buried_alive
Major
★★★★★
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2022
- Posts
- 2,317
In the past, female hysteria was considered a disease that widely affected women and had a very wide set of symptoms like anxiety, shortness of breath, fainting, nervousness, sexual desire, insomnia, fluid retention, heaviness in the abdomen, irritability, loss of appetite for food or sex, (paradoxically) sexually forward behavior, and a "tendency to cause trouble for others". In the 1800s and 1900s the treatments physicians applied consisted mainly of sexual stimulation, with many psychiatrists, like Freud and Carl Jung, going further and having sexual relationships with their patients.
Today it's known that female hysteria is not a disease but natural female behavior caused by the repression of their sexuality, which brings us to inceldom. Our sexuality is also repressed and, to further the damage, we are shamed for it. We don't get male hysteria, men and women are different, but there are going to have behavioral and physiological manifestations of this repression, like brain rot, depression, suicidal ideation, bitterness, anxiety, etc, which we all know all too well what's like.
All this is further proof of the necessity of being sexually active to achieve a healthy life. And this is denied and dismissed as a problem, because we are men, while women had this same problem many decades ago. Except they had treatment for it. We don't.
Today it's known that female hysteria is not a disease but natural female behavior caused by the repression of their sexuality, which brings us to inceldom. Our sexuality is also repressed and, to further the damage, we are shamed for it. We don't get male hysteria, men and women are different, but there are going to have behavioral and physiological manifestations of this repression, like brain rot, depression, suicidal ideation, bitterness, anxiety, etc, which we all know all too well what's like.
All this is further proof of the necessity of being sexually active to achieve a healthy life. And this is denied and dismissed as a problem, because we are men, while women had this same problem many decades ago. Except they had treatment for it. We don't.





