SEX EDUCATION FOR THE MODERN LIBERAL ADULT
by Robert Anton Wilson
The head Sublime, the heart
Pathos, the genitals Beauty, the
hands
and feet Proportion. . .
If the doors of perception were
cleansed every thing would appear
to
man as it is, infinite.
- William
Blake
While I
was attending college, I worked part-time as an orderly in a hospital. One of
my jobs was cleaning up the "stroke" cases, paralyzed old men who
could no longer control their bowels. This proved to be useful experience later
on, when I became a father – a baby and a paralyzed old man are much the same
to one who must care for them, except that a baby's bowel movement is lighter
in color and there is less of it.
I also used to go along on the
ambulance to emergency calls. I'll never forget the first birth I witnessed. I
had just read Philip Wylie's Essay on Morals, and I remembered his
statement that a man who hasn't seen a baby born is a spiritual fop, a traveler
on the surface of life. I was, I remember, astonished at the enlargement of the
vulva (it was so much bigger than verbal descriptions would lead one to
expect). Later, I wrapped the placenta in newspaper, to throw it out.
In spite of having received
"a good Christian upbringing," I can't remember a time when I really
believed that sex was "dirty." When I saw the Family of Man exhibit
at the Museum of Modern Art, I was swept by a wave of tenderness, almost to the
point of tears, at the photographs of lovers.
The first time I heard anybody
refer to those beautiful pictures as "vulgar" (I have heard this
opinion twice, once from a 16-year-old Irish Catholic virgin, and once from
conservative Russell Kirk) I was flabbergasted. If someone had said that Van
Gogh's "Sorrow" was pornographic, I couldn't have been more
astonished. It still seems to me that our civilization must be basically insane
to produce people with such orientations.
During the Korean War, I made
a point of donating blood the maximum number of times. I was thunderstruck when
somebody told me that donating blood requires "courage." "What
the hell do you mean?" I burst out. "It doesn't hurt! " (I was,
at that time, nervous whenever I went to the dentist.) "But," said my
friend, "to see your own blood draining out…”
I didn't understand then, and
I still don't. But I heard the same tone of voice from a co-ed in my college
class when I mentioned my work as an orderly. "You mean you clean up
dirty old men?" she said. And I heard the same tone, again, when I was
explaining to another girl, why my wife and I believe in Natural Childbirth.
"Your wife must be very brave," she said. (Natural Childbirth,
according to the Read Method, is often as ecstatic as the conception itself.)
And I hear exactly the same
tone of voice in people who object to Marilyn Monroe's joyful femaleness, or
some of Red Skelton's jokes, or Dr. Albert Ellis's frankness. I can only conclude
that our civilization is full of people who are squeamish and uncomfortable
about the basic biological nature of life.
I think that these people are,
whether they are "adjusted" to society or not, profoundly, existentially
insane.
I was astonished and dismayed
to discover – in letters of protest which The Realist received after
printing Paul Krassner's "Sex Education for the Modem Catholic Child"
– that this literally insane hatred for the physical world still festers in the
minds of many who consider themselves enlightened freethinkers and humanists.
Let us face the facts for
once. Man is one cell in a universe of process. His life is part of the carbon
cycle. He lives off the fruits of the earth directly, or off the animals whose
food-value derives from the fact that they live off the fruits of the
earth; and his excrement and (ultimately) his corpse both go back to the earth
as fertilizer.
This is the basic existential
cycle, the frame in which our values must be found. There is no way of breaking
out of it. The other natural processes of the solar system and the great galaxy
itself are equally crucial to humanity: if the sun went nova tomorrow, human
life would end. The cycle of birth, reproduction, and death also dominates us.
Millions of lesser cycles,
epicycles, rhythms, and processes make up the structure of our reality: the
moon; menstruation; blood pH; metabolism; spring, summer, fall, and winter; digestion;
respiration.
There is nothing "vulgar"
about these processes, nothing "not nice," nothing
"obscene." They are just there; they exist; and that's
all. Whether we accept these processes, rejoice at their beauty
or feel hopeless and disgusted about being involved in them – this
tells something about our own mental health, but not about the natural
processes.
The most important of the cyclic
processes in the life of a healthy adult is, of course, that of
pre-orgasmic tension, orgasm, and post-orgasm relaxation.
Psychiatry, history,
anthropology, etc. all seem to bear out the conclusion that it was the Church's
interference with this particular cycle that began the degeneration of mankind,
which led ultimately to the present mess in which a great proportion of the
population is embarrassed, uncomfortable, or just plain frightened at any crucial
biological process.
It is for this reason that I
am a militant freethinker and not just a nice, respectably academic
"humanist." The American Humanist Association goes on and on about
"stating positive values," etc., not "being merely
negative," etc. Well, I call myself the Negative Thinker with good
reason.
I just don't believe any new
positive values can enter the lifeblood of our civilization until we have
first purged it of the poison of the Schizogenic Fallacy: the fallacy that man
is a "nice" spirit imprisoned in a "not nice" physical
body.
My wife used to believe, as
many "liberal intellectuals" still believe, that organized religion
is a quaint relic of the Dark Ages, a charming sort of living fossil as cute
and as harmless as the duck-billed platypus. She couldn't understand how I could
get so angry about it.
Now, however, with children
arriving at school age, she is beginning to develop some of my own militant
anger. It is a horrible thing to see innocent children begin to pick up the millennia-old
theological rubbish from their playmates; it is more horrible to reflect on how
much more they will pick up from children's TV shows and from our supposedly
secular public schools.
Make no mistake about it, old
Wilhelm Reich may have been wrong about many things, but not when he wrote, in The
Function of the Orgasm and The Mass Psychology of Fascism, that
chronic rage and hatred stem directly from "orgastic impotence" (the
inability to achieve total organismic orgasm), and that "orgastic
impotence" stems from, man's rejection of his own physical being.
The child taught to despise
his own body and its functions and to identify himself with an imaginary "soul"
is eventually going to become full of hatred for everybody and everything in
existence. Why? Because one part of him (the sensory, non-verbal,
existential level, you might call it) is permanently at war with this
ridiculous "soul" dogma which his cortex tries to believe. His
nervous system becomes schizoid.
He has what Reich calls "muscular
armor," chronic physical tension holding back the natural, but (to him) forbidden
felicity of the organism. He can't be comfortable in his body; and, of
course, he can't really get out of it.
The result, according to the
usual Freudian mechanisms, is that all this neural frustration and biological
rage is projected outward upon the rest of existence. The physical world becomes,
as it was to Saint Cyprian, "the creation of the devil." The rest of
mankind becomes "the enemy" to be exterminated, or, more
hypocritically, "the damned" to be saved. Every social evil, from the
malicious gossip of Mrs. Gilhooley's bridge-table to the horrors of Belsen,
derives from this state of mind.
Now, finally, what of the
people who consider themselves "liberal" and "enlightened"
but object to "Sex Education for the Modern Catholic Child"? Krassner's
language is uncensored, very true. So is the blood, smear, and urine analysis
of a competent obstetrician.
Are you upset by Krassner's
reference to sanitary napkins (a puritanical euphemism itself, by the way)? You
would be more upset by the case of a girl my wife once knew who inserted her
first Tampax without removing the cardboard roll. I don't suppose anybody could
deny that the painful experience of that girl resulted from the stupid taboos
of our society which made it impossible for her to learn how a Tampax should be
inserted by asking clear and specific questions in plain words.
Are we still living in the
Victorian Age? Do you object to a reference to "nocturnal emissions"?
The Army, in its psychological test for draftees, refers to them as "wet
dreams." If you are afraid of plain language about the natural
functions of the healthy human body – your human body – what are you doing
reading a freethought journal anyway?
Nobody can deny the point made
by Paul Krassner's Swiftian little bit of satire – that the precious
"natural order" which the Catholic hierarchy is so anxious to save
from interference by the rubber industry, this wonderful capitalized Nature
that is not the same as the nature known to science (since things can happen
which violate it), this sacred "Nature" sees to it that millions of
ova are wasted for every one that is fertilized, that trillions of spermatozoa
perish without ever reaching an ovum, that hundreds of thousands of babies are
born dead every year.
Krassner makes this point by using
specific, extensional language, which is what any semanticist would advise.
Who or what would profit if the point were weakened by evasions, subterfuges,
euphemisms, and Nice-Nelly-ism in general?
A psychiatrist once told me
that he makes a point when discussing sex with his patients of using the
familiar Anglo-Saxon monosyllables rather than medical terms. "They can
never really tell me about their problems if they're busy searching for
'nice' words," he said. It may seem unrelated, but I am reminded of
Ramakrishna's remark that, before he could teach yoga to Occidentals, he first
had to teach them to weep.
I am a very enthusiastic
student of certain varieties of Oriental mysticism, some of which seem quite
rational to my mind. The purpose of yoga, of what the East calls "ways of
liberation," is not to sink into a mindless trance like a masturbating
tree-sloth, but to become more acutely aware on all levels of the
senses, nervous system, and "mind." (A Zen master once summed up
Buddhism in the one word, "Attention.")
The first step toward this
awareness is to transcend the "muscular armor" which keeps the
organism sensitive to those parts and functions it has been told are not
"lady-like" or not" gentlemanly. " (Modern psychiatry insists
on "abreaction" – as Mencken put it, the patient has to make a
jack-ass of himself before he can be cured.)
Michelangelo wrote that
"to create, you must first be able to love." Einstein, more
verbosely, said that the drive toward greater knowledge always begins from
"an intellectual love of the objects of experience." The greatest
artist and the greatest scientist of the Western world are at once in recognizing
that their creativity arises from "love"; and Einstein seems to have
had in the back of his mind Spinoza's "Intellectual love of a thing means
understanding its perfections." Twenty-five hundred years ago in China,
Confucius wrote in the Shu King that "the dynasty, Y Yin, came in
because the folk had achieved a great sensibility. "
All of these expressions (the
Zen master's "Attention," Michelangelo's "love," Einstein
and Spinoza's "Intellectual love of things," Confucius' "great
sensibility," and I could throw in also Blake's remark about "cleansing
the doors of perception") seem to me attempts to verbalize an experience
which, by its nature, cannot be verbalized. One has to experience it.
You have to relax your body,
so that the hard kinks of prejudice and fear cannot censor your perceptions.
You have to look at things without using words inside your mind, look at things
as they are originally perceived without shame or "value" or use-consciousness
or purpose of any sort. Every thing you look at will then appear to you, as
Blake says, infinite.
This is the "oceanic
experience" Freud noted at the root of religion. It is also at the roots
of science and art. We are all stumbling into this experience constantly,
whenever we are completely relaxed and unafraid – Sunday afternoon in the
hammock, for instance.
This experience has created a
hundred stupid theologies, true; but, it has also created sciences and arts. In
the Occident especially, from the troubadours of the 12th century up to D.H.
Lawrence and Ezra Pound, this experience has become the exclusive property of
wild and erotic independent mystics, while the official churchly mystics have
sunk deeper and deeper into a miasmal mist.
It is out of this
"oceanic experience" that a rational humanism can create
"positive values" as an alternative to the delusional schizophrenias
of Judeo-Christian theology. But these values can only be understood by those
who are aware on all levels of their being, sensory as well as rational;
and the majority of people will never become aware in this way until
those institutions are destroyed which teach man to despise his own body and to
fear even to speak of it in plain, honest words.