Klismaphilia

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Klismaphilia (or klysmaphilia), from the Greek words κλύσμα ("enema", from κατακλυσμός, "deluge, flood") and φιλία ("love"), is a paraphilia involving enjoyment of, and sexual arousal from, enemas.[1][2]

History

The term klismaphilia was coined in 1973 by Joanne Denko, an early investigator in this field, in her article "Klismaphilia: Enema as a Sexual Preference[:] Report of Two Cases," to describe the activities of some of her patients,[3] whom she referred to as klismaphiliacs.[4] Klismaphile[5] has come into use as a synonym for klismaphiliac.[6]

Manifestation

An aluminum nozzle
An Inflatable Enema Nozzle
As inserted into the rectum
Inflated wider than a human rectum so it cannot be expelled (diameter here of 89 millimetres (3.5 in))

Klismaphiles might gain pleasure from a large, water distended belly or the feeling of internal pressure. An enema fetish may include the sexual attraction to the equipment, processes, environments, situations, or scenarios,[7] and some may be sexually aroused by the preparations, such as by the feel and smell of a latex rubber or plastic syringe, by the smell of soapsuds enema solution, or by preparing the recipient.[8] Often, klismaphiles report discovering these desires after a chance administration of an enema sometime in their childhood, but some do report discovering these feelings later on.[3] Klismaphiles can gain satisfaction of enemas through fantasies, by actually receiving or giving one, or through the process of eliminating steps to being administered one (e.g., under the pretense of being constipated).[4] Usually, klismaphiles carry out normal lives and successfully engage in this behavior secretly.

An enema can be an auxiliary to, or a substitute for, genital sexual activity.[4]

That some women use enemas while masturbating was documented by Alfred Kinsey in Sexual Behavior in the Human Female: "There were still other masturbatory techniques which were regularly or occasionally employed by some 11 percent of the females in the sample... Douches, streams of running water, vibrators, urethral insertions, enemas, other anal insertions, sado-masochistic activity, and still other methods were occasionally employed, but none of them in any appreciable number of cases."[9]

Sadomasochistic activities may incorporate enemas[10][11] for erotic humiliation[12] or for physical discomfort.[13] BDSM punishment scenes can involve administering an enema in a manner that is humiliating and painful[8] and for producing pain and cramps an extra-large volumes or highly irritating substances can be injected.[3] Among the attractions to enema play in BDSM are erotic humiliation, dominance and submission, discipline, psychodrama, power exchange, and so on. An erotic enema allows acting out vulnerability in a primal form.[14]

Classification

The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR) classifies klismaphilia under the diagnosis of "Paraphilias, Not Otherwise Specified". The diagnostic code is 302.9.[15] Proactive treatment for klismaphilics is not generally recommended, due to the lack of any significant desire to be "cured".[4] Health treatment for klismaphilia thus is typically only focused on ensuring the techniques employed and chemicals used are not harmful to the practitioner.[4] Caution should always be maintained on the part of the practitioners experimenting with new techniques and concoctions; in certain cases cramps produced by the chemicals used have led to hospitalizations,[4] in other circumstances the effects can even be life-threatening.[16][17]

References

  1. ^ Paraphilias Archived 2008-02-24 at the Portuguese Web Archive from Psychology Today
  2. PMID 4704017
    .
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:489,516
  6. ^ "klismaphile". Wiktionary. 6 August 2017. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  7. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:517
  8. ^ a b Agnew, Klismaphilia (2000):75
  9. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:513,516
  10. ^ Agnew, Klismaphilia (2000):74,77,78,79
  11. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:515,516,520
  12. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:513,517
  13. ^ Brame et al., Different loving – The World of Sexual Dominance and Submission:515-516
  14. ^ Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision. Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Association, 2000.
  15. S2CID 564073
    .
  16. .

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