Sexual desire counts among the great human mysteries. What
turns people on? What turns people off? What does not turn people either way?
Serious thinkers will tell you that taboos do it. Prohibit
sexual congress between mothers and sons, for example, and a good Freudian will
insist that mothers and sons want nothing more than to bounce around on the
downy billows. This good Freudian will also explain that everyone wants only
one thing in life… that being to copulate with his or her mother. You will
appreciate the genius and you will also appreciate how nonsensical it all is.
If desire, as the Freudians insist, is elicited and excited
by women, one must also admit that a woman's ambiguity, not availability and not
unavailability, proves to be the best incitement.
In my humble way I once offered a slightly different idea. Since
depression manifests itself in the absence of desire one would suspect that
lifting the depression, recovering one’s pride and one’s morale would, ipso
facto, cause a return of desire.
But, how can we ever measure something so nonspecific as
human desire? Try this: if an event restored pride
to a nation one would suspect that nine months after said event there would be
more births and thus more epidurals. Such events are eminently calculable.
Last summer little Iceland became a giant killer, ousting
England from the European Soccer championships. It was an enormous event in
Iceland and produced a spike in the number of epidurals. We all understand that Iceland has never been known as a hot place.
Naturally, we turn to the Daily Mail for the story:
And it
seems we know exactly how Iceland fans celebrated their historic win after a
hospital in Reykjavik reported giving a record number of epidurals over the
weekend.
The
weekend marked almost exactly nine months since Iceland's 2-1 victory in Nice which saw then-England
manager Roy Hodgson throw in the towel.
While
the exact number of epidurals given is not known, any increase is likely to be
significant since 10 per cent of the country's population travelled to France
to watch their team play.
Landspitali
Hospital in Reykjavik, the country's largest, said a record amount of pain
medication was given to women giving birth between Friday and Sunday night,
according to Icelandic magazine Visir.
Those
figures were backed up by a tweet from Asgeir Petur Porvaldsson, a resident
from the hospital's anesthesiology department.
He
wrote: 'Set a record for the number of epidurals in the maternity ward this
weekend - nine months after the 2-1 win over England.'
So, there you have it. Definitive proof of what provokes
lubricious longings. One suspects—without any real evidence—that said coital
actions were taking place in duly sacrilized conjugal beds.
Apparently, the same rule applies in cities whose teams win the Super Bowl. And yet, to keep some perspective, we note that New York City saw a significant increase in births nine months after an event that had nothing to do with sports. After a blackout, when all of New York's lights went out, the city's denizens, perhaps out of boredom, perhaps because they were thrilling to how much electricity was being saved, got busy and produced children.
1) Why on earth would someone use epidurals as the indicator, rather than simply number of births?
ReplyDelete2) Given that contraception is probably not unknown in Iceland, it would seem that the effect of the win was not just an increase in sexual desire, but an increase in the desire or at least the willingness to have children.
Excellent question about the epidurals-- I assume that it either has something to do with the peculiarities of Icelandic culture, or with the reports on the problem. I suspect that epidurals are not universal, but I may be wrong on that. I also agree that the increase in child births must suggest that victory in sports also motivates people to have more children. An excellent point, too. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI might guess alcohol of celebration has something to do with it as well, reduced inhibitions, assuming there are more unplanned pregnancies under the influence than otherwise.
ReplyDeleteNationalism is a potent force
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mav2kkvakGY