To avoid a contest of wills she delays training until the toddler's eighteen-month stubbornness wanes. She responds to the stool as an erotic product, just as she does to an erection. She smiles and comments on its pleasant characteristics. She receives the stool as warmly as she receives the child who forms it. She emphasizes the erotic rather than the hygienic component of cleansing by utilizing soft cotton, creams, and oils. She's pleased by the process. If her child is a girl, she treats the clitoris as an area distinct from the anus by naming and swabbing it separately. If her child is a boy who fondles his penis while seated on the potty chair, she observes without averting her eyes. She smiles and offers a compliment. Anal eroticism needs to be protected too.
Anal sensations
intensify the adult response, providing the individual can
accept and enjoy them. Tightening the muscles about the
anus during coitus heightens pleasure in both sexes. Some
women prefer certain positions because the penis presses
back against the rectum, and in almost all positions, the
woman's anus is stimulated by traction on vaginal tissues. A
finger on or in the anus accentuates the climax for many men
and women. Thus the mother needs to accept and convey
enjoyment of the anus also. Her tissue can be soft, her touch
tender, and her smile warm.
Preschool children invest their stool with character-nice,
mean, powerful, angry, stubborn, and so forth. (Anthony,
1972) Children ascribe the same qualities to the stool that
they assign to the anal and genital areas. It's easy to find out
how a child feels by asking. Let him know that you can feel
friendly toward both the producer and the product.
Occasionally a child enamored of his own products will
decorate himself or a wall with astutely smeared feces. Is a
parent supposed to encourage that too? Hardly. Encourage
eroticism and preserve pleasure, but not at the expense of
creating an "enfant terrible." This can be labeled unacceptable
behavior without demeaning the stool nor the child's
intrinsic worth. "Your poop is lovely, but it does not belong on
the wall.Here,help me put it back in the pot."The production
of flatus, or letting wind, can also be gently curtailed without
evoking shame if the parents have first demonstrated their
acceptance and enjoyment of this natural function.
Shame is transmitted to children at an age when words
are less important than actions. Because of this, the sex therapy
clinics must utilize actions rather than words to relieve
shame. Assignments include disrobing under a bright light,
swimming together nude, demonstrating methods of self-
pleasuring to one another, and an exploration of each other's
genitals. This last exercise includes the internal examination
of the wife by her husband, in the presence of one or
more therapists. An examining table with stirrups and a
speculum are provided. These tasks cause the clients profound
embarrassment, and the therapist must support the
couple every step of the way. Once a task is complete, the clients
experience tremendous relief, and increased comfort
and intimacy. As shame diminishes, sex improves.
Another sexual dysfunction, performance anxiety, is
rooted in our early attempts to educate children, such as toilet
training. Performance anxieties are the fears which men
experience concerning erection and ejaculation. Will it get
hard enough? Can I hold that erection? Can I delay orgasm
long enough to satisfy my mate? Will I ejaculate? Once these
anxieties intervene, the joy in sex dwindles. The production
itself is so important that passive, receptive pleasuring is
impossible. The child's first pressured performance is on the
potty chair.
Mothers who focus on the rapid production of
"enough" stool at the appointed hour are emphasizing performance.
"Now it's time to do your business"; "Do a good
job." Goodness is equated with compliance and achievement.
The child learns to please his mother by producing a proper
stool. Later, he pleases his mate by producing a proper
orgasm. Performance anxiety can be prevented through a
relaxed attitude toward all early training including the potty
chair. Slipups are expectable. In addition, parents can
emphasize passive pleasures such as rocking and back rubbing,
and the erotic rather than hygienic component of toilet
training.
