© 2018 Greg & Sylvia RAY
Read more about the article Stop it or you’ll go blind!
Fear of masturbation was encouraged by this illustration from the book, Rescued at Last

Stop it or you’ll go blind!

I feel terribly sorry for the young men of my great grandfather’s generation: told to keep their hands above their waists on pain of a thousand terrible tortures. Not only were many young men of that era warned that “self-abuse” was immoral and likely to consign them to hellfire after death, they were also assured that the practice would stunt them physically in so many ways that blindness was probably the least of it. And to make matters worse, the people giving this wrong advice were mostly making money from the confused and worried men they…

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Passchendaele: a name written in blood

If getting killed by the thousands is glorious, it was glorious in the Ypres battle. My battalion came out 200 strong out of a thousand. It breaks my heart when I think of it.Private Bob Gibson, Knorrit Flat By 1917, as fighting wore on in Europe, the British high command was practically in disrepute among sizeable portions of the Allied armies. Commander in Chief Douglas Haig didn’t go anywhere near the Ypres battlefields in late 1917 and criticised the troops for not being able to make and hold territorial gains. Men saw that they were repeatedly…

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Read more about the article Uncle Jack Allsopp’s walk-on part at the Battle of Passchendaele.
At the grave of Jack Allsopp in France, 2015.

Uncle Jack Allsopp’s walk-on part at the Battle of Passchendaele.

Passchendaele was a word I grew up with because that was where my grandmother's favourite brother died. My grandmother's been gone from this world herself now for more than 50 years, but I can see her plainly in my mind's eye, sitting in her rocking chair in her little fibro housing commission cottage at Glendale, Newcastle, NSW. She didn't talk much to adults about Uncle Jack; maybe because she got more than a bit misty when she thought about him. But she told me, when I was a child at her knee, and she let me…

Continue ReadingUncle Jack Allsopp’s walk-on part at the Battle of Passchendaele.
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