When you and new lovers get together to make love for the
first time, you can better honor your fertility and health
concerns once you’ve heard each other’s sexual health
information, asked questions and perhaps performed a home-HIV
test.
Each of you tells her or his sexual history.
Share your test results for sexually transmitted and other
contagious diseases. Say who and how you’ve touched sexually
since your last HIV tests. Say what methods you used (or
didn’t) for disease protection. State your fertility status.
Notice your partners’ body language and eye
movements as they share their sexual history. Body and eye
movement can indicate truth (people lie most about sex). Ask
questions until you get enough information to make intelligent
decisions.
WEIGH WHAT WANT & DON’T WANT
Focus, breathe, find your center. Notice signals your body
sends you. Is your belly tense, head aching, breathing rapid?
Then gather your thoughts and take turns saying what you seek,
prefer and what you do not want sexually with each person at
the love-in. Consider all health, emotional and social factors
and remember, you can say “No” anytime.
CENTER YOURSELF BETWEEN INNER GIVER & TAKER
You may hide your desires if your Giver-- an inner voice that
says to please others first–dominates you. Your Giver knows
how to make other people comfortable. Trouble is, sometimes
giving becomes more than an option, your Giver becomes your
main voice, the only one you hear inside. Your Giver takes you
over and can ignore your own needs.
If your Giver dominates you, you do what other
people want you to do so they’ll like you. You think, “I’m
nice and just naturally try to make them happy first.” This
may please them and you for a while.
But when you automatically please others first,
you suppress your ability to choose how you want to interact
sexually with your lovers at the love-in. The Giver, always
gratifying others, keeps your Taker--the part of you that
wants to meet your own needs–offstage.
Offstage in your unconscious, your Taker
gathers strength and bitterness and can explode without
consideration of your inner ecology or relations with your
polymates.
What works for me is inclusive, pair-bonded
loving (Mono-poly), with Sasha and I each having a veto on one
another's sexual involvement. Sasha never exercises his veto,
but I often do. In inclusive loving, all sexualloving takes
place in each others' presence. Relating to other couples has
to be right for both of us, no small requirement, since we're
bi, eccentric and intense and we need all-round approbation
with our lovers.
Show your protective voices that you can, from
your discerning center, experiment with new behaviors and
still feel secure. From your Center, face your sexual self,
overcome your family and cultural programming, burn karma,
heal trauma and drop inhibitions. If your love group
encourages emotional release and reprogramming, emotions you
experience in the love-in give you a chance to heal and learn.
STATE DESIRES & LIMITATIONS
Tell each person how you want to share sex with her or him.
You don’t have to justify a request; just state it. Hear but
don’t judge other’s requests.
When you request, say, double penetration, your
love-in lovers may or may not give you that. If they ask you
to do something you need not comply. Offer each other
alternative intimacies. Match your sexual interactions with
your comfort level. Perhaps, refrain from coitus at first. A
man may, in some instances, ejaculate only with his mate but
share oral sex with others in the group.
Many woman, like me, were forced, raped,
controlled, manipulated or dominated by male caretakers or
lovers. We may have attitudes that limit our sexuality.
If you have primary partners present at the
love-in, after each person expresses sexual wants and limits,
tell your partners how you feel about their sexual desires for
others and ask them to say how they feel about your sexual
requests. Reach consensus with your partners before engaging
in sex with others.
Always honor and respect the wants, desires and
needs of your partners to limit how you relate to the others
at the love-in. Give your primary partners they want and
thereby create space for their healing, space where they can
feel safe. Then they can open up later on in the current
encounter or future episodes rather than retreat and shut down
from this experience or from polyamory.
Your partner, through hesitancy, reflects a
part that is not healed within him or in your relationship and
must be addressed before he can expand sexually. The sexual
sharing must satisfy your partners as well as you for
polyamory to work.
You may have requested something on the line of
the following: “Sue, I would like you to have intercourse with
me and Joe, I would like for you to stroke my hair while Sue
and I make love.”
Sue may respond, “Tom, I don’t know you that
well at this point and I am not comfortable with saying yes
right now, but I would be willing to let you honor my pearl.”
[kiss her clitoral head]
Joe, who is Sue’s husband may add, “It’s fine
with me if you make love with Sue at this time, and I am open
to it whenever she is comfortable. However, I would like to
assist your joining, at that time. And yes, I would love to
stoke your hair when you two make love and also pleasure you
in any way you would both desire.”
Ann, your wife may interject, “I wouldn’t be
comfortable with Sue and my husband joining together and Tom
assisting unless Sue and I connect first and get to know each
other intimately in that fashion. Once we know and love each
other, then I am open to anything.”
And so on around the group until all have
expressed their desires, preferences and limitations. But, no
matter what you expressed in the beginning, you can change
your mind at any time.
And honor emotional interruptions to
sexualloving. Honor a person’s feelings and don’t take them
personally. An upset person, her history and her life’s
experiences trigger her and she’ll process and reveal what is
up for her in her own time and way.
As a group, you can be there for her in ways
she previously never thought possible. Let her release things
long pent up and heal and reprogram herself.
2a. VET EACH OTHER by Sasha Lessin, Ph.D.
Before getting sexual with your lovers, I
suggest you Join hands in a circle. Imagine energy circulating
through you, from left to right; receive energy from the hand
that holds yours on your left, send it down your right hand to
the hand you hold on your left.
Make eye contact for 30 seconds or so with each
person at the love in, then lower your hands. Each shares
How would you would like the relationships among you to
develop?
What’s the best that can happen for each of us?
What’s the worst for each of us?
Test results for sexually transmitted and other
contagious diseases?
Who touched you sexually since your last HIV
tests? How did you touch?
What methods did you use (or not use) for
disease or pregnancy protection?
What’s your fertility status?
What do you seek, prefer and not want sexually
with each person?
Make eye contact with each person and tell her
or him how you want to share sex with her or him. You don’t
have to justify a request just state it
Hear and repeat in your own words each person’s
requests with the understanding that each will consider the
requests. Then respond to the requests or offer each other
alternative intimacies.
If you have primary partners present, after
each person expresses sexual wants and limits,
tell your primaries how you feel about their sexual desires
for others
Ask your primaries to say how they feel about
your sexual requests
Reach consensus with your partners before
engaging in sex with others
****
|