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Loving Men On Beach

Working Skillfully with Erotic Energy

12

I don’t plan what I’m going to blog about from week to week. Every Thursday or Friday, I go to the mountain and wait to hear Spirit speak, and when I hear something, I start writing it down. That can be a little nerve wracking, because sometimes Spirit seems to wait until the last minute. As of mid-morning today, we still hadn’t really been in touch.

At 9 AM this morning I shared the most exhilarating Touch Practice with a very skillful partner, a friend I haven’t seen in months. While he’s relatively new to the practice, he understands it in his body like he’s lived with it for a hundred years.

I want to blog today about what I’ve learned over the years from working with erotic energy in Touch Practice.  This very wonderful hour and a half I had this morning seemed to summarize all of that well enough that I think I can write about it coherently in the 90 minutes I have to get this blog written. Thank you, my old (new) friend (you know who you are!) for serving as the inspiration for this particular blog.

Those of you who have read any of my writings know that it’s been a journey for me to learn how to channel erotic energy in a way I find satisfying and productive. In the beginning, when I was starting to experiment with being held and hugged by various people, hugging would sometimes turn into sex, seemingly without my awareness or control: it would just happen. And that was frustrating and ultimately unsatisfying in those cases where I set out just to be held, and where I was looking for deep, non-sexual connection to someone.

On the other hand, I went through a period where I tried just ignoring erotic energy, or making it unwelcome in the room. That really doesn’t work either. It’s difficult for two men to hug while both have raging erections they are trying to ignore. It’s physically uncomfortable, and it feels emotionally dishonest. It’s like sitting across from your dinner partner at a restaurant enmeshed in a riveting conversation while pretending not to notice he has a javelin stuck in the side of his head. It’s not convincing.

Of course there are times when someone just has to sit with the fact that he’s aroused: if my practice partner has not given explicit consent for genital touch, or is too uncomfortable with erotic energy to allow us to work with it together, that simply has to be respected as a limitation. What I want to write about, however, is where erotic energy can go when both people want to acknowledge it, both allow it to be in the room, and both make a conscious effort to engage it productively with the goal of a non-sexual outcome.

I can sum up what I’ve learned in four big directives:

  1. Find your puppy body
  2. Breathe, ground, find your feet, set your intention
  3. If it gets erotic, go there first, and fast; and
  4. Watch for backward time travel and ride the train

Puppy Body

As adult men we have the capacity to engage each other in the energy of arousal and erection without that engagement needing to be sexual, end in ejaculation, or produce frustration. Most men are completely out of touch with that capacity, but you had it as a little kid, and let me see if I can help you locate it.

Many little boys have had the experience of “playing doctor” or exploring someone else’s body, particularly their genitals, and may have experienced arousal or excitement without the sense of urgency that things had to proceed towards a particular goal or outcome.  It was purely about exploration. That capacity exists. It still exists.

The reason your psychotherapist spends so much time talking about your “inner child” is that it still exists in a very real way. So does the pre-sexual part of your body; it is as real in the here-and-now as your psychological wounds are. It is accessible here and now just like the rest of your inner child.

For some there are challenges. If you had the experience of childhood sexual abuse, as I did, then you may have been “fast-forwarded” past your pre-sexual body by some menacing adult who took you directly into adult sexual experience, so you’ll need to go back, intuit, and reconstruct your pre-sexual body and pre-sexual experience with men. You can do it. I’ve done it. It’s part of what Touch Practice is about, for me. I rebuilt experiences my twelve year old would have had, had he been allowed to have them on his own, by creating them now.

So the first necessity is that at least intellectually or cognitively, you locate (or construct, if necessary) your “puppy body,” that part of you that can have genuinely child-like innocent curiosity about someone else’s body, including their genitals, without being on a railroad track to ejaculatory behavior. That space has to be cultivated, in some cases, as I’ve said, it has to be recreated, but for starters, you have to acknowledge that it exists.

Breathing and Grounding

There are some of you (there are many, actually) who write to me asking, “I tried getting together with someone where we agreed we would do hugging and holding, but it ended up being sex. We haven’t spoken since; we were both so disappointed. What went wrong?”

Without having been there, I can tell you exactly what went wrong, actually, because I’ve watched this happen a few dozen times. What went wrong is (and you won’t believe me, it’s so simple): you stopped breathing. When you stopped breathing (stopped being aware of your breathing) you stopped being aware of your experience. When you did that, you checked out; your plane flew on autopilot, and by the time you woke up, your plane had landed in Warsaw despite the fact that you set out for Paris. The answer is always (and I’m pretty sure of this) “you stopped breathing consciously and intentionally.”

Breathe, feel your feet in the ground, check in with your intention (what are you hoping will happen.)  When you run into erotic energy, check grounding the way a pilot looks over a pre-flight checklist because I swear to you, you will crash if you don’t.

If it gets erotic, go there first

If erotic energy shows up during practice, it is, in my opinion, a big mistake to ignore it, downplay it, or wait to engage it. I go there first, fast, and deliberately. If I have permission and I’m working with a partner who will allow me to engage erotic energy when it surfaces, particularly if we’re doing naked work, then if the penis needs attention, I go there first. If there’s erection I acknowledge it. I typically do this by very carefully and slowly, as though I am reaching for something breakable and expensive, taking the genitals in my hands, breathing into them and instructing my partner to do the same. I just “sit with” the genitals; hold them, pay attention to them, offer them some respect and reverence. Sometimes for two or three minutes. Whatever it takes.

You will find very often, not always, that if you sit quietly with an erection by simply holding it in your hands, it subsides. The energy reallocates itself to the rest of the body and is reabsorbed into the larger energetic body. Often dealing with the need to acknowledge erotic energy allows that energy to move off to the side so that other, and deeper, energetic connections can be engaged.

Watch for Time Travel

My experience of watching men engage non-sexualized erotic energy in a 90 minute window is that we start from where we are now, as adults, and work our way backward in time. So our first engagement of an erection in a partner is likely to be a sexualized adult thought (“hand job?”) and then slowly, as we sit with erotic energy, and breathe, and ground, and relax, over the next hour, people move slowly backward in their time bodies. At some point men are able to engage each other as adolescents, aroused and excited, and at some point beyond that, as men enter puppy body, they are able to be playful and innocently curious about each others’ bodies without any sense of urgency or directive outcome.  In a typical Touch Practice, by the end of the hour, we end up genuinely childlike, filled with wonder and curiosity and a desire to explore these containers we are poured into at birth.

And that’s  all the time I have for this blog. I’ll have to mop up any messes next week.

Have thoughts you’d like to share?

Touch Practice is a sacred practice for me, and part of that is keeping confidences sacred. While a name and e-mail address are required to post a comment, feel free to use just your first name, or a pseudonym if you wish. Your e-mail address will never be seen by or shared with anyone. It is used to prevent spam and inappropriate comments from appearing in the blog. I’d really like to hear from you!

  1. Thomaas in Greenwich
    Thomaas in Greenwich01-28-2012

    Thanks for the memory – for the recollection of a time when intimacy was disentangled from need. I have learned to be timid, now – to sit with my physical isolation as collateral damage for growing older. It is a wonder to remember, through your words, the beauty and innocence of play.

    • Kevin Smith
      Kevin Smith01-28-2012

      Thank you Thomas–good to see/hear from you. Thanks for your comment. Innocent play is still ours to be had! It takes some work sometimes to reclaim or, if necessary, rebuild (or sometimes create it from scratch in our adulthood.) May you have a fun play date with a partner of your choosing (which can be ourselves, too!) sometime soon.

    • Lee
      Lee12-09-2013

      Thomas – I’m going to use your well chosen – inspired! – words, “intimacy disentangled from need” and “the beauty and innocence of play” as something of a contemplative focus for the next few days. These few words RIVET my attention, quiet my mind, and penetrate my heart. From however we have gotten entangled in life experiences which separate us from being “in touch with” our most true and inner nature – innocence – may be find our way to re-experiencing and living from that inner ground. I personally believe that there is therapy in finding ways TO open to such playfulness with another – or as Kevin has wisely reminded us, with ourselves – and that there is no accident that hospitals today employ staffs trained in “play therapy” specifically aimed at using dynamics which allow children to “work it out” and heal within themselves. May we play ourselves as far into healing as we can, using ALL of ourselves, including our erotic energy. Thank you, Thomas, for the inspiration.

  2. An old friend
    An old friend01-30-2012

    Reading this summary is very helpful. It has transformed this morning’s session from a good memory into a useful toolkit. I will try this with my partner. Great to see you again.

    • Kevin Smith
      Kevin Smith01-30-2012

      Agreed–although our visits with each other are very infrequent, I consider you among the oldest of old friends. It is always a privilege to share practice with you.

  3. Dale in PA
    Dale in PA01-30-2012

    I am so happy that this is what you were given to write about this week. This is exactly what I have always hoped for a survivor of sexual abuse. There is a boy who had his first time so violated and wants desperately to have what Billy Crystal in the movie “City Slickers” called a “do over”! I was committed to doing this after the 11-11-11 workshop and now I am even more. Will call soon. Can’t wait for next week’s clean up!

    • Kevin Smith
      Kevin Smith02-05-2012

      Dale, great to hear from you! Thanks for your comment. I hope all is well with you. Warm hugs.

  4. Sean in MN
    Sean in MN01-31-2012

    Can’t begin to tell you how helpful this was to me. I’ve had a couple of situations recently that I really just craved the intimacy, the caressing, the snuggling, the cuddling. Now, you’ve given me some tools to remain in the moment exactly as I want to be. As Thomas said, “It is a wonder to remember, through your words, the beauty and innocence of play.”

    • Kevin Smith
      Kevin Smith01-31-2012

      Thanks Sean; it’s great to hear from you and I appreciate your comments. I hope the tools will serve you well. Hugs, Kevin Smith

  5. David
    David02-19-2012

    Can everyone who practices your method, over time, expect to acheive mastery of this at some point? How long might it take?

    Also, can you discuss if it is it even worth it for everyone to try this when failure and disappointment (at least in the beginning) is so commonplace, and friendships are sometimes rocked?

    Hope you don’t mind these tough-minded questions.
    Thanks!!

    • Kevin Smith
      Kevin Smith02-20-2012

      Wow, David. Some tough questions! I’ll do my best. These are challenging.

      First of all, I resist thinking of this as “my method.” As I’ve written, I guess Touch Practice does have some of my fingerprints on it; I own the domain, I blog, I coined the phrase, I lead in some way. But I see myself as a carrier of a kind of work that has many different sorts of “flavors.” The use of touch as a sacred, healing practice with many different manifestations is ancient. It is carried by physicians and chiropractors and massage therapists, by people who call themselves “sacred intimates” (which means many, many different things to different people,) by parents who rock their babies, really by almost all of us who have ever reached out to touch people as a form of blessing. So, yes, this is the flavor of this practice that I carry, my own “practice” of touch. So if we call it “my method” let’s just put that in context.

      I believe learning how to touch each other involves skill. There might be a little bit of knowledge involved, and knowledge can be helpful, but it’s mostly skill. Skill has a particular acquisition pathway: skill is obtained by repeated practice in a safe environment. “Safe” in this context means that a) physical boundaries are respected and that b) there’s no shame or shaming involved (shame creates emotionally unsafe environments) and c) we allow for mistakes. No one who practices anything, from riding a bike to playing the clarinet, expects to be able to do it “right” the first time. But my experience is the more we practice, the better we get. The more aware we become. The more we learn about things like intentions, grounding, and so forth.

      How long does it take? I can honestly tell you that people who have done a weekend workshop with me have felt that even within that small amount of time, they experienced a noticeable shift in how they perceive and experience touch, a noticeable shift in how they intend or hope to use touch in their close relationships. And perhaps these folks wouldn’t use the word “mastery,” but I bet if you interviewed them and asked them if they felt increased “comfort” or “awareness,” I suspect they’d say yes.

      If you practice at tennis, then if you are a beginner and you have a pro as your partner, you’re going to improve faster than if you have another complete beginner as your partner. In fact, with two beginners, you might not even be able to get a game going. There might never be a returned serve; if so, it’s pretty hard to get off the ground. The same is true in touch.

      I don’t consider myself a “master” or any sort of trainer or teacher (although I often play that role.) I DO consider myself to have a heck of a lot of experience. I’ve spent hundreds of hours holding people, all different sorts of people, different ages, orientations, sizes and shapes, each of whom has a different reason for wanting to be held. After a few hundred hours, I should be pretty good at it by now!

      It’s just practice. Practicing tennis with someone who has hundreds of hours on you is going to be the same thing as practicing touch. And two people in a room who don’t know much about what they’re doing? Same as tennis. Doesn’t mean it’s hopeless. It does, I think, point to the value of skill and having skilled partners.

      And, partly, that’s the reason why I find myself putting more and more energy into workshops, where I can lead groups of men through these experiences, a dozen or two at a time, rather than focusing exclusively on individual work. It allows skilled partners to get out there in the world so that people can get better games of tennis (or in this case, touch) started! Thanks for your questions!

  6. Rafael
    Rafael01-20-2014

    Kevin, I have experienced that puppy love and the erotic energy. Many times holding another person for the first few times erotic energy surfaces, but if you redirect it somewhere else it goes away. Even holding my daughter once it happened and I understood what it was and just keep holding her in my arms and pretty soon it was gone. Our bodies by nature can react erotically when touched but it doesn’t has to go to the auto-pilot of sex. We can hold someone even another naked man and it not be sexual but tender and satisfying physically and emotionally- men have a lot of that energy in their bodies that is both both masculine and also very spiritual.