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Dynamics of
Intimacy,Sexuality, & Love
by
John Robbins and Ann Mortifee
 In
our culture, after hundreds of years of sexual
denial, the pendulum has swung the other way. Now
our society has a preoccupation with sexuality.
There is hardly a place where its mark cannot be
found. All this makes it difficult to feel the
deeply personal, intimate, and holy function that
sexual energy can play in our lives.
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Despite
the degree to which sexuality permeates the culture,
the collective guilt of history can still be felt.
We have been socialized to be suspicious of
pleasure, to live removed from our bodies, and to
maintain a tight rein over our feelings. In a
culture riddled with guilt, sexual confusion, and
body shame, the sexual force has often been misused.
Yet when entered with joy, tenderness, and respect,
it becomes not only a source of great vitality, but
a guide to the ways of the heart.
We
are entrusted with our sexual appetite, power, and
capacity for feeling not so that we will be driven
by it, but so that we may be nourished and upheld,
strengthened and moved. The flow of sexual
excitement in the body is, in and of itself, a
healing gift. There need be nothing about our sexual
experience that removes us from the sacred. In fact,
sexual union can be the ritual expression that
unites body and spirit in a divine dance of
Creation.
Sexual
Conflicts Between Partners
Because
we are evolving beings, our need or lack of need for
sexual expression will flux and change. It may
sometimes feel impossible for two people to remain
harmonious in a mutual level of desire for any
prolonged length of time. There is tremendous
understanding available if we are able to listen
deeply whenever a lack of harmony arises between us.
We are gift bearers, bringing messages to ourselves
and to one another through our sexual sharing. The
ability to remain still enough to hear these
messages requires tremendous discipline -- the
discipline of not complaining, of not blaming, of
not fearing or doubting or judging. It is, in fact,
the ultimate discipline of unconditional love and
curiosity.
There
are many reasons why two people are drawn sexually
to one another. There is the need to be reassured,
to reassure the other, to forget separateness, to be
safe, to feel alive and vibrant, to be united, to
feel in communion with, to ward off loneliness, to
feel valued, to be momentarily complete, to do our
duty, to transcend the daily boredom, to touch the
mysterious, to awaken the life force, to be consumed
by a power greater than the mind, to heal
misunderstandings, to claim our territory, to
reinstate our affectionate hold, to give what we
believe the other wants, to keep peace, to express
tenderness, and on and on and on. All of the reasons
are valid; all of them are part of a deep urge
toward wholeness and love.
But
each different reason carries with it a different
energy field. Some of these fields are mutually
compatible, and some are not. If, for example, we
are longing to be reassured that we are loved and
valued, and our partner is giving what he or she
considers to be a duty, neither of us will be
satisfied.
During
times of disconnectedness, if we can intimately and
with deep trust venture together into our most
vulnerable honesties, we will begin to discover
there the understanding that can eventually lead to
healing.
We
have been given few attributes as potent, volatile,
and complex as our sexuality. For our sexuality
often becomes a focal point where unacknowledged
fears, hopes, expectations, and griefs rise to the
surface.
It
takes courage to go beyond our fear and actually
acknowledge what is buried within us, but, when we
do, we open the way for communion, joy, and profound
discovery.
The
more we can share about ourselves with our beloved,
the more sexual harmony we will enjoy, and the
greater will be our ability to discover and heal all
the fears and misconceptions that keep us from our
true capacity for intimacy, pleasure, and
fulfillment.
Intimacy
and Humility
We
have been socialized in this culture to believe in a
romantic fantasy in which two people meet, fall in
love, live happily ever after, and never need anyone
else.
This,
we all eventually discover, is merely a fairy tale,
and seeking it distracts us from the possibility of
a more fulfilling voyage of discovery, a voyage that
can lead us deeper into ourselves and into each
other.
Inevitably,
we bring not only our love to a relationship, but
also our wounds and confusion. As the relationship
begins to mature, we become a bit more willing to
let go of the image that we believed we needed to
maintain in order to love or to be loved. We become
willing to risk showing more of ourselves, more of
those places where we believe we are flawed.
Healing
relationships give us the courage to face ourselves,
to see those attitudes and behaviors that are not in
keeping with our essential being. They show us the
ways in which we distance ourselves from others, and
enable us to see how we defend those habits and
beliefs that compromise our well-being and the
well-being of our relationships. As we acknowledge
and share these patterns, they can become undone.
Conflict, guilt, sorrow, and all the other fearful
emotions can lead us to the place where the wounded
child waits in hiding, so that what has been hurt
can be brought to health.
When
our heart's desire is to heal ourselves and each
other, then every single moment can become an
invitation to move toward love. When we open to
ourselves and to our beloved with honor and total
acceptance, something miraculous happens. In the
full mingling of our spirits we are renewed,
strengthened, and delivered to our highest
possibilities. Our love has become a bridge not only
to ourselves and to each other, but to life itself.
Criticism
and Intimacy
There
are times in every intimate relationship when we
wish to express to the other person that he or she
is doing something that we feel is not in alignment
with his or her spirit.
This
is a delicate moment. For when we share any kind of
criticism, the attitude we hold toward the other and
the manner in which we speak are an essential part
of the message we convey. The communication becomes
difficult to receive if we are relating out of a
sense of separation or condescension, if we are
bitter, judgmental, or angry or if we are needing
the other person to change. There is a much greater
possibility that our communication will be heard and
received when we are embracing the other as
essentially well and whole, and when we speak with
acceptance and respect for who he or she already is.
We
have all at times used our intimate relationships as
a place to vent our frustrations. A healing
relationship, however, calls for impeccable
responsibility and infinite fairness and respect.
For only then can enough trust develop so that
trembling hearts can open deeply to each other and
risk being known.
This
article was excerpted from the book The
Awakened Heart : Meditations on Finding Harmony in a
Changing World, © by John Robbins and Ann
Mortifee. Reprinted with permission of the publisher
HJ Kramer/New World Library, Novato, CA 94949. www.newworldlibrary.com
For
more info or to order this book.
About
The Author
JOHN
ROBBINS is the author of the internationally best-selling Diet
for New America and Reclaiming Our Health. The
recipient of the 1994 Rachel Carson Award, he is the founder
of EarthSave International, a nonprofit organization that
supports health food choices, preservation of the
environment and a more compassionate world. Visit their
website at http://www.earthsave.org.
ANN
MORTIFEE is one of Canada's most distinguished creative and
performing artists. She has received numerous awards,
including the Order of Canada for outstanding contributions
to the performing and healing arts. A distinguished teacher
and workshop leader, some of her topics include Compassion
and the Healing Power of Music, Releasing Your Inner Voice,
and Healing Journey. Visit her website at http://www.annmortifee.com.
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