A Conversation with Aubrey Terrón
concerning circumcision and foreskin. This interview and 113 others on Bonobo3D’s Youtube Channel.
concerning circumcision and foreskin. This interview and 113 others on Bonobo3D’s Youtube Channel.
Spock on Infant Circumcision
Authors description: In the 1940s and 1950s circumcision became quite common. By the 1960s, 90 percent of all male newborns in the United States were being circumcised as routine procedure. Ten years later, however, opinion among doctors swung away from the belief that certain groups of women developed cancer of the cervix because their husbands were uncircumcised. It was concluded that the cause was actually lack of good male hygiene - which is not as much of a problem in this country as it is in some other parts of the world. Also, by the early 1970s, more physicians - though not all - were aware of the psychological harm that could come from circumcision after infancy, and circumcision of an older child was not suggested as frequently as in the past.
Read his article on how he changed his mind here:http://www.doctorsopposingcircumcision.org/info/spock.html
In 1971 a task force of the American Academy of Pediatrics concluded that there is no medical reason to recommend routine circumcision, and I voiced the same opinion in the 1976 revision of Baby and Child Care. I hoped that the controversy would then be settled once and for all. But today, there are again some physicians who favor routine circumcision because they are of the opinion (not substantiated by solid scientific proof) that circumcision will decrease, at least to a small degree, the risk of contracting various venereal diseases in adulthood. But many physicians, myself included, are unconvinced.
One recent study did indicate that urinary tract infections in infancy, which is an uncommon disease in boys, does occur less frequently among circumcised boys, but this has not yet been confirmed by further studies. There is no doubt in medical circles that routine circumcision does prevent cancer of the penis, but this is a very rare disease which causes only approximately 150 deaths a year in the United States. Should one million baby boys be circumcised each year because of this small risk? Each parent must answer that question for him or herself.
In view of the renewed controversy regarding circumcision, the American Academy of Pediatrics has again appointed a task force to reconsider its position on routine circumcision, although no final decision has yet been reached.
Though the debate continues within the medical community, parents do have a few facts and various opinions on which to base their own decision on this matter. In earlier days many parents were not informed about what the issues were. The attending obstetrician or an intern or resident would appear at the mother’s bedside a few days after delivery and say, “Do you want the boy circumcised?” or “I suppose you want him to be circumcised,” as if it were the only sensible choice.
We now know that it is not the only choice, nor is it agreed that it is the most sensible choice. My own preference, if I had the good fortune to have another son, would be to leave his little penis alone.
Side note: genital integrity applies to both sexes. This post is intentionally dedicated to one sex specifically, because the issues are different (although there are some similarities) More imagery to come.
What is normal?
Anatomy GIF 01. | TheMany parts of the male genitals.
Descriptions written by Uncutting:
Scrotum - The sack that holds the testicles.
Shaft skin- The lowest skin on the penile shaft, that can’t be categorized as foreskin.
Outer foreskin- The outer foreskin. Covers the glans (head of the penis) when flaccid, but this is the portion that remains on the outside of the “skin tube.” Basically this is the same type of skin as regular shaft skin, it’s just located higher up.
Inner foreskin- The inner foreskin. The portion of foreskin that’s inside the “skin tube” when flaccid, and directly contacts the glans. The inner foreskin is highly sensitive, thinner than regular shaft skin, and one of its functions is to protect the glans and keep that more sensitive, too. Circumcision removes a varying degree of inner skin.
Coronal sulcus - Also commonly referred to as just the sulcus. The little groove where the glans and shaft meet.
Glans - The head of the penis. The glans is intended to be covered and kept sensitive by foreskin when flaccid, thus circumcised penises have a glans that is less sexually responsive due to years of exposure.
Frenulum - The strip of skin tethering the glans to the foreskin. Often highly sexually sensitive, but sadly it is often partially or completely removed in circumcision.
Coronal ridge - Also known simply as the corona. The ridge of the glans, that tends to be highly sensitive.
Frenar band - Also known as the ridged band. A highly sensitive bundle of nerves within the inner foreskin, that is unfortunately removed in circumcision.
Urinary Meatus - The meatus or orphice connected to the urethra, which is connected to the bladder. The urinary meatus is the opening where urine and semen is released.
For more detailed and cited information regarding the prepuce, please read this article from The British Journal of Urology.
Function 22 includes the comedic reason “intimately hiding drugs” or to conceal notes. “Members of the IRA were known to hide notes under their foreskins when incarcerated” - Richard English, Armed Struggle(2004) 200-201 quoted in Non-Therapeutic Male Circumcision, Issues Paper No 14, 2009, Tasmania Law Reform Institute Stores contact lenses, smuggled jewels, etc. - not all recommended uses …
Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard
“April 8, 2008”
… it would be preposterous to suggest that babies should be circumcised to prevent them doing this as adults, but such is the irrational pressure to circumcise, there are those who will.
Or you can just stick sick a clementine in there to spritz up for somebody

I am sharing this video because it is so important to know your own body.
I wish I had seen this video when I was in middle school, because(and I’m not embarrassed to admit) I used to think something was funny about my ‘vulva’. Because mine looked different in a way I hadn’t seen before. I was relieved to find out that other women had the same ‘difference’ I thought was so strange. I learned that many people even find it much more attractive, but that’s beside the point.
It’s important to know that you’re not some freak and that somebody out there has got that same characteristic as you. It’s NORMAL:)
Share this so that other adolescents know; different is normal.I’ve reblogged this before, and will again!