The happiness of all human beings,
men and women, depends largely on their rational solution
of the sexual problem. Sex and the part it plays
in human life cannot be ignored. In the case of
animals sex plays a simpler and less complex rôle.
It is a purely natural and instinctive function whose
underlying purpose is the perpetuation of the species.
It is not complicated by the many incidental phenomena
which result, in man’s case, from psychologic,
economic, moral and religious causes. Climate,
social conditions, individual modes of life and work,
alcohol, wealth and poverty, and other factors affect
sexual activity in human beings.
Sexual love, which is practically
unknown to the animals, is a special development of
the sex urge in the human soul. The deeper purpose
of the sex function in human beings, likewise, is
procreation, the reproduction of species.
The average man, woman and child should
know the essential sex facts in order to be able to
deal with the sex problems of life. Of late years
there has been a greater diffusion of such knowledge.
To a large extent, however, children and adolescents
are still taught to look on all that pertains to sex
as something shameful and immodest, something not
to be discussed. Sex is an “Avoided Subject.”
This is fundamentally wrong.
Sex affects the very root of all human life.
Its activities are not obscene, but Nature’s
own means to certain legitimate ends. The sex
functions, when properly controlled and led into the
proper channels, are a most essential and legitimate
form of physical self-expression. The veil of
secrecy with which they are so often shrouded tends
to create an altogether false impression regarding
them. This discussion of these “Avoided
Subjects,” in “Plain English,” is
intended to give the salient facts regarding sex in
a direct, straightforward manner, bearing in mind
the true purpose of normal sex activities.
The more we know of the facts of sex,
the right and normal part sex activities play in life,
and all that tends to abuse and degrade them, the
better able we will be to make sex a factor for happiness
in our own lives and that of our descendants.
Mankind, for its own general good, must desire that
reproduction the real purpose of every sexual
function occur in such a way as to perpetuate
its own best physical and mental qualities.
THE LAW OF PHYSICAL LIFE
It is a universal rule of physical
life that every individual being undergoes a development
which we know as its individual life and which, so
far as its physical substance is concerned, ends with
death. Death is the destruction of the greater
part of this individual organism which, when death
ensues, once more becomes lifeless matter. Only
small portions of this matter, the germ cells, continue
to live under certain conditions which nature has
fixed.
The germ cell as has been
established by the microscope is the tiny
cell which in the lowest living organisms as well as
in man himself, forms the unit of physical development.
Yet even this tiny cell is already a highly organized
and perfected thing. It is composed of the most
widely differing elements which, taken together, form
the so-called protoplasm or cellular substance.
And for all life established in nature the cell remains
the constant and unchanging form element. It
comprises the cell-protoplasm and a nucleus imbedded
in it whose substance is known as the nucleoplasm.
The nucleus is the more important of the two and,
so to say, governs the life of the cell-protoplasm.
The lower one-celled organisms in
nature increase by division, just as do the individual
cells of a more highly organized, many-celled order
of living beings. And in all cases, though death
or destruction of the cells is synonymous with the
death or destruction of the living organism, the latter
in most cases already has recreated itself by reproduction.
We will not go into the very complicated
details of the actual process of the growth and division
of the protoplasmic cells. It is enough to say
that in the case of living creatures provided with
more complicated organisms, such as the higher plants,
animals and man, the little cell units divide and
grow as they do in the case of the lower organisms.
The fact is one which shows the intimate inner relationship
of all living beings.
THE LADDER OF ORGANIC ASCENT
As we mount the ascending ladder of
plant and animal life the unit-cell of the lower organisms
is replaced by a great number of individual cells,
which have grown together to form a completed whole.
In this complete whole the cells, in accordance with
the specific purpose for which they are intended,
all have a different form and a different chemical
composition. Thus it is that in the case of the
plants leaves, flowers, buds, bark, branches and stems
are formed, and in that of animals skin, intestines,
glands, blood, muscles, nerves, brain and the organs
of sense. In spite of the complicated nature of
numerous organisms we find that many of them still
possess the power of reproducing themselves by division
or a process of “budding.” In the
case of certain plants and animals, cell-groups grow
together into a so-called “bud,” which
later detaches itself from the parent body and forms
a new individual living organism, as in the case of
the polyps or the tubers in plant life.
A tree, for instance, may be grown
from a graft which has been cut off and planted in
the ground. And ants and bees which have not been
fecundated are quite capable of laying eggs out of
which develop perfect, well-formed descendants.
This last process is called parthenogenesis.
It is a process, however, which if carried on through
several generations, ends in deterioration and degeneracy.
In the case of the higher animals, vertebrates and
man, such reproduction is an impossibility.
These higher types of animal life
have been provided by nature with special organs of
reproduction and reproductive glands whose secretions,
when they are projected from the body under certain
conditions, reproduce themselves, and increase and
develop in such wise that the living organism from
which they proceed is reproduced in practically its
identical form. Thus it perpetuates the original
type. Philosophically it may be said that these
cells directly continue the life of the parents, so
that death in reality only destroys a part of the
individual. Every individual lives again in his
offspring.
THE TRUE MISSION OF SEX
This rebirth of the individual in
his descendants represents the true mission of sex
where the human being is concerned. And reproduction,
the perpetuation of the species, underlies all rightful
and normal sex functions and activities. The
actual physical process of reproduction, the details
which initiate reproduction in the case of the human
being, it seems unnecessary here to describe.
In the animal world, into which the moral equation
does not really enter, the facts of conjugation represent
a simple and natural working-out of functional bodily
laws, usually with a seasonal determination. But
where man is concerned these facts are so largely
made to serve the purposes of pruriency, so exploited
to inflame the imagination in an undesirable and directly
harmful way that they can be approached only with the
utmost caution.
The intimate fact knowledge necessary
in this connection is of a peculiarly personal and
sacred nature, and represents information which is
better communicated by the spoken than by the printed
word. The wise father and mother are those naturally
indicated to convey this information to their sons
and daughters by word of mouth. By analogy, by
fuller development and description of the reproductive
processes of plant and animal life on which we have
touched, the matter of human procreation may be approached.
Parents should stress the point, when trying to present
this subject to the youthful mind, that man’s
special functions are only a detail albeit
a most important one in nature’s
vast plan for the propagation of life on earth.
This will have the advantage of correcting a trend
on the part of the imaginative boy or girl to lay
too much stress on the part humanity plays in this
great general reproductive scheme. It will lay
weight on the fact that the functional workings of
reproduction are not, primarily, a source of pleasure,
but that when safeguarded by the institution
of matrimony, on which civilized social life is based they
stand for the observance of solemn duties and obligations,
duties to church and state, and obligations to posterity.
Hence, parents, in talking to their children about
these matters should do so in a sober and instructive
fashion. The attention of a mother, perhaps,
need not be called to this. But fathers may be
inclined, in many cases, to inform their sons without
insisting that the information they give them is,
in the final analysis, intended to be applied to lofty
constructive purposes. They may, in their desire
to speak practically, forget the moral values
which should underlie this intimate information.
Never should the spirit of levity intrude itself in
these intimate personal sex colloquies. Restraint
and decency should always mark them.
In making clear to the mind of youth
the fact data which initiates and governs reproduction
in animal and in human life, the ideal to be cultivated
is continence, the refraining from all experimentation
undertaken in a spirit of curiosity, until such time
as a well-placed affection, sanctioned by the divine
blessing, will justify a sane and normal exploitation
of physical needs and urges in the matrimonial state.
To this end hard bodily and mental work should be encouraged
in the youth of both sexes. “Satan finds
work for idle hands to do,” has special application
in this connection, and a chaste and continent youth
is usually the forerunner of a happy and contented
marriage. And incidentally, a happy marriage
is the best guarantee that reproduction, the carrying
on of the species, will be morally and physically
a success. Here, too, the fact should be strongly
stressed that prostitution cannot be justified on
any moral grounds. It represents a deliberate
ignoring of the rightful function of sex, and the
perversion of the sane and natural laws of reproduction.
It is in marriage, in the sane and normal activities
of that unit of our whole social system the
family that reproduction develops nature’s
basic principle of perpetuation in the highest and
worthiest manner, in obedience to laws humane and
divine.