fbpx
Wikipedia

Castration anxiety

Castration anxiety is the fear of emasculation in both the literal and metaphorical sense. Castration anxiety is an overwhelming fear of damage to, or loss of, the penis—a derivative of Sigmund Freud's theory of the castration complex, one of his earliest psychoanalytic theories.[1] Although Freud regarded castration anxiety as a universal human experience, few empirical studies have been conducted on the topic. It has been theorized that castration anxiety begins between the ages of 3 and 5, otherwise known as the phallic stage of development according to Freud.[2] In Freud's theory it is the child's perception of anatomical difference (the possession of a penis) that induces castration anxiety as a result of an assumed paternal threat made in response to their sexual activities. Although typically associated with males, castration anxiety is theorized to be experienced in differing ways for both the male and female sexes.[3]

Literal

Castration anxiety is the conscious or unconscious fear of losing all or part of the sex organs, or the function of such. In the literal sense, castration anxiety refers to the fear of having one's genitalia disfigured or removed to punish sexual desires of a child.[4]

In Freudian psychoanalysis, castration anxiety (Kastrationsangst) refers to an unconscious fear of penile loss originating during the phallic stage of psychosexual development and lasting a lifetime. According to Freud, when the infantile male becomes aware of differences between male and female genitalia he assumes that the female's penis has been removed and becomes anxious that his penis will be cut off by his rival, the father figure, as punishment for desiring the mother figure.[5]

In 19th-century Europe, it was not unheard of for parents to threaten their misbehaving sons with castration or otherwise threaten their genitals. This theme is explored in the story Tupik by French writer Michel Tournier in his collection of stories entitled Le Coq de Bruyère (1978) and is a phenomenon Freud documents several times.[6] In this same period, Dr. Kellogg and others in America and English-speaking countries offered to Victorian parents circumcision and, in grave instances, castration of their boys and girls as a terminal cure and punishment for a wide variety of perceived misbehaviours (such as masturbation),[7] a practice that became widely used at the time.

Metaphorical

Castration anxiety can also refer to being castrated symbolically. In the metaphorical sense, castration anxiety refers to the idea of feeling or being insignificant; there is a need to keep one's self from being dominated; whether it be socially or in a relationship.[8] Symbolic castration anxiety refers to the fear of being degraded, dominated or made insignificant, usually an irrational fear where the person will go to extreme lengths to save their pride and/or perceives trivial things as being degrading making their anxiety restrictive and sometimes damaging. This can also tie in with literal castration anxiety in fearing the loss of virility or sexual dominance.

Relation to power and control

According to Freudian psychoanalysis, castration anxiety can be completely overwhelming to the individual, often breaching other aspects of his or her life.[citation needed] A link has been found between castration anxiety and fear of death.[8] Although differing degrees of anxiety are common, young men who felt the most threatened in their youth tended to show chronic anxiety. Because the consequences are extreme, the fear can evolve from potential disfigurement to life-threatening situations. Essentially, castration anxiety can lead to a fear of death, and a feeling of loss of control over one's life.[8]

To feel so powerless can be detrimental to an individual's mental health. One of the most concerning problems with all of this is the idea that the individual does not recognize that their sexual desires are the cause of the emotional distress.[8] Because of unconscious thoughts, as theorized in the ideas of psychoanalysis, the anxiety is brought to the surface where it is experienced symbolically. This will lead to the fear associated with bodily injury in castration anxiety, which can then lead to the fear of dying or being killed.[8]

Relation to circumcision

Freud had a strongly critical view of circumcision, believing it to be a 'substitute for castration', and an 'expression of submission to the father's will'.[9][10] This view was shared by others in the psychoanalytic community, such as Wilhelm Reich, Hermann Nunberg, and Jaques Lacan, who stated that there is "nothing less castrating than circumcision!"[11][12]

Themes central to castration anxiety that feature prominently in circumcision include pain,[11] fear,[11] loss of control (with the child's forced restraint,[9] and in the psychological effects of the event, which may include sensation seeking, and lower emotional stability[13]) and the perception that the event is a form of punishment.[14]

The ritual's origination as a result of Oedipal conflict was tested by examining 111 societies, finding that circumcision is likely to be found in societies in which the son sleeps in the mother's bed during the nursing period in bodily contact with her, and/or the father sleeps in a different hut.[15]

A study of the procedure without anaesthesia on children in Turkey found 'each child looked at his penis immediately after the circumcision 'as if to make sure that all was not cut off'.[9] Another study of 60 males subject to communal circumcision ceremonies in Turkey found that 21.5% of them "remembered that they were specifically afraid that their penis might or would be cut off entirely," while 'specific fears of castration' occurred in 28% of the village-reared men.[11] Fear of the authoritarian father increased considerably in 12 children.[11]

Psychoanalytic interpretation of Biblical stories shows themes of castration anxiety present in Judaic mythology concerning circumcision.

The figure of Lilith, described as "a hot fiery female who first cohabited with man"[16] presents as an archetypal representation of the first mother of man, and primordial sexual temptation. Male children were said to be at risk of Lilith's wrath for eight days after birth.[17] Deceiving Lilith into believing newborn babies were a girl – letting the boy's hair grow and even dressing him in girl clothes – were said to be the most effective means to avoid her harm, until they were ritually circumcised on the eighth day of life as part of a covenant with God.[18]

The figure of Judith, depicted both as "a type of the praying Virgin... who tramples Satan and harrows Hell," and also as "seducer-assassin" archetypically reflects the dichotomous themes presented by castration anxiety and circumcision: sexual purity, chastity, violence, and eroticism.[19][20] Judith defeats Assyrian General, Holofernes by cutting his head off – decapitation being an act that Freud equated with castration in his essay, "Medusa's Head".[21]

Counterpart in females

It is implied in Freudian psychology that both girls and boys pass through the same developmental stages: oral, anal, and phallic stages. Freud, however, believed that the results may be different because the anatomy of the different sexes is different.

The counterpart of castration anxiety for females is penis envy. Penis envy, and the concept of such, was first introduced by Freud in an article published in 1908 titled "On the Sexual Theories of Children". The idea was presumed that females/girls envied those (mostly their fathers) with a penis because theirs was taken from them—essentially they were already "castrated". Freud entertained that the envy they experienced was their unconscious wish to be like a boy and to have a penis.[22]

Penis envy, in Freudian psychology, refers to the reaction of the female/young girl during development when she realizes that she does not possess a penis. According to Freud, this was a major development in the identity (gender and sexual) of the girl. The contemporary culture assumes that penis envy is the woman wishing they were in fact a man. This is unrelated to the notion of "small penis syndrome" which is the assumption by the man that his penis is too small. According to Freud's beliefs, girls developed a weaker[23] superego, which he considered a consequence of penis envy.

Among his many suggestions, Freud believed that during the phallic stage, young girls distance themselves from their mothers and instead envy their fathers and show this envy by showing love and affection towards their fathers. According to Cohler and Galatzer, Freud believed that all of the concepts related to penis envy were among his greatest accomplishments. However, these are also his most criticized theories as well—most famously by Karen Horney.

Empirical testing

Sarnoff et al. surmised that men differ in their degree of castration anxiety through the castration threat they experienced in childhood.[8] Therefore, these men may be expected to respond in different ways to different degrees of castration anxiety that they experience from the same sexually arousing stimulus.[8] The experimenters aimed to demonstrate that in the absence of a particular stimulus, men who were severely threatened with castration, as children, might experience long-lasting anxiety.[8] The researchers claimed that this anxiety is from the repressed desires for sexual contact with women. It was thought that these desires are trying to reach the men's consciousness.[8] The experimenters deduced that unconscious anxiety of being castrated might come from the fear the consciousness has of bodily injury.[8] The researchers concluded that individuals who are in excellent health and who have never experienced any serious accident or illness may be obsessed by gruesome and relentless fears of dying or of being killed.[8]

In another article related to castration anxiety, Hall et al. investigated whether sex differences would be found in the manifestations of castration anxiety in their subject's dreams.[24] The researchers hypothesized that male dreamers would report more dreams that would express their fear of castration anxiety instead of dreams involving castration wish and penis envy.[24] They further hypothesized that women will have a reversed affect, that is, female dreamers will report more dreams containing fear of castration wish and penis envy than dreams including castration anxiety.[24] The results demonstrated that many more women than men dreamt about babies and weddings and that men had more dreams about castration anxiety than women.[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Schwartz, Bernard J. (1955) The measurement of castration anxiety and anxiety over loss of love. Journal of Personality, 24 204-219.
  2. ^ Feiner, K. (1988) A test of a theory about body integrity: Part 2. Psychoanalytic Psychology. 5(1), 71–79.
  3. ^ Appignanesi, Lisa & Forrester, John. Freud's Women. London: Penguin Books, 1992, pp.403-414
  4. ^ Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary 2012
  5. ^ Freud, S. (1954). The Origins Of Psycho-Analysis: Letters To Wilhelm Fliess, Drafts And Notes: 1887-1902. Edited by Marie Bonaparte, Anna Freud, Ernst Kris. Translated by Eric Mosbacher and James Strachey. New York: Basic Books.
  6. ^ Freud, Sigmund. "The Dissolution of the Oedipus Complex." On Sexuality. Vol. 7 of Penguin Freud Library. Trans. James Strachey. Ed. Angela Richards. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1976. 313-322.
  7. ^ Laderman, Gary; León, Luis (2014-12-17). Religion and American Cultures: Tradition, Diversity, and Popular Expression, 2nd Edition [4 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 772. ISBN 9781610691109. from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved 2020-11-25.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sarnoff, I., & Corwin S.M., (1959) Castration anxiety and the fear of death. Journal of Personality, 27(3), 374.
  9. ^ a b c Goldman, R. (1999). (PDF). BJU International. 83 Suppl 1: 93–102. doi:10.1046/j.1464-410x.1999.0830s1093.x. PMID 10349420. S2CID 7927499. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-11-11.
  10. ^ Freud, S (1920). Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis.
  11. ^ a b c d e Ozturk, Orhan M. (1973). "Ritual Circumcision and Castration Anxiety". Psychiatry. 36 (1): 49–60. doi:10.1080/00332747.1973.11023745. ISSN 0033-2747. PMID 4687287. from the original on 2022-07-29. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  12. ^ Lacan, J (1962). Séminaire X – L'angoisse. pp. 94–95.
  13. ^ Miani, A (2020). "Neonatal male circumcision is associated with altered adult socio-affective processing" (PDF). Heliyon. 6 (11): e05566. doi:10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05566. PMC 7702013. PMID 33299934. (PDF) from the original on 2022-07-29.
  14. ^ "Circumcision's Psychological Damage | Psychology Today Australia". www.psychologytoday.com. from the original on 2022-07-29. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  15. ^ Kitahara, M. (1976). "A cross-cultural test of the Freudian theory of circumcision". International Journal of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. 5: 535–546. ISSN 0091-0600. PMID 60293. from the original on 2021-09-29. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  16. ^ Davidson, Gustav. A Dictionary of Angels including the Fallen Angels. New York: The Free Press. p. 174.
  17. ^ Elhaik, Eran. "Neonatal circumcision could increase the risk of sudden infant death syndrome in babies – new research". The Conversation. from the original on 2021-09-02. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  18. ^ Genesis 17:12
  19. ^ Wills, Lawrence Mitchell; Wills, Professor of Biblical Studies Lawrence M. (1995). The Jewish Novel in the Ancient World. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-3075-6. from the original on 2021-12-20. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  20. ^ "Judith with the Head of Holofernes, Lucas Cranach the Elder (c1530)". the Guardian. 2004-01-10. Retrieved 2021-09-29.
  21. ^ Freud, S (1922). Medusa's Head. p. 1.
  22. ^ Fancher, Raymond E. & Rutherford, Alexandra Pioneers of Psychology, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. New York, London. 2012 ISBN 978-0-393-93530-1
  23. ^ Freud, Sigmund (1925). "Some Psychological Consequences of the Anatomical Distinction between the Sexes" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2016-06-15. Retrieved 2017-05-21.
  24. ^ a b c d Hall, C., & van de Castle, R. L. "An empirical investigation of the castration complex in dreams", Journal of Personality, 1965, 33(1), 20. doi:10.1111/1467-6494.ep893396

castration, anxiety, fear, emasculation, both, literal, metaphorical, sense, overwhelming, fear, damage, loss, penis, derivative, sigmund, freud, theory, castration, complex, earliest, psychoanalytic, theories, although, freud, regarded, castration, anxiety, u. Castration anxiety is the fear of emasculation in both the literal and metaphorical sense Castration anxiety is an overwhelming fear of damage to or loss of the penis a derivative of Sigmund Freud s theory of the castration complex one of his earliest psychoanalytic theories 1 Although Freud regarded castration anxiety as a universal human experience few empirical studies have been conducted on the topic It has been theorized that castration anxiety begins between the ages of 3 and 5 otherwise known as the phallic stage of development according to Freud 2 In Freud s theory it is the child s perception of anatomical difference the possession of a penis that induces castration anxiety as a result of an assumed paternal threat made in response to their sexual activities Although typically associated with males castration anxiety is theorized to be experienced in differing ways for both the male and female sexes 3 Contents 1 Literal 2 Metaphorical 3 Relation to power and control 4 Relation to circumcision 5 Counterpart in females 6 Empirical testing 7 See also 8 ReferencesLiteral EditCastration anxiety is the conscious or unconscious fear of losing all or part of the sex organs or the function of such In the literal sense castration anxiety refers to the fear of having one s genitalia disfigured or removed to punish sexual desires of a child 4 In Freudian psychoanalysis castration anxiety Kastrationsangst refers to an unconscious fear of penile loss originating during the phallic stage of psychosexual development and lasting a lifetime According to Freud when the infantile male becomes aware of differences between male and female genitalia he assumes that the female s penis has been removed and becomes anxious that his penis will be cut off by his rival the father figure as punishment for desiring the mother figure 5 In 19th century Europe it was not unheard of for parents to threaten their misbehaving sons with castration or otherwise threaten their genitals This theme is explored in the story Tupik by French writer Michel Tournier in his collection of stories entitled Le Coq de Bruyere 1978 and is a phenomenon Freud documents several times 6 In this same period Dr Kellogg and others in America and English speaking countries offered to Victorian parents circumcision and in grave instances castration of their boys and girls as a terminal cure and punishment for a wide variety of perceived misbehaviours such as masturbation 7 a practice that became widely used at the time Metaphorical EditCastration anxiety can also refer to being castrated symbolically In the metaphorical sense castration anxiety refers to the idea of feeling or being insignificant there is a need to keep one s self from being dominated whether it be socially or in a relationship 8 Symbolic castration anxiety refers to the fear of being degraded dominated or made insignificant usually an irrational fear where the person will go to extreme lengths to save their pride and or perceives trivial things as being degrading making their anxiety restrictive and sometimes damaging This can also tie in with literal castration anxiety in fearing the loss of virility or sexual dominance Relation to power and control EditAccording to Freudian psychoanalysis castration anxiety can be completely overwhelming to the individual often breaching other aspects of his or her life citation needed A link has been found between castration anxiety and fear of death 8 Although differing degrees of anxiety are common young men who felt the most threatened in their youth tended to show chronic anxiety Because the consequences are extreme the fear can evolve from potential disfigurement to life threatening situations Essentially castration anxiety can lead to a fear of death and a feeling of loss of control over one s life 8 To feel so powerless can be detrimental to an individual s mental health One of the most concerning problems with all of this is the idea that the individual does not recognize that their sexual desires are the cause of the emotional distress 8 Because of unconscious thoughts as theorized in the ideas of psychoanalysis the anxiety is brought to the surface where it is experienced symbolically This will lead to the fear associated with bodily injury in castration anxiety which can then lead to the fear of dying or being killed 8 Relation to circumcision EditFreud had a strongly critical view of circumcision believing it to be a substitute for castration and an expression of submission to the father s will 9 10 This view was shared by others in the psychoanalytic community such as Wilhelm Reich Hermann Nunberg and Jaques Lacan who stated that there is nothing less castrating than circumcision 11 12 Themes central to castration anxiety that feature prominently in circumcision include pain 11 fear 11 loss of control with the child s forced restraint 9 and in the psychological effects of the event which may include sensation seeking and lower emotional stability 13 and the perception that the event is a form of punishment 14 The ritual s origination as a result of Oedipal conflict was tested by examining 111 societies finding that circumcision is likely to be found in societies in which the son sleeps in the mother s bed during the nursing period in bodily contact with her and or the father sleeps in a different hut 15 A study of the procedure without anaesthesia on children in Turkey found each child looked at his penis immediately after the circumcision as if to make sure that all was not cut off 9 Another study of 60 males subject to communal circumcision ceremonies in Turkey found that 21 5 of them remembered that they were specifically afraid that their penis might or would be cut off entirely while specific fears of castration occurred in 28 of the village reared men 11 Fear of the authoritarian father increased considerably in 12 children 11 Psychoanalytic interpretation of Biblical stories shows themes of castration anxiety present in Judaic mythology concerning circumcision The figure of Lilith described as a hot fiery female who first cohabited with man 16 presents as an archetypal representation of the first mother of man and primordial sexual temptation Male children were said to be at risk of Lilith s wrath for eight days after birth 17 Deceiving Lilith into believing newborn babies were a girl letting the boy s hair grow and even dressing him in girl clothes were said to be the most effective means to avoid her harm until they were ritually circumcised on the eighth day of life as part of a covenant with God 18 The figure of Judith depicted both as a type of the praying Virgin who tramples Satan and harrows Hell and also as seducer assassin archetypically reflects the dichotomous themes presented by castration anxiety and circumcision sexual purity chastity violence and eroticism 19 20 Judith defeats Assyrian General Holofernes by cutting his head off decapitation being an act that Freud equated with castration in his essay Medusa s Head 21 Counterpart in females EditIt is implied in Freudian psychology that both girls and boys pass through the same developmental stages oral anal and phallic stages Freud however believed that the results may be different because the anatomy of the different sexes is different The counterpart of castration anxiety for females is penis envy Penis envy and the concept of such was first introduced by Freud in an article published in 1908 titled On the Sexual Theories of Children The idea was presumed that females girls envied those mostly their fathers with a penis because theirs was taken from them essentially they were already castrated Freud entertained that the envy they experienced was their unconscious wish to be like a boy and to have a penis 22 Penis envy in Freudian psychology refers to the reaction of the female young girl during development when she realizes that she does not possess a penis According to Freud this was a major development in the identity gender and sexual of the girl The contemporary culture assumes that penis envy is the woman wishing they were in fact a man This is unrelated to the notion of small penis syndrome which is the assumption by the man that his penis is too small According to Freud s beliefs girls developed a weaker 23 superego which he considered a consequence of penis envy Among his many suggestions Freud believed that during the phallic stage young girls distance themselves from their mothers and instead envy their fathers and show this envy by showing love and affection towards their fathers According to Cohler and Galatzer Freud believed that all of the concepts related to penis envy were among his greatest accomplishments However these are also his most criticized theories as well most famously by Karen Horney Empirical testing EditSarnoff et al surmised that men differ in their degree of castration anxiety through the castration threat they experienced in childhood 8 Therefore these men may be expected to respond in different ways to different degrees of castration anxiety that they experience from the same sexually arousing stimulus 8 The experimenters aimed to demonstrate that in the absence of a particular stimulus men who were severely threatened with castration as children might experience long lasting anxiety 8 The researchers claimed that this anxiety is from the repressed desires for sexual contact with women It was thought that these desires are trying to reach the men s consciousness 8 The experimenters deduced that unconscious anxiety of being castrated might come from the fear the consciousness has of bodily injury 8 The researchers concluded that individuals who are in excellent health and who have never experienced any serious accident or illness may be obsessed by gruesome and relentless fears of dying or of being killed 8 In another article related to castration anxiety Hall et al investigated whether sex differences would be found in the manifestations of castration anxiety in their subject s dreams 24 The researchers hypothesized that male dreamers would report more dreams that would express their fear of castration anxiety instead of dreams involving castration wish and penis envy 24 They further hypothesized that women will have a reversed affect that is female dreamers will report more dreams containing fear of castration wish and penis envy than dreams including castration anxiety 24 The results demonstrated that many more women than men dreamt about babies and weddings and that men had more dreams about castration anxiety than women 24 See also EditCastration complex Anti Œdipus Jacques Lacan Genital retraction syndrome Luce Irigaray Medusa s Head Phallic woman Phallogocentrism Vagina dentataReferences Edit Schwartz Bernard J 1955 The measurement of castration anxiety and anxiety over loss of love Journal of Personality 24 204 219 Feiner K 1988 A test of a theory about body integrity Part 2 Psychoanalytic Psychology 5 1 71 79 Appignanesi Lisa amp Forrester John Freud s Women London Penguin Books 1992 pp 403 414 Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary 2012 Freud S 1954 The Origins Of Psycho Analysis Letters To Wilhelm Fliess Drafts And Notes 1887 1902 Edited by Marie Bonaparte Anna Freud Ernst Kris Translated by Eric Mosbacher and James Strachey New York Basic Books Freud Sigmund The Dissolution of the Oedipus Complex On Sexuality Vol 7 of Penguin Freud Library Trans James Strachey Ed Angela Richards Harmondsworth Penguin 1976 313 322 Laderman Gary Leon Luis 2014 12 17 Religion and American Cultures Tradition Diversity and Popular Expression 2nd Edition 4 volumes ABC CLIO p 772 ISBN 9781610691109 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Retrieved 2020 11 25 a b c d e f g h i j k Sarnoff I amp Corwin S M 1959 Castration anxiety and the fear of death Journal of Personality 27 3 374 a b c Goldman R 1999 The Psychological Impact of Circumcision PDF BJU International 83 Suppl 1 93 102 doi 10 1046 j 1464 410x 1999 0830s1093 x PMID 10349420 S2CID 7927499 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 11 11 Freud S 1920 Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis a b c d e Ozturk Orhan M 1973 Ritual Circumcision and Castration Anxiety Psychiatry 36 1 49 60 doi 10 1080 00332747 1973 11023745 ISSN 0033 2747 PMID 4687287 Archived from the original on 2022 07 29 Retrieved 2021 09 29 Lacan J 1962 Seminaire X L angoisse pp 94 95 Miani A 2020 Neonatal male circumcision is associated with altered adult socio affective processing PDF Heliyon 6 11 e05566 doi 10 1016 j heliyon 2020 e05566 PMC 7702013 PMID 33299934 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 07 29 Circumcision s Psychological Damage Psychology Today Australia www psychologytoday com Archived from the original on 2022 07 29 Retrieved 2021 09 29 Kitahara M 1976 A cross cultural test of the Freudian theory of circumcision International Journal of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy 5 535 546 ISSN 0091 0600 PMID 60293 Archived from the original on 2021 09 29 Retrieved 2021 09 29 Davidson Gustav A Dictionary of Angels including the Fallen Angels New York The Free Press p 174 Elhaik Eran Neonatal circumcision could increase the risk of sudden infant death syndrome in babies new research The Conversation Archived from the original on 2021 09 02 Retrieved 2021 09 29 Genesis 17 12 Wills Lawrence Mitchell Wills Professor of Biblical Studies Lawrence M 1995 The Jewish Novel in the Ancient World Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3075 6 Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 Retrieved 2021 11 16 Judith with the Head of Holofernes Lucas Cranach the Elder c1530 the Guardian 2004 01 10 Retrieved 2021 09 29 Freud S 1922 Medusa s Head p 1 Fancher Raymond E amp Rutherford Alexandra Pioneers of Psychology W W Norton amp Company Inc New York London 2012 ISBN 978 0 393 93530 1 Freud Sigmund 1925 Some Psychological Consequences of the Anatomical Distinction between the Sexes PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 06 15 Retrieved 2017 05 21 a b c d Hall C amp van de Castle R L An empirical investigation of the castration complex in dreams Journal of Personality 1965 33 1 20 doi 10 1111 1467 6494 ep893396 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Castration anxiety amp oldid 1138595179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.