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sexual health
Attitude & Sexual Health
Dr. Jenny McCloskey
Our self image is the blueprint which
determines exactly how we will behave, who we will mix with, what we will try
and what we will avoid; our every thought and every action stem from the way we
see ourselves.
-- Andrew Matthews, Being
Happy, 1988
Your sexual health and attitude
are determined by multiple influences -- your parents, friends, teachers and
your environment and culture -- but the most important influence is you.
Most of the time we do not
question the way we behave. Our actions reflect habits of thought and
established beliefs about ourselves and others. We should critically examine
our thoughts and behaviors. Sometimes we will need to adapt our beliefs to new
realities. The capacity for positive change is vital to success in life.
A Bill of Human
Rights
I believe every person has the
right to:
Respect
Honesty
Express your own feelings
Be listened to
Be taken seriously
Be different
Make mistakes
Be perfect
Be detached
Be loved
Love yourself
Author Stuart Wilde proclaimed the
first nine of these human rights at a talk I attended in 1990. The last two
(the right to be loved and the right to love yourself) I have added.
I believe the key to sexual health
(and to happiness in life) is in the last one: the right to love yourself. Only
through learning to love yourself you will find happiness, peace, and bliss. I
am not talking here about sexual love but about agape (pronounced ahgarp-ee).
Agape is probably best defined as a tremendous love for life and is akin to
altruistic love or having regard for the well-being of others.
Loving Yourself
What does loving yourself mean
when our society says we should do things for others? Loving yourself is a
feeling of being centered and calm within. When we can find this within
ourselves we can help others to be like this too. We bring love in abundance to
our lives.
To learn to do this you need to be
able to discipline yourself. You need to be able to say, 'No'. You need the
discipline of being able to make yourself do things that are good for you and
not do the things that are bad for you. Discipline is not a really popular
concept in our self-indulgent society. Often we find it very difficult to say
'No' to things we know are bad for us. We say 'just this one more time' and
think it will not make any difference. But it does. Things add up little by
little. Instead we might learn that saying 'No' just one more time strengthens
our character, helps us to respect ourselves, and is the path to making our
lives just that little bit happier.
Respect yourself and assert your
rights
People often think that if they
say 'No' it means they don't like or love the person who is asking. How wrong
this is! Responsible parents often say 'No' to their loved children. They will
say 'No' when the child wants to play on the road or with a knife, precisely
because they love their child. It is the same in adult life except we've
forgotten that saying 'No', because we care about ourselves and the other
person, can be positive.
Learn to be assertive. In our
society we think that to be assertive is to be aggressive. It is not. It is
just that you respect yourself, and the more you learn to respect yourself the
more you will learn to respect others. You have a right to say, 'I want...' and
'I insist...' and to be heard by your partner. If your partner does not hear or
listen to you, this is telling you something very fundamental about your
relationship: that your basic rights of being a person are not being respected.
Please allow yourself to have these rights.
Talk about what you want
OK, I say what I want and my
partner says what they want, and they are different. Where do I go from here?
You have got past the first major hurdle. You are both talking about what you
want. That is the basis of a relationship: to discuss what you both want then
to talk about a solution where you will both be happy because you respect each
other's feelings and right to be different.
In looking after your sexual
health, you have a right to want to remain healthy and free of disease. You
must take these responsibilities on your own shoulders and not assume your
partner will be responsible for you. In good relationships, your partner will
want to share the responsibility with you and they will talk about it. There
will be no assumptions.
Talk talk talk
In a relationship we often act as
though the other person is clairvoyant -- that they know what we are thinking
or what our feelings are, without being told. This idea may strike you as
romantic, but most partners are not clairvoyant -- you need to get used to
explaining yourself so that they understand you. Often you need to repeat
yourself so the message gets through. Perhaps one of the hardest things for a
human being to do is to really recognize and accept as valid another person's
point of view, when it is different from their own.
Practice saying explicitly what
you mean and checking that you have been clearly understood.
Help your partner to say exactly
what they mean, especially when they are embarrassed or frightened. Remember,
in any discussion, do not devalue yourself. Stick to your Bill of Rights. If
there is a disagreement, respect the other person's opinion and acknowledge
that you have heard it, but stick to what you feel is right for you. 'I
appreciate your opinion but I do not accept that it is right for me.'
Communication, Respect, and
STDs
What's all this got to do with
sexual diseases? So I've been talking about your rights as a person and about
communication and respect in a relationship. That might be fine in a marriage
guidance book, but what's it got to do with sexual disease? Quite a lot.
Examine your current sexual
relationships. Is there any risk that you could catch a sexually transmittable
disease?
Do you have just one
partner?
How often do you change
partners?
Is your partner being
faithful to you?
If you are not being
faithful to your partner, what makes you think they are being faithful to you?
Remember it can take only one fleeting sexual contact to catch a
disease.
What is your partner's
sexual history?
What of your own sexual
past, are you sure you are not carrying hidden infection?
Only if you can fully answer all
these questions can you really know what your risk of sexual disease is. Only
then can you know if you are taking all the precautions necessary to maintain
your sexual health.
I think you'll see that only
relationships based on open and trusting communication can allow you to assess
your risk and act to control it.
Sex just happens -- or does
it?
There is a myth in our society
that sex is something that 'just happens'. There is also a myth that men, in
particular, have uncontrollable sexual urges. Many people act out these myths,
using them as an excuse not to take responsibility for themselves. This is
where the practice of discipline and saying 'No' is essential.
The more you say 'No', the
stronger you become as a person. When people do not own responsibility for
their own sexual urges they often deny the fact that there are diseases
circulating which they can catch. They expect other people to make the world
safe for them. But when there are lots of other people like them, also denying
their responsibilities, the world is not safe at all.
In real life, the people involved
actually think about sex before it happens: that it might happen and that they
would like it to happen. You can plan ahead. The hardest thing to do is to make
a change and maintain the change, but when you are sure you are making a
correct decision stick to your guns. Remember your Bill of Rights.
- Are you saying I shouldn't have
sex?
- I don't like being different from my
friends
- Make your own decisions
- I like taking risks
- I like drinking alcohol or getting high on
drugs
- Self respect
- I want to change, but how do I go about
it?
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