Saturday 2 October 2010

The Intimacy of Being


Last year’s Gay Men's Week at Laurieston: ‘The dance between power and intimacy’, set me off on a 12 month roller coaster journey of self healing, spiritual integration and joyfulness which climaxed in this September’s week: ‘Pleasure, Love, Joy, Light- The intimacy of being’

I’d like to thank all members of the Edward Carpenter Community for supporting this magically facilitative network of loving men. Without it I could not have allowed myself to become the person I now am!

So, what happened? Last September I felt sad and friendless. Forty-nine years old and locked into an erotic-free yet physically, emotionally and romantically close relationship with my long-term partner who had been plagued with physical health problems for 6 of the 10 years we’d been together. Prior to my relationship with him I had enjoyed a reasonably vigorous sex life but when we fell in love we committed to a monogamous life together. So by the sixth year of attempting to be sexually faithful to a sex-less relationship, always hopeful that the illnesses would remit but perpetually disappointed by his consistently absent libido, something was going to snap. I didn’t want it to be our relationship. I didn’t want it to be my mental state. I didn’t want it to be my own physical health- though preoccupation with aches and pains were threatening to colonise my consciousness and make me old before my time.

Without fully understanding why, I found myself on last year’s Laurieston September week and it turned out to be the best thing that could have happened to me.

By sharing my predicament in Heart Circle and Base Groups in the context of a programme of events encouraging openness to self and others, exploring the link between sexual and spiritual, I was able to discover that truth to myself lay in openly acknowledging my sadness. What had previously seemed to be a safe, powerful position of holding onto a mental armoury designed to project that I was a happily assimilated monogamous gay man, could now be seen as an obvious unhappiness-making mirage. I learned that intimacy in relationships grew from both trusting others to accept me in my vulnerability and allowing others to trust me with their vulnerabilities too!

With that important lesson learned as a foundation, I was able to return to my previously forlorn existence with a new lease of life. Could my relationship withstand some consensual, ethical, non-monogamy? Of course it could-and what a relief for both of us that we could actually talk about it! How would I develop my newfound fascination with the development of spirituality via sexuality? Why had these vitally important aspects of my personhood been perceived as mutually exclusive?

Four months later I’m experiencing the nature-bound healing spiritual Magick of a Faerie gathering at Featherstone Castle. Four months later I’m in community with beautiful Eurofaeries at Folleterre Faerie Sanctuary. Three months later I’m in Berlin for another week of Faerie frolicking in the company of queer folk allowing ourselves to be our very own unique selves! Two weeks later and I’m back at Laurieston focusing on Pleasure, Love, Joy, Light. Within days our community develops a deep physical, emotional and sexual intimacy allowing us to re-awaken an awareness of ourselves as sexual and spiritual pioneers. Learning the answer to the questions ‘Who do I want to be? What am I waiting for? What do I want to let go of?’

What have I learned in all this? Being brave enough to truly be myself (and this is not an insignificant piece of work in progress) is immensely pleasurable, gets me in touch with Spirit, inevitably invites genuine intimacy and generates joy in bucket-loads!

Thank-you to the organisers Shokti, Kevin, Adrian and Peter!

I’m looking forward to next year!

Pleasure, Love, Joy, Light!

6 comments:

  1. This post has deeply touched me. I, in my own work have come across the concept of vulnerability and how it relates to me loving and being loved. I am still working on what it means for me in terms of release work and shifts but I loved this from your post

    "I learned that intimacy in relationships grew from both trusting others to accept me in my vulnerability and allowing others to trust me with their vulnerabilities too!"

    A big Amen to what you have done and have given permission for. Loved it! Wishing all blessing as your courage grows by the day to just be you!

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  2. Hey Crazeebee
    Thanks for your support. I sometimes write these blogs and wonder if I am managing to convey what I'm going through.
    It's really encouraging to know that something I have discovered on my journey resonates with what you are learning on yours.
    Makes it feel like we're on the right track.
    Namaste
    :-)
    x

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  3. wow.
    I ask myself how many couples (str8 or otherwise)NEVER reveal these conflicting sentiments of being human beyond the closed circle of 2 we call partnerships.
    Your story is for me a variation on a theme many people (secretly) experience but don't dare to disturb the image strangers, friends and family have come to believe and have comfort with. One can find glimmers of this in literature (i.e. what are the untold details of Ibsen's DOLL HOUSE) Diaries (now blogs) do indeed serve a personal (and social) function to find individual (and healing)dynamic solutions. Thanks. Warm hug CCP

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  4. Hey Cocopierre
    Yep there's an increasing number of gay couples out there who don't dare to disturb the comforting assimilation-ist imagery we have imposed on ourselves as the price of our acceptance by the mainstream
    Yes I think you're right it's not just gay couples either who get wedded to the myth of monogamy as a means of regulating future subject-object consumer durable ownership disputes.
    :-)
    There are individual, healing, dynamic solutions to be arrived at but not without some considerable risk to self and personal power. Not that popular in these days of expensive divorce settlements.
    :-)
    My blog has been the space in which I have dared to own up to my truth.
    Thank-you for dropping by with your affirmation and your warm hug- it's much appreciated!
    x
    GS

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  5. Yay, you're blogging again! :) Thanks so much for sharing with such honesty and openness, I really enjoyed hearing about your journey. It left me wanting to know more, specifically to how it has changed your approach to life and maybe even your relationship. Keep blogging, I'll be here! :)

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  6. great post. thanks for sharing.

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