Is this man not a doctor? Has he
not heard of gonorrhoea of the throat? Has he never read my
peer-reviewed article entitled “Extensive palatal echymosis from felatio
– a note of caution with AIDS at large”? If not, let him get it and
read it.
Published in the British Journal of Sexual
Medicine Volume 14 in 1987, pages 286-287 I mentioned, Tafracher,
Gonorrhoea of the throat from oral sex, plus other things that I usually
discuss only in Consulting Rooms.
I am the only person known to
have interviewed 128 international prostitutes on duty on the African
Continent, and published the findings. When I described in detail what
they told me, mentioning those things in my book “What Is AIDS?”
(Foreword by Dr Justice Thomas Mensah, ex-OAA UK Chairman) I prefaced
the book with a chapter on the Ghanaian word “Tafracher” (in Yoruba
Forijimi) and I went on to say this: “Some of the practices described in
this book as being intimately related to AIDS are so ‘frank’ that not
even tafracher or forijimi, can sufficiently remove the unpleasantness“
I
went on: “But the question ‘What Is AIDS?’ cannot be answered anywhere
near adequately without being frank. For this reason the book cannot be
recommended for all and sundry. Those who do not need to read these
things are advised not to read them. I emphasize that not every literate
adult needs to read this book”.
And now, here comes a doctor
trained in the prestigious University of Ghana Medical School telling
giggling girls and women (and I quote) “Oral sex is a good thing”. No
Tafracher, no Forijimi, nothing prefixed that statement!
Let me
tell the doctor something the prostitutes I sat down to have dinner with
in Mombasa and in the Hotel du Nil in Burundi told me that will teach
him some small lesson. Asking around the table as I frequently did: “How
much do you charge?” I got the ready answer “It depends, doctor”. On
what? They laughed, and one aggressive girl said this: “For oral sex, I
charge double”
Of course I knew why. But, tongue in cheek, I asked “Whatever for? Why do you charge double?”
They
expressed surprise that I, a doctor, was asking such a question, and
they said “It is dangerous!” They included oral sex in what they called
“Abnormal Sex”. One 19-year old French speaking African prostitute in
Burundi told me she always allowed oral sex “Mais je leur demande une
grande somme d’argent” (page 36 of my book) because the thing is
dangerous paa! And now here comes our doctor-cum-preacher videoed saying
“Oral sex is a good thing”?
And our doctor-cum-preacher produced
laughter when he said …. I dare not reproduce what he said. No number
of Tafrachers can de-vulgarize his assertions. But Mina, for the sake of
those who were there and who heard him, and for those on your Forum who
hang onto every word of this doctor-cum-preacher, please direct them to
the words of the world experts on sex, those who charge double for oral
sex in the sex trade.
Another True Story: When I asked a patient
to say “Aah” while I looked at her throat, and I said to her “You had
oral sex last night!” her response was “Are you a magician or
something?” When she then told me her husband was a womaniser and I
calmly said “Then I will take a swab and check you for gonorrhoea of the
throat” she almost passed out. I had to support her lest she tumbled
down, whispering over and over again to herself “Gonorrhoea of the
throat! Gonorrhoea of the throat! Gonorrhoea of the throat!”.
Final
advice to this doctor-cum-preacher: How many communicants are in his
church? Does he use the same Communion cup for everybody? Does he know
how many of them use his recommendation of oral sex? Very sad!
Akora
Felix Konotey-Ahulu is Consultant Physician Genetic Counsellor in
Sickle Cell & Other Haemoglobinopathies, Phoenix Hospital Group
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Saturday 14 November 2015
Re: Oral Sex Is Good
Publisher GhanaThings.Com
11/14/2015 04:05:00 pm
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