Would you take your kiddies on a lil visit here?

she_is_my_addiction

insane drunken monkey
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Contraception Museum Features More Than 650 Exhibits

POSTED: 10:17 am EST December 6, 2004
CLEVELAND -- What do crocodile dung and beaver-testicle tea have in common? They both were used as contraceptives.
That bit of trivia can be learned at the History of Contraception Museum at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. More than 650 items are in the collection at the one-of-a-kind museum.

Visitors will find rows of cervical caps, while condoms are on display near the douches.

Percy Skuy, 72, a retired Canadian pharmacist, spent nearly 40 years assembling the museum. The items were largely donated by medical professionals and family planning services, or are recreations of historical contraceptive devices.

"These artifacts really tell an important sociological story of human motivation to want to limit family size over hundreds and thousands of years in different cultures and in different countries," Skuy said.

He emphasized the creativity of people through history, who used materials readily available for folk contraceptive remedies.

"Some were useless, some harmful and some could probably have shown a reasonable degree of effectiveness," Skuy said.

James Edmonson, the school's chief curator, said there can be an initial "giggle factor" when visiting the birth control museum. But he said there's a serious side to the collection. He noted that the quest for birth control transcends religions and cultures.

Edmonson believes the permanent exhibit will be popular among students, researchers and the public. A museum setting, he said, is ideal for exploring sensitive topics.
 
Depends on their age and how ready they are for this type of information. (Let it be known that no, I don't have kids.)

On another note I think a visit here by both my sister and brother would be a good idea, as well as their kids. These people breed like Rabbits.

Cat
 
she_is_my_addiction said:
Contraception Museum Features More Than 650 Exhibits . . .
I, and I believe many others, are presently wondering whether these exhibits are facsimiles, reproductions, or if they are previously-used devices reclaimed by anthropologists digging in various historical sites?
 
Just the pharmcopaeia of contraception is cool. A lot of those abortificants really worked.
 
About the kiddies issue. That museum with its strange devices would be a poor introduction to sexual function. One would have to imagine sex ensorcelled 'round with bits of arcane leather and metal, a hideous complicated tchnical nightmare.

Kids need to know about sex, and I think fairly young, so that they'll have an appreciation of what's being spoken of and will know when they're being bullshitted. This way of doing that would be a little destructive and stupid.

cantdog
 
cantdog said:
About the kiddies issue. That museum with its strange devices would be a poor introduction to sexual function. One would have to imagine sex ensorcelled 'round with bits of arcane leather and metal, a hideous complicated tchnical nightmare.

Kids need to know about sex, and I think fairly young, so that they'll have an appreciation of what's being spoken of and will know when they're being bullshitted. This way of doing that would be a little destructive and stupid.

cantdog

I have a feeling that the internet is now the prime source of kids learning about the wide world of sexuality. This is not the same as learning safe sexuality and is akin to the old-style "finding Dad's playboys". I think actual parental communication (golly what a thought) and real sex-ed classes do a proper job of filling in the rest.
 
Lucifer_Carroll said:
I have a feeling that the internet is now the prime source of kids learning about the wide world of sexuality. This is not the same as learning safe sexuality and is akin to the old-style "finding Dad's playboys". I think actual parental communication (golly what a thought) and real sex-ed classes do a proper job of filling in the rest.

Not the way I did it. She had the facts and then some, because I kept answering until she ran out of questions or lost interest, every time. She could correct the other kids' jokes by the time she went to school. Unless your example kids start on the internet at four...
 
cantdog said:
Not the way I did it. She had the facts and then some, because I kept answering until she ran out of questions or lost interest, every time. She could correct the other kids' jokes by the time she went to school. Unless your example kids start on the internet at four...

Ditto and well said!

I've never shirked answering any of my girls' questions. They know the "facts of life" and I talk very openly with them, in a matter-of-fact way. I don't use kiddie language, either, or slang - I use the correct terms. They know what periods are and why they will have them and part of explaining about that meant I told them exactly how babies are made. The questions went on and on then, but the three of us had a wonderful chat, as we often do.

I had a slight stomach ache yesterday and my eight year old said, "Is it your period, Mummy? Tsk, I'll start having those one day." She rolled her eyes, smiled at me and wandered off again. It wasn't my period, but that's beside the point, I just loved the way she said it so naturally, as if it wasn't a big deal. Which it isn't!

Lou
 
I think the museum would be good for highschool aged kids for history of man type subjects- dont know what they take now aday.

I would have issues with my 13 yr old going only because they may get the idea they could use those things instead of proper birthcontrol.

The right age, and setting it would be an interesting place to visit.

Speaking of the olden days, I guess thats where they saying, "Being on the rag" came from. Rolling up old rags to take care of the monthly problems.
lol
C
 
Huh ... what surprises me is, that its possible to open a museum like that in the first place. In Cleveland, mind you ... I'd have thought it would have been run over by your local <insert religious / conservative group here> by now ...

As for the kids ... well, I'd say this museum isn't meant to tell kids about the flowers and beens. And saying "Hey, lets go to the contraception museum today" on a sunday morning sounds kinda odd :D.

CA

P.S: Oh and Cealy ... that avatar is gorgeous ...
 
I don't believe that I'd be the one taking them there as a means of "breaking the ice" on the topic of sexuality. It is for them to ask or be interested.

Sex, on the other hand, is a part of life. I see no reason to blush or shy away from taking them there, if they suggest it.

It is a parent's responsibility to answer all questions honestly but NOT to force any subject on them.

Better to take them to a museum of sexuality than one of military history who's point isn't making life but ending it!
 
I wouldn't take my kids there if they were under 13. Kids want to know what sex is, not what contraceptives are, and certainly not what type of things ancient cultures used as contraceptives! Kids aren't that interested in the anthropoligal-historical aspect of sex, I believe.

A teenager, on the other hand, might find it amusing. And I think it would lend a rather disarming effect to having to listen to your parents talk to you about contraceptives.
 
Help, please.

This thread reminds me that there is a sex-aid/sex-toy museum I think in the Czech Republic.

Any help finding a website would be appreciated (plus a link to the contraceptive museum if they have one).

Og the curious
 
Tatelou said:
Ditto and well said!

I've never shirked answering any of my girls' questions. They know the "facts of life" and I talk very openly with them, in a matter-of-fact way. I don't use kiddie language, either, or slang - I use the correct terms. They know what periods are and why they will have them and part of explaining about that meant I told them exactly how babies are made. The questions went on and on then, but the three of us had a wonderful chat, as we often do.

I had a slight stomach ache yesterday and my eight year old said, "Is it your period, Mummy? Tsk, I'll start having those one day." She rolled her eyes, smiled at me and wandered off again. It wasn't my period, but that's beside the point, I just loved the way she said it so naturally, as if it wasn't a big deal. Which it isn't!

Lou

I can only hope I'll be able to be as honest an open with my children as you are with yours.

:kiss:
 
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This post just makes me glad that my kids are..... well lets just say they are giving ME advice!!!!!
 
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