Foreword

The years of youth are the dangerous years. Only children really experience the tremendous insecurities of not knowing what lies ahead. The average adult is experienced in the ways of the world-one can predict that the way things are now will continue, with minor change to the end of life. The individual creates his own cage from the materials that fall to hand. What he was, he will be.

Children, however, know only the special relationships with their parents. And these relationships can usually never be duplicated again. Like being snatched from the womb, leaving the family unit is a one-time traumatic experience rarely repeated.

It is no wonder that children form special sexual attachments with their fathers and mothers. The drive within them lets them know that sex is something special. Their insecurity drives them to bind themselves closer to their parents.

This is even truer when one considers the relationship of children when the only parent has remarried. The child is threatened by the knowledge that a father or mother can find happiness and special relationship with another adult. And if the child discovers that this relationship is based on sex, then it is a simple step for the child to attempt to extend his or her relationship to include sex also.

In this book, Suzy falls victim to all of these problems. And overindulgence. Like so many little girls, her eyes are bigger than her vagina -and she feels no sexual conquest is beyond her.

It is a case of having one's case and eating it too. And, if the author may be believed, there is a basis for suspecting it can be done.

-THE PUBLISHER