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Amazing women! | the art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | asbestos | belts | bidets | founder bio | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books: menstruation and menopause (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | contraception and religion | costumes | menstrual cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous women in menstrual hygiene ads | FAQ | founder/director biography | gynecological topics by Dr. Soucasaux | humor | huts | links | masturbation | media coverage of MUM | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor (olor)| pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | your remedies for menstrual discomfort | menstrual products safety | science | shame | slapping, menstrual | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour of the former museum (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | Words and expressions about menstruation | Would you stop menstruating if you could? | What did women do about menstruation in the past? | washable pads
More articles by Dr. Soucasaux: Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals - The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Comments on the corpus luteum and related aspects - Comments on some anatomical and symbolic aspects of the female pelvis - The curious relations between androgens and estrogens in women - Drospirenone Oral Contraceptives - Due to prohibition, Brazilian women don't have access to modern medicinal abortion - Endocrinology of menstruation - The Fallopian tubes - Female sexual response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot) - The Gynecologic Palpation (descendant of "The Touch") - Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas - Gynecology and Gynecologic Surgery - Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical" stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of women's medicine - Hypermenorrhea and/or Menorrhagia (Prolonged and/or Excessive Menstrual Bleedings) - Hypertrichosis, Hirsutism and Androgenic Manifestations in Women - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries - On the Intimate, or Small-Scale, Mechanisms of Menstruation - On the Strange Nature of the Ovaries - Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill") - The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations - Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation - Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant, Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology part 1 (part 2) - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation - Psychosomatic gynecology - Some Details on the Function of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Ovaries Axis - Stanislav Grof's Perinatal Matrixes of the Unconscious and Women's Medicine - Symmetric Patterns in the Female Genitals - Thoughts on Female Sexual Psychology - Uninterrupted use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend it - The uterine cervix - Uterine contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active" - Women's corporeal consciousness and experience - Women's Experience of the Breasts - Women's Undesired Pregnancies and Women's Right to Abortion and see his Art of Menstruation


Stanislav Grof's Perinatal Matrixes of the Unconscious and Women's Medicine

Dr. Nelson Soucasaux, Brazilian gynecologist

Among the several kinds of archetypes related to the female genitals, the modern concept of perinatal matrixes of the unconscious acquires fundamental importance. Stanislav Grof, one of the most important psychical researchers of our times, identified in the unconscious of men and women a very typical group of experiential patterns which he named "perinatal matrixes."* These psychical contents are related to the phases of childbirth and other archetypal subjects, as well as to transpersonal aspects of existence. They would be a kind of "memories" linked to the final moments of intrauterine life and the passage through the birth canal, and seem to be not only personal but also part of the collective unconscious.

The process of birth of the human being is deeply traumatic, not only for the mother but also for the child, since in it both inflict great physical suffering upon each other. Concerning these perinatal matrixes of the unconscious, Grof observes that, even if the total spectrum of the experience that occur at this level cannot be reduced to a revival of biological birth, the birth trauma seems to represent an important core of the process.* Anyway, what matters the most here is that these psychical contents are clearly associated to some of the first human experiences related to the female genitals ­ the place where all of us, men and women, were conceived and generated.

The possibility that some negative uterine archetypes may originate in these perinatal matrixes described by Grof also acquires special relevance in women's medicine. Nevertheless, considering that this subject concerns mostly  modern psychical research, the study of the perinatal matrixes of the unconscious by far transcends the boundaries of gynecology and obstetrics. Here, only the topics directly related to women's medicine will be briefly discussed here.

According to Grof, the perinatal matrixes of the unconscious exhibit a clear correspondence to the clinical stages of parturition.* So, let us speak a little on some of these correlations.

The first stage of parturition corresponds to the period in which, under the effect of the uterine contractions, cervical dilation takes place. Nevertheless, when the dilation of the uterine cervix does not complete, not allowing the propulsion of the child and actual birth, the effect of the strong myometrial contractions in a still "closed" uterus may give rise to feelings like a "suffering without resolution," a severe "imprisonment in pain." As to the perinatal matrix related to this phase of childbirth, Grof observes that, symbolically, it comprehends a feeling of "no way-out or hell."* This experiential pattern concerns not only the child but also the mother.

The second stage of parturition begins when the uterine cervix is completely dilated and, consequently, the uterine contractions cause the propulsion of the child through the birth canal. In this phase, voluntary contractions of the woman's abdominal muscles add to the uterine ones. The "no way-out" stage finishes and the one of the "titanic fight" starts (Grof).* At the same time, as the child goes through the narrow pelvic canal under the strength of the powerful uterine contractions, his/her passage traumatizes the mother's tissues, which are violently stretched and squeezed against the lower part of the pelvic bones.

The third stage of parturition corresponds to the actual childbirth. At this moment and at the expense of enormous distention and dilation of the perineal muscles and the vaginal entrance, the child is finally expelled from the maternal body.

Grof observes that the perinatal matrix corresponding to the second stage of childbirth comprehends experiential patterns typical of a "death-rebirth struggle" and may also include sadomasochist components. About the latter, he comments that they reflect a combination of the aggression imposed upon the child by the female genitals and his/her responsive biological rage regarding suffocation, pain and anxiety.* As already said, throughout the final stages of parturition mother and child inflict on each other intense suffering. The mutual violence and pain reaches its peak along the second and third stages of labour, but normally all of this is followed by a great relief and relaxation as soon as childbirth is finished.

Grof also mentions the existence of a sexual component in the perinatal matrix corresponding to the propulsion of the child through the birth canal.* If this is true, this matrix may contain elements typical of sexual violence by including a combination of fear, struggle, aggression, trauma, pain and sadomasochist feelings. It is also pertinent here to mention Masters and Johnson's observation that, during the second stage of parturition, some women report sensations roughly similar to those of the initial phase of orgasm.**

The fact that childbirth takes place in traumatic and bloody circumstances may also give rise to negative associations between the female genitals and blood. In this way, here we have one more element that can contribute to the elaboration of the negative menstrual myths and other pathological ways of experiencing menstruation.

This subject of the perinatal matrixes of the unconscious and its relationship with the traumatic aspects of parturition lead us once again to the extremely complex problems of pregnancy. In my book "Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" ("New Perspectives in Gynecology"), the emphasis I made on the "aggressive" and traumatic aspects of pregnancy and parturition for women annoyed many people who are still conditioned to the naive romantic view of motherhood ­ unfortunately, an ancient and deep-rooted view still present in our culture.

In my aforementioned book, I pointed out the great sacrifices imposed by gestation and childbirth on the female body by causing in it not only enormous physiological overload but also intense distortions and stretching of tissues that not always return entirely to normal during and after puerperium. Some of the several sequelae often left in the woman's body by pregnancy and parturition were duly emphasized by me. Therefore, my analysis was made focusing my attention on women. Now, based on Grof's work we can see how much specifically parturition is also traumatic for the child.

Pregnancy and parturition are physiological events with frequent pathological consequences. During pregnancy, the processes resulting from the embryonic development cause a series of "physiological aggressions" in the woman's body. At the moment of parturition, the "aggressions" between mother and child become reciprocal. Although the uterine contractions are not under voluntary control, I have already observed that the very potent myometrial contractions of labour can be regarded as the way through which women, after nine months of passive submission to the evolution of pregnancy, "actively" participate in childbirth, putting an end to the long and strenuous period of gestation. However, besides traumatizing even more the mother, the entire process of parturition also traumatizes the child. In this way, we can see that the "physiological/pathological" processes of gestation and childbirth are always very, very problematic. For more details on the problems of pregnancy for women, as well as those regarding the possibility of becoming pregnant, see my article "The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant, its Implications for Women and Abortion," published here at the MUM.

* Grof, Stanislav: "Beyond the Brain: Birth, Death and Transcendence in Psychotherapy." State University of New York, Albany, 1985.

** Masters, William; Johnson, Virginia: "Human Sexual Response." Little, Brown and Company, Boston, 1966.

The text above is an adapted excerpt from my book "Os Órgãos Sexuais Femininos: Forma, Função, Símbolo e Arquétipo" ("The Female Sexual Organs: Shape, Function, Symbol and Archetype"), published by Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 1993. For more information on the book, see page http://www.nelsonginecologia.med.br/orgaos.htm , from my web site www.nelsonginecologia.med.br .

Copyright  Nelson Soucasaux  1993, 2005

______________________________________

Nelson Soucasaux is a gynecologist dedicated to clinical, preventive and psychosomatic gynecology. Graduated in 1974 by Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he is the author of several articles published in medical journals and of the books "Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" ("New Perspectives in Gynecology") and "Os Órgãos Sexuais Femininos: Forma, Função, Símbolo e Arquétipo" ("The Female Sexual Organs: Shape, Function, Symbol and Archetype"), published by Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 1990, 1993. He has been working in his private clinic since 1975.

Web site (Portuguese-English): www.nelsonginecologia.med.br

Email: [email protected]


NEWS | homepage | LIST OF ALL TOPICS | MUM address & What does MUM mean? | e-mail the museum | privacy on this site | who runs this museum?? |
Amazing women! | the art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | asbestos | belts | bidets | founder bio | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books: menstruation and menopause (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | contraception and religion | costumes | menstrual cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous women in menstrual hygiene ads | FAQ | founder/director biography | gynecological topics by Dr. Soucasaux | humor | huts | links | masturbation | media coverage of MUM | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor (olor)| pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | your remedies for menstrual discomfort | menstrual products safety | science | shame | slapping, menstrual | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour of the former museum (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | Words and expressions about menstruation | Would you stop menstruating if you could? | What did women do about menstruation in the past? | washable pads
More articles by Dr. Soucasaux: Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals - The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Comments on the corpus luteum and related aspects - Comments on some anatomical and symbolic aspects of the female pelvis - The curious relations between androgens and estrogens in women - Drospirenone Oral Contraceptives - Due to prohibition, Brazilian women don't have access to modern medicinal abortion - Endocrinology of menstruation - The Fallopian tubes - Female sexual response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot) - The Gynecologic Palpation (descendant of "The Touch") - Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas - Gynecology and Gynecologic Surgery - Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical" stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of women's medicine - Hypermenorrhea and/or Menorrhagia (Prolonged and/or Excessive Menstrual Bleedings) - Hypertrichosis, Hirsutism and Androgenic Manifestations in Women - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries - On the Intimate, or Small-Scale, Mechanisms of Menstruation - On the Strange Nature of the Ovaries - Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill") - The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations - Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation - Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant, Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology part 1 (part 2) - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation - Psychosomatic gynecology - Some Details on the Function of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Ovaries Axis - Stanislav Grof's Perinatal Matrixes of the Unconscious and Women's Medicine - Symmetric Patterns in the Female Genitals - Thoughts on Female Sexual Psychology - Uninterrupted use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend it - The uterine cervix - Uterine contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active" - Women's corporeal consciousness and experience - Women's Experience of the Breasts - Women's Undesired Pregnancies and Women's Right to Abortion and see his Art of Menstruation