October 28, 2017 at 6:23 pm









I’m really glad Alyssa Milano started this #MeToo movement. The endemic sexual harassment of and violence against women in our culture has been minimized and kept under wraps for millennia and needs as much exposure as it can get.

I’m also thrilled to see the campaign is blowing the cover on another deep, dark secret, one that I suspect is at the heart of much of the sexual violence toward women — circumcision.









The movement has prompted dozens of my Facebook friends (male and female) to add the hashtag #MeToo on behalf of circumcised males:

Among the most moving of these posts I’ve seen was written by a circumcised man who used both the hagtags #itwasme and #metoo, acknowledging that he was both the perpetrator and victim of sexual violence.

“#itwasme #metoo, it’s not a one-way street,” he writes. “It’s a co-creation. Let’s hear [#itwasme] from mothers and fathers who gave their newborns out of their warm breasts to the mechanical steel. Let’s hear it from the doctors who are bought off and and encourage this behavior. Let’s hear it from technicians who follow orders.”









“#itwasme who was trying to find some sort of unreachable feeling that unbeknownst to me may remain unreachable for my entire life,” he continues. “I am sorry for taking it out on my partners when I was young. #ihadnoidea I was traumatized thus.”

He suggests that men with intact penises might not need to “take from another to feel whole” — “Who needed to take from me to feel whole?”

His assertion this act of sexual violence against male infants is the root cause of much of the sexual violence against women is not a new idea.

Psychologists Ronald Goldman and John Rhinehart have provided extensive evidence for this theory. Rhinehart has compiled a list of the symptoms of circumcision trauma as observed in his patients:

a sense of personal powerlessness

fears of being overpowered and victimized by others

lack of trust in others and life

a sense of vulnerability to violent attack by others

guardedness in relationships

reluctance to be in relationships with women

defensiveness

diminished sense of maleness

feeling damaged, especially in the presence of surgical complications such as skin tags, penile curvature due to uneven foreskin removal, partial ablation of edges of the glans and so on

sense of reduced penile size, a part cut off or amputated

low self-esteem

shame about not “measuring up”

anger and violence toward women

irrational rage reactions

addictions and dependencies

difficulties in establishing intimate relationships

emotional numbing

need for more intensity in sexual experience

sexual callousness

decreased tenderness in intimacy

decreased ability to communicate

feelings of not being understood









Note that the first five symptoms he lists sound eerily similar to the symptoms of female victims of sexual violence. Ronald Goldman emphasizes the unconscious compulsion of many circumcision victims to reenact their trauma on others.

“When a baby’s sexuality is not safe, no one’s sexuality is safe,” Goldman concludes in his book Circumcision, The Hidden Trauma : How an American Cultural Practice Affects Infants and Ultimately Us All .

Unfortunately, instead of seeing that men courageous enough to speak out about the link between circumcision and sexual violence against women are their allies, many women are reacting in blind anger.













To all those who think #MeToo threads are “not the place” to speak out against male circumcision — that it’s distracting from or invalidating to the pain suffered by women — nothing could be further from the truth.

By making the connection between sexual violence against women and circumcision, these brave souls are trying to help SOLVE the problem by getting to the ROOT of it, rather than just hacking away at the branches.

Additionally, consider the hypocrisy of telling anyone (male or female) to “shut up” about the sexual violence committed against them in a thread promoting people to speak up about it:

“I was told not to talk about it. I was told it wasn’t that bad. I was told to get over it.” Sound familiar?

For more about the link between sexual violence against women and circumcision, listen to this paradigm-shifting podcast:

The #MeTooCircumcision campaign is not co-opting the #MeToo campaign, it’s getting to the root of the problem rather than fruitlessly hacking away at the branches.







