
-unless it is removed with water or killed by poisonous
-injections.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When, however, the sperm comes near the ovum
-it is drawn to it as to a magnet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ovum being carefully protected by nature within
-the ovaries, leaves its sister cells and travels alone.
-The sperm cell, however, having more dangerous paths
-to travel, must provide against the uncertainty of doing
-its great work by going in numbers, though it takes but
-one single cell to produce human life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A number of the male cells go to meet the ovum,
-but only one enters it. Almost at the moment the head
-enters the ovum it becomes completely absorbed by the
-ovum and all trace of it is lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This union of the two cells is called fertilization,
-fecundation, impregnation, or conception. Any of these
-terms may be used. This union usually takes place in
-the tube, but the fertilized egg does not remain there;
-it wanders along and finds its way into the uterus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now that the ovum has been fertilized, it readily
-becomes attached to the soft lining of the uterus which
-has been specially prepared to receive it. No menstruation
-occurs. The woman is now pregnant. A new being
-is created, and marvelous changes will now take place
-within the tiny cell clinging so weakly to the lining
-of the uterus. At this time the ovum is so small it can
-scarcely be seen by the naked eye, but in two weeks it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>has grown to the size of a pea; in four weeks to the
-size of a walnut, and in eight weeks to the size of a lemon.
-At this time it is three inches long and is completely
-formed, the head being much larger in proportion to the
-rest of its body. What has happened to the ovum in
-these few weeks is briefly this: All the changes in the
-evolution of the animal kingdom, that man had to pass
-through to arrive at his present shape, the human embryo
-goes through step by step within the uterus in a
-very short period. Immediately after fertilization the
-ovum begins to divide into sections or lobes, into 2, 4, 8,
-16, 32, etc. cells until they are almost countless. Each
-cell splits in the middle of the nucleus, forming two complete
-new cells and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The next stage is represented by this mass of cells
-forming themselves into a shape like a hollow ball.
-The third stage is the meeting of the two layers of cells,
-as if the ball had collapsed, and these two layers meet
-and unite as one, stretch and flatten out like a worm.
-After this stage things become more complicated; new
-organs begin to develop, line marks for the backbone
-and intestinal canal show themselves, as do the bony and
-muscular structure of the skeleton.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A slight pulsation is observed, showing the development
-of the heart. The head fold is formed by a gradual
-bending of the spinal column at the front end of the
-ovum, which we will now call the embryo. There are
-also formed at this time, processes which soon become
-arms and legs, there is a furrow on the face, pits for the
-eyes; all of which has happened in less than four weeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From this time forward development is rapid; the
-bones, which up to this time have been soft matter,
-grow harder, and all organs which were only outlined,</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>
-<img src='images/i_053.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic003'>
-<p>FIG. II.<br /><br />Foetus in the Uterus at two months' pregnancy.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>now become definitely formed. At the end of the
-fourth month it has grown to its natural shape. The
-remaining months it increases in size and gains strength.
-The uterus becomes enlarged, rises out of the pelvis
-and occupies the abdominal cavity. It takes forty
-weeks or 280 days to complete the growth of the human
-embryo, although the time may be two weeks more or
-less and yet be normal.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us see how the child has been fed all this time.
-When the ovum is fertilized and up to the eighth week
-it is fed by delicate branched threads, which form a
-covering for it. These threads are called “villi”, and dip
-into the uterine surface for nourishment from the mother
-to supply the embryo.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About the eighth week these “villi” have grown
-greatly intertwined into a mass of spongy tissue full of
-blood vessels called the placenta (afterbirth). This fastens
-itself to one side of the uterus, takes oxygen as well
-as nutriment from the mother and sends it through the
-umbilical cord to the child, the point of attachment being
-at the navel, the depression left on the belly of the
-child by the cutting of the umbilical cord at birth. In
-the same way it takes the waste product from the child
-to the mother, and she, in turn, throws them out of her
-system through the kidneys, bowels and skin. The child
-and placenta are both encased within a membraneous sac,
-which secretes and serves to hold a watery fluid in which
-the child swims.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The child is folded together with legs on the thighs
-and thighs on the belly, arms on the chest and head
-bent forward over the breast. Toward the end of the
-term it moves about slightly, often stretches a little, and
-has periods of rest when it scarcely moves, and again
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>periods of great activity. A mother first feels the child
-move in the fourth or fifth month. Often the young
-mother at this time begins to worry over her acts lest
-something she should do might deform the precious
-charge she carries. This, as you can readily understand
-from its early development, is impossible, for by the
-end of the second month the child has been formed, and
-no mental impressions of the mother can alter its shape.
-Just as the nucleus of the male sperm has within it all
-the contributions which the father of the child can give
-it, until after it is born, so does the mother give it its
-physical qualities right at the beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whatever is to be inherited from the father must
-be within the substance of the spermatozoon at the time
-the ovum is fertilized. He has no further pre-natal influence
-over it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is interesting to observe that the children of so-called
-great men are seldom above the average in intelligence,
-where, on the other hand, almost all men of
-great minds have had intelligent mothers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>How great or how little influence a mother has over
-her child through her thoughts has not been proven, nor
-has the subject of determining or influencing sex of the
-unborn child been settled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the end of nine months the child's development
-is complete and it is ready for its journey to the outside
-world. The process of this journey is called “labor”—a
-word which will describe the mother's share in it.
-When this occurs before the embryo is able to live
-outside the uterus it is known as abortion.</p>
-
-<h3 id='V-II' class='c008'>REPRODUCTION—PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the first part of this essay I said that if the process
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>of labor occurs before the seventh month (which is the
-earliest time the foetus can live for any length of time outside
-the womb) it is known as abortion or miscarriage.
-When labor occurs later than this or within two weeks
-before term, it is known as premature labor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The average girl in using the word abortion, has in
-mind a criminal act, whereby the process of pregnancy is
-purposely interrupted. She prefers the word miscarriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is also a belief among girls that a miscarriage
-occurring in the early stages of pregnancy can be brought
-about without bad results or any serious consequences
-to her health.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is a mistake to regard an abortion as of slight importance,
-for any interruption in the process of pregnancy
-is always more dangerous than the natural labor at full
-term. One writer claims there are more women ill in
-consequence of abortion than from full term childbirth, on
-account of which there are so many women who are
-semi-invalids.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There can be no doubt that the often excessive loss
-of blood leaves the woman in a weak and rundown condition,
-thereby lessening her powers of resistance to other
-diseases.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The shock to the woman's system is greater than that
-produced by natural labor, and consequently leaves her
-in a hysterical and often critically nervous state for some
-time after.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The causes of abortion are many. Among them are
-overexertion, overexcitement, shock, fright, fall, great
-anger, dancing, fatigue, lifting heavy weights, purgative
-medicines and excessive sexual intercourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The dangers resulting from abortion are blood
-poison, hemorrhage—even lockjaw has been known to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>the result of abortion, also the danger that one miscarriage
-is likely to follow another, and disables a woman
-to carry a child to the full term.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If there is the same care and treatment given the
-woman who aborts as the woman in childbirth, she will
-naturally be less likely to suffer serious results than if no
-medical attention were given her.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most common disturbances of pregnancy
-is nausea, more commonly called “morning sickness,”
-because it is felt in the morning when the woman first
-assumes the erect position. As a rule, this lasts only
-during the early months.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About the latter part of the fourth month, or often
-not before the fifth month, movements of the foetus are
-felt. These movements are called “life”, and women are
-glad of this signal that all is progressing naturally. One
-writer said a woman had described the first feeling of
-life as “the trembling movements of a bird within the
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are often many nervous manifestations accompanying
-the pregnant woman, such as headache,
-neuralgia, toothache and as a usual thing, constipation is
-always present, and should receive attention. The
-teeth also should receive attention at this time for they
-decay easily on account of the secretions in the mouth
-which are increased during pregnancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The breasts enlarge in the early months of pregnancy,
-and there is a fullness and tingling felt often in the
-fifth week. The nipples become erect and the skin
-around the nipple becomes dark brown. These are only
-a few of the disturbances of pregnancy, but enough to
-show that other organs beside the uterus are tested in
-strength and how important it is to have a good healthy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>body. In fact, every tissue and fiber in the woman's
-body feels the impetus of pregnancy, and all kinds of physical
-changes occur. Like in June, “Every clod feels a
-stir of might, an instinct within it that reaches and
-towers.”—Howell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the common questions asked by young women
-in early married life is how to tell if they are
-pregnant.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is not always easy, but there are a few points
-on which a diagnosis is based, namely: in a healthy woman
-(during the reproductive age) the function of menstruation
-stops, together with the morning sickness, and
-the enlargement of the breasts with dark color around the
-nipples. These are early indications that pregnancy
-exists. I am not going to take the time nor space to
-explain that all three of the above named can exist in nervous
-women, even when pregnancy does not exist. It is,
-as I said before, with the average healthy girl I am dealing,
-not with the exception. The only certain signs of
-pregnancy are the hearing of the heart-beats of the child
-and its movements.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another question which troubles a young woman is
-how to count the time when she will be confined. This,
-too, is difficult to say, for an error of two weeks earlier or
-later is possible, because the time of conception is seldom
-definitely known. Experience has given a method of
-arriving at an approximate date which is used and which
-answers the purpose fairly well, though it is by no means
-perfect. Add seven days to the first day of the last
-menstruation and count nine months forward. For example:
-Mrs. A. menstruated last, beginning October 5
-add seven days; this brings the date to October 12; add
-nine months, which brings the date of confinement to July
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>12. It is well to have everything prepared two weeks
-before this date so that the woman can be as much as
-possible in the open air during the remaining waiting
-days.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c000'>The dress of the pregnant woman should receive
-serious attention. In the first place, it should be simple
-and warm, without bands restricting the circulation of
-any part of the body, like skirt bands, round garters,
-corsets and tight shoes. The secret of a comfortable
-outfit for the expectant mother is to have all clothing
-hang from the shoulders. Combination underwear can
-be bought as reasonably as the separate drawers and
-shirt. There should be no pressure on the womb from
-above, rather let all support come from below. The
-corset gets in its harmful work by pressing down the
-uterus into the pelvis, thus displacing the abdominal
-organs and crowding them together in such a way as to
-cause injury to the uterus as well as to the child itself.
-The muscles of the uterus and abdomen are weakened and
-from this results that horror of all women: the “high
-stomach.” Some women, especially those having borne
-children, prefer to wear in the latter days of pregnancy
-an abdominal supporter. If it is well fitted to the body
-it helps to assist the abdominal muscles in carrying the
-weight and affords great relief. If women would devote
-to making themselves comfortable during pregnancy as
-much time as they give on the baby's outfit, they would
-profit by it. Instead of wearing any old worn-out dress,
-ill-fitting and out of style, make one “maternity” dress
-to fit the figure. This can, of course, be let out in size
-as the figure grows. It can be made of some pretty, inexpensive
-material and gives such comfort and ease to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>the mind as well as to the body that the woman who has
-once had one will never again do without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The food also should be simple. In fact, there are
-few restrictions to be placed on food unless so ordered
-by the physician. One common mistake of women is
-that they believe they are eating for two persons, and
-consequently, must gorge themselves, which, of course,
-results in indigestion. Physicians advise a small amount
-of meat once a day. Plenty of water, milk and cereals,
-fruit, vegetables and especially fruit, which loosens the
-bowels. Rich pastry or starches fried in fat should not be
-eaten, because they are hard to digest. There is no
-reason why the diet should be at all strict unless a
-woman is under the special care of a physician. She
-should take a moderate amount of exercise every day,
-but should not get tired. Walking in the open air in the
-sunlight is best. Avoid dancing, swimming and all violent
-exercise; sewing on the sewing machine should be
-restricted. Fainting in the early months is often caused
-from bad air in overcrowded and overheated rooms, also
-from an empty stomach when the woman is too busy to
-notice nature's call for nourishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is now generally agreed that alcohol taken by
-the mother during pregnancy, has very bad effects on the
-offspring.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is little more to be said here except that a pregnant
-woman should be mentally and physically active,
-though not fatigued. And of all things she should keep
-out of the hearing of old superstitions, which have a sign
-for every act and keep a young woman constantly worried.
-She should not be allowed to worry over her approaching
-labor, and as far as possible be kept cheerful
-and happy. Another question which concerns every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>expectant mother, is, if there is any danger in sexual
-intercourse during pregnancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the end of the period the child and the placenta
-are expelled from the uterus. The uterus gradually returns
-to its former size. It requires about six weeks
-for this to occur and it is very important that there
-should be no heavy lifting and overwork at this time.
-As a rule after childbirth, the woman's form becomes
-matured and more developed. The facial expression
-takes on a kinder, a maternal look, the whole nervous
-system is awakened to sympathy, pain or grief bringing
-tears to the eyes quicker than ever before. Especially
-is this true for the first few years following.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The important thing is that the care of the pregnant
-woman should be begun in girlhood. If we are going
-to be and have mothers, then we should give attention
-to the development of the organs which make us
-mothers.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>
- <h2 id='VI' class='c005'>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-</div>
-<h3 id='VI-I' class='c008'>SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>When the boy arrives at the age of puberty, he is in
-greater danger than a girl of being not only led astray
-by companions, but being actually sent into unclean
-living by those nearest and most interested in his welfare—HIS
-PARENTS.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The reason of this is that there has been and still
-is a false idea clinging to many parents that as soon as
-the boy has seminal emissions, it is a signal that he must
-have sexual relations or suffer in health.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That the seminal emissions are not harmful and that
-they grow less frequent as the boy grows older is a fact
-of which few mothers seem to be aware.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We cannot blame the mothers of the past for not
-informing their sons of this physical condition, for few
-of them knew it themselves. Mothers have been as ignorant
-as the boys of their sex functions as well as
-other functions of the body.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>They accepted sickness, disease, and even death
-without a question, placing their faith and confidence
-entirely in the hands of the medical profession, who,
-like the rabbis and high priests, made a church of their
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fortunately this condition of affairs is changing,
-and the knowledge of the human body, which for ages
-has been most carefully locked within the medical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>libraries, is fast taking up its abode in the homes of the
-people—where it belongs.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is said that in Japan or China, the duty of a physician
-is to keep his patients in good health, receiving
-payment only when they are well.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Certainly this sounds like civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Only a few weeks ago I had occasion to talk to a
-woman about her oldest son, whom I considered sick
-from overwork and lack of nourishment. She informed
-me, however, that this was not so, and whispered confidently
-that he was 16 years old and “in that age when
-he needs a woman.” She further remarked that she and
-“the papa” had talked it over with the result that the
-father had told the boy, when he had “the desire for a
-woman,” that he, the father, “would give him money
-enough to get one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Think of that boy's attitude toward women, and
-the danger to become affected with venereal diseases
-that he was likely to contract. Yet both parents had
-the sincerest wish to do their best for that boy; they
-gave the best advice they knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One of the most common errors I have found
-among people, even those educated in other lines of
-thought, is that the sexual organs will become useless
-unless they are used in early manhood. This is considered
-untrue by the best authorities on the subject, for it
-is known that the essential organs of reproduction are
-glands, not unlike the tear glands of the eyes or the
-milk glands of the breasts. The tear glands do not
-atrophy even if one does not cry for years, nor the
-milk glands during the entire period of reproduction.
-The same can be said of the sexual glands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Another idea which is fast being uprooted is that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>sexual act is an appetite, not unlike that of hunger and
-thirst, which must be fed by the boy sowing his “wild
-oats” first before settling down to marriage. It is now
-a recognized fact that it is no more necessary for a boy
-to “sow wild oats” than it is for a girl, and women are
-today demanding of men the same cleanliness of body
-and mind which men have heretofore considered necessary
-only in women.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is now the unreserved opinion of the foremost
-medical men of the day that a man does not suffer in
-health from living a continent life, nor is he a “mollycoddle”
-from so doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hutchinson says: “The belief that the exercise of
-the sex functions is necessary to the health of the male
-at any age is a pure delusion, while before full maturity
-it is highly injurious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ruggles says: “Sexual abstinence is compatible with
-perfect health and tends to increase virility (which means
-manhood) through the reabsorption of the semen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ancient Teutons were aware of this, for it is
-said that it was considered a most shameful thing for
-their young men to have sexual relations with a woman
-before their twenty-sixth year. From observation and experience
-they were convinced that men were not sexually
-mature much before this age, and no one will dispute
-they were strong and manly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Statistics show that 65 per cent. of men infected
-with venereal diseases (which means diseases due
-to sexual intercourse) are contracted between the ages
-of 15 and 21 years; and 25 per cent. are contracted in
-the 21st and 23rd years.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Writers claim that from statistics they have found
-men are not sexually mature before the twenty-fifth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>year and women not before the twentieth year. Yet
-we find them both reeking with sexual diseases before
-this age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>According to Sanger's “History of Prostitution,” it
-is claimed that three-eighths of the prostitutes enter
-the life before the twentieth year in New York City. It
-is safe to say this is a conservative estimate, for the more
-recent investigations in Chicago and other cities show a
-very much higher percentage. However, this, together
-with the statistics of venereal diseases mentioned above,
-show that it is before the boy and girl are sexually mature
-that there is the greatest difficulty in directing the
-impulses and controlling the passions.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Chassaignac says that the more healthy and normal
-an individual is, the better can he not only control his
-passions, but the less likely is he to be disturbed by continence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just one more word on the subject of continence,
-and that is that it is not at all unusual to find men determined
-to remain continent until they find their ideal
-woman. Nor for athletes in training engaged in contests,
-nor for sailors on long sea voyages, and many
-others for long periods of time is continence impossible;
-in fact, they are better for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This knowledge was not lost sight of in ancient times.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Reference is made to it in the Bible, in the sending
-of women prostitutes into the camps of the enemy the
-night before an expected battle, in order to exhaust or
-decrease the vitality of the soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When one finds an individual who realizes the force
-of the sexual impulses and knows how to conserve them,
-you usually find a person who does not drain or exhaust
-these forces, but uses them in creative work.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>Every girl should look upon the man who indulges
-freely in the sexual relations <strong>without Social responsibility</strong>,
-as a prostitute far more degraded than the unfortunate
-girl who is compelled to sell her body to sustain
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every girl should know something about the physical
-makeup of a boy as well as of her own, for upon the
-well-being of both does the future race depend. To be
-a real mother a woman must understand a boy's emotions
-and development, if she would sympathize with him.
-And when she does understand, she will not send him
-to buy a woman for physical satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is this ignorance of parents, together with the
-silence of the medical profession, which is largely responsible
-for the terrible spread of venereal diseases which
-exist today.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When a few years ago Dr. Morrow stated that there
-is more venereal diseases among innocent, virtuous wives,
-than among prostitutes, this statement should have resounded
-throughout the walls of every home in the land,
-instead of which it is kept intact within the covers of
-large volumes, where only those wearing cap and gown
-have access to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is claimed that out of 1,000 married men in New
-York 800 have gonorrhoea, and 90 per cent. of these
-have not been cured and can infect their wives. The
-result is that at least three out of every five married
-women in New York have gonorrhoea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This seems astounding and exaggerated, but the following
-quotation is taken from an authority and is considered
-quite conservative: “Over 90 per cent. of our
-young men stray from the path of virtue before marriage;
-60 per cent. contract venereal diseases which are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>difficult to cure; more wives than prostitutes have venereal
-diseases; one-eighth of all diseases in New York
-hospitals are venereal; 20,000 infected persons walk the
-streets daily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It seems to me that the above facts are sufficient
-to warrant every girl and boy knowing something about
-these diseases.</p>
-
-<h3 id='VI-II' class='c008'>SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>The two venereal diseases which I will tell you something
-of here are those most commonly known to all—gonorrhoea
-and syphilis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gonorrhoea is an inflammation of the urethra (water
-passage) characterized by redness, swelling, smarting
-pain on the passing of water, and accompanied by thick
-purulent (poisonous) discharge, at first creamy in color,
-and later a greenish yellow. It is considered by the
-highest authorities as solely a sexual disease in adults,
-depending almost exclusively upon sexual intercourse
-as its mode of origin and infection. In children, however,
-it is not the rule, especially in infants and little
-girls, who can be infected by the hands of the mother
-or nurse being soiled with the discharge, also where the
-fresh discharge is on towels, toilets, etc. It starts an
-inflammation of the outer delicate parts but seldom
-enters the urethra.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In former days gonorrhoea was considered an ordinary
-catarrhal inflammation, “no worse than a bad
-cold,” the old saying went. It was thought to originate
-in women with the discharge at the end of the menstrual
-period, or leucorrhoea; in fact any secretions from the
-uterus, of an irritating character, were thought to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>sources of gonorrhoea. However, with the discovery of
-the microbe “gonococcus”, in 1879, by Dr. Neisser, it
-is now an established fact that the disease comes from
-a source where there is either latent or chronic gonorrhoea,
-which, of course, means that the gonococcus is
-present. It is considered a conservative estimate that
-at least 50 per cent. of the adult population in this country
-have suffered from gonococcal infection. More men
-than women have been and are infected.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first symptoms of the disease appear from three
-to seven days after infection, and under proper treatment
-the discharge may disappear in six or eight weeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the man or woman places himself under the care
-of a specialist within forty-eight hours after infection,
-the disease is often of much shorter duration. When
-allowed to become chronic, it is called gleet. Too much
-emphasis cannot be put upon the danger of placing any
-one with this disease into the hands of the doctors who
-advertise so conspicuously, claiming rapid and complete
-cures for all sexual diseases. Experience has found that
-thousands of boys and young men, attracted by such alluring
-promises as only the quack can put forth, have
-been under such treatment, only to find later that the
-disease was allowed to remain in the tissues, the discharge
-only having been dried up. The germs were
-allowed to continue their work on up into the bladder,
-kidneys, joints, heart and even to the brain. The germs
-can live for years in the body hidden away in the gland
-ducts, the mucous membrane of the organ first attacked
-being in a normal state, yet when a condition arises when
-the vitality of the tissues in which the germs are lodged
-is lowered, or which gives the germs themselves more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>nourishment or stimulus, such as alcohol or excessive
-intercourse, they almost always become active again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In women the small part of the womb (cervix), as
-well as the urethra, are favorite places of attack. When
-the disease attacks the cervix a woman may not be conscious
-of it, and so, unless prominent symptoms attend
-it, she may infect many persons in the meantime. In
-man, on the other hand, the disease cannot be present
-without his knowing there is something wrong, and it
-should be impressed upon him that it is a moral obligation
-on his part not to have sexual relations until he
-has been examined and pronounced cured by a specialist
-in genito-urinary diseases.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Your general practitioner will always recommend to
-you a specialist if you ask him to. When the disease
-attacks the uterus and ovaries it very often blocks the
-fallopian tubes and prevents the impregnation of the
-ovum. It is said that over one-third of the childless
-marriages are due to gonorrhoea in women, innocently
-contracted from their husbands. Both men and women
-can become sterile from this disease. The seminal tubes
-in the man become blocked, thus disabling him from impregnating
-the ovum.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Again, when the disease attacks the organs of generation,
-unless speedily attended to, the organs get into
-a chronic state of inflammation. The disease is, therefore,
-more difficult to reach, the chances of cure more
-difficult, and it usually means an operation for the woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The great mass of ailing women who trace their
-misery back to never seeing a well day since marriage,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>can be classed among those suffering with this disease,
-as can also that army of women whose illness is classed
-among “female disorders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A curious point to know is that a man may have
-a hidden or latent gonorrhoea, of which he is not aware,
-for it gives him no trouble, and may infect a clean,
-healthy woman during sexual relations, and she in turn,
-can infect him with the same disease, acting like a fresh
-infection, giving rise to pain and discomfort. The
-great majority of infections in women are contracted
-from men who believe themselves cured, being under
-the false impression that they are cured because the discharge
-has ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At a lecture given by a well-known physician in this
-city last winter, the physician advised every girl whose
-sweetheart, lover or expected husband had a history of
-inflammatory rheumatism of the joints, back of him,
-that as she values her life and future health, not to marry
-that man without a thorough examination by a specialist
-in these diseases. He declared: <strong>No young man should
-have inflammatory rheumatism</strong>. This statement is considered
-somewhat exaggerated by some making more recent
-investigations, yet all seem to agree that a very
-large majority of cases of inflammatory rheumatism of
-the joints have the gonococcus present.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the woman is not made sterile by the disease and
-is able to carry the child to full term labor, then there
-is another danger of infecting the child's eyes during the
-process of labor, when the secretions lodge themselves
-into the delicate membrane of the eyes. Then, unless
-quick action is applied, the sight of both eyes can be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>lost. Over 80 per cent. of blindness in babies is due to
-this germ. It can be carried into the eyes of both children
-and adults by any means which can carry the discharge
-to the eyes. Upon the slightest suspicion that
-this has been done, medical aid should be summoned at
-once.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is one fortunate thing to know, that the germ
-cannot live for a great length of time outside its natural
-or proper environment, though it can for years be hidden
-in the body. It dries up very quickly, and special
-solutions of both bichloride and permanganate of potash
-will kill the germs with which the solution comes in
-contact. There is but one course to follow, that upon
-any of the symptoms mentioned above, go at once to a
-reliable physician and follow his instructions closely.
-And remember that the causes which retard recovery
-are alcoholic drinks, lack of rest, spicy food and <strong>sexual
-excitement</strong>. It is said there is no positive proof against
-this disease, except continency until marriage and then
-monogamy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A story is told of a young Irish physician, who, being
-asked how he treated gonorrhoea, replied most tersely,
-“with contimpt.” That this was for a time a general
-feeling is agreed, but with the knowledge that so
-many persons, especially women, contract the disease,
-under the moral, as well as legal, conditions of present
-society, the feeling has changed. A woman is infected
-by her husband after the marriage is sanctioned by the
-state and blessed by the church, neither taking the interest
-in the woman's future to guarantee to her a clean
-individual as a husband. Prostitution has been upheld
-and women segregated for man's sexual use, the government
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>going to the extent of authorizing examinations
-of the women for venereal diseases to insure <strong>man's</strong> safety
-from these diseases. Yet there has been no such protection
-given either the woman prostitute or the wife
-that the man's body is free from them. On the other
-hand, every means to keep a married woman in ignorance
-of the source of her infection is made by the church,
-state and society in general. Every law to protect the
-man's crime is made for his use, while women remain
-unprotected victims of his guilt. And this, they say, is
-“to protect the family and the home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. James S. Wood tells a story of his experience
-With a young woman of 25, married five years, when
-she came to him. The husband admitted having had
-gonorrhoea previous to marriage. The doctor found her
-flowing excessively, the cervix badly torn, the uterus
-sharply bent back and fixed, ovaries bound down and
-adherent, the tubes thickened; a leuchorreal discharge
-was present which contained gonococci, and other
-symptoms which made her sick and miserable. The
-doctor operated upon her, scraping her womb, sewing
-the torn cervix, opening the abdomen to remove the
-thickened appendix and inflamed ovaries and tubes. She
-convalesced beautifully, and had no bad or unusual
-symptoms for six months, at which time she returned
-with a renewed infection. Careful questioning extracted
-from the husband the confession that he had been
-“out with the boys,” and had had a recurrence of gonorrhoea.
-Most of the good which came from the operation
-was spoiled by this second infection.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is only one simple example of what is meant
-by preserving the home and family at the terrible cost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>of women's lives. Women should protest against the
-so-called medical secret which decrees that they be kept
-in ignorance where their health, as well as life, is directly
-concerned. That there are men in the medical profession
-in this country, as well as in Europe, who have
-openly protested against respecting the secret where another
-life is involved, seems a cheerful signal of a general
-social awakening in this field.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the Medical Record, April 20, 1912, Maude Glasgow
-says: “After suffering for years a woman becomes
-a feeble, worn-out, nervous woman; her life is a burden
-The operating table is her only hope, and she leaves it
-deformed, mutilated and sexless.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If women voluntarily exposed themselves to diseases
-which would sap the husband's vitality, making
-him a dependent invalid, or expose him to the shock of
-a mutilating operation, or death—would men continue
-to suffer? Would they allow the medical secret to
-protect women in this alleged “freedom”? Every girl
-knows he would neither protect her nor continue to
-suffer. It is women only who have allowed the double
-standard of morals to stand so long, giving men the
-purest and best of their womanhood, but not demanding
-the same from them. As soon as women realize the danger
-to themselves and their children which they are likely
-to incur from men who have lived promiscuously, they
-will revolt against such standards.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gonorrhoea differs from syphilis, and though it is
-not a disease which can be transmitted from the parent
-to children, as syphilis can, yet it is a subtle, wrecking
-disease and can do almost as much harm to the individual.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>WHAT EVERY GIRL SHOULD KNOW</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_075.jpg' alt='NOTHING!' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c014'>
- <div>BY ORDER OF THE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div>POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c014'>
- <div>FEB. 9, 1913.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>[From New York Call, after temporary suppression of article, “What Every
-Girl Should Know,” by the postal authorities.]</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>[The particular part of the article objected to by the postal authorities].</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 id='VI-III' class='c008'>SOME CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORANCE AND SILENCE.—PART III.</h3>
-
-<p class='c009'>Prominent medical authorities claim that syphilis
-was not known in Europe before the discovery of
-America. Others equally as prominent hold that it has
-existed for many centuries in Europe, but was confused
-with other diseases such as leprosy. It makes little
-difference to the girl or boy today just how long or
-where it came from; the point we do know is that it is
-here in our homes and workshops, and we should know
-what it is like and how to avoid it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A story is told of a French nobleman whose son was
-about to leave his home to live in a big city. Said the
-father to the son: “If you are not afraid of God, fear
-at least syphilis.” This advice might be applied today,
-for if boys or girls knew, or could see the appalling results
-of syphilis, they would surely fear it, for it is
-humanity's most deadly foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Syphilis is an infectious disease, caused by a special
-microbe which is acquired by contagion or heredity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is chronic in course, varied and intermittent in
-character, and the length of time it remains in the body
-is indefinite.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is so widespread that no country in the world is
-free from it, neither is any organ of the body exempt
-from its ravages.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let us take a young man indulging in promiscuous
-sexual intercourse, who cohabits with a syphilitic woman.
-He notices nothing wrong for about five weeks,
-when he becomes aware of a pimple on the sexual organs,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>to which perhaps he pays little attention. This
-grows and becomes hard at the base and is ulcerated
-on the top.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>About ten days after the appearance of the ulcer (or
-chancre) the boy notices that the glands of the groins
-begin to swell, but as there is little or no pain attached
-he still pays no attention to all this.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After three, or sometimes four weeks the ulcerated
-opening heals, but leaves the hard lump under the skin.
-In two or even three months after the time of infection
-the first general symptoms appear. His bones ache, he
-is mentally depressed, slightly feverish at night, and a
-rash appears upon his body and sore spots in the mouth;
-and throat. These symptoms usually decide him to
-consult a doctor, who finds him in the second stage of
-syphilis. This condition lasts usually about two and
-one-half years, the rash often lasting a short period, and
-leaving, but to return again.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The blood within and the ulcers on the body contain
-the poisons of the disease, and for three or four years
-the poison <strong>can be transmitted</strong> by contagion, or by heredity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The third stage is the most destructive, especially
-to the nervous system, for this disease is recognized as
-the greatest factor in organic disturbances of the nervous
-system.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It not rarely is the cause of cerebral and spinal meningitis,
-paralysis of the legs, paralysis of one side of the
-body, and that most helpless and terrible disease, softening
-of the brain and many other diseases which affect the
-spinal cord, which are seldom ever cured. The majority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>of those diseased are left with physical or mental
-infirmities, rendering them public charges.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There have been cases where the third stage did not
-develop, and as this stage is not distinctly separated
-from the second stage by a definite line, it may not take
-place for months, or even years after the first sore appeared.
-Again, this stage has been averted by careful
-treatment in the early stages, and it is here the hope
-of all afflicted lies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every case of syphilis begins with the characteristic
-pimple or chancre, except inherited syphilis. The
-chancre always appears where the infection enters, and
-the glands swell in the same vicinity. For instance, if
-in using a pipe of a syphilitic, whose mouth contains
-the sore patches, the victim finds the chancre will appear
-on his lips, mouth or throat, and the glands of the neck
-will swell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is said that almost 10 per cent. of the infections
-are contracted innocently, especially in European countries,
-where kissing and other forms of endearment are
-much indulged in. In this country it is not so common,
-but more women than men contract it innocently and in
-this manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In women, too, the first symptoms are not so characteristic
-as in men. She may pay no attention to the
-chancre for a month, even if she does feel aches in the
-bones, she thinks she is run down, or thinks she has
-malaria; even the rash does not alarm her, and often
-only repeated miscarriages will be the only symptoms
-she can remember of the early stages. She may continue
-for years before the disease reaches the third
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>stage. This is not always so, for in every individual
-the disease differs in character and duration.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gonorrhoea and syphilis differ in many ways. For
-instance, the former shows itself in a week or ten days
-after infection, where syphilis shows no signs for five or
-six weeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gonorrhoea is considered a purely sexual disease,
-because infection takes place only in sexual relations
-(except where the germ gets into the eyes), while
-syphilis can be contracted in many other ways, through
-forks, spoons, glasses or cups, towels, sponges, bathtubs,
-toilets, pipes, dental and barbers' instruments, and
-kissing.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Gonorrhoea is considered a social danger because of
-its effect upon the sexual organs, often rendering them
-sterile. Syphilis is also a social danger, but it has direct
-effect upon the offspring, and upon future generations
-because its effects are visited upon the child.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sixty to eighty per cent. of the syphilitic offspring
-die at birth or in early infancy. Someone has well said,
-“The greatest criminal is he who poisons the germ cells.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In hereditary syphilis there is more difficulty in gathering
-facts, for the laws which control it are not so well
-understood, as yet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is no sore or chancre in hereditary syphilis,
-but other symptoms appear which every physician recognizes
-and of course attends to at birth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Under proper treatment the danger of the father
-transmitting the disease to the child should cease in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>from two to five years, while the danger of the mother
-transmitting it to her offspring does not end at any definite
-time, for there have been mothers known to give
-birth to syphilitic offspring years after all disappearance
-of their own symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The strongest features of the disease transmitted to
-the offspring are the deformities which it imparts to
-the bones of the head as well as of the body.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is said on good authority that if a patient, at the
-end of five years, has been two years without symptoms
-or treatment, he may be guaranteed for marriage.
-Though he can never be wholly guaranteed from relapses
-in his own person. These, however, are considered
-noninfectious.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cure of the disease depends upon the individual's
-environment, constitution and his habits, chiefly as
-regards alcohol and tobacco.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Alcohol is considered the commonest and most active
-enemy of the patient's recovery. Men addicted to the
-use of alcohol are the most difficult to cure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There seems to be no doubt that if the disease receives
-the proper treatment there is every hope for the
-individual to live a normal life. Fouriner, a French authority,
-says:</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>“Personally I could cite several hundred observations
-concerning syphilitic subjects who, after undergoing
-thorough treatment, have married and became
-fathers of healthy, good-looking children.” The question,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>then, to receive some attention is what means are
-available for the treatment of both syphilis and gonorrhoea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Dr. Prince A. Morrow says: “Prompt curative
-treatment is not only in the interests of the patients
-themselves, but especially in the interests of the others
-they might infect. But everywhere we are confronted
-with this situation: There are no special hospitals for
-this class of diseases; few general hospitals receive them
-in the early, curable stage; still fewer have special
-venereal wards; even the dispensary services are not
-organized with special adaption to the needs of venereal
-cases; few have night classes, so that working people
-who go to the dispensary must lose half a day, which
-often means the sacrifice of their employment. As a
-consequence they resort to quacks or the use of nostrums
-(secret or quack medicines). They are not cured, but
-go on spreading the seeds of contagion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is the condition as far as hospitals are concerned
-in the matter of venereal diseases. And in relation
-to private practice the average person's position is
-still more deplorable. Take, for example, the story of
-a girl who came under my care some years ago, after
-having suffered three years with the disease. She had
-been refused attendance in public hospitals in three different
-cities while she was working her way to New
-York. At different times she consulted physicians, only
-to learn that to be cured she must be treated regularly,
-and to be so treated would require money. Different
-estimates were quoted from $150 to $500 for treatment.
-As the amount of money left over after she had paid her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>expenses each week was never over $2, the possibility
-of a cure looked hopeless. She concluded to purchase
-patent medicines whenever she could, but her condition
-became worse, until she was picked up by a charitable
-organization, who cared for her until she died. When
-I saw her all her hair, eyebrows and eyelashes
-were gone, her nose and upper lip were almost
-entirely eaten away, most of her teeth were
-gone—in fact, to try to describe her condition
-would be almost impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This is only one case, but there are thousands of
-syphilitics who are wandering around unable to pay
-the prices which the physician asks to treat this disease.
-The same can be said of gonorrhoea, and the same physician
-who clamors against the prices of the so-called
-quack, forgets that the price he asks of the public is exorbitant
-in the extreme. So the only course for the individual
-to take, if he cannot pay the price, is to remain
-a menace to society. The physician assumes no responsibility
-toward society to find out if the patient is under
-treatment elsewhere; the patient can do as he pleases
-with his disease when he closes the doctor's door. This,
-then is the situation as regards society's attitude toward
-the venereal subject: Society seems to take a different
-attitude towards other contagious and infectious diseases,
-such as measles, chicken pox, diphtheria, etc. In
-these diseases, a physician has some responsibility toward
-society; he must report each case as it comes to
-his attention, to the Board of Health, who in turn assume
-some responsibility by isolating the disease.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If this is necessary in these comparatively simple
-diseases, how much more important should it be to register
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>and isolate patients suffering from the venereal
-diseases.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>
- <h2 id='VII' class='c005'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> <span class='large'>MENOPAUSE OR CHANGE OF LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>In the previous chapter on Puberty, it was stated
-that the menstrual function began in the average girl at
-fifteen years of age and continued until the forty-fifth
-or fiftieth year.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At this later age it ceases, together with her sexual
-or child-bearing capabilities and is known as the Menopause
-or Change of Life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This constitutes a period from the beginning of irregularities
-in the appearance of the menstrual flow,
-until it has actually ceased, which period usually lasts
-two and one-half to three years.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thousands of women know nothing of the period
-which, like puberty, they must pass through, but are entirely
-ignorant of the process.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is usual for them to look toward this age with
-dread and foreboding; where a little knowledge of the
-nature of the process would enable them to enter upon
-this period physically prepared, which would insure
-their safe arrival through this dreaded and much-feared
-period.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The greatest change occurring in the woman at this
-time is that which goes on in the ovaries. They cease
-to do their work and ovulation stops.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The first indication that the woman has, that this is
-likely to occur, is by the ceasing of the menses or
-monthlies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Ovulation, however, very often continues for several
-months, even a year after menstruation has entirely
-ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The glandular tissues of the uterus, tubes and
-ovaries degenerate, which is said to account for the
-Menopause, and that of the ovaries occurs later than
-the tubes and uterus, which explains the continuance of
-ovulation after the menses have stopped.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a few women the Menopause is accompanied by
-very little or almost no discomfort at all, just a sudden
-stopping of the monthlies announces to them that this
-period has come.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The majority, however, do not pass through this
-time so easily, but suffer for the entire period with one
-affliction or another.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Among those symptoms most common are flushings
-or flashes, which are mostly confined to head, face and
-neck, are increased by heat and motion and followed by
-profuse sweating, giddiness, backache, headache, sleeplessness,
-disturbances of digestion like diarrhoea or constipation,
-blueness, depression of spirits, shortness of
-breath, palpitation and nervous irritability.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the most alarming symptom of the Menopause
-is hemorrhage. This is too often considered lightly and
-classed with the minor symptoms of this period.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whenever there is excessive bleeding, there is surely
-a cause and calls for special and immediate attention.
-It may be caused by an inflamed condition of the lining
-of the uterus (womb), ulceration, general diseases of the
-heart, lungs and kidneys can also be the cause of excessive
-bleeding at this period. Some authorities claim
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>that it also has its cause in early or profuse menstruation,
-too frequent and difficult labors, abortions and alcoholic
-drinking, but the most common cause of hemmorhage at
-this time is cancer. It is a fact that cancer in women,
-from the age of 40 to 50 is more common that at any
-other age.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps it is not generally known that cancer is now
-known to begin as a local disease, and if taken in time
-it can be removed so completely that a radical cure follows.
-No wonder then, that hemmorhage should be an
-alarming symptom, for if care is not taken and the
-dreaded disease, cancer, is allowed to take root, the results
-are too generally known to dwell upon. At the first signs
-of hemorrhages or excessive flow, a woman should place
-herself under the care of a gynecologist (specialist in the
-diseases of woman), just as a pregnant woman is under
-the care of a physician until she is entirely free from the
-dangers of childbirth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Women have heretofore looked to this period with
-dread, on account of the consequences which neglect has
-caused. It need not be dreaded for assuring word comes
-from prominent physicians who have made this special
-period a study, that the natural symptoms of the Menopause
-do not portend loss of life, reason or health. It is
-a period as natural to the woman as menstruation and
-with little care, these symptoms or ailments will cease
-in a few years, leaving the woman to enjoy years of good
-health.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the period is delayed beyond the fiftieth year,
-it calls for the same attention as excessive flow. These
-are two important signs of disease, and should receive
-immediate care. The period is, however, often brought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>about at an earlier age than is normal, by mental or physical
-shock, illness, operations, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The age at which it occurs often differs with climate,
-race and according to Kisch, social relations, who claims,
-that the sexual function is “generally abolished earlier in
-the laboring classes, who are compelled to work hard and
-have many cares,” and further states that a vigorous
-vitality causes prolongation of the menstrual process.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the average woman it does not cease at once, but
-has two or three periods of cessation, returns again for
-an irregular period and continues in this irregularity for
-the entire time of two and one-half to three years. It
-is important to know that the changes which are going
-on in the organs of the woman are exactly opposite from
-those which occur at puberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At puberty the organs are increasing with life, vigor,
-and vitality, while at the Menopause they are receding
-or going backward.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The generative organs gradually but surely shrink
-or atrophy after menstruation stops. The uterus becomes
-small. The vagina, whose walls were formerly
-corrugated or wrinkled, now become smooth. The orifice
-or opening of the vagina, becomes shrunken, unless
-it has been previously enlarged by child-bearing. The
-whole process tends to show that the child-bearing period
-is at an end, which in fact has caused much mental anxiety
-and disturbance among women to the extent of melancholy
-and insanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It seems a very small things to give to every woman,
-going through this disagreeable period of life—a complete
-change of climate and rest, until the change has become
-established. Certainly she has served society to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>the best of her knowledge, often “entering into the valley
-of the shadow of death”; many times fearlessly, to give
-the best of herself to the race. It is a small thing to give
-in return.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Tilt believes that unmarried women suffer less at this
-period than married women, and says: “As at puberty,
-from the ignorance in which it is still thought right to
-leave young women, so at the change of life, women
-often suffer from ignorance of what may occur, or from
-exaggerated notions of the perils which await them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All that is needed is to keep guard on one's self—watch
-the diet and bowels. A light vegetable diet
-seems best at this time unless very actively engaged in
-physical exercise, then meat once a day. Keep free
-from foods difficult to digest, cheese, fried foods, hot
-bread, etc., drink plenty of water and eat fruit to keep
-the bowels open; slight exercise in the open air, rest,
-sleep and freedom from mental anxiety are the simple
-rules which are generally prescribed for women at this
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Tilt says: “The best way to avoid the danger of
-this critical time is to meet its approach with a healthy
-constitution.” And again says, “All complaints remain
-chronic because there is not stamina enough to carry
-them through their stages.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is the opinion of the foremost medical men that if
-women at the first sign of irregularities, consult a gynecologist,
-it would be the means of saving thousands of
-lives every year, and would prepare women to enter upon
-the post-climatic period in health and happiness.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONCLUSION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>In conclusion I cannot refrain from saying that women
-must come to recognize there is some function of
-womanhood other than being a child-bearing machine.
-Too long have they allowed themselves to become this,
-bowing to the yoke of motherhood from puberty to the
-grave. No other thought has entered the mind except
-to be a good mother—which has usually meant a slave-mother.
-This has been her only use, her only wish and
-hope—and when the age arrives where she cannot perform
-this function longer, she considers herself useless.
-No wonder she becomes melancholic or even insane.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fortunately the woman of today is gradually ridding
-herself of such archaic notions. More and more is she
-realizing that motherhood is only one of her capabilities;
-that there are certain individuals more fitted for motherhood
-than others, just as individuals are better fitted
-for nursing, teaching, etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>And further must she realize that though she is past
-the age of motherhood, yet she is still a woman with all
-the instincts and experiences which motherhood has bestowed
-upon her, and she can now begin a new development,
-based upon these valuable experiences, she can
-now enter into public life unhampered by the details of
-kitchen and babies, for as she completes her work and
-passes on, others come in to take her place.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Being free from domestic and maternal cares enables
-her to give to society the benefit of her matured
-thought, seasoned and enriched by these experiences.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>She often does enjoy the best health of her life after
-the Menopause and this, together with a vista of a future
-of usefulness, should open to the woman in the post-climateric
-period, a new life—a new world.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In completing this series of articles I cannot refrain
-from uttering just a word about the relation of the entire
-subject I have been discussing to the economic problem.
-It is impossible to separate the ignorance of parents,
-prostitution, venereal diseases, or the silence of the
-medical profession from the great economic question that
-the world is facing today. It is here ever before us,
-and the more we look into the so-called evils of the day
-the more we realize that the whole structure of the
-present day society is built upon a rotten and decaying
-foundation. Until capitalism is swept away, there is
-no hope for young girls to live a beautiful life during
-their girlhood. There is no hope for boys or girls to
-build up strong and sturdy bodies. There is no hope
-that a woman can live in the family relation and have
-children without sacrificing every vestige of individual
-development. There is no hope that prostitution will
-cease, as long as there is hunger. There is no hope for
-a strong race as long as venereal diseases exist. And
-they will exist until women rise in one big sisterhood to
-fight this capitalist society which compels a woman to
-serve as a sex implement for man's use.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Education is necessary—education is the need of the
-people. For this will soon enable one to see that knowledge
-alone does not suffice, but that it is only through
-economic security that the man and the woman will
-emerge in a future civilization.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(The end.)</div>
- </div>
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-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span></div>
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-to all who desire to be well informed with the progress
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-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
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- <div>P. O. Box 178,&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; READING, PA.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span></div>
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='under'>How Six Little Children</span></div>
- <div>Were Taught the Truth</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>is a book which tells a mother just
-how to talk to her child regarding
-the great truths of sex.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thousands of mothers are willing
-to tell their children the truth, but
-have no knowledge of the words to
-use, or the manner in which to tell it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This little book tells you just how
-the truth was told to children in a
-successful way. It begins with the
-flowers, tells of reproduction among
-them, tells of the fish, frogs, birds,
-dogs and cats, leading up to the
-great event of a new baby neighbor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every mother should read this
-book. It is just what she is looking
-for.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Advance orders received. Price,
-50 cents.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>MARGARET H. SANGER,</div>
- <div class='c002'>235 West 135th Street, New York, N. Y.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>PRICE LIST</div>
- <div class='c002'>OF</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>“<span class='under'>What Every Girl Should Know.</span>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>☘ ☘ ☘</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Socialist Party Locals, Branches and dealers can obtain
-this book at the following prices:</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c017'>Single copy (prepaid)</td>
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-books are to be sent.</p>
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-<p class='c000'>Send all orders and remittances to</p>
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- <div>Box 178,&#8196; &#8196; &#8196; READING, PA.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
- <ol class='ol_1 c004'>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's What Every Girl Should Know, by Margaret H. Sanger
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