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Nocturnal emissions are perfectly natural and are nothing to be concerned about. Normally, they occur two or three times a month after one has reached complete maturity, though individuals differ in the frequency of them. Individuals also vary as to the age when nocturnal emissions begin, the range being from around fourteen to around eighteen.

The description of the sexual process as it occurs in nocturnal emissions will serve also to give some notion of the mechanism involved in sexual intercourse. Sexual intercourse is a more complete experience involving the highly emotional, conscious pleasures that come from bodily contact, especially if there is a strong personal attachment and attraction of two persons toward one another. The undulations of the body and the friction of the genital organs in coitus (the sexual act) also increase the stimulation of the nerve centers involved. When this stimulation reaches its maximum intensity, it results in the spasmodic muscular contractions which produce the discharge of the semen. This is called orgasm. It is followed by a relaxation of the genital organs and a temporary let-down in sexual interest.

In all of the sexual process the product that is of supreme importance in the reproduction of life is the seminal secretion of the testicles, containing the spermatozoa. The secretions of the seminal vesicles, the prostate gland and the glands of Littre and Cowper are simply aids to the spermatozoa in reaching their destination, and are unable in themselves to produce life. The sexual act can occur without the presence of spermatozoa, but the discharge in such cases is sterile, i.e., incapable of fertilizing an ovum or egg cell of the female.

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