L'Acte Essentiel
du docteur
Charles Fouqué
L'Acte Essentiel
du docteur
Charles Fouqué
km0 aime Duran Du
1 des 2 livres que j'ai trouvé dans la Bac Bo Phu est : L'acte Essentiel
Charles Fouqué (1889)
Charles Fouqué, né à Cherbourg en 1889, décédé en 1965, est une personnalité de la Manche.
Les Études psycho-sexuelles
Le docteur Charles Fouqué est, avant la dernière guerre, un des pionniers de l’éducation sexuelle en France et il se rend très célèbre en publiant une série d’ouvrages populaires sur la question.
Charles Fouqué fait ses études à Avranches puis à la faculté de médecine de Lyon. Après la Première Guerre mondiale au cours de laquelle il est gazé à l’ypérite, il vient s’installer comme médecin de campagne à Saint-Pierre-Église avant d’ouvrir un cabinet rue Bondor à Cherbourg où ce père de neuf enfants, fervent sportif, s’adonne avec passion à la boxe, à l’escrime et au rugby. Il ne fait alors que mettre en pratique sa propre philosophie selon laquelle la culture du corps et celle de l’esprit doivent aller de pair pour atteindre l’équilibre. Il quitte sa ville natale en 1930 pour aller exercer à Lyon. On parle beaucoup de lui en 1955 à l’occasion d’un procès retentissant. Il est inculpé pour exercice illégal de la médecine et radié de l’Ordre des médecins pour avoir employé un vaccin non homologué contre la tuberculose. Il est acquitté sous les applaudissements de ses nombreux admirateurs.
Mais il se fait surtout connaître par la publication en vingt-quatre volumes de ses Études psycho-sexuelles qui remportent un énorme succès auprès de tous les publics. Il écrit aussi d’autres ouvrages de sexologie pratique sous le pseudonyme de Jacques Gerlinal. Il s’agit d’une série de petits romans aux titres évocateurs tels que Les pamoisons hasardeuses, Les plaisirs des dieux ou Le micro dans l’alcôve.
Le docteur Fouqué ne limite pas son œuvre aux traités d’éducation sexuelle qui forment pourtant une vaste encyclopédie. Véritable journaliste-écrivain, il écrit aussi des nouvelles et des contes dans le quotidien cherbourgeois Cherbourg-Éclair. Il est encore l’auteur d’un roman populaire, Le triple serment du chevalier d’Avranches. Il s’intéresse enfin aux sciences occultes, au folklore et à l’histoire locale. C’est ainsi qu’il publie Ma Normandie en 1959 ; et cela, tout en dirigeant un journal sportif, Le Stade, et un mensuel d’informations médicales qui milite contre l’Ordre des médecins !
Dernière modification par DédéHeo ; 10/03/2012 à 06h43.
hou la la, jai eu très peur ! jene separe jamais ces 2 livres là.
'est mon butin de KM0
mais le 2eme, je n'ai ni la couverture, ni la reliure alors il s'égare facilement
J'avais très peur de l'avoir perdu
Je le google pour la 1ere fois
"The Power of Sexual Surrender", by Marie N Robinson
This book has long been out of print, but it is available from: Alibris: Used Books, Used Textbooks, Rare & Out-of-Print Books Amazon also has a few used, but those are costly.
Dr Robinson says that frigidity in women often results from refusing to submit to the common female fantasies regarding male domination. Dr Robinson held a degree in psychiatry from Cornell University, and ran a clinic in Manhattan (NYC) specializing in the treatment of female frigidity.
‹ A man sometimes needs his taken in hand wife to be strong How do you maintain control without discipline? ›
A readers' forum post by BlueRose on Mon, 18/07/2005 - 17:27
I am still reading this book...
am almost done. Its a sad shame its out of print because I think a lot of women could be helped by it, whether they admit it or not. I found out the truth of what Dr Robinson says on my own, after I adopted the Taken In Hand philosophy...but its good for me to read her book and see my personal experiences of late being confirmed. I thought maybe there was something wrong with me, but I find out I'm normal (at least by Dr Robinson's orthodox Freudian theories.)
C'est très bizarre : Je vénère ces livres là depuis très très longtemps, des dizaines d'années et je n'avais jamais googelisé les auteurs.
C'est très dröle : les 2 n'ont pas de wiki alors...
Je nèavais ni le nom, la préface et la dernière page de l'autre...
Si elle a un wiki, en plus elle est très jolie ; mais Robinson est un faux nom
hou la la ! c'est vraiment de la litérature de Viêt công !
Marie Nyswander - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marie Nyswander (March 13, 1919 – April 20, 1986) was an American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst[1] known for developing and popularizing the use of methadone to treat heroin addiction.
Nyswander was born on March 13, 1919, in Reno, Nevada. Her father, James Nyswander, was a mathematics professor and her mother was noted health educator Dorothy Bird Nyswander; they divorced soon after her birth, and Nyswander followed her mother to Berkeley, Salt Lake City, and New York City. Her original name was Mary Elizabeth Nyswander; she took the name Marie as a teenager.
Nyswander graduated from Sarah Lawrence College in 1937 and trained as a physician and surgeon at the Cornell University medical school until 1944; while at Cornell, she was briefly married to anatomy instructor Charles Berry. After finishing her studies at Cornell, she attempted to join the Navy, but discovered that they did not allow women to serve as surgeons. notaDD: Ca c'est du Viêt Công !Despite a life marked by many changes, Marie Nyswander, MD, seems destined to have become a leader in the addiction treatment field.
Her straightforward manner, her unsentimental compassion, and her easy rapport with patients were legendary. Most important, at a time when her fellow psychiatrists viewed drug-addicted persons with disdain as being mentally-deficient moral outcasts, she promoted the idea of addiction as a disease.
It is commonly recognized that no other American psychiatrist of her generation benefitted the lives of so many opioid-addicted patients.
Addiction as a Medical Problem
Marie was born Mary Elizabeth Nyswander (which she later changed to Marie) in Reno, Nevada, in 1919. Her father, James, was a mathematics professor and her mother, Dorothy, earned a doctorate in psychology after the couple’s divorce when Marie was still a toddler.
Marie was raised by her mother and the two eventually moved to New York City in 1936. Marie attended Sarah Lawrence College and later went to Cornell University Medical College, graduating in 1944.
After completing a surgical internship, she joined the Navy as a surgeon. However, the Navy had no place for female surgeons in those days and Nyswander was posted to the Lexington Narcotic Hospital in Kentucky run by the U.S. Public Health Service.
The Lexington experience was a turning point. Nyswander saw drug addicts from all walks of life branded as psychopaths, mistreated, and subjected to racial insults. She became convinced that these patients could and should be treated more humanely, as individuals.
When she left the service, Nyswander decided that surgery was not for her and pursued a career in psychiatry. She trained at New York Medical College in the late 1940s and established a private psychiatric practice in the early 1950s.
She volunteered much of her time treating impoverished drug-addicts and, in 1955, Nyswander helped establish the Narcotic Addiction Research Project — a first of its kind outpatient program providing actively addicted patients with intensive individual psychotherapy. She also set up a clinic to treat jazz musicians addicted to heroin and by the early 1960s was treating addicts in an East Harlem storefront clinic.
Nyswander described her clinical experiences in a book, The Drug Addict as a Patient (1956). Her patients’ repeated cycles of brief recovery inevitably followed by drug relapse were frustrating, yet she believed they could be helped by clinicians willing to learn more about addiction. She presented a radical viewpoint, at the time, that addiction should be approached from the perspective of patients with a medical problem.
Nyswander’s empathy with patients may have been influenced by her self-acknowledged addiction to nicotine; she was a 3-pack-a-day smoker. In Nat Hentoff’s excellent book on her work, A Doctor Among the Addicts (1968), she tells of once attempting to quit: “The craving for cigarettes exists as an entity, separate from pleasure. Nor did the craving diminish with time. …if it’s this hard to stop smoking, think what it must be like to stop taking a drug such as heroin.”
Birth of MMT
Another turning point came for Nyswander in the early 1960s when she was invited to join Vincent Dole, MD, at Rockefeller University in New York City. He was embarking on a project exploring new pharmacotherapies for opioid addiction and had read Nyswander’s book. He believed she had the necessary skills and experience in working with drug-addicted patients. In 1964, a third member joined the team – Mary Jeanne Kreek, MD – who was a young clinical investigator and first year resident in internal medicine.
After testing a number of agents, the team soon discovered that methadone stemmed withdrawal and relieved narcotic hunger, yet at stabilized doses it did not produce the euphoria of other opioids. By spring 1965, the team had data on 22 patients successfully treated with methadone and published their remarkable findings. Expansion of their program and further publications soon followed, giving birth to the methadone maintenance treatment field.
Essential Lessons; Seeing the Inner Person
According to Mary Jeanne Kreek – who is now Professor and Head of the Laboratory of the Biology of Addicted Diseases at Rockefeller University – Nyswander was intense and rather firm at times. However, she was always open-minded when it came to discussing individual patients and their treatment.
“Many therapists and clinicians would dismiss what patients were saying as the ramblings of disturbed, addicted minds,” Kreek notes. “Yet, Marie reminded us again and again, ‘listen to the patient.’”
“Marie felt that much could be learned by careful listening,” Kreek says. “Then, if the whole story was not forthcoming, patients could be questioned.”
A major new concept of the team was viewing addiction as a brain disease. Patients should not be defined by their past behaviors and merely viewed as criminals or weak-willed. “Marie knew that behavior management alone was insufficient to deal with addiction,” Kreek continues. “However, the notion of using pharmacotherapy, such as with methadone, to treat the drug-addicted brain was a new idea and slow to catch on.”
In 1965, Nyswander married Vincent Dole, and she passed away in 1986 at the age of 67. Each year since 1983 the Nyswander-Dole Award created in their honor – and now simply known as “The Marie Award” – has been bestowed on individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the methadone treatment field.
Looking back, Dole once remarked that her secret was an ability to see the inner person. No doubt, such vision was aided by better listening to patients.
Dernière modification par DédéHeo ; 10/03/2012 à 10h46.
Quelle histoire... J'ai enfin trouvé la couverture de mon livre...
Je ne sais pas quel bouquin je vais lire ce soir ?
Les aventures de Grillon de To Hoai, traduit par G.Boudarel,
L'adieu au roi de Schœndœrffer
ou mes bouquin de "Kilometre Zero" :
L'Acte Essentiel du Docteur Charles FOUQUE
ou ce truc qui ss'arette à la page 186 et on en était à THE BRIDGE TO WOMAHOOD?
Cest The Power of Sexual Surrender du docteur Marie N. Robinson
Mais il me manque la fin
Dernière modification par DédéHeo ; 15/03/2012 à 00h00.
Les filles, c'est vraiment...
Elle rentre de l'école et Papa Viêt Công & Maman Viêt Minh prennent le thé
- comment s'écrit "glamorous" en anglais ?
moi : - Ca n'existe pas
madame : - peu être "atractive" ?
la fille : Si si, ca s'écrit G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S
nous: - ?
elle: - si si ! vous ne savez pas par ce que vous etes trop pauvres. Mais moi, j'aime Fergie et je suis G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S alors je chante :
If you ain't got no money take yo'broke ass home
You say: If you ain't got no money take yo'broke ass home
G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S, yeah G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S
[B-Section:]
We flying the first class
Up in the sky
Poppin' champagne
Livin' the life
In the fast lane
And I wont change
For the glamorous, oh the flossy flossy
[chorus:]
The glamorous,
The glamorous, glamorous (the glamorous life)
For the glamorous, oh the flossy flossy
[Verse:]
Wear them gold and diamonds rings
All them things don't mean a thing
Chaperons and limousines
Shopping for expensive things
I be on the movie screens
Magazines and boogie scenes
I'm not clean, I'm not pristine
I'm no queen, I'm no machine
I still go to Taco Bell
Drive through, Ross, hell
I don't care, I'm still real
No matter how many records I sell
After the show or after the Grammies
I like to go cool out with the family
Sippin', reminiscing on days when I had a Mustang
And now I'm in...
[B-section then chorus]
[Ludacris:]
I'm talking Champagne wishes, caviar dreams
You deserve nothing but all the finer things
Now this whole world has no clue to do with us
I've got enough money in the bank for the two of us
Brother gotta keep enough lettuce
To support your shoe fetish
Lifestyles so rich and famous
Robin Leach will get jealous
Half a million for the stones
Taking trips from here to Rome
So If you ain't got no money take yo'broke ass home
G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S, yeah G-L-A-M-O-R-O-U-S
[B-section + chorus x2]
[Verse:]
I got problems up to here
I've got people in my ear
Telling me these crazy things
That I don't want to know (fuck y'all)
I've got money in the bank
And I'd really like to thank
All the fans, I'd like to thank
Thank you really though
Cause I remember yesterday
When I dreamt about the days
When I'd rock on MTV, that be really dope
Damn, It's been a long road
And the industry is cold
I'm glad my daddy tell me so, he let his daughter know. [x3]
Comment apelle-t-on les 2 trous ronds en haut des fesses, à la jointure sacro-iliaque ?
J'ai remarquée que cette maison en avait aussi ! L'architecte français a poussé l’anthropomorphisme très loin LOL
Xấu nhưng kết cấu nó đẹp! (Sát thủ đầu mưng mủ)
Comme ceux de la fille sur le dessin de gauche,celle qui est
"moche mais l'"arrière train" est joli"
ceci n'est pas une pipe
Peut envoyer des images dans les signatures : Non
Je ne me souviens plus exactement quand c'était, mais j'étais encore enfant, lorsqu'un jour, à la plage, intriguée par ces deux petites trous que je voyais parfois au bas du dos des autres, j'ai demandé si j'en avais aussi et ce que c'était. J'ai eu un "oui" à la première question, mais on n'a pas su me répondre à la seconde.
Cependant plus tard, parce que sans doute j'insistais, quelqu'un m'a dit : " Ce sont les " boutons à Mickey " ! se référant aux premiers dessins du fameux personnage de Walt Disney, lorsqu'il portait une courte culotte bouffante retenue par des bretelles attachées derrière avec deux gros boutons. Sans y croire, j'ai retenu malgré tout ce nom curieux. Il me paraît aujourd'hui bien sympathique ! Qui dit mieux ?
" Être forte pour être utile." J'ai fait tout ce que j'ai pu...
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