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Saturday, April 26, 2014

MISSISSIPPI: Man Loses Penis to Circumcision, Circumcises Son Conceived Via Artificial Insemination

 

I was following the story of the man who lost his penis to circumcision, who had to get penile reconstructive surgery, and whose reconstructive surgery was so unsuccessful the only way he could conceive a child was through artificial insemination.

My one burning question was, OK, so he lost his own penis through circumcision. HERE IT IS FOLKS! Partial or complete penile ablation is a risk of circumcision, and here we have a living example. Would he go on to circumcise his own son?

Dishearteningly, I read today that the answer was yes, he would.

And, it seems he and his wife are choosing to believe in comforting lies for their own sakes. Here is an excerpt from the article:

"Mike "was nervous about having him circumcised," his wife, Heather said, "but there was no cutting involved – just a little plastic ring that goes around him and then it just falls off."
The procedure went smoothly, and everyone is happy and healthy and in tact."

I am absolutely floored.

I mean, you think after having LOST YOUR PENIS, you would say "No way this is happening to my son."

What was the conversation going through this man's mind when he decided "We're going to do it. We're going to put our son through the same risk I was."

Here, we see his wife touting a myth that just isn't true.

She's talking about the Plastibell method of circumcision, and contrary to the lies she is either being fed, or telling herself for her own sake, yes, there is cutting.

Not only is there cutting, but the Plastibell method is actually notorious for complications. (WARNING: GRAPHIC. Visit link at your own risk.) Were they informed on them?

Did they see the above complications and STILL CHOOSE to put their perfectly healthy son through this?

"The procedure went smoothly, and everyone is happy, healthy and intact."

Who is "everyone?" Have they asked the kid? Was the kid UN-healthy beforehand?

I'm sorry, but any which way you try to slice it, no, this child is no longer intact.

Perhaps to a lesser degree than his father, but this poor child has a mutilated penis.

Yes, I dare say it, 30% of the world's male population are living with mutilated penises. Perhaps they are blissfully ignorant about it, but they are.

I'll tell you what was going through this man's head; circumcising his son was necessary to validate what he went through. His son remaining intact would have been a daily reminder that he lost his own penis to a needless procedure with risks. There was a mental necessity for this father to have his son "safely on the other side," for his own reassurance that (despite his own missing penis) circumcision is "harmless."

I'll I've got to say is, really dude? After losing your penis to circumcision you, STILL thought putting your own child through this was a good idea?

I hate to say it but what a shame. Shame on this father, shame on the doctor. And shame on this article for allowing the dissemination of misinformation.

Circumcision has risks.

This man's story is a living example of what can go wrong.

The "Plastibell" method of infant circumcision is not any "better" than the other circumcision methods, whose objective and end-result are the same. In fact, the "Plastibell" method carries its own particular risks.

No, the circumcised penis is NOT "intact," it is MISSING an intrinsic part with which all boys are born with.

Absolutely disheartening to learn that in spite of it all, this man went through with inflicting his son with the same risk that lost him his own penis.

Even after having had to employ artificial insemination to conceive him he STILL went through with it.

What was this man smoking?

What were the doctors that went through with it on?

In what mind is it acceptable to put a perfectly healthy child through needless risk?

A risk for which the example is hanging right between your legs?

There are no words.

I'm in utter disbelief.

7 comments:

  1. "A risk for which the example is hanging right between your legs? "

    Or rather, isn't.

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  2. "I'll tell you what was going through this man's head; circumcising his son was necessary to validate what he went through. His son remaining intact would have been a daily reminder that he lost his own penis to a needless procedure with risks. There was a mental necessity for this father to have his son "safely on the other side," for his own reassurance that (despite his own missing penis) circumcision is "harmless.""

    Spot on once again. Thanks Joe.

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  4. The compulsion to circumcise and "normalize" seems to be overwhelming in this country. I have had at least one client circumcise a second son after a first son was damaged during a botched circumcision and I suspect that a second one did the same. It is very sad. But you can lay the blame at the doorstep of the medical profession that has a duty to the infant boys to refuse to do unnecessary surgery on them but will not follow through on that obligation, opting instead for money and, perhaps, validation of their own statuses and choices.

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  5. One mother said to me, "If I don't get him circumcised now, he might get an infection when he's five years old and have to be circumcised then." She hadn't thought about the fact that her newborn son would experience the trauma of circumcision as a primal wound when there wasn't even a problem and there was great likelihood there would never would be one. In fact, statistics were in his favor (or we wouldn't have overpopulated the planet)! Fear is a driving force. I think this father was in a terrible dilemma. It's reasonable to assume he would think "If I had been circumcised at birth, I wouldn't have needed it later," or "This will keep him from having the problem I had that caused me to need to be circumcised," Imagine his worry, however, knowing the potential damage that could be caused by circumcision surgery. It must have been a painfully trying decision and I wonder what he would have done had he not been coerced by those around him. Fear allows us to do irrational things. I'm just sorry we didn't have an opportunity to speak with him. The truth is so simple. Once it's pointed out, it's easy to understand. Sadly, father and son are bonded by pain and trauma. Let's hope they set an example of what not to do to infants and children. We can tell their story, others will listen. .

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  6. I wonder that if this poor boy grows up and becomes a father himself he will do the same thing to his own son. Idiocy and irrationality are passed down the generations.

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  7. Joseph I agree. He now can live his life through his cut son, the way it was suppose to be for himself - cut and okay. This should also cement Mike's faith that his parents loved him that's why they chose circumcision. So he has to cut his son to edify his parent's love. Just a guess.

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