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incontinence
(redirected from self-gratification)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.

incontinence

Inability to control excretion. Starting and stopping urination relies on normal function in pelvic and abdominal muscles, diaphragm, and control nerves. Babies' nervous systems are too immature for urinary control. Later incontinence may reflect disorders (e.g., neural tube defect causing “neurogenic bladder”), paralysis of urinary system muscles, long-term bladder distension, or certain urogenital malformations. Weak pelvic muscles can allow small urine losses on coughing or sneezing (“stress incontinence”). Uncontrolled defecation can result from spinal or bodily injuries, old age, extreme fear, or severe diarrhea. See also enuresis.


incontinence [in′känt·ən·əns]
(medicine)
Inability to control the natural evacuations, as the feces or the urine; specifically, involuntary evacuation from organic causes.


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With their lives devoted to self-gratification and other hedonistic tendencies, Greeks have been having a good time practically all the time since the pagan days of worshiping Dionysus, the god of wine, some two centuries ago.
Most important, it's about fasting from power and self-gratification and glory.
As a professional African-American male, I too am aware of some of the self-gratification and sense of entitlement that could be fulfilled by adhering to the programs and philosophies of right-wing doctrine, particularly around issues of personal responsibility and heterosexual morality and dominance.
 
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