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Ask Dr. Frank

Offers advice for perceived personality disorders. Temperament over
traffic jam; Man's apprehension over actual sexual contact with
females.

dear Dr. Frank,

I need help from you and your readers. After years of trying to
"put the brakes" on my aggressive driving and explosive temper, I still
become flustered and extremely agitated when trapped in a pack of cars or
held up by slow or inconsiderate drivers. If at these times I succeed at
not cursing, honking my horn, or speeding around others, I often implode
inside and feel like I'm having a heart attack. Over the years I have
tried everything: eight years of therapy, an anger management class,
relaxation tapes, meditation, exercise, distraction techniques like
playing the harmonica, and a million self-help books. Is there any hope
for a reactive, aggressive Neanderthal like me?

-- Mad as Hell but Not Wanting to Do It Anymore!!!

Dear Maddy,

You have been misinformed about a couple of things. First,
unexpressed anger will not kill you, but expressed anger in traffic might
get you shot. Contrary to some self-help ideas of the Sixties, you will
not achieve mental health by storming around blowing up whenever you
don't get your way. You won't achieve social acceptability either.

Second, the traffic is not doing this to bother you. It is just as
hard on the rest of us as it is on you, and we are all trying to tolerate
it as well as we can, knowing that the social agreement that makes
civilization possible requires us to treat others as if their feelings
matter too. You are not the center of the universe; you are not even the
only person in the traffic. You ask us for help, but don't you realize
that we are the other drivers who are stuck in the same traffic?

I don't know where you got the idea that you personally were
supposed to make the rest of the world behave properly, but you were
misinformed about that, too. If the rest of us get together and choose a
block captain to keep us in line, we will pick someone better tempered
than you.

Continue your exercise, meditation, and harmonica. Lay off
caffeine. Go to work earlier and come home later, so you'll have to share
the road with fewer drivers. Civilize yourself by putting Mozart or Haydn
on your car tape deck. But above all, keep thinking about how all of us
other drivers are feeling. We feel what you feel and we really do
sympathize with you. But we'd be more sympathetic to you if you were
sympathetic to us.

Dear Dr. Frank,

I am 43 and have masturbated every day for the past 29 years. Over
this time many attractive young women have offered me their services with
no strings attached. But this triggers great fear in me. Why?

I have always had the desire to have great sex, but I've never been
willing to risk it. Could there be something wrong in my thinking?

-- Nonesuch

Dear None,

Yes, you have too much imagination and too little spirit of
adventure. There's nothing wrong in masturbating. We've all masturbated
since puberty, no matter what else we've done with our sexuality, but you
got stuck there.

You suffer from vagina-phobia -- the fear of letting go of your
penis and giving it over to someone else. Unless we began our
heterosexual careers in a burst of postpubertal bravado, every one of us
was frightened the first time, though most of us can't remember exactly
what we feared. Whatever it was, it didn't happen, and it won't happen to
you, either. One thing that does often happen the first time is that your
pecker feels your fear and shrinks up rather than rising to the occasion.
Hang in there and in time you will both get comfortable. And don't be
concerned about having great sex; that will come later.

Just settle for letting a friendly woman play with your favorite
toy. Don't worry, she'll give it back. Expect to be anxious at first, but
you'll relax with it in time.

One last suggestion: You might be more sexually available to others
if you gave yourself a little rest. Remember the old adage: "Don't have
sex in the morning; you never know who you'll meet later in the
day."

ILLUSTRATION