Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Bi-curious Exploration for Men

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

This is a re-post of an article I wrote a while back.

Last weekend I hosted a workshop called “Like a Pro” that was taught by Dr. Betty Martin from Seattle. Betty is my favourite teacher of intimacy skills. The class was geared to people like myself who use touch especially sensual and sexual touch as part of their profession – be it educational, therapeutic or as Betty put it, “providing a sensual oasis for your clients”, good old fashioned pleasure.

I’ll get into what we learned in the training in another post or you can have a look at Betty’s websites to see for yourself www.eroticeducation.org

After the workshop all of the students and Betty went to a local restaurant, Chai, where they were having a special evening called Mystic Romance. There was sensual music and belly dancing and general yumminess. Part of the evening was asking questions to a panel of “Love Experts”. Betty was one of them – she introduced herself as a Sacred Intimate and a Courtesan – what a lovely word. People wrote their question anonymously on a piece of paper and they were answered by the four “experts”.

There was the usually stuff like, “How do I get a man to commit?” or “How do I know he is the right man for me?” But then a question showed up that caused a silence to descend on the room:

I am a man who has a wife who I love deeply but I am wanting to explore my attraction to men. Should I tell her or should I just go ahead and do it?

As expected the answers from the panel were all about honesty and communicating with your partner. Even Betty said at first, “Don’t cheat dude!” But then as they were about to move on to the next question she asked for the microphone again. There was a serious and contemplative look on her face as she spoke.

“I am going to go out on a limb here. Let’s be real. Maybe your wife doesn’t want to hear the truth. But you owe it to yourself to explore your unexpressed erotic desires. My suggestion would be to seek out a professional to do that safely and with clear boundaries.”

Spoken like a true erotic revolutionary! There was a moment of silent discomfort in the room before the panel moved on. I wanted to jump up at that point and add, “Like me!” but I didn’t have the guts.

I see a lot of bi-curious men in my work. I remember one man who was in his late 70’s whose wife had died a few years earlier. He recounted his sexual experiences with his male friends as a teenager and how he had secretly wanted to explore that his whole life but didn’t. With his wife gone he was finally ready. He left my studio feeling like that happy teenage boy again.
Other men have wives and kids and they come to see me for a safe encounter. What does safe mean?

Well there is physical safety and emotional safety. Physically they know from my website that there will be no activities where there is a risk of contracting a sexually transmitted infection. I don’t engage in kissing or intercourse and if I touch the intimate areas of his body I put on medical examination gloves. Beyond that they know that I am their to take care of their needs without imposing my own. This means offering a sensual experience with clear boundaries that honour their desires. And of course I respect their need for confidentiality.

On the emotional side of things safety boils down to a couple of keys attitudes which I hold as the foundation of my work.

Non-judgment, Acceptance, Nurture and Affirmation.

This is deep soul nourishment. Men in our culture are expected to live in very confining boxes. You are either straight or you are gay. Woe to the man who is somewhere in between. I takes a lot of courage and vulnerability to be bi-curious.
I’ve seen first hand the years of shame and self-hatred lift when massaging a man sensually I offer some simple words like, “It’s good to enjoy the touch of another man.” Or “It’s great to feel your arousal.” Or “I’m here with you.”

On some deep level I feel that I am healing the wounds that many men feel about not having sensual intimacy with their fathers or other men in their life. Of course I don’t mean that men should all be exchanging erotic massage but what about just savouring a satisfying hug or sitting close to a man and relaxing into the connection and companionship. I wonder what the world would be like if men could learn to relate in this sensual intimate way instead of relating through competitive sports, cut-throat business, or killing each other in war.

Understanding The Sexual Healing Process – Introduction

Tuesday, May 10th, 2011

For almost three years now I have been training in a form of emotion and body centred psychotherapy called Hakomi. This method, the life work of visionary Ron Kurtz who just recently passed away, is a synthesis of ancient spiritual practices and the most leading edge science on the workings of the brain/mind/emotion/body phenomena.

I want to be clear that I’m not yet a certified Hakomi practitioner and what happens in my sessions with clients is not pure Hakomi. However through my study and practice of Hakomi I’ve gained powerful tools and an understanding of the healing process which has greatly influenced my work as a sexual healer. I’ve been wanting to write about this for a long time.

My desire in this writing process is to advance the conversation around hands-on sexual healing into the realm of science while keeping it accessible to people. Right now there is way too much of a spiritual, new age, Tantra bias in my profession. It really turns most people away I believe. I’d like to remove that barrier so that more people will be attracted to this work as practitioners and clients. On a personal note I’ve changed the tagline for my website from “Where Spirit and Senses Unite” to “Feel the Power of Erotic Freedom” to reflect my own move away from this spiritual bias. Not that this work isn’t spiritual, it’s just that talking about the spiritual is better left to poets.

Another reason for my writing is to organize my own knowledge and experience. I believe that I’m actually one of quite a small number of people who are practicing hands on sexual healing work and engaging in a rigorous certification process in a recognized psychotherapeutic modality. So my perspective is rare and important.

This is my own first attempt at organizing an immense amount of theory and experience into a coherent whole so please bear with me. It’s not going to come out in a single entry to my blog. There are going to be lots of them. I think if I am able to get a posting out once every couple of weeks (or once a month) I’ll be doing well. There’s a book in here somewhere.

So broadly mapping out the territory here’s what I’d like to have a look at:

• Defining, in general terms, what “healing” is.
• Describing the elements of the therapeutic relationship. The importance of safety, client/therapist connection, and loving-presence which are paradoxically both the goals of the healing process and the context within which the healing process occurs.
• An understanding of holographic nature of human beingness or how our neural/emotional/biological/cognitive/perceptional/behavioural/interpersonal relationship processes all affect each other and influence the entire system. This is going to be a wide ranging look at the science around core emotional systems, the adaptive unconscious, attachment theory, developmental psychology, neural plasticity and evolutionary neural biology. (Oh God I really hope I don’t get in over my head here.)
• The importance of mindfulness (in the Buddhist sense) in the healing process, especially developing the capacity to stay in awareness of the sensorimotor aspect of being (or how learning to be embodied is key to the healing process).
• Reframing the healing process as, experimental and playful self-study of unconscious survival adaptations leading to freedom and choice, rather than, fixing something that’s wrong.
• The role of physical and emotional nourishment. How getting “the missing experience” changes everything and how the practice of engaging in sexual touch with your therapist (ok we’re in radical territory here, I know) can be a really good thing.
• An understanding of the cultural biases around sexuality, especially shame, and how integrating sexuality in all of it’s aspects (lust, nurture, play, exploration, socio-bonding and spirituality) into the whole of one’s being is an essential part of the healing and self-actualization process.

Ok as I write this down I know I am setting myself up for a big task (or a big failure). So I ask you to bear with me and even help me out if you can. If you don’t understand something please let me know. If you have a personal experience which elucidates a point I am trying to make please share it with me. If you think I am way off the mark please correct me. If you are at home waiting for the next instalment please write me and encourage me to get writing. Really I can’t do this alone.

For myself, since this is my first crack at this – and it’s a blog not a book at this point. I’m giving myself permission to not get it perfect and to write in a way which works for me instead of worrying too much about my punctuation and my audience. I trust that those who need to get this will get it.

That’s it for today. Stay tuned.

Becoming A Touch Centred Sex Educator and Therapist

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

The title of my website is Massage By Ki implies massage and you might wonder what the link is between massage and Sex Education and Therapy. It seems like quite a jump.

Well I think that telling my personal story of how I got into this work and how it is evolving might make it easier to understand.

Years ago I quit my former jobs as a white water raft guide and environmentalist and I took up massage. I took some training in Lomi Lomi massage and Thai massage and although I wasn’t officially licensed but I really loved massage and I was good at it.

Being unlicensed, I got a lot of requests from people, men especially, to massage their whole body including their genitals. At first I was righteously and indignantly opposed to the idea. That was just wrong and bad! In hindsight I can see how I had not worked through my shame and fear around sex, never mind sexual touch for money.

Then one day a beautiful young woman came to see me for a relaxation massage. We got to talking during the session and she told me how she did sexual massage, ran her own porn production company, and did professional dominatrix work. This woman was not a victim. She was radiant with life energy and confidence. I was inspired. Something inside of me shifted.

I starting questioning myself, “Really what is my problem with sexual touch? Why am I so uptight about it? Why do I touch people’s body all over except for their sexual organs? What message am I sending to people?”

Well I decided the answers to those questions were all based in some narrow minded morality and sex-negativity that I didn’t really agree with. So I just decided to change the way I thought and what I was doing. Actually it’s truer to say that I changed what I was doing and the way I thought eventually changed too.

So in my massage practice I just jumped into the deep end and started advertising that I did erotic massage, or “full-body” massage as we say in the biz, as well as my regular relaxation massage.

My work became a challenging and interesting learning environment to say the least. Immediately boundaries became an issue – a lot of people, men and women, wanted more sexual play than just an erotic massage. In some sessions I felt like I went further than I wanted to. Communication was difficult too – many people wanted an erotic experience, but they didn’t know what it was they wanted exactly, or they were too ashamed to express it to me, and I was left trying to figure it out. Needless to say there were mixed results – some sessions were deeply unsatisfying for me and my clients. I had lots of my own unresolved issues around sex that got activated while working with clients. At times I’d get my own needs and desires mixed up with those of my clients. Or I’d try to please my clients without really knowing what they wanted. In short, it was pretty messy in those early days.

It didn’t really help that there wasn’t much in the way of mentorship or community. Most people doing erotic massage and sex work are in it for expediency. It’s not their calling, it just pays the bills. They don’t spend a lot of time in self-development and self-reflection or connecting with others in their community.

I think what helped me most in those early days was a strong community of friends who I was open with about my work, my own personal meditation practice of Vipassana, a lot of self love and forgiveness, and a genuine interest in this work and helping people. Even with the challenges, the balance of my experiences were very positive. I learned a lot about myself and my relationship to sex. I got a front row seat on the huge diversity of sexual problems and desires that people have.

After a few months of doing it myself, I started looking for teachers to help me on my journey. My first was Maryse Côté. She is tantra teacher who has devoted her life to this work. I took a couple of 2 week tantra intensives with her and also became her assistant helping her organize and run other trainings. I learned so much from Maryse. I love and respect her dearly. Her teaching had a focus on tantric ritual, erotic massage and the sacredness of sex.

It was a good start but not enough. I found out pretty quickly that when you touch someone, especially when you touch their genitals, you aren’t just touching their body, you are touching their whole history with sex, and their emotions, beliefs and meanings about sex, themselves and the world. Unfortunately Maryse didn’t explicitly teach about how to deal with that tangled web. Certainly she is a master at doing it herself but she didn’t really teach it. It’s only years later that I could even understand what I was needing at the time but wasn’t getting.

So I kept looking for guidance and I kept doing my work with my clients – to be honest they were my best teachers. I believe that it there is no such thing as a sex expert – because the erotic and sexual are just so personal – every single person has a different story and experience. Sure there are themes – for example most people have a lot of shame around sex – but each person is so unique.

My next teacher was Dr. Joseph Kramer. Dr. Kramer is truly an erotic education pioneer. He started the Body Electric school, an innovative series of workshops focusing on attaining ecstatic states by combining breathwork and erotic massage. He is a master at creating experiential erotic learning environments using massage. He even had the vision and drive to create an academic program and a certified profession, Sexological Bodywork, in California. This program is taught in San Francisco at an accredited university, the Institute for Advanced Study in Human Sexuality.

I signed up for this training as soon as I found out about it. I thought, “Wow here is something accredited that includes sex and touch – that’s leading edge.” The training gave me some important pieces that I needed for my work like technical training in using breathwork and massage but more importantly it gave me a whole new perspective on using bodywork as a modality for teaching people about themselves. There were some rare unusual teachings as well, like masturbation coaching and anal massage. The course also had some great reading material like Jack Morin’s book “The Erotic Mind” which expanded my understanding about the erotic as a mental construct not just a physical response. Ironically, I would say that the Sexological Bodywork training treated the erotic mostly as a physical response.

Good as it was the pieces that were still missing for me from the training were boundaries and dealing with people’s emotions and psychological material. Sexological Bodyworkers are supposed to work with talk therapists who will take care of that material – Sexological Bodyworkers are just supposed to educate people about “erotic embodiment”.

Yeah right. In my experience that’s not very realistic for two reasons. First, I don’t work in California and I can’t get professional certification and insurance so no talk therapist will refer clients to me because of liability issues involved in using sexual touch. By the way I’ve never had a single complaint in this regard. Second, the psychological/emotional material that arises during a Sexological Bodywork session is ideally dealt with in the moment when it arises. In that moment a window to the unconscious opens briefly (a memory arises, an emotion is felt) and a skilled therapist can use that opening to help their client complete a healing process (come to a new understanding or make a new meaning around an old unresolved experience) before the window closes and the material disappears into the unconscious once again. I can only even begin to describe this process after years of my own training, especially with Hakomi, and coming to understand the therapeutic process. So there was a lot in the Sexological Bodywork training that was great and a lot was missing – for me anyways.

One of the unexpected benefits of taking the Sexological Bodywork training was that I met a woman named Betty Martin. She became another one of my teachers. Betty is dedicated to bringing a level of professionalism and ethics to the practice of using erotic touch for healing and education. More than anyone I know, Betty understands boundaries and erotic communication and how that influences the flow of erotic energy and satisfaction that people get in an intimate interaction. She has devised a conceptual model in this area which I believe is revolutionary. And she has devised a way teaching that conceptual model in real life situations between people – be they lovers or a practitioner and a client. A lot of Betty’s work on boundaries comes out the Cuddle Party culture. One of my favourite Cuddle Party sayings is, “You can’t truly say Yes until you feel completely comfortable and empowered to say No.” That has become one of my core teachings for people that come to see me for sexual healing and education work. Learning to know what their No is and speak it.

Betty’s teaching gave me a huge piece around erotic boundaries and communication. I was already learning the hard way, hit and miss with my clients, but her work just made it explicit and teachable for me. It totally shifted my practice.

The world is quite remarkable in that it does respond to who we are. After the Sexological Bodywork training and my studies with Betty I started attracting more challenging clients in my practice. When I first started doing erotic touch most of my clients were men who would come for a one time pleasure experience. I don’t have a problem with that, I still do plenty of those types of sessions. Even in those single sessions which are “just for pleasure” there can be an immense amount of sexual healing and learning that happens as a side effect if I give my complete presence and a lot empathy to someone, which is what I always try to do.

For example, I can’t tell you the number of times a man, after getting a great massage with a release, has spontaneously opened up to share some important event from his sexual history, usually painful in some way. All he needs is for me to hear them, to look at them with compassion, and to just be with them for a moment in a quiet non-judgmental space. Something shifts, some deep tension in his body lets go and there is a new possibility for joy in his life. It’s wonderful.

But after Betty’s training I started to get clients who would come to see me for multiple sessions with specific or general problems they wanted to address. There were a couple of women that I saw weekly over the course of a year with serious problems around knowing their desire and communicating it – which affected their ability to be satisfied sexually and in their life in general. My work was still focused on massage but there was more talk and inner exploration. I learned a lot from them as I helped them. My biggest personal growth areas were about the delicacy of maintaining such an intimate ongoing connection with someone on a therapeutic basis.

But the missing piece for me was still how to skillfully deal with people’s emotions and belief systems – how they see themselves and the world especially in the context of desire, the erotic and the sexual. That inner world is murky, complex and fraught with fear and shame. All of my trainings skirted around the edges of dealing with it – either ignore it or send them off to another expert. That didn’t work for me.

By sheer chance I stumbled upon Hakomi. Hakomi sounds like some foreign metaphysical therapy but it is actually a very new form of body centred, somatic, depth psychotherapy. It’s based in mindfulness, loving presence and all of the new brain science.

Ron Kurtz, the creator of Hakomi, calls it assisted self-study. In Hakomi you do not look upon the client as a person in crisis seeking therapeutic help but rather a person curious about getting to know themselves better. It reminds me of the writing above the entrance to ancient Greek oracle at Delphi, “Know Thyself”. I like that – it’s empowering. At the time of writing this article I have been studying and using Hakomi for 2 years.

Hakomi uses the body and touch as a way to access the unconscious mind, emotions and beliefs so that they can be examined and changed. And the learning of Hakomi has nothing to do with reading books but rather practicing how to enter into a deep resonance with clients and create a space of trust and communication where healing can happen without effort. It was the last major piece that I had been missing in my work and really gave me the confidence to work on a mental and emotional level with my clients and not just their bodies. Nobody in the Hakomi world as far as I know is doing sexual touch.

I’ve actually become somewhat circumspect about just jumping right into doing erotic massage with someone who wants to do deeper work in finding more freedom and choice in the areas of sex and the erotic. A lot of people come to me out of desperation and think that they need something radical like a tantric massage to “breakthrough their resistances” or “remove their blocks”. Sure they could possibly have a great “WOW” experience with a tantric massage but it often doesn’t translate into anything useful for their day to day life. It’s similar to the “workshop effect”. If you have ever done a weekend personal growth workshop and feel like a new person on Sunday evening but by Wednesday morning you have a hard time remembering what you learned and life looks pretty much then you know what I’m talking about here.

These days I’m looking to create more lasting changes in people. To do that requires spending more time creating a deep trust with clients and teaching them about mindfulness and communication before we get into erotic touch. After studying Hakomi I use much far less sexual touch to do far more sexual healing.

So it feels at this point I have all the major pieces in place for my sex education and therapy work. But I have to say that I still feel very much like a beginner. And to be honest I feel comfortable with that. Beginners mind and being open to the spontaneous rather than “knowing” is the appropriate response to have when dealing with sexuality. So much of what the experts know about sexuality is dead wrong in my opinion. It’s much better to just approach each person as a mystery and create a loving space where they can discover themselves.

That being said I am constantly digesting new material about sex, the erotic and sexual healing. My education will never be done.

For example, I recently became very much interested in the work of Esther Perel the author of Mating in Captivity. Here is a woman who has deeply examined the elements that give rise to, or kill, the erotic in long term loving relationships. This is especially interesting to me because so many of the individuals and couples who come to me seeking help are in relationships that are devoid of the erotic. I’m also interested on a personal basis because I am in a committed relationship with a 7 month old baby and I’m feeling like my old erotic identity has evaporated and I’m searching for a new one. Often my own life is a fertile field for learning about sex in ways that I can bring to my clients.

So bringing it into the present, if I had to describe my area of “expertise” it would be in using touch and mindfulness to help people develop mastery in what I would call the “satisfaction cycle”. It goes something like this:

- Feeling safe with intimacy. Which depends largely on developing healthy boundaries e.g. being able to say No and Yes and feeling like you have sovereignty over your body and personal space.
- Feeling good about enjoying eroticism and sexuality. Or in other words seeing yourself as an erotic and sexual being and that being a good thing which means getting over sexual shame.
- Knowing what it is that will satisfy you, referenced from yourself, especaily by paying attention to what your body is telling you. This is in contrast to the default position that most people have which is trying to please someone else and give them what they want.
- Communicating your desires to another person which requires specific erotic communication skills which may be verbal or non-verbal. This also requires self confidence.
- Receiving and enjoying what you asked for. Receiving touch is a definitely a learned skill. In our touch starved culture there are a lot of people who don’t have it. Getting the touch you want might also require that you be able to teach another person how to do it. This is another skill.
- Allowing the cycle to repeat over and over and deepening into your satisfaction, pleasure and the connection with yourself and your partner. This is the ultimate goal.

Every step of the way there is stuff hidden in the unconscious, habits and beliefs, that will sabotage the process and keep you from fully getting the pleasure and satisfaction you want. I don’t know anyone who is completely satisfied and at peace with their erotic life, there is always another level of erotic mastery that can be attained.

So there you have it. That’s a “brief” history of my evolution from a masseur to a Pleasure and Touch Centred Sex Educator and Therapist. Thank you for taking the time to read all the way through this 3000 word treatise. If you want to talk more about how I might be able to help you please drop me a line at info@massagebyki.com or call me at 604-618-3381. I offer an initial free consultation of 45 minutes. Go ahead take a chance – all you’ve got to lose is the stuff that’s keeping you from having the erotic satisfaction that you desire.