Introduction
Alfred C. Kinsey reported that, "there is not an inconsiderable group of cases ... in which the husbands had encouraged their wives to engage in extramarital activities. This represented a notable break with the centuries-old cultural tradition. In some instances it represented a deliberate effort to extend the wife's opportunity to find satisfaction in sexual relations. In not a few instances the husband's attitude had originated in his desire to find an excuse for his own extramarital activity. What is sometimes known as swapping usually involves this situation. In another group of cases, the husband had encouraged extramarital relations in order to secure the opportunity for the sort of group activity in which he desired to participate."
The woman who has been exposed to a variety of sexual experiences may find sexual intercourse with a new partner can become a compulsion.
And when the "compulsion" knows no bounds, the woman can find herself seeking sexual partners in young people. This poses a tragic and difficult problem, for "molestation" is where sexual freedom must end. An adult has no right to take advantage of the youth and immaturity of a minor.
As so often happens, the minor is a son, a daughter or a relative, such as the case in our story of the passionate aunt, whose sexual feelings focused on her young, but virile nephew.
The forbidden sexual desires suddenly become the ones most sought after. And, in the perversity of the act, comes sexual-psychic satisfaction for the warped.
While sexual freedom is to be cherished, the limits of sexual encounter must also be recognized. Otherwise, sexual confusion, and chaos replace the pleasure and satisfaction, that should follow sexual intercourse.
-THE PUBLISHER
