Put What Where?: Over 2,000 Years of Bizarre Sex Advice. John Naish

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Название Put What Where?: Over 2,000 Years of Bizarre Sex Advice
Автор произведения John Naish
Жанр Личностный рост
Серия
Издательство Личностный рост
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007542789



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of hygiene’ which covered personal cleanliness, diet and sex. Ejaculating frequently, the books warn, wears a man out, because semen is full of the life-force, chi.

      A man could preserve his penis chi either by not climaxing, or by climaxing but preventing ejaculation. Medical experts suggest this can be done by applying hand pressure to a point between the scrotum and the anus, which blocks the urethra. Peng’s theory was that the semen would be diverted up the spine into the brain. In fact, if you block your urethral tube behind your scrotum, the sperm is squirted into your bladder and gets urinated out. This whole idea might seem insane, but it has resurfaced in different forms for centuries. It reappeared in Chinese books printed in 1066, 1307 and 1544, and was later published in Japan. It also crops up in different cultures around the globe at different times. It even became popular, as we will see, in nineteenth-century America.

      The Mawangdui guides do not only cover non-ejaculation. There is an entire regime dictating when to have sex: in spring you can do it from evening until after midnight; in summer from evening until midnight; in winter from evening until around 11pm; and in autumn, hooray, whenever you like – though the text then says that men should never try having intercourse in the morning.

      The books also tell you in confusing and often tedious detail the precise operation of lovemaking, with a guide to foreplay using slow, sexual massage, the ‘ideal 100-thrusts’, and then the ‘ten refinements’ – which basically involve going up, down and from side to side, and changing your speed and depth – information that must surely have been old hat even 300 years before the birth of Christ. And with around 21 centuries to go before the invention of Viagra, the manuscripts offer their own aphrodisiac ideas, involving such exotic stimulant ingredients as swarming beetle larvae, wasps and dried snails.

      The ancient Chinese also brought us the first sex-advice Q&As. The format so beloved of Cosmopolitan and co was created by books in which the legendary Yellow Emperor asked ‘your common questions’ of a team of expert female advisors with names such as the Plain Girl and the Mystery Girl, as well as (of course) a qualified doctor. The Yellow Emperor texts were frequently illustrated with pictures of sexual positions, and given to brides as part of their trousseau.

      Despite its general uselessness, much of this advice remained in circulation in one form or another in China until the sixteenth century, when it was suppressed by the new regime of Confucianist emperors. They found all this sex stuff generally unspeakable and censored it so efficiently that subsequent Chinese writers never knew that it had even existed.

      When to Have Sex

      Never after a meal

      Perfumed Garden of Sheik Nefzaoui (16th century), translated into English by Sir Richard F. Burton

      If you wish for sex, you should not have your stomach loaded with food and drink. If your stomach is full, only harm can come of it to both of you; you will have symptoms of apoplexy and gout, and the least evil that will be the consequence of it will be the inability of passing your urine, or weakness of sight.

      And not before lunch

      Ancestor Peng, in the introduction to Yinshu (The Pulling Book), c. 186 BC

      Morning is not the recommended time for men to practise sex.

      Daytime – all day

      R.T. Trail, Sexual Physiology: a scientific and popular exposition of the fundamental problems in sociology (1867)

      If children are to be begotten ... the sexual embrace should be had in the light of day. It is only then that the magnetic forces and the nervous system are in their highest condition of functional activity and the body, refreshed by sleep, is in its most vigorous condition. But it should not be the hurried act of the early morning, like a hasty meal before a day’s work ... Surely, if sexual intercourse is worth doing at all, it is worth doing well And it would not exalt its importance one iota above its real merits if certain days were set apart, consecrated, to the conjugal embrace. It might be one day in seven, or one day in twenty, or more or less.

      Seasonal sex

      Giovanni Marinello, Medicine Pertinent to the Infirmities of Women (Italy, 1563)

       Least harmful: spring and winter

       Use sparingly: summer

       Use even more sparingly: autumn

      Spring for men, autumn for women

      Nicholas Venette, The Mysteries of Conjugal Love Reveald (1703)

      Men are most apt for the company of women in winter and in spring; women most desirous of commerce with man in summer and autumn; and this proceeds from the contrary complexion, in respect both to the times and persons, which complexion is nothing else than the different mixtures of warmth with cold, and moisture with dryness ...

      In my opinion, copulation is more seasonable in spring and winter; it may be used in the time of autumn, but in the heads of summer it should be carefully avoided, when the ordinary discharges of the body are so great...

      We ought to embrace when our belly is moderately filled, for at such a junction we feel a strange desire to be meddling.

      Cheek the zodiac, and never after war ...

      Ananga Ranga of Kalyanamalla (Stage of the Love God), by the Indian poet Kalyan Mall (16th century)

       Hot weather

       Cold weather

       Any time, in fact that’s not springtime or the rains

       Daytime – unless it’s your woman’s favourite time

       When ill with fever

       When tired from travel

       When observing a religious rite

       At the new moon

       When the sun or a planet passes from one side of the zodiac to another

       In the evening

       When tired from warfare

      Geddinthere! (Times she might be in the mood)

      Koka Shastra (The Scripture of Koka), by the Indian poet Kokkoka (12th century)

       When tired from travel

       Convalescing from a fever

       Weary from dancing

       The sixth month of pregnancy

       A month after giving birth

      Etiquette: when to introduce a new mistress to your wives

      Chinese householder’s notebook (c. 16th century)

      Recently I heard about a certain official who took unto him a new concubine. He locked himself in with her behind double doors and did not appear for three days. All his wives and concubines were highly incensed at this behaviour. This is indeed the wrong way.

      The right method is for the man to control his desire and, for the time being not approaching the newcomer, concentrate his attention on the others. Every time he has sexual intercourse with his other women, he should make the newcomer stand at attention by the side of the ivory couch. Then, after four or five nights of this, he may for the first time copulate with the newcomer, but only with his principal wife and the other concubines present. This is the fundamental principle of harmony and happiness in one’s women’s quarters.

       CLASSICAL GAFFES