Bad romance: 10 surprising facts about the Irish and sex
Ten things you didnt know about the Irish and sex
Published Wednesday, August 31, 2011, 7:32 AM
Updated Tuesday, September 13, 2011, 4:22 PM
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larsporsenna | Apr 10, 2013, 10:50 AM EDT
When it comes to matters sexual remember the wise words of Lord Chesterfield to his son, "The pleasure is fleeting, the posture ridiculous and the expense damnable."
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Maureen Hawkins | Mar 12, 2013, 02:57 PM EDT
The Brehon laws also allowed polygamy and polyandry. A man or a woman could have more than one spouse as long as each had his or her own house at a distance from one another and the person who had two spouses did not actually live with either (no favouritism allowed). It allowed divorce; each party was allowed to take out of the marriage what he or she had brought plus its "natural increase" (e.g., if one brought 20 cows, one could take them & their offspring). Either party could instigate the divorce. Forsterage was common practice by which a child would be raised in another family to cement ties between them. One could marry a second-degree relation (e.g., a cousin, aunt, or uncle) but not a foster-brother or sister or parent. It was a common practice into the 17th century that members of the nobility would marry under the Brehon laws rather than in the Church so they would have the freedoms allowed by the Brehon laws. It was Rome & England that forced women into subjugation, crippled men's & women's sexuality, and blessed droit du seigneur (the right of a lord or landlord to sleep with a tenant women on the night of her wedding).
If the Catholic Church really believes that sex is only for procreation, why don't they force couples to divorce if the man becomes impotent or the woman passes menopause? Why do they permit marriage if one partner is sterile? I suppose they can always bring up the case of Abraham and Sarah to show that God can work a miracle & allow a post-menopausal woman to conceive, but, if God can work miracles, surely He can allow a gay couple to conceive.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 04, 2013, 10:59 AM EST
When it comes to sex, Sean O'Casey gave away how to have as much as you want without its being sinful, simply make sure there is a "bit of holy hesitation between the thought and the act."
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irishfrank | Aug 31, 2011, 05:00 PM EDT
not a lot
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SingleDonald | Aug 31, 2011, 12:26 PM EDT
Sadly, the "Right of First Night" practice also existed in some old cultures, in Italy. It was for that reason that the Mafia instituted the rule, which forbids any man in the "honored society" from seducing another man's wife. This way, even a boss could be executed, if he engaged in the "Right of First Night". Concerning the rights of women, the early Irish were sure enlightened! Despite me being opposed to radical feminism, I feel that all guys should respect women. Chivalry is not a patronizing practice, as some feminists believe, but a deferential attitude. This attitude should be extended to the bedroom, where a woman's more complex needs can be adressed, and fulfilled. All legitimate advances by women, over the last few decades, should be respected.
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IAPRINCESS | Aug 31, 2011, 10:32 AM EDT
The topic of Sex and Ireland was never so funny as the time I gave an "Irish Sex Manual" written by monks and found recently. The fly cover explained how the monks diligently scribed all the findings in this wonderful book. When you went to read the book, the PAGES WERE BLANK!!!!
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cillowen | Aug 31, 2011, 10:06 AM EDT
When the lands of ould Erin were totally under Sasanach's
control.
The practice of having the landed gentry sleeping with
the bride on the first night instead of husband screwed up the dna tracking for the first born.
While on internet check in on RTE.ie offerings and you'll
hear the foulist female and male mouthings on every aspect of sex Give it a look.
In US this NI fellow Feherty has a program on the Golf channel in which he appears to be hung up with continual anal references. Who knew St Patrick's efforts would come to naught and for the black irish as well.
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