Clinical Case Studies – Introduction
Among the most perplexing of sexual phenomena are relations pitting humans with animals. Many remained stupefied by such relationships, wondering how a human being could find sensuality and, often, a measure of compatibility in such contacts. Due to the fact that such relationships often enter the realm of the highly bizarre, public curiosity naturally magnifies as a result. This is the first of a two volume work definitively exploring the causes and effects of animal-human sex relationships. It involves an enormous sociological undertaking designed to bring to the fore hitherto unanswered questions.
“If I had only known that my daughter had a penchant for dogs a few months before I found out, I might have been able to do something about it,” a distraught father confessed to me one day in my office. “Yes, she was quiet, very withdrawn, but I had no idea that she apparently had no purposeful social outlets with other humans.”
The disturbed father shed light on one of the most crucial single elements precipitating animal-human sex relations—that of alienation. Often the type of person who is most susceptible to finding charms in an animal is the same individual who feels cut off from the rest of society. As the alienation syndrome becomes more pronounced, the harder the individual gropes, often in sheer desperation, to locate meaning in life.
“I got completely fed up with men,” an attractive young brunette confided to me during an office consultation. “I find them treacherous and unfaithful. After spending several years on a perpetual merry-go-round filled, unfortunately, with far more valleys than peaks, I got sick of the whole rat race. On the advice of a girlfriend, I gave dogs a try. At first I thought she was crazy for suggesting it and I told her so, but when I found out how much less taxing it was psychologically to deal with dogs, and when I found out how much fun I could have with them, my attitude completely changed.”