Sex efficiency through exercises : special physical culture for women / by Th. H. van de Velde ; [photos, by E. Steinemann].
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her husband ! (Needless to say, her pitiful quest was in
vain.)
Another familiar figure of everyday human tragedy is the
wife and mother who has borne two or three children : who
has had no relevant instruction or effective treatment after
her confinements, and is, therefore, unable to compensate for
the unavoidable stretching and slackening of her organs, by
conscious contractions and rhythmic movements of the
pelvis and the muscles of the pelvic floor. Or, again, her
husband, who finds that maternity has robbed his wife of
her special physical charm in coitus. I have discussed this
matter with experienced gymnastic instructresses of serious
and alert mind. They unanimously testified that they had
been much impressed by the lively interest shown by
mature married women (in the forties) for pelvic exercises,
and, above all, for those involving the muscles of the pelvic
floor. They described the indefatigable persistence and
vigour with which these women performed such exercises,
and tried to master the processes involved, and those
instructresses who were themselves already initiated, were
in no sort of doubt as to the reason and motives for this
gymnastic zeal.
I would add a final series of examples to the foregoing
list. When I first contemplated a brief monograph on pelvic
physical culture and its benefits for women, I discussed the
idea with a certain number of married women, in order to
test their views. I chose for consultation, only such women
as I knew to have lived for at least three years in apparently
normal marriage, who were free from flippancy and irrespon-
sibility, and were mentally above the average and capable
of sound judgment. Without exception, they immediately
recognised and emphasised the importance of pelvic physical
culture for women in coitus, and gave me encouraging approval
from this point of view. They passed over the (equal)
significance of pelvic physical culture for pregnancy, birth
and the process of local involution, which is termed the puer-
perium, and concentrated on the coital values.
Therefore I consider it indubitable that many women are
more or less definitely and acutely aware of their deficiencies