Bodywatching – The Chest

12 December 2009

When our ancestors switched to hunting as a means of survival, new pressures came to bear on the human body. The males who set off on the chase had to develop improved respiration. If they ran out of breath they ran out of food. Compared to other monkeys and apes they had to become big-chested. The male chest became an athlete’s chest.

The female developed in a different way. Hampered by pregnancies and infants, she was less mobile. Her chest did not enlarge like the male’s. It developed in another direction, the rib-cage remaining small but the breasts swelling to a pair of soft hemispheres. These enlarged breasts had two biological functions, one parental, acting as gigantic sweat glands producing the modified sweat we call milk, and the other sexual.

While mother’s milk is ideal for growing a baby it has to be said that the shape of her breast is far from perfect for the task of breast-feeding; this is due to the sexual role of the breasts. This apparent flaw is explained by observing the breasts of monkeys and apes. In all other primate species the females are flat chested when not lactating. When they are breast-feeding, the region around the nipples becomes somewhat swollen with milk, but even then it is rare to find anything approaching the hemispherical shape of the human breast. The breasts of monkeys and apes are purely parental.

The origin of paired hemispheres of human female sexual signal is not hard to find. The females of all other primates display their sexual signals backwards from the rump region as they walk about on all fours. When the human female stands face-to-face with a male her rump-signals are concealed from view, but the evolution of a pair of mini-buttocks on her chest enables her to continue to transmit the primeval sexual signal without turning her back on her companion or going around on all fours.

In their sexual role the female breasts operate first as a visual stimuli and then as a tactile one.  Once the visual signals have attracted a male partner and sexual contact has begun, the tactile qualities of the breasts come into play. In pre-copulatory sequences there is often a great deal of oral and manual caressing of the breasts by the male. It is thought that the glands of the areolar region of the breast, during sexual activity, may transmit scent signals to the male nose exciting the male even more than the female. Which explains why males exploring their partners’ bodies spend so much time noising around in the mammary zone.

As sexual arousal mounts, the female chest undergoes several marked changes. The nipples become erect, increasing in length by up to a centimetre. The breasts become engorged with blood, increasing their overall size by up to 25 per cent and becoming more sensitive. With the approach of orgasm the areolar patches become tumescent and swell so much that they start to mask the nipple; there also appears a strange measles-like rash over the surface of the breasts and elsewhere on the chest, the ‘sex-flush’.

Few know that one every two hundred women have more than two breasts. The additional breasts are usually not functional .  Sometimes they are little more than additional nipples, sometime small breast-buds without nipples. The famous statue of the Venus of Milo, in the Louvre, displays three breasts, the third one being a small bud above the right breast.

The shape of the breast changes gradually from the age of puberty to old age.

The above is reproduced freely from ‘BODYWATCHING , A Field Guide to the Human Species’ by Desmond Morris.

The Fountainhead

3 November 2009

I am not primarily an advocate of capitalism, but of egoism; and I am not primarily an advocate of egoism, but of reason. If one recognizes the supremacy of reason and applies it consistently, all the rest follows.

When I first came across Ayn Rand and her philosophy, only a few months ago, I was surprised. I found bizarre that I had no knowledge of her philosophy which I do understand well and, as you can imagine, I completely agree with. More importantly, I had missed her as a writer.
The Fountainhead is a masterpiece, in my top 2 list. Every page you read, you’ll want more and you get more. Great characters and great settings.
If you happen to be an architect or to have an interest in architecture and urbanism you’ll love this book. If you don’t, you’ll love it nonetheless.
Fountainhead
Wynand: But, Mr Toohey, why shoud I consider your opinion?
Toohey: Well, after all, I am your architectural expert! He could not keep the edge of anger out of his voice.
Wynand: My dear Mr. Toohey, don’t confuse me with my readers. After a moment, Toohey leaned back and spread his hands out in laughing helplessness.
Toohey: Frankly, Mr. Wynand, I didn’t think my word would carry much weight with you. So I didn’t intend trying to sell you Peter Keating.
Wynand: No? What did you intend?
Toohey: Only to ask you to give half an hour of your time to someome who could convince you of Peter Keating’s ability much better than I can.
Wynand: Who is that?
Toohey: Mrs. Peter Keating.
Wynand: Why should I wish to discuss this matter with Mrs. Peter Keating?
Toohey: Because she is an exceedingly beautiful woman and an extremely difficult one.
Wynand threw his head back and laughed aloud.
Wynand: Good God Toohey, am I so obvious as that?
Toohey blinked unprepared.
Wynand: Really, Mr. Toohey, I owe you an apology, if, by allowing my tastes to become so well known, I caused you to be so crude. But I had no idea that among your many other humanitarian activities you were also a pimp.

Useful links
Find out more about Ayn Rand
You can buy The Fountainhead here for delivery in Europe or here for delivery in the USA

Bodywatching – The Eyes

26 October 2009

The eyes are the dominant sense organs of the human body. It has been estimated that 80 per cent of our information about the outside world enters through these remarkable structures. Despite all the talking and listening, we do remain essentially a visual animal.
Our eyes evolved to work efficiently at much longer distances than are usually encountered in modern life. Prehistoric men did not sit bent over desks poring over figures, reading small print or watching flickering images on screens. as they were hunters their eyes were more concerned with images in far distance.

the Pope
Poor eyesight must have been a curse for many of our remote ancestors as the permanent strain of trying to see with defective vision causes severe migraines and headaches. Seneca, the Roman coonnoisseur of the art of rhetoric seems to have been the first person to attempt this problem. He managed to read his way through the libraries of Rome by using a ‘globe of water’ as a magnifying glass. This ingenious solution should have led to early development of eyeglasses but it failed to do so. Again in the thirteenth century, Roger Bacon observed that the use of a crystal or glass could be useful to those with weak eyes. But it was not until the the end of the century that the first spectacles started to appear in Italy.
Igorclosed eye
People who believe in the importance of good and bad luck in their lives are often superstitious enough to decorate their rooms with eyes. These are known technically as ‘apotropaic eyes’ and have been used in one style or another for thousands of years. The idea behind them is that if the ‘evil eye’ comes to look upon the person in the room and brings bad luck with its glance, it can be out-stared by the other eyes present. Because they are un-blinking, artificial eyes, they will eventually be able to force the ‘evil eye’ to look away, and no harm will then come to the owner of the room.
Eyes

Now, look at me.

Useful links
The above is reproduced freely from ‘BODYWATCHING, A Field Guide to the Human Species’ by Desmond Morris. Find out more about Desmond Morris here

I, Lucifer – Glen Duncan

22 October 2009

I Lucifer

I, Lucifer, Fallen Angel, Prince of Darkness, Bringer of Light, Ruler of Hell, Lord of the Flies, Father of Lies, Apostate Supreme, Tempter of Mankind, Old Serpent, Prince of This World, Seducer, Accuser, Tormentor, Blasphemer, and without a doubt Best Fuck in the Seen and Unseen Universe (ask Eve, that minx) have decided – oo-la-la! – to tell all.

All? Some. I’m toying with that for a title: Some. Got a post-millennial modesty to it, son’t you thik? Some. My side of the story. The funk. The jive. The boogie. The rock and roll. (I invented rock and roll. You wouldn’t believe the things I have invented. Anal sex, obviously. Smoking. Astrology. Money… let’s save time: Everything in the world that distracts you from thinking about God. Which… pretty much… is everything in the world, isn’t it? Gosh.)

Do you know when you see a book, you look at the cover, at the title, you read the first few pages and you think: Wow! this book has been written for me and you buy it without even thinking about it. 

Just read it and love it.

See you in Hell, scribe.

Useful links
You can buy I, Lucifer here
Find out more about Glen Duncan and his bibliography here