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You Studyin' Hard And Hopin' To Pass
"Do as I say, not as I do," mother always used to advise when I confronted her with the manifest hypocrisy of her behavior. Her pronouncements on matters moral, spiritual and hygienic designed to keep me in line did not, she said, apply to adults, or at least to the situation at hand which, in my estimation, undermined the foundation of her original decrees. Dad mostly stayed out of the way and enjoyed this fruitless debate as a spectator. Nothing can be gained and much dignity sacrificed in arguing with children.
Which is sort of how, now, I feel about writing to my Congressman. Reason, perspective, proportion and decency are ineffective tools with which to engage ignorance, incompetence and apathy or, worse, the vicious conglomeration of God, guns and greed that defines my country's purposes now at home and in the world.
The President, we may charitably say, is an idiot. And a puppet. He knows not what he does. But that would be fine, or at least we could effectively work around his vacuity, vapidity and sad inability to plod through a straightforward declarative sentence without pausing, stumbling and ultimately mispronouncing, frequently with a loss of subject and verb agreement or a variable approach to tense, if Congress posed any sort of corrective rein upon our self-described "Decider."
But Congress wants only to get reelected. So its members lunch with lobbyists, make promises to great corporations in exchange for money and votes, pose for photographs with flags, and let one bad deal after another go down. Except Nancy Pelosi tells us, too many years to count into the never-ending war, that she's proud to have "changed the nature of the debate." And I'm sure that's comforting to the families burying the boys and girls we've "lost" since her party took control of Congress last January.
But we have the solution to stupid presidents and timid or co-opted legislators. A law already on the books need only be amended to expand its application. Possibly this would require a Constitutional Amendment, since it will change the way we choose our leaders. Or maybe an Executive Signing Statement or Supreme Court decree would suffice, since we have largely abandoned adherence to most of the important parts of that dusty old document in the conduct of our affairs.
I refer to the law known as No Child Left Behind. The theory here is that you can't be sure you've educated a child unless he can give you back evidence of what you tried to put into him. So, you test him. Teachers, mostly, don't like this. They say it requires them to "teach to the test." Many students don't like it because they either do poorly when tested (perhaps because they don't know the material) , suffer "anxiety" at the prospect, "don't test well", or have "a learning style" that does not adequately reveal the depth of their intellect on multiple choice questions. No doubt these are valid enough complaints in some cases and under some circumstances in some jurisdictions.
But the assumption that you can measure how much sand you've poured into a bag by hoisting it on to a scale seems to me reasonable. I've taken tests I was prepared for and tests I've failed because I didn't apply myself, wasn't paying attention, didn't care, didn't try. I might have blamed a bad teacher; mom always blamed me; nobody talked about any inherent bad effects of testing all those years ago.
So I think President Bush is right. More testing. But hey, teacher, leave those kids alone. I propose a series of standardized tests for persons wishing to apply their intellect to the complex, difficult, yet often subtle tasks of running the public affairs of a great nation. You want to represent Maine in Washington? You might even have presidential aspirations someday? Fine. Don't solicit cops in men's rooms, immediately return campaign contributions linked to organized crime, make certain your children's nanny has her papers in order, and score at least seventy-five per cent on the Public Servant Suitability examination.
What to require? Well, English, of course. Bilingual though we may be becoming, it would be wonderful if our leaders at least mastered this one language that is in common, widespread use all around the world. I did well enough on the 1967 version of the New York State Regents exam in that subject, and would be pleased to see how President Bush and members of Congress might score on the same test. Beyond basic tests of grammar, vocabulary and reading comprehension, I think we ought to require a decent facility at composition of those who would use our language to persuade us to vote for them, their schemes, their wars. Toward this end, I propose certain essay requirements including, at minimum, the following.
First, three essays, of at least three thousand words each, on the subjects: "the Uses Of War By Civilized Nations," "My God, Your God, The Right God," and "Three Immoral Laws I Would Break And Three Legal Things I Wouldn't Do For Any Amount Of Money."
I would expect each potential candidate to demonstrate his ability to write and deliver a speech lasting at least ten minutes on the subject of his or her suitability to guide and lead and legislate. The phrases "The American people," "God bless America," "the fact of the matter," "at the end of the day," "the bottom line," "heroes of 9/11", "enemies of America," "greatest nation on earth," "greatest generation," "high-tech," "family values," "sanctity of marriage," "the ultimate sacrifice," and other common annoyances of like nature shall be proscribed.
President Bush the First, a decade or more ago, while his son was still enjoying himself executing retarded and innocent persons in Texas instead of laying waste to whole nations, said the United States would, under his education reforms, be "Number One in math and science by the year 2000." Well, we weren't. And we aren't. But we should expect of our leaders a reasonable degree of numeracy. Accordingly, it should be easy enough to resurrect the final exam from some high school Practical Math course of a few decades ago.
Can your Senator balance a checkbook? Do per centage markups and discounts? Convert Fahrenheit to Celsius? Derive the decimal equivalent of five thirty-seconds? Add and subtract negative numbers? I wouldn't be against framing the questions in a culturally appropriate context: If Senator X agrees to vote for a bill sponsored by Exxon in exchange of the sum of two hundred thousand dollars, and he puts the sum received at interest at the rate of five per cent compounded monthly until he "retires" to "spend more time with his family" when discovered rubbing his fingers along the underside of a public toilet partition seventeen months later, how much interest will he have earned, less a fifteen dollar early withdrawal penalty and a ten per cent tithe to his fundamentalist church?
Yes, there will be questions about evolution. No, there are not "equally valid alternative explanations."
History will be a difficult subject to test. Probably we'd need more of a Seminars In American Studies sort of approach, with questions testing the fineness of the candidate's appreciation for certain Supreme Court decisions; the causes of, excuses for and beneficiaries of several popular wars; notable scandals in American politics; Japanese interment during World War II; the McCarthy years and the Red Scare era. Sample question: What did President Eisenhower mean by the "Military Industrial Complex"? Why did he warn against it? Was he afraid of it? Are you?
Each candidate should be required to publish a list of all the magazines, newspapers, technical journals, scriptures, tracts, and corporate reports to which he subscribes or regularly reads. If any.
I wouldn't object to a nationally televised spelling bee. P-O-T-A-T-O. N-U-C-L-E-A-R.
We've given ignorance a chance. It has shown its weaknesses. I'm not saying intelligence, literacy and an understanding of history, culture, natural and applied science, and an appreciation of comparative religion will solve all our many problems, but I do think a job is better done with decent tools than with just any old, dull, straight-slot screwdriver you happen to have lying around Texas.
Look, I'm not much. But if you give me a total rise I can lay out and build a set of stairs you'd be willing to climb. Tell me the width of your garage and the pitch of your roof and I'll tell you how long your rafters are. And I'll bet several senators and some Supreme Court justices couldn't.
One other thing. Everybody has to memorize one long poem (no free or blank verse) and recite it on national television (all networks, cable stations and local franchises required to carry the program) two nights before election day.
There are strange things done down in Washington, son, By boobs whose abuses are bold. They may have passed Yale, but daily they fail; And their workings are hard to behold.
If a bunch of the boys get to whoopin' it up. And to Cooper they wish to reply, Talk to him like his mom: ckc2@prexar.com, And advise him: who, what, when, where, why.
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23 Comments so far
Show AllBrilliant. I can't stop laughing.
Chris,
Great article! LMAO!
It makes much more sense than the current system of selecting an emperor.
Wonderful article. Literacy in America is sorely needed, especially among our so-called leaders.
I am a technical writer and programmer for a county in West Virginia, so I deal with school administrators very frequently. During more than 20 years of experience, I've come to realize that the main problem with education in America is that the people who decide what our children need to learn are most definitely not scholars. There are no more than three or four administrators in the entire county school system of 1,500 employees who can write a paragraph that is grammatically correct and coherent.
It's no wonder that the majority of posters on blogs don't know that "it's" is not a possessive. When school administrators and teachers think the words "high school," "football game" and "room" are proper nouns, it's not surprising that students coming out of our schools don't understand grammar or sentence structure.
I'd be willing to wager that the majority of Americans don't know the difference between an adjective and an adverb or the subject and object of a sentence. This includes many writers of TV dialog, who write lines like "I feel badly" and "he was talking to Mom and I." I often wonder if people who say they feel badly also say they feel happily.
When a business is doing poorly, the clerks and custodians are not to blame. It's the fault of those at the top. When our education system is not doing well, it's not the teachers, parents, or students who are to blame. It is, in fact, a systemic problem that can't be rectified without some very basic changes in how education is viewed. Testing students is surely not the answer.
If the political leaders in America are ignorant, poorly educated, unable to speak their native language, and have little understanding of history, it stands to reason that this will filter down to many other aspects of life.
Along with the tests and intellectual accountability for political leadership, it might be a great idea to have tests and intellectual accountability for educational administrators, too. Just a thought.
cooper speaks truth to power,
with wit and wisdom well heard.
with hope in this crucial hour,
the masses of men will be stirred.
i would that the faithful be risen,
to stem the murderous horde.
but i fear the light is imprisoned,
the pen destroyed by the sword.
Maybe that's why repugs keep getting elected in the South, lack of a decent education for the booboisie for the last 40 years.
bandido said:
"Maybe that's why repugs keep getting elected in the South, lack of a decent education for the booboisie for the last 40 years."
True. Keep 'em dumb and manageable. Their kids are all online though... Thank goodness for teenage rebels.
The land of milk and honey is substantially populated with ill educated retards who pride themsleves on their false pretenses.
I mistook this land for another - historically cultured Europe
But that only means the slants there are more educated
As always, Chris makes his points through the marvelous use of prose and now poetry. It doesn't get much better. Thanks.
This essay is brilliant, and I wish I didn't feel that I am among a frighteningly small number of Americans who agree with it.
I want to live in a country where intelligence is respected instead of shunned.
I want to live in a country where science trumps religious
beliefs.
I want to live in a country where people are more horrified by violence than they are by matters of sexuality.
I want to live in a country that recognizes the rest of the world as necessary not only for its own prosperity but for its own survival.
I used to live in a country like that. I hope to again.
Testing would-be candidates wit and integrity would be a marked improvement over soundbyte TV appearances cum debates. Still, some of the most twisted minds have been those of educated, historical leaders... and that is why I would recommend the astrological option! Yep, folks... the skilled astrologer can see if there is grounds for any moral decency in the person's natal chart. Jupiter (kin to the New Testament and its call to faith, its promise of prosperity and healing) operates as a counter-balance to Saturn, the judgmental eye-for-an-eye 'god' of the Old Testament and arbiter of karma. All the new age books that claim that changing your thoughts, reciting mantras, or focusing on your desired objective by manicuring your power of intention leave out the Saturn factor, and it explains why some lives improve far more than others. If these 2 planets are poorly configured (it's all cosmic math) in a chart, the bearer of that designation has not learned a balance between faith and fear, reason and euphoria, how to spend and how to save. Bush's are at odds. Of course I'd like to see other factors come into analysis, too, but after 30 years of astrological chart analysis, as per ethics, the combo of these 2 in the natal chart is the most comprehensive in noting whether an individual is CAPABLE of ethics, honesty, accountability or decent judgment. Given what our present system has bequeathed to us, considering the astrological factor ought not to be such a stretch! I'd do analyses for free!
Siouxrose-I think a test of ethics is more important than anything really.
Again, total honesty here...
...I really couldn't give a damn about how "smart" a candidate is.
What I care about is their moral character. As you once put it Sioux, a "mastery" of ethics.
The worst individuals in human history have been those with smarts and a plan.
I'm not shunning intellect. Many people do. They fear it. Because they know what ill smart people can be capable of.
If we're going to measure intelligence in our leaders, let it be emotional and/or moral intelligence.
And I'm not talking about how often they go to church or what their sexual history is.
I want to know how much they care for people. What and how much are they willing to do to better the human condition and the planet? Are they a member of the elite, or are they one of us?
You don't have to be a member of Mensa to have a conscience.
Read "Government" by B. Traven. He described how Chiapan Maya (partially tongue-in-the-cheek) selected their leaders.
First, a council of elders (selected for their wisdom and demonstrated concern for the community's benefice), would search for a man who-
1. demonstrated consistent and regular patterns of behavior that successfully promoted the welfare and well-being of all of his fellow tribal members.
2. showed a longterm apathy, or antipathy toward accumulating private wealth or building political power bases
3. never indulged in self-promotion or public advertising relative to his civic spirit
After the council selected the leader-to-be who fulfilled the above criteria, they then sent strong men to ambush and capture him.
After that, the council would both canjole and force him into taking office.
However, before the new leader took office, he would have to publicly swear to an oath: to constantly work for the good of the tribe, openly give reasons for his decisions, and never order others to do any work he himself could do.
To burn the oath home, during the time the appointed leader took the oath he would sit on an extremely hot iron seat.
As a result, the new leader's butt would be so painfully burned, he could not comfortably sit for any length of time.
The last part of the oath stated: If he did not leave office when either his term ended, or when the majority, through referendum, voted against his retaining office, he would be executed.
Siouxrose___We will be counting on you to enlighten us on the indicated intelligence, moral character, and other leadership abilities of the candidates after they are narrowed down to a few. I am sure it will be as helpful if not more so than listening to campaign speeches. I have noticed how the sun signs are remarkably accurate in showing behaviour, but that is the extent of my astrologic knowledge. (Please don`t laugh) Some have commented on the dumbing down of America, and when one looks at old letters and documents and the beautiful writing and use of the language, it seems to be the case. Also many people seem to live only for today and have quite a shallow attitude about what they should contribute to posterity. There is nothing that will develope the character like having to use ones wits and abilities to survive, which may happen again in America unless somehow we change course. We have to watch out for those "Mars" people next time, so keep us informed.
Let's at least hope the candidates can pass a geography test. In addition to Bush's embarrasing gaffe about Nelson Mandela, I seem to recall in a speech he referred to Africa as a nation. If that is the case Mr. President, then the state of Alaska must be an island, right? You know, the state where the atlas publishing companies put it in a box next to the Hawaiian Islands because there is not enough room on the page to accurately depict where Alaska geographically is located? God help us!
Expectin' the cotton-pickin' congress-critters to know anythin', to unnerstan' anythin' - now that sounds mighty like "cruel and unusual punishment"!
Now what sort of reaction would we get if we turn up when the congress-critters of our localities are spoutin', and we stick up mighty big posters that say, "expecting this congress-critter to know or understand anything is cruel and unusual punishment"?
Not as much fun as nailing decapitated teddy-bears drenched in ketchup to their electoral constituency office doors, with a sign saying "International Conspiracy for the Oppression of Teddy Bears", and expecting the police, the FBI etc, to understand just precisely what they are being expected to do as a result ... but maybe more effective in the long run.
Good Morrow, IWARRIOR: I love the lyric from Don Henley, "What it means to you to BE alive." The word alive, implies sentience, and in mature souls, sentience is not limited to the 360 purview of ego as primary reference. It entails a consideration for others, the realization that life is a shared creation (Dr. Paul Brenner quote), that we "were born involved in one another." (That's an American Indian saying.)
Today's political arena is about macho posturing, who's the best warrior, and as I have often related, that is the quintessential signature of Mars. Its cosmic complement, Venus, relates to the health of society. BOTH are necessary. We are born as individuals for a reason, to explore the boundaries between self and other; but what is limited in human education is the realization that without a balanced society, no singular self really wins any prize, attains any true satisfaction. HEALTHY selves within a HEALTHY society that supports a vision of art, peace, culture, CREATIVE as opposed to DESTRUCTIVE (think the investment in an obscenity of arms programs and weapons systems) objectives and aspirations. Yeah, I dream of that day and write books for children that I hope will survive to plant a vision like a seed, akin to that related by Dr. Seuss particularly in THE LORAX. If only all elected leaders had to read SEUSS and if they persisted in policies of aggression, lock them up in a natural sanctuary and give them only marijuana and/or hallucinogens until they arrive at a necessary vision correction. I think Huxley would validate this strategy.
KERNEL: One intriguing analogy between the zodiac's TWELVE sun signs is its analogy to CHRIST choosing 12 disciples and Abraham founding 12 tribes. I see these twelve as specific paths to learning. They are modalities. Our bodies have separate systems, i.e. reproductive, endocrine, digestive, etc and these twelve are the SYSTEMS for mankind's oeprational procedures. Every one of the sun signs brings gifts and reciprocal flaws (or tests & lessons), and that is why the human mosaic, taken as a Gestalt, provides its own built-in checks and balances.
I learned about sun signs during high school and when I met a "real" astrologer who touted the details of moon signs, Venus-Mars aspects, etc I thought, "I could never remember all that." But the subject fascinated me, and I studied it as an adjunct to courses in psychology and sociology, and always felt that the academics studied human behavior in the way an observer looks at the tree as it shows from above the ground. Astrology and the old oracle systems reveal what goes on beneath "the earth," i.e. those root structures that dictate HOW that tree will grow.
Today's astrology books cater to this age of mercantilism and focus on how to find love/lust and/or make $. The older books (I have a serious collection and wonder if some day these books will be banned or burned. One more Republican president, although we all know the parties have morphed into one, would probably generate that outcome) are the ones with DEEP realizations. I marvel at the thought process of the early Theosophical society members, their brilliant minds focused on subjects of metaphysical importance. If anyone on this site finds this material of interest, check out QUEST BOOKS (The Theosophical Publishing House).
BALAKIREV: Your anecdote brings to mind the origin of politics as HOT SEAT!
Siouxrose-Does Mars factor into my astrological profile. I can get so angry and have reallty been that way as of late. I try not to succumb to it and am not proud of it, but I very much have that macho streak within me. I DO at times want to bust the heads of the right people. I DO often want to fight the good fight. There are bastards I do want to see brought down.
I've never been a war-mongerer so to speak. I don't believe any good comes out of nations attacking each other.
But where does my rage come from? I only dabble in astrology, but I've always thought that agression wasn't an Aquarian trait.
Look at my comments as of late. I'm almost embarassed at what I wrote.
I've said a whole bunch of times that I want Bush to be swung from the gallows.
That's kind of ugly isn't it? I don't like feeling that way.
IWARRIOR: Mars is a component of every individual and thus every birth chart. Just as music results from a combination of notes, who we are at essence reflects the arrangement of these planetary personae. To me, they are the ganglia of our universe's nervous system.
Mars is the principle of ego, also of self-interest and where thwarted, anger and violence. Our society is so enamored with Mars that its influence is disproportionate. My favorite example is the amount of $ that goes to war, weapons and the military-industrial complex. I believe by this example, our nation's priorities are evidenced.
Keep in mind that Jesus showed righteous anger when he encountered the moneychangers within the solemn confines of the Temple, i.e. what should have been a sacred place. I get angry, too. Any sane person confronted with the ravages against basic decency, honesty and justice that are passing for "business as usual" in our now seriously deranged nation, who does NOT get angry (shades of Norman Bealle's famous line, "I'm mad as hell and not gonna take it anymore," come to mind) is either on prosac, stuffing their face with food to make sugar their drug, boozed out, or essentially mentally DEAD.
Anger is passion and passion can be a great thing. In the Tarot, the card of the lion represents this fuel, this raw passion which some individuals hold greater endowments of than others. I happen to have a lot, and believe I lived as a male and a warrior in other times. The key to the lion card is "ride the passion, don't let it ride you." I satirized recently in this forum, confronting my own ambivalence about going to DC for the 9/15 protest as rather instead staying home to "fuck for peace." The universe delivered, and I have found that a lot of sex helps my mind to deal with these times. It might be selfish, but I consider it self-preservative, kind of like the hiker stopping to rest on the mountain before scaling the next one.
Therefore the question is not anger, for there IS much to BE angry about; but rather where can you best direct your PASSION so that it keeps you in relative balance (mind/body/spirit) and ultimately serves your purpose.
Aquarius is in a tough spot. My best friend is raising her Aquarian grandson because her daughter is a lost cause. I have watched my friend age because she's literally poured her life spirit into the nurture of this child. He is very willful and the school system (particularly today, as it does its utmost to expunge creativity, individual uniqueness, independent thought) is a bane to his existence. I remind her that Aquarians are born with the will to buck institutions. They are the zodiac's chosen rebels. They are the sign best equipped to see through the morass of lies into the unerring Truths that are inviolate, written as law into the hidden (etheric) constructs of this universe.
I encourage you to read esoteric and metaphysical literature to beef up, like ingesting vitamins, your realization of these Truths as this knowledge will further your cause. "Many are called, but few are chosen." A lot of people have what it takes to become leaders. With the ugliest planet (its potential for mass violence is involved) about to enter Capricorn, the sign I would link to fascism; and the planet of deception in YOUR sign, with your own planetary ruler, Uranus, in Pisces (sign of deception, duality, subterfuge)... Aquarius is IN the great cosmic squeeze.
The astrological portents (Kudos to Michael Lutin for explaining the key factors of a rather ominous arrangements that gets underway in late 2009 and builds through 2010 and onwards) are those of such a massive struggle between basic human liberties and the forces that would enslave us, as to make coming years resonant with the Born Again Christian's notion of THE TRIBULATION. The difference is their beliefs are bringing it on, while the rest of us, who have a more humane notion of life and the Deity, must also wrestle with the symptoms of so much coming asunder. Remember the power of the Phoenix. Some of us will rise from the ashes, and with passionate conviction, we will be the spiritual (and secular) leaders who plant the seeds of that which is next to come. This is a planet that rotates and revolves, as does every living planetary entity in our solar system. This rotation, this pattern for revolution reminds us that time is NOT linear. That cycles recur. That there is a great wisdom on the part of the cosmic clockmaker, which cannot interfere with the free will premise upon which this planet, as school room of a sort, has been fabricated.
The best decisions, the core of inner truth, come about when WE are centered. For me that involves not ingesting much sugar, caffeine, booze, etc. Practicing Yoga and biking into the woods to HEAR the voice of spirit. If more Americans lived a sacred practice, listened to that interior voice, I wonder if our nation would be a zone of addicts and those who can care less about their nation's unceasing destruction, moral callousness to other HUMAN being, not to mention ecosystems. (I'll quit now. The moon is in Aquarius today, you should receive major insights as a result.)
Thanks Siouxrose. Your posts give me a new respect and appreciation for astrology. Again, I've been interested in it since I was a child. I remember finding out that I was an Aquarius, it made me feel "special" in a sense, and helped me understand why I felt different from a lot of people then and still do today. That's why I think astrology is a nice thing to introduce to kids. It makes them feel unique and shows them that the weaknesses people may see in them are actually strengths.
"satirized recently in this forum, confronting my own ambivalence about going to DC for the 9/15 protest as rather instead staying home to "fuck for peace." The universe delivered, and I have found that a lot of sex helps my mind to deal with these times."
Oh yeah, sex is great, IF you can find it. ME, I can't even get a date! :)
That's one thing that bugs me a little about New Age/Aquarian thinking, all this talk of sex. Not that I'm a prude, but ya gotta find someone you'd want to have sex with first, and that's not easy. :) At least for me. Not that I haven't had offers, but I'm not willing to "make do" either.
That's why "Make Love Not War" bothers me. Not everyone can "Make Love". As if there's all these women I'd want to have sex with just waiting for me to leave my house or whatever!!! I'm not a rock star!
Yeah, hedonism and free love can be a nice thing, IF there are people willing to be hedonistic and free lovin' with YOU. And when it comes to finding a relationship, you might as well go job hunting. Every date feels like an interview. And when you don't fit the "requirements", it just makes it tougher. Y'know gotta be "successful", taller than 6ft, have a car, etc.
Besides, nowadays, free lovin' gets you a STD or a paternity suit.
Being single is rough. :)
IWARRIOR: I was celibate for some time because there was no one I felt linked with on enough levels, but the universe sent me a guy 11 years younger the day AFTER my birthday. His father lives in my neighborhood and he saw me cutting my grass with a machete, and just showed up... lawn warrior style... as a chilvarous gesture. It would have been a good scene for "THE LUCY SHOW" in that his timing was terrible! I was arguing on the telephone as per a lost manuscript, couldn't hear a thing, was in the midst of trying to tie up loose ends to take off for 2 weeks to the Keys, and all the noise!!!! Then when I got back 2 weeks later, there he was again... built like Adonis, and ready to help me do some home repairs. LOTS of chemistry... I came of age in the Woodstock protest time period, and there was "free love" back then, but we were all young and beautiful and believed in a different world. It's hard to find that kind of trust today, so when you do feel it for someone... dive in! No one knows how long they will be given, so it's essential to HONOR the gift of communion, flesh to flesh. For some of us, that opens a spiritual gateway and forms the basis of Tantra. Now that's ultimate sex... I'm working towards that with "lawn warrior."
I WARRIOR: Go to a Unity church, or a new age book shop, or the local health food store, or a hip coffee shop. There's got to be a woman in one of those spheres with whom you can connect. You need it... open yourself to sexual healing.