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Head of the Japan Family Planning Association Recommends
Polynesian Sex (
ポ リネシアンセックス
)

Dr. Kunio Kitamura was born in 1951. He graduated from Jichi Medical School and through his 30 years of research,is now the "voice of Japanese sexuality." Among his many books are "Shiawase no Sex (Happy Sex)," "Piru (The Pill)" and "Karada no Hon (The Body Book)."


   Dr. Kunio Kitamura, head of the Japan Family Planning Associaion, responds on a national level to  issues concerning sex.  After all, happiness in the hay may be a very private realm--but it is also a public health issue.  Happy couples are healthier, more joyful, and they stay together.  In his column in the Manichi Times, he tackles problems having to do not only with the lack of satisfaction among intimate partners, but also with issues arising from sexual misunderstanding and ignorance, birth control, abortion, puberty, sexually transmitted diseases, child-rearing, and domestic violence.  Some of his more notable books are Happy Sex, The Pill, and The Body Book.

   At fifty-five years of age, Dr. Kitamura is a father of five who travels frequently on Japan's bullet trains, where he comes face to face with the great masses of the Japanese population. 

   Because so much of sex in Japan is based on hideous pornographic models, Dr. Kitamura has long sought to promote sex that is healthy and therapeutic.  This has involved teaching people about differences in sexual response between men and women, about safe sex, and more recently about Polynesian sex (ポリネシアンセックス)

   Dr. Kitamura lives in a country that has long nurtured a tradition of respect for the contemplative awareness of everyday life.  For instance, in the zen-inspired art of tea ceremony, there is no goal.  Tea is simply presented in such an atmosphere that awareness awakens to the fullness of the living moment.

   Given such a cultural background, one might understand why Dr. Kitamura laments the modern-day focus of lovers on the quick production of orgasm.  Why not savor the sexual moment in the same way that one would tea?

   A few years ago Dr. Kitamura was writing a column for a Japanese weekly.  The column was entitled "The Happy Sex Revolution."   Dr. Kitamura had read about Polynesian sex, which was becoming a buzz phrase of popular culture.  It had been made famous in two volumes by Japan's most successful writer, who is a spiritual as well as literary figure, Mr. Hiroyuki Itsuki.   Mr. Itsuki's two books  on the subject of Polynesian sex (ポリネシアンセックス), entitled Silent Love and Twelve Chapters on Love (Ai ni Kansuru Ju-Ni Sho) were inspired by James Powell's Energy and Eros , which after considering sexual traditions in the West, in ancient India and in ancient China, turns to a discussion of Polynesian sex. 

   In the same manner that Mr. Itsuki envisioned Polynesian sex as a remedy for much of the abberrant sexual interest in Japan, Mr. Kitamura found in it a way to promote teachings on sexual intimacy that are heartfelt and healthy. 

   Reading in Mr. Itsuki's books that they were inspired by Powell's Energy and Eros, Dr. Kitamura stopped in at Hosei University Press, which was near his office, and obtained a copy. 

   According to Dr. Kitamura, Polynesian sex increases the subtle energy in the body, which the Japanese call "ki." As these waves of energy increase during Polynesian lovemaking, they flood the body from head to toe, giving the couple unfathomable delight.

   It is this general flow of energy throughout the whole body that allows South Seas sensuality to transcend the goal-oriented sexual relations as promoted by the Japanese media.

   As a result of learning about laidback loving, Dr. Kitamura renamed his column "Slow Love."

home about polynesian love
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