Kaplan's three stage model. We discussed desire, excitement, and orgasm what I understand about those three-stage model which is desire, excitement, and orgasm. Those stages are important in our relationship each of them have a strong meaning that that cannot be unnoticed in a relationship first the desire is when someone have a strong want for sexual intimacy usually this phase referred when physical attraction involved, also the person can only feel the other person touch, smell, etc. a lot of things that can contribute to sexual desire. Also, excitement can be when you attract to the person physical to sexual desire. for example, when you see someone that you like or have interests your heart rate might increase, even your blood pressure. …show more content…
These methods explain destructive sexual experiences. She sees sexual energy as a neutral force, the three level that she talks about the focus on caring, respect and safety. The level +2 is the making love it's more focused on pleasure and experimentation. The level+3 is the sexual intimacy the person has, to be honest, and open the last one is level +1 which is positive role fulfillment, the level can be a problem in a relationship if there is no respect, I do not want any negative consequences in my relationship. This information might help me in the future to teach others about. Negative consequences in a relationship especially went people not honest about their circumstances or health condition. Some of them don't want to have children but they refused to protect themselves from the unwanted pregnancy …show more content…
According to of the book "Margaret Sanger want to develop a reliable method for women that they could control their own fertility (pg. 280). This concept is important to discuss in our relation because I know people who do not ready to have children and suddenly get pregnant. And decide for having an abortion, I do not want anything like that to happen to me because I do not believe in abortion and I am against it also thing no matter how the circumstances if you get pregnant you should take the full responsibility for it. I think Margaret was doing a wonderful thing by shipping diaphragms from Europe. And also published detail how to use it in the
Dorothy Wardell’s article titled “Margaret Sanger: Birth Control’s Successful Revolutionary” explains what inspired Sanger ideas on contraception and what problems she faced while working to change the notions and laws on Birth Control. The central argument presented by Wardell is that Sanger’s efforts led to privileges for women’s bodies and health centers providing methods for women to act on these privileges (Wardell, 736). Although Wardell is effective in supporting her argument, it would be stronger if she included some historical context and evidence of Sanger’s opinion in her own words found in a speech of hers and in Family Limitation. Wardell begins by addressing that “…a definitive biography and assessment has yet to be written.”,
Margaret Sanger was, at large, a birth control activist, but this speech was more about the questioning of birth control corrupting morality in women. People must remember, in the day and age where Sanger presented this speech, November 1921, women were considered very far from equal and much closer to servants or maids. In her speech, I saw that ethos was present in the sense that she gave herself credibility. Through Sanger’s detailed words and actions, and her statements including the presence of scientists and, or, professionals, the masses of listening people could infer that she was very well informed and solid in her statements. Though she presented herself as agreeable, Sanger was firm in her beliefs. In addition, Sanger says, “We desire to stop at its source the disease, poverty and feeble-mindedness and insanity which exist today, for these lower the standards of civilization and make for race deterioration. We know that the masses of people are growing wiser and are using their own minds to decide their individual conduct” (Sanger, par.15). To me, Sanger made herself appeal to the audience by using the word ‘we.’ In the practice of ethos, this focused on the author more than...
On September 14, 1879, Margaret Sanger was born in Corning, New York. She was the sixth child of eleven children and realized early what being part of a large family meant; just making due. Although her family was Roman Catholic both her mother and father were of Irish descent. Her mother, Anne Purcell had a sense of beauty that was expressed through and with flowers. Her father was an Irish born stonemason whose real religion was social radicalism. Her father was a free thinker and strong believer in eugenics which meant Margaret possessed some of the same values. (Sanger, Margaret) Eugenics is the belief that one race is better than a different race just because they are not like them, kind of like Hitler and the holocaust. “He expected me to be grown up at the age of ten.” (Source 4.3 page 30) Coming from a family of eleven children she did have to grow up fast. Faster than most kids should have to. She left her house as a teenager and came back when she needed to study nursing. It was during this time that Margaret worked as a maternity nurse helping in the delivery of babies to immigrant women. She saw illegal abortions, women being overwhelmed by poverty, to many children, and women dying because they had no knowledge of how to prevent one pregnancy after another. This reminded her of the fact that her own mother had eighteen pregnancies, eleven children, and died at the age of forty-nine. Margaret dropped out of school and moved in with her sister. She ended up teaching first grade children and absolutely hated it. She hated children at that time. When Margaret was a child herself however, she would dream about living on the hill where all the wealthy people lived. She would dream of playing tennis and wearing beautiful c...
One can see as a result of her fight and her persistent distribution of Birth Control how determined she was to help women have control in their lives. Sanger didn't necessarily fight just for the sake of women to have access to Birth Control but she also fought for equality. It is unfair that only wealthy women could decide how many children they will have when the poor women were the ones who were in trouble of not being able to provide for all of the
Both sources approach an issue from a different demographic, the married young housewife and the of age generation in the roaring twenties respectively. If we compare intent, we see Sanger's is a politically motivated piece seeking empathy compared to what appears to be a balanced study from New Girls for Old. Therefore the more representative source is that of the uninfluenced survey, while we can't discount that they are selectively chosen; in comparison to Sanger's selected testimonials are likely the most pressing and emotive letters written to her. This contrasting factor of intent also leads to their influence varying, as Engelman presents it was Sanger's pivotal activist role that when combined with the radicals, socialites and professionals that led to the successive progress of the birth control movement as one of the few women led social movements i...
Researcher Mark Knapp is best-known for describing and developing a 10 step model of relational stages, it explains how relationships come together and how they come apart (Alder, pg 287). I decided to take one of my past relationships with an ex-boyfriend of mine through Mark Knapp's relational stages model. I will be referring to my ex-boyfriend as Johnny throughout this paper.
“When a motherhood becomes the fruit of a deep yearning, not the result of ignorance or accident, its children will become the foundation of a new race." (Margaret Sanger, 1) Margaret Sanger, known as the founder of birth control, declared this powerful statement. It is reality that the rights that are customary for women in the twentieth century have been the product of the arduous physical and mental work of many courageous women. These individuals fought for the right for women to be respected in both mind and body by bestowing on them the rights to protect their femininity and to gain the equivalent respect given to men. A remarkable woman named Margaret Sanger is the individual who incredibly contributed to the feministic revolution that took place in the 1920’s. Her legacy of making the right to use birth control legal for woman is a precedent in history for the foundation of the equal rights battle that is still being fought today. By giving control back to the women in their sexuality, Margaret Sanger also restored confidence in those women who felt that their lives revolved around pregnancy. She has become an influential icon to women all around the world who enjoy the security of birth control that gives them the freedom in their sexuality on a daily bases.
that every person must undergo over their entire life. All stages are present at birth but only begin to unfold according to both a natural scheme and one's ecological and cultural upbringing. In each stage, the person faces, new challenges. Each stage builds upon the successful completion of the previous stages. The challenges of stages which are not successfully completed may be expected to reappear as problems in the future. The eight stages include, trust vs. mistrust, autonomy vs. shame/doubt, initiative vs. guilt, industry vs. inferiority, identity vs. role confusion, intimacy vs. isolation, generativity vs. stagnation, and integrity vs. despair.
Eugenics, which had started long before my time, had once been defined as including free love and prevention of conception… Recently it had cropped up again in the form of selective breeding. (Margaret Sanger)
Sanger, one of the pioneers of modern birth control, founded Planned Parenthood which was an
Alice Paul and Margaret Sanger are two mavericks who pioneered and championed the women's cause for equality and proper treatment. It's hard to comprehend the women's place in our modern society without the great effort and dedication that these two women started. The tragic experience suffered by Margaret's mother is still prevalent in today's society because of religious belief. Some religion still disagrees and strongly encouraged their followers not to practice birth control. As a result, the women who practiced this religion encounter near death situation after giving birth to multiple babies. Fortunately, modern medicine was able to save them in their predicament.
There were totally three major phases for the research. They are a paper-and-pencil love scale, a questionnaire study of student dating couple and a laboratory experiment.
During the early 1900s, American nurse Margaret Sanger led the birth-control movement in the United States. She and others opened clinics to provide women with information and devices. Although frequently jailed, she and her followers were instrumental in getting laws changed. In subsequent years, laws against birth control gradually weakened, and more effective methods were developed.
In dealing with addicted clients, it is crucial to consider the client's attitudes, intentions, and behaviours as these factors, are linked and pivotal in affecting change of the problem behaviours, which is the premise of the stages-of-change model (Miller, 2015). Furthermore, the stages-of-change model contends that change happens when the right combination of the procedure occurs at the right time. As such determining where the addicted client's level of change as well as determining the right intervention to apply is critical for the success of the client.
The excitement phase is the first phase of the sexual response cycle. This is the phase where things start to “heat up” or both the man and women experience excitement and arousal. To many this stage consists of foreplay, arousing both individuals to want and need the sex. When a man is in this stage he experiences many genital changes, his penis becomes erected, testes enlarge, and skin thickens on the scrotum. Women experience more changes than the man, their breasts enlarge, the clitoris swells, the vaginal lips flatten and swell, and also the vaginal lubrication will form. Men and women in this phase also will experience some of the same effects. Both will experience elevated heart rates and blood pressures, and in some individuals the nipples will erect. (Nevid & Ruthus, 2005).