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A Different Sort of Hot

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Message Craig K. Comstock
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Selling the sizzle if not the steak, the Harvard Crimson serves up a feature called "the 15 hottest freshmen." What's hot? It is a Bay Area couples therapist, yogi, and author named Stuart Sovatsky who savors a different kind of hot.

A whole spectrum of meanings applies to the colloquialism "hot." At one end of the stick is the hard-core porn now accessed on smart phones in the palm of the hand. This digital ease has provided a generation with what Cindy Gallup calls "default sex education."

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For the past few decades, one relief from shallow encounters, has been the "neo-tantra" movement, as described in such classics as The Art of Sexual Ecstasy (disclosure: the author, Margot Anand, is a friend). In the minds of some workshop participants, neo-tantra has mainly involved getting past Puritan guilt, learning skillful techniques, slowing down, while reaching for the big O.

In his new book, Advanced Spiritual Intimacy, Sovatsky treats neo-tantra with the same disdain that political progressives apply to neo-cons (disclosure: the author is another friend). Inspired by his long-time practice of yoga, he draws a basic distinction between ars erotica (the sensibility he favors) and scientia sexualis (what's taken for granted in this society, including the approach of Freud).

Paradoxically, Sovatsky argues that the erotic arts can benefit by a period of "brahmacharya" (or a deliberate holiday from genital sex) which veers sharply away from the culture of "hooking up," sex-on-the-first-date, and, in a phrase from the author's youth, "going all the way."

"Going all the way to what?" he recalls asking after slipping out of a college party with his date and ending up on a lower bunk. It's clear from his books that the author has tasted the fruits of periods of brahmacharya and of erotic relationships.

In Sovatsky's writing, ars erotica is illustrated by some of the ecstatic utterance of Your Perfect Lips. Self-published nine years ago, this book-length poem has yielded many lovely excerpts, along with plentiful Sanskrit terms, both incorporated in Advanced Spiritual Intimacy.

Sovatsky has earned his living mainly as a psychotherapist, a counselor to couples who are immersed in scientia sexualis and who are lurching, along with many of their peers, in the direction of divorce court. The author, along with arising before dawn and doing his yogic practices, has been moved by witnessing the distress and even agony that he confronts in the consulting room.

In a video interview, you can see Sovatsky explaning how he seeks to start an upward spiral in the couples, less by focusing on negative patterns than by helping clients start the back-and-forth practice of witnessing the other partner seeing and thanking him or her, hesitantly at first and then, in Sovatsky's experience, with growing enthusiasm.

He introduces the idea that other "puberties" can come after the genital awakening). The idea that later "tumescences" are possible, no less dramatic, but not automatic, is new to most of us in the West. Quoting yogic scripture, Sovatsky holds out the promise, for example, of a puberty in the pineal gland, associated with the third eye.

Brahmacharya includes bodily phenomena that are normally overshadowed by explosive sexuality It does not exclude a return to genital sexuality, but offers, Sovatsky says, an erotic sensitivity that brings its own extraordinary and even revolutionary pleasure. He quotes the eminent French historian, Michel Foucault, as hoping for release from the "austere monarchy" of genital sexuality.

Advanced Spiritual Intimacy is like an attic trunk packed with treasure-garments, with gowns and capes that must perhaps be shaken out and worn, gotten accustomed to, before their full value is revealed. One crux in the author's love-life, came after he practiced brahmacharya for more than several months and then had sex with a partner. His reaction was "hmmm." At that point he slipped back into the yogic practices, which, as he writes, can be done either solo or with a partner. This in turn led eventually to the ecstatic lines found in Your Perfect Lips.

If you can get past an automatic disbelief that anything can possibly be more satisfying than the forms of love-making common today, you may find yourself drawn into a different world. Sovatsky himself has been touched by many worlds, from attending Princeton College to studying at (and serving on the board of) the East-oriented California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, from serving as co-president of the mainly Western group called The Association for Transpersonal Psychology to teaching workshops in Russia and helping to organize a conference in India, from working as a psychotherapist to chanting in the Bay Area kirtan group "Axis Mundi."

Having attended neo-tantra classes taught by Margot Anand, I found some of the exercises given by Sovatsky to be familiar. One big difference is that while Anand encouraged couples in her workshops to go back to their private rooms and "practice," by which she meant have sex, Sovatsky suggests that his readers and clients go deeply into energetic engagement over a long period before cutting it off with a genital climax. Where Anand describes sexual energy as a source of spiritual attainment, Sovatsky sees it not only as a road to bliss but also, during certain periods, as a possible distraction.

If a reader decides to take a holiday from genital sex, Sovatsky recommends a minimum duration of at least three months "without sex or masturbation or hot movies." He continues: "As moralistic as this sounds, it won't remain that way, as ars erotica experiences will come to allure you, 'seduce' you, thrill and transfix you in both utter tranquility and uplifting energy."

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Craig K. Comstock Social Media Pages: Facebook page url on login Profile not filled in       Twitter page url on login Profile not filled in       Linkedin page url on login Profile not filled in       Instagram page url on login Profile not filled in

Author of three recent books, Better Ways to Live: Honoring Social Inventors, Exploring New Challenges (2017); Enlarging Our Comfort Zones: A Life of Unexpected Destinations (2016); and Gift of Darkness:Growing Up[ in Occupied Amsterdam (more...)
 

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