On the theory that sexuality is as much a part of life as anything else. I mean, what it is, is what it is. Here is how one mother from India, with the help of a graduate student, made a video which showed how to masturbate.
Quote:
Unstrange Minds: Remapping the World of Autism, Roy Richard Grinker, Perseus Books Group, 2007, pages 223-24:
When Gautam was about fifteen years old, he began to touch himself more frequently, arousing himself but not knowing what else to do once he had an erection. He became increasingly frustrated, irritable, and violent, and sometimes he scratched and hit himself. "No one gives you advice about handling these sexual matters," Shubrha said, "especially in India where people have so many hang-ups about sex. I made sure not to use the word 'masturbation' or any other sexual word around him because he'd repeat them in public. He once heard the word 'scrotum,' became fixated on it, and started saying it to strangers. But other than that, I couldn't figure out what to do."
At a conference on special education in Delhi, Shubrha met a young American graduate student and asked for his thoughts. Gautam, he believed, needed to learn how to masturbate. He and Shubrha decided that Gautam should see someone masturbate, if possible on film, but it wasn't easy to figure out how to arrange that. Video recordings of any sexual act are a violation of Indian law, so pornography is difficult to find. It would be even harder to find depictions of men masturbating alone. So the graduate student set up his own video camera and filmed himself. When Gautam saw the film he showed no initial reaction, but after a few days, Shubrha said, it was obvious that he had learned what to do; Shubrha just had to make sure he learned to do it in private.