Mayo Clinic Guide to Fertility
and Conception. By Jani R. Jensen, M.D., and Elizabeth A. Stewart, M.D. Da
Capo. $23.99.
Sex: An Uncensored Introduction.
By Nikol Hasler. Illustrations by Michael Capozzola. Zest Books. $14.99.
How to get pregnant – and
how to enjoy sex if you do not want to get pregnant – are the subjects of,
respectively, Mayo Clinic Guide to
Fertility and Conception and Sex: An
Uncensored Introduction. The Mayo Clinic book is exactly what anyone
familiar with this outstanding medical establishment would expect: thorough,
engaging, fact-packed and plainspoken. It is also full of surprises – for
example, Jani Jensen and Elizabeth Stewart suggest that both partners, not just
the woman, should have good body-mass index (BMI) numbers to maximize the
chance of a pregnancy. The book is also upbeat in some rather surprising ways, explaining,
for example, to “forget about positions and routines” when trying to get
pregnant, because “there’s no scientific basis for the idea that certain
positions during sex will enhance conception. By all means, though, feel free
to get creative if you like!” The highly positive tone of this book makes some
of the more-complex elements of it much easier to accept; the personal stories
sprinkled throughout are helpful, too. But it is a fair bet that most people
who buy Mayo Clinic Guide to Fertility
and Conception will do so because they want to know how to start or expand
a family – the writing style and other people’s stories will be subsidiary. The
book proves to be just as helpful (and, not surprisingly, scientifically
accurate) as anyone could wish. The authors have impeccable credentials, Jensen
as co-director of the In Vitro Fertilization Program at the Mayo Clinic and
Stewart as chair of the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility.
The 20 chapters here focus clearly on just about all aspects of getting
pregnant, and each chapter breaks down its topic into accessible,
easy-to-follow, clearly written sections. “Ovulation and Fertility Signs,” for
example, includes “Your menstrual cycle,” “Your fertility window,” “Products
that can help,” and a personal story – and each of the first three of these parts
is itself broken down into smaller subsections. This makes the very complex
topic of fertility and conception much easier to understand, and has the added
advantage of letting readers skip sections in which they are not interested and
get right to the ones on which they want to focus. There is, for example, a
chapter called “Miscarriage and Ectopic Pregnancy” that includes “Miscarriage,”
“Recurrent pregnancy loss,” “Ectopic pregnancy,” “Trying again,” and the usual
personal case history. Turn to “Trying again,” for instance, and there is the
expected statement that “Pregnancy loss can be an extremely difficult
experience. …Keep in mind that you and your partner may deal with a pregnancy
loss in different ways. It may not always be easy to recognize that the other
person is hurting.” But you will also find the unexpected here: a short description, with photo, of the Japanese
custom of making offerings to Jizo, an enlightened being thought to watch over
miscarried and aborted fetuses. Of course, Jensen and Stewart do not suggest
purchasing a Jizo statue and dressing it in a cap and bib, as is done in Japan;
here as elsewhere, they explain more than they recommend. But by including this
unfamiliar-to-Westerners custom, they subtly show that the pain of the ending
of a desired pregnancy takes many forms and generates many different coping
mechanisms. It is this sort of inclusiveness, this openness to multiple
approaches to becoming pregnant and carrying a baby to term, that makes Mayo Clinic Guide to Fertility and
Conception so valuable. The book really does go through pretty much every
possible child-related alternative, including surgery, reproductive assistance,
third-party reproduction, single parenthood, adoption – and child-free living.
The expertise of Jensen and Stewart is matched by their empathy, and anyone
seeking to start a family or expand one, and who is looking for some sound,
scientifically grounded advice and cheerleading, will find them served up here.
Mayo Clinic Guide to Fertility and Conception of course includes a
“How Babies Are Made” chapter with illustrations of male and female sexual
organs and diagrams of fertilization, implantation, and even the different ways
twins develop in the womb. Sex: An
Uncensored Introduction includes reproductive-organ illustrations, too, but
this is a book primarily targeting teenagers, and its style is therefore very
different – starting with the bird and bee shown on the front cover. Nikol
Hasler aims for a mixture of accuracy, humor and nonjudgmental, uncensored
advice here, and manages a pretty good mix some if not all of the time.
Hasler, a mother of teens, hosts a Web series about sex and works in public TV,
and she is scarcely a medical expert, but Sex:
An Uncensored Introduction is scarcely a medical book. In trying to speak
to a teenage audience, Hasler includes elements such as occasional boxes called
“There are no stupid questions – except for this one.” An example: “Can I get
my mom pregnant if I masturbate in a sock and then my mom washes the dirty
sock, gets dried semen on her hand, and later wipes herself?” Also here, in
addition to what Hasler calls “the basics” about sex, are entries such as
“What’s in a name?” – where she says “there are lots of great (and not so
great) names for your body parts! Here are some of our faves.” Those include,
for breasts, “airbags…tittybojangles, tracks of land, chesticles…dairy
pillows,” and for penis, “one-eyed trouser snake, schlong, purple-headed yogurt
slinger…tallywhacker…pork sword.” Clearly this is not a book as straightforward
as the Mayo Clinic’s. But there is an underlying seriousness of purpose to Sex: An Uncensored Introduction, as
shown in answers to a variety of questions that raise concerns ranging from “My
penis is kind of small” to “I’m an openly gay kid, and I am really sensitive to
guys thinking I want them”; from “I was raped as a young girl, and because of
this I feel like I have lost the magic” to “Will my new boyfriend still want to
have sex with me when he finds out that I am all loose and stretched out?” Hasler
takes all these questions seriously and answers them carefully and
nonjudgmentally – indeed, the nonjudgmental aspect of the book is one of its
strongest points. A weaker element is the way Hasler bends over backwards to
stay with-it and trendy, probably because she wants teens to pay attention.
Thus, her first entry under “Gender Identifications” is: “Cisgender: People who
are comfortable in the gender they were assigned at birth.” Assigned at birth?
By whom? What exactly does that mean? But the basic advice in the book is sound
and is delivered forthrightly: “Sex or foreplay should be consensual every time
you have it, no matter what kind of sex it is and who [sic] you are having it with.” If
anything, Hasler errs on the side of caution, as when discussing sexually
transmitted infections: “If you are sexually active, you should be getting
tested every six months, even if you are using condoms (which you’d better
be).” There is nothing pandering or smarmy in Sex: An Uncensored Introduction, despite the fact that it lives up
fairly well to Hasler’s promise to discuss “everything that has to do with
sex.” The book is not an advocacy tract: “This book is not here to tell you to
have or not to have sex – it’s to tell you what you need to know if you are
having sex, or ever will.” Yes, some of the attempts at humor fall flat, such
as the chapter title, “Oral, Vaginal, and Anal Sex: You’re Going to Put That
Where?” And whether some items are humorous is a matter of opinion, such as
this “no stupid questions” entry: “If I want to make it to third base on the
first date, does it help to bring a baseball bat?” However, the biggest issue
with Sex: An Uncensored Introduction
is that the humor and seriousness sometimes coexist uneasily and imperfectly,
with the funny elements tending to override the far more important serious and
health-related ones. For the intended teen audience, though, that may be no
issue at all, although it is sometimes difficult to remember that Hasler is addressing teens – as when, for
example, she feels obliged to write a definition implying far more naïveté than
teenagers are likely to possess: “Some people like to look at pictures or
movies of people having sex. This is called pornography, or porn.” Still, the
bottom-line message here, and it is one that Hasler delivers effectively, is,
“We’re all wired differently, and we all like different things for different
reasons.” That is a comment that teens – and parents of teens, such as Hasler herself
– can hopefully take to heart…not just to their sex organs.
No comments:
Post a Comment