abstinence

(noun)

The practice of restraining oneself from engaging or indulging in something, such as intoxicating/alcoholic beverages.

Related Terms

  • temperance
  • American Temperance Society

Examples of abstinence in the following topics:

  • Periodic Abstinence

    • Periodic abstinence refers to abstaining from sexual intercourse during the fertile days of a menstrual cycle.
    • This schematic of a typical female menstrual cycle shows that periods of ovulation are taken in account to be a period of abstinence in calendar-based contraception methods.
  • The Temperance Movement

    • The temperance movement of the early nineteenth century advocated for alcohol moderation or complete abstinence from alcohol.
    • The movement advocated temperance, or levelness, rather than abstinence.
    • The movement split along two lines in the late 1830s between moderates, who allowed some drinking, and radicals, who demanded total abstinence.
  • Frances Willard and the Women's Christian Temperance Union

    • The Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was the first mass organization among women devoted to social reform with a program that "linked the religious and the secular through concerted and far-reaching reform strategies based on applied Christianity. " The purpose of the WCTU was to further the temperance movement and create a "sober and pure world" by abstinence, purity and evangelical Christianity.
  • Malthus' Theory of Population Growth

    • As a solution, Malthus urged "moral restraint. " That is, he declared that people must practice abstinence before marriage, forced sterilization where necessary, and institute criminal punishments for so-called unprepared parents who had more children than they could support.
  • Absorption of Alcohol

    • In cases of severe liver disease, the only treatment option may be a liver transplant in alcohol-abstinent patients.
  • HIV and AIDS

    • These include a re-emphasis on fidelity within marriage and sexual abstinence outside of it.
  • Socialization and Human Sexuality

    • For example, many evangelical Christians value abstinence and believe that men and women should wait until marriage to engage in sexual activity.
  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder

    • Similarly, long-term alcohol use is associated with the development of anxiety disorders, with evidence that prolonged abstinence can in turn result in the remission of anxiety symptoms.
  • Narcotics

    • Physical dependence refers to an alteration of normal body functions that necessitates the continued presence of a drug in order to prevent the withdrawal or abstinence syndrome.
  • The Prohibition Movement

    • The purpose of the WCTU was to further the temperance movement and to create a, "sober and pure world" through abstinence, purity, and evangelical Christianity.
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