By Awaken — 2018
“You can open to God through sex. By learning to open your heart and body while embracing and trusting all energies from rough ravishment to sublime gentleness, you can open to be lived by the mystery that lives the entire universe. - David Deida
Read on awaken.com
CLEAR ALL
One-night stands and friends with benefits are just what your brain ordered.
In this world, women are marketed as toys and trophies. Are we surprised when some men take things literally?
You exercise, eat kale salads, and drink watermelon juice, but you still find yourself questioning your libido. Where do you turn?
The problem with sexual withholding in a marriage has far less to do with actually having or not having sex and much more to do with misunderstanding.
In this edition of Good@Sex, Alexandra Fine—sexologist, co-founder and CEO of Dame Products, and Well+Good Changemaker—delves deep into whether existential stress and a resulting low libido would be better treated and relieved by having sex or not.
I live with my partner, and we're spending more time together than ever right now. Nothing is wrong, per se—in fact, we're getting along super well. Yet, I'm…not in the mood for sex. Well, partnered sex. You see, I am in the mood for alone time and self-pleasure.
You should have sex with someone when you want to have consensual sex with them. That is the right time for you to have sex.
As a relationship matures, I think the lack of makeup sex isn't something to worry about at all. In fact, it should be something to celebrate.
Whether you’re curious about a shift in libido, want intel about a certain relationship dynamic, are interested in exploring an untapped avenue of your sexuality, or anything else, Alexandra Fine—sexologist, co-founder and CEO of Dame Products, and Well+Good Changemaker—has an answer to offer.
As a psychiatrist to people with spiritual aspirations, I am witness to some of the ways in which spirituality and sexuality interact, not always to either of their benefits.