Why
Good Doctors Refuse To Perform Vasectomies
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Very few men understand the stakes involved in a vasectomy.
That vasectomy is an act of hostility, whether conscious or
unconscious, is not my own idea but the idea of the famous
psychologist Milton Erickson, who said precisely the same
thing. He added that the "rational sounding" reasons such as
prudent avoidance of childbearing, helping one's wife to
avoid the risks of sterilization, or rationalizations simply
camouflage the real and ugly reality. I have confirmed this
through the years in clinical practice. One man confided to
me, in a written testimony entitled "Can Manhood Be Lost?",
that it was only when I brought up the long-term sequelae of
vasectomy in front of his wife that for the first time years
of resentment could escape to the surface, and he could
express his anger at having been humiliated as a man through
the experience of a vasectomy. And lest anyone think that
this is an odd or idiosyncratic reaction peculiar to one
individual only, be assured that it is not. This particular
man was only lucky enough to be in a position to be
consciously able -- because in the setting of a real
conversion -- to admit the anger, shame, and self-loathing
that the sin of vasectomy had engendered in him. It was the
beginning of a real healing between him and his wife,
something that usually is not possible in our society
because the sin, fault, or injury is most often not
consciously admitted.
Vasectomized men experience unhappiness, because unless they
can admit the existential, spiritual and bodily injury, they
have to live in a life where they have rejected part of
their own identity. Depression, sexual dysfunction, all
kinds of hyper-masculine and hyper-macho acting out often
takes place, and very many of these men cannot avoid
expressing their anger. Still, they most often do not know
the source of this anger unless they are fortunate enough,
as my patient was, to learn the source and be able to repair
(not "reverse") the damage. It remains true that many men
undergo repair (again not "reversal"), not so much to
achieve a pregnancy as to repair their manhood and restore
their sense of themselves as men. If this cannot be done,
then one can only expect an increased chance of infidelity,
as his masculinity is propped up through the illusory
acceptance of the act of adultery. There is an increased
chance of divorce, as the man after a time cannot stand to
be with the woman who required the loss of his manhood as a
condition of their continued marriage relationship.
For the same reasons, vasectomy often influences in an
adverse way a man's relationship with his existing children.
When the very source of a man's procreative powers is
attacked or assaulted as it is with vasectomy -- no man
should believe that vasectomies are anything less than this
kind of self-violence – then he comes to loathe not only
that source but the life that was generated from that
source. This makes sense because the vasectomy has forced an
illegitimate equation whereby either he is worthy or his
procreative powers are, but not both! He will often resolve
this difficulty by rejecting and loathing the idea of more
children, which spills over to a rejection, at least in
part, of his existing children as well. I have had personal
experience with this in my practice, in a situation where
two daughters born before their father's vasectomy learned
that they were not valued and were rejected, and suffered
all kinds of damaging mental and psychological anguish in
their lives. They falsely concluded that they were in
competition for their father's love.
Finally, vasectomy has numerous health consequences at the
purely physical level. Many men have chronic pain after the
operation, which only is resolved with the repair. The
occlusion of the tube causes spermatic "blowouts" or
granulomas, and the abnormal immunologic reaction to
spermatozoa suddenly and abnormally appearing in the
bloodstream is an autoimmune reaction that can cause
arthritis and autoimmune disease. Likewise, prostate cancer,
probably chronic prostatitis, and heart disease (despite
what you may read, this tendency towards heart complications
has never been disproved) are all increased in frequency.
After vasectomy wives suffer health complications too. The
literature suggests increased rates of hysterectomies,
abnormal menstrual bleeding, and even allergic reactions
among women whose husbands have had vasectomies.
But perhaps the saddest thing is the closing off of a man's
horizons to life, and to the joys that come with that. All
of the complications in a marriage cannot compare with the
joy of a new child, one's own child!
Dominic M. Pedulla MD, FACC, CNFPMC, ABVM, ACPh
Varicoseveins1@yahoo.com
Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, OU Health Sciences
Center
Medical Director, The Oklahoma Vein and Endovascular Center
President, The Edith Stein Foundation
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