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10/22/2012

Tribrachiality



From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
           
             
Definition

Tribrachiality is a condition where a third arm sprouts on the upper portion of an individual’s back.

Development

The third arm is not visible at birth. It typically begins to form around adolescence, although initial growth has been noted both earlier and later in life.

Cause

Nobody knows why some people grow third arms and others do not. Some argue that the condition is genetic but many others believe that the third arm begins to grow as a direct result of a person's upbringing. Still others believe that there is an element of choice involved in the matter. They espouse the belief that those who develop a third arm should be able to prohibit its growth through a careful and concerted effort.

Groups dedicated to the eradication of third arms have sprung up across the nation, but are generally viewed as having very low success rates. Despite this fact, some tribrachial individuals enroll in eradication programs, hoping to learn techniques that will result in the withering of the third arm, or at the very least, how to live in such a manner that the third arm will become an unused and atrophied appendage.

History
           
Scholars argue over the history of tribrachiality. Some prominent anthropologists point to depictions of ancient people in which a protuberance can be deciphered around the upper portion of their back. Such anthropologists believe that tribrachiality is as old as civilization, but other scholars reject such interpretations of the ancient art, attributing the bulge to a special decorative adornment ancients wore under their clothing during celebratory rituals.
           
Up until 1950, most tribrachials attempted to hide their condition. They did so by curling their third arm between their shoulder blades and wearing bulky clothing; however, many tribrachials report that doing this caused a great deal of both physical and emotional pain.

Wilhema E. Foster was the first tribrachial to cut a hole in her clothing, thus allowing her third arm to hang out. Foster was subsequently imprisoned for this act, which was deemed a “grotesque display”, but she became a role model for other tribrachials and is largely regarded as the founder of the Tribrachial Rights Movement.
           
Though Foster pioneered the practice of displaying the third arm, remarkably, it was not until 1995 that the first three armed shirt was manufactured in America. Tribrachials everywhere celebrated this as a major triumph and sign of a shifting cultural perspective, but those opposed to tribrachialism deemed it yet another sign of the moral erosion of modern society.

Mating
             
Sexual intermingling between bi and tribrachials is widely scorned in much of society; however, it is estimated that anywhere from three to seven percent of the population engages in such intermingling. Those who oppose such pairings do so widely on a moral basis, claiming that each arm needs a companion during sexual intercourse. According to this contingent, it is unnatural and immoral for an arm to be idle during intercourse. They stake much of their claim on references found in the Book of Civilization, which they widely regard as the touchstone for all rules regarding morality

Proponents of intermingling believe that love, rather than anatomical differences or similarities, should be the determining factor for what draws two individuals together. They see no intrinsic harm in an idle arm and tend to judge the morality of individuals on a differing set of criteriaone based upon the way an individual conducts herself in day-to-day interactions with other people. 



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