Polyamory
and Sexual Healing

Virtually
everyone who has been raised in a sex negative culture such as ours
is sexually wounded. For some, this wounding is simply a matter of
barely conscious sexual guilt, shame, and inhibition. It manifests in
subtle—or sometimes not so subtle—discomfort about social nudity,
public displays of affection, or erotic art. It manifests in an
inability to freely enjoy sexual pleasure, in ejaculating too soon
(for men) or not at all (for women), or in difficulty reaching
orgasm. It manifests as a lack of sexual confidence, an inability to
truly let go sexually, or an obsession with sexual privacy.
But
everything it infects is actually everything needed in creation and
primal healing.
In
addition to this general malaise, many of us have experienced
personal traumas as well: one out of three or four girls and one out
of seven or eight boys in our society are sexually molested as
children. Rape, abortion, insensitive medical exams, circumcision,
unskilled or uncaring lovers, and guilt over masturbation also take
their toll.
I
discovered very early in life that polyamory has a way of bringing
sexual wounds to the surface. It was post Summer of Love time (the
late '60's for the culturally illiterate) and I was a considered a
feral child because I lived a traditional Romani lifestyle as I still
do at 55. A few of my friends had taken LSD together and were
sprawled half naked on someone's living room rug taking in the sounds
of the Moody Blues on the stereo. Alice was one of my closest
friends. A dark-eyed, long legged beauty with flowing waist length
black hair and a deep hatred of anything bourgeois, she had a lovely
soprano voice and played a classy Martin guitar. Her musician
boyfriend Jason also my best friend outside the Rom had grown up in a
Village and was very hip—and artistic. The three of us began to
slither over and around each others bodies, grooving on the sensual
electricity between us. But Alice became uncomfortable. Jason and I
didn't pay much attention to her withdrawal at first, we were
magnetized by the powerful erotic force between everyone. We probably
would have gone on to make love right then and there to her had not
Alice exploded with jealous rage. Jason and I were bewildered—we
all loved each other, did we not? Surely Alice knew we had no wish to
hurt or infringe on her as many with sexual inhibitions do. We all
rejected the sexual mores of our middle class families, did we not?
We had all agreed to explore group sexual energy, had we not? What
was the problem? Well, the problem, it turned out, was that Alice was
overcome by sexual guilt and shame and felt totally inadequate and
over-shadowed by her high libido buddies. None of us, including Alice
herself, had any idea she was so hung up.
After
replaying minor variations on this scene countless times over the
next twenty-five years, I finally caught on. It's not possible to
enjoy sharing your sweetheart if you're sexually wounded. It's not
possible to enjoy having multiple partners if you're sexually
insecure. And you may not realize you're anything less than fully
functional until you're intimately exposed to people who are
relatively free of sexual inhibitions at which time you may be more
prone to running and ducking than seeking liberation.
I
don't mean to imply that everyone who chooses sexual exclusivity is
dysfunctional. Fear is not the only motivation for chosing serial
monogamy, that actually isn't natural and instills psychosis, but
it's far more common than is usually acknowledged.
Many
people give up on polyamory, or at least retreat into the safety of
intellectualizing or fantasizing about its glories, once they realize
the amount of sometimes painful healing and deconditioning which may
be involved. Very unfortunate! For it is precisely the driving
necessity to make the leap to higher consciousness which gives
polyamory its evolutionary value. Those who see polyamory primarily
as a means to greater personal fulfillment or family security and
bemoan its challenges fail to appreciate polyamory as a spiritual
path. And the first step on this path, in my opinion, is to shed the
sex negative belief systems which keep us alienated from our bodies,
from each other, and from Nature herself. You can't even be this
pagan goddess you claim to be and BLINK you then see it all
illusional instead of raw primal power. Just like the system you
think you reject has you hog tied in.
Compulsory
monogamy is the brain child of a sex negative philosophy which holds
sexuality to be sinful, disgusting, and evil. In keeping with their
eagerness to denigrate the Feminine, the early Church fathers viewed
celibacy as the most spiritual option, but realizing that it would be
impractical, if not impossible, to make celibacy the norm, they opted
for the next best thing. Their teaching was to have as little sex as
possible with as little pleasure as possible and only with your
lawful mate. In contrast, a sex positive belief system would
recognize sexuality as a form of worship, in which women's and men's
bodies, pleasure, fertility, and life itself are celebrated. Sex
would be recognized as a means of of entering higher states of
consciousness and directly experiencing the Divine. Erotic ritual
would be valued as an expression of love and a powerful means of
bonding the entire tribe or community. In a sex positive culture,
polyamory would be seen as a contribution to society rather than an
immoral act.
The
fact is that even the more conservative forms of polyamory, such as
polyfidelity or Robert Rimmer-style closed group marriage in which
all the sex is one on one, will always be anathema in a sex negative
culture. The fact is that individuals who have been raised in a sex
negative culture and internalized it's values will find it
exceedingly difficult to practice polyamory without first finding a
way to heal sexually. The fact is that couples who are not sexually
satisfied with each other will probably find it difficult to feel
comfortable taking on other lovers.
Over
the last several years, I've discovered that for me and perhaps for
most people, a combination of sexual healing work, erotic ritual, and
polyamorous concepts provide a solid base from which to make the
shift to new paradigm relating. Polyamorous ideas alone tend to lead
to intellectual sterility at best. Without the deep emotional
clearing and releasing of genital armouring which the sexual healing
work offers, polyamorous relating must often be kept superficial or
else degenerate into melodrama. Sexual healing harnesses the enormous
power of our sexual energy and channels it for transformation. It
paves the way for tantric or sacred sexual practices and is wonderful
for opening the heart and getting the creative juices flowing. But
without a polyamorous framework and understanding of new paradigm
relating, erotic ritual can open a Pandora's box. Together, these
three components combine to create a synergistic whole. And that's
what the Love Without Limits work is all about. That's how to shock
the goddess works! That's how real manifestation of creation
works........
No comments:
Post a Comment