Author:
Leo
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Date Posted: Thursday, January 10, 2013, 01:49: pm
Jimmy,
Four reasons, all of which you are free to doubt if you choose. First, as I stated above, given the internet and the like, there are much cheaper and quicker ways of satisfying voyeuristic interests than spending 4 years of college, 4 years of medical school, and 4 years or more of residency (less for a nurse, of course), coming out tens of thousands of dollars or more in the hole. Second, I have been on other websites where this topic has come up and the large concensus among the medical professional is they do not get turned on by patients (of course you can say they are either lying about being medical professionals or about their feelins). Third, most of sex is in the head, its more psychological than genital. The whole ambience of a medical encounter (bright lights, drapes, presence of a chaperone, lack of an interested partner, limited time to do your job, and the intellectual challenge of disgnosing and treating a sick patient) is not conducive to sexual stimulation and fantasies. Fourth, as psychologists, anthropologists, and nudists will tell you, constant nudity quickly starts to lose its stimulating power. Many women in seductive and attractive clothing may be more of a turn-on then that woman naked. But, no, I don't know and can't prove what goes on in someone else's head, so you are free to project and believe whatever you want is lurking behind the minds of doctors and nurses.
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