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Organic Sexuality: Toward Decency and Compassion
In addition to the details of his own patients' sexual functioning, Reich proceeded to examine, through interviews and case records, the love life of over 200 patients seen at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Polyclinic. He was testing several hypotheses here: (1) That genital disturbance
was present in all neuroses; Reich was impressed
by the frequency and depth of genital disturbances he found. He became
very suspicious of the superficial reports about sexual experience, whether
supplied by clinic patients themselves or by the psychiatrists who evaluated
them. For example, a patient whose sex life was reported to be normal,
on closer interviewing by Reich revealed that she experienced pleasurable
sensations during intercourse but no climax. Moreover, she was consumed
by thoughts of murdering her partner following the act... Reich was not unique
in his emphasis on the capacity for uniting tender and sensuous feelings
in a healthy love relationship. As early as 1912, Freud had noted that
many male patients would not unite both tender and sensuous feelings,
but would concentrate the former on an idealized mother figure toward
whom they could not feel erotic, and their sexual feelings on prostitutes.
What was original was Reich¹s emphasis on the involuntary -- Myron Sharaf
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