Ever woken one morning with your censored missing?
Ever blamed it on a witch?
Check out the online article by Callie Beusman: "Witches Allegedly Stole Penises and Kept Them as Pets in the Middle Ages".
https://broadly.vice.com/en_us/article/ ... iddle-ages
This sounds a bit like an X-rated Monty Python sketch from The Holy Grail.
Has this phenomenon already been explored by magic historians? e.g. Peter Lamont or Ricky Jay who tend to collect weird anecdotes from the past.
The source of the censored Paranoia is Malleus Maleficarum, Heinrich Kramer's witch-hunting manual (1486?)
Anthony Donne, New Testament Scholar, alerted me to Beusman's article.
http://historicaljesusresearch.blogspot ... estal.html
Here's a link to two images of medieval nuns harvesting penises from trees and this predates the Kramer book. treeshttp://67.media.tumblr.com/6e9f408 ... 1_1280.jpg
Male Paranoia
- Richard Kaufman
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Re: Male Paranoia
This is not news to anyone who's read Scot's Discoverie of Witchcraft.
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Re: Male Paranoia
Claims of shrinking and vanishing penises, and related accusations of witchcraft occur around the world, not just in Europe or in the past.
A few years ago there was a lot of press about attacks on censored stealing witches in West Africa. Similar cases have also reported in various Asian countries.
These seem related to a disorder called Koro: “(in Chinese called suo-yang), the panic anxiety state in which affected males believe that the censored is shrinking and/or retracting, and perhaps disappearing.” (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17727356)
A few years ago there was a lot of press about attacks on censored stealing witches in West Africa. Similar cases have also reported in various Asian countries.
These seem related to a disorder called Koro: “(in Chinese called suo-yang), the panic anxiety state in which affected males believe that the censored is shrinking and/or retracting, and perhaps disappearing.” (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17727356)
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Re: Male Paranoia
Thanks. I'll have to take a closer look at Reginald Scot's writings.
There's a fairly new book by Philip Almond - England's First Demonologist: Reginald Scot and 'the Discoverie of Witchcraft' - maybe I'll start there.
There's a fairly new book by Philip Almond - England's First Demonologist: Reginald Scot and 'the Discoverie of Witchcraft' - maybe I'll start there.
- Tom Frame
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Re: Male Paranoia
Ah yes, Koro. It’s a culture-specific syndrome seen most frequently in Asia and the Middle East. It occurs predominantly in young, single males and consists of the fear that his genitals will retract into his abdomen and lead to death. It’s typically preceded by feelings of depersonalization, which is a nonspecific syndrome in which the patient feels that he has lost his identity, or that he is different or strange or unreal.
Tying a red string around the censored or clamping a wooden box around it is used to prevent the syndrome. A proactive placebo is a great thing! Hey, whatever works!
What we have here is classic Freudian castration anxiety, typically manifest during the Oedipus complex, which usually occurs and is resolved during the phallic stage of psychosexual development (age 3–6).
Not that we need it, but this case provides even more evidence that men worry more about the size of their censored than women do. And that’s because men spend more time gazing upon, and pondering and ravaging their own junk than they do in using it for carnal purposes with another person.
Over the years, I’ve successfully treated many patients with penile size concerns and the subsequent anxiety that it can elicit. My intervention is simple.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. Don’t mistake a symptom for a problem.
I empathize with the man’s concerns, which ultimately have nothing to do with the size of his torpedo. They often involve self-esteem, identity, cultural and self-imposed expectations, childhood sexual abuse, relationship discord, substance abuse, or a depressive episode.
I encourage him to examine and work through those underlying issues first. If he is willing to engage in that work, receive the insight, and practice new thoughts and behaviors, his sexual concerns are likely to resolve within a month.
If he isn’t willing to engage in honest introspection – if he defensively focuses on his presenting symptom, instead of the underlying problem – I plant this seed, so to speak:
It’s not about the size of your wand, it’s about the magnificent magic that it can produce.
Most importantly, I urge him to talk to his partner about what works best for him and them during their sexual encounters.
Ah, time for a cigarette.
Tying a red string around the censored or clamping a wooden box around it is used to prevent the syndrome. A proactive placebo is a great thing! Hey, whatever works!
What we have here is classic Freudian castration anxiety, typically manifest during the Oedipus complex, which usually occurs and is resolved during the phallic stage of psychosexual development (age 3–6).
Not that we need it, but this case provides even more evidence that men worry more about the size of their censored than women do. And that’s because men spend more time gazing upon, and pondering and ravaging their own junk than they do in using it for carnal purposes with another person.
Over the years, I’ve successfully treated many patients with penile size concerns and the subsequent anxiety that it can elicit. My intervention is simple.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. Don’t mistake a symptom for a problem.
I empathize with the man’s concerns, which ultimately have nothing to do with the size of his torpedo. They often involve self-esteem, identity, cultural and self-imposed expectations, childhood sexual abuse, relationship discord, substance abuse, or a depressive episode.
I encourage him to examine and work through those underlying issues first. If he is willing to engage in that work, receive the insight, and practice new thoughts and behaviors, his sexual concerns are likely to resolve within a month.
If he isn’t willing to engage in honest introspection – if he defensively focuses on his presenting symptom, instead of the underlying problem – I plant this seed, so to speak:
It’s not about the size of your wand, it’s about the magnificent magic that it can produce.
Most importantly, I urge him to talk to his partner about what works best for him and them during their sexual encounters.
Ah, time for a cigarette.