CAPE TOWN - We have been banned from buying our favourite foods, going out and enjoying South Africa’s beauty, walking our dog, buying alcohol and cigarettes.
So the question is what about sex? Is it safe in the time of Covid-19? Should we? Can we indulge in the fruits of the flesh? Is sex a fundamental human need, next to food and shelter, even in times of crisis as we are faced today?
“Maintain this social distance. When you get time to stay in, stay in. Maintain the distance even in the middle of the night. Maintain this social distance. It’s one way of dealing and preventing this disease. Don’t come close more than a metre, it doesn’t matter who. No kissing, nothing," said Police Minister, Bheki Cele.
These comments might be met with laughter, confusion and then frustration once it settles in and for some, it might be too far-reaching into our personal lives.
However, Cele is right, Covid-19 does spread via saliva, via droplets when an infected person speaks, coughs or breathes. Kissing would therefore facilitate the spread of the virus. His motivation like the rest of the world are to reduce the spread of the virus in order for our health care system to cope and save lives.
Is sex a fundamental need like food and water?
Some, like psychologist Abraham Maslow, would argue that sex is one of our fundamental human needs and could be paralleled with other basic needs like food and shelter. According to Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs, it starts with physiological, safety, love and belonging, esteem and ends at self-actualization - the ultimate goal even if we do not see it as such.
This theory was an attempt to understand what makes people do the things we do. He saw our actions progress, once we’ve achieved one we need the next one. Once the basic needs of food and water are met (physiological), we move on to need financial security and personal security (safety). And then we need a sense of belonging, friendships, intimacy - which includes sex.
An indication of why people are defying laws and risking jail time or fines to indulge. This was the case for a couple in Cape Town recently who received a