Saturday, April 12, 2014

Given that there are inner worlds and outer worlds...is it remotely possible that there could also be...?

Q. Two sides to everything else?

Could chakras be dual in nature?

Must all things exist in balance?
Sunman: Yes! Like the "teeter totter", and the "swing set" and the "merry-go-round"....all things remain in motion, but are they not also balanced?


Answer
If you believe that Sex between a Man and a Woman is the greatest gift, then the answer to your question is yes.

The religions (those that I have looked into their mysticism) that share this view are many and varied, but they all share a common theme; that a prolonged mutual orgasm is the gateway to the Divine.


Coitus reservatus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coitus_reservatus
Coitus reservatus (coitus, "sexual intercourse, union" + reservatus, "reserved, saved")[1] , is commonly thought of as a form of sexual intercourse in which the man does not attempt to ejaculate within his partner, but instead attempts to remain at the plateau phase of intercourse for as long as possible avoiding the orgasm and seminal emission (however, as in prepuberty, a male may achieve orgasm without any seminal emission, known as a dry orgasm).[2] Another term used for this kind of relationship is the word karezza.

The word Karezza is generally believed to be derived from the Italian word "carézza" meaning "caress." However, Alan W. Watts believed it was a Persian word.[3] Alice Bunker Stockham coined the word karezza and is akin to maithuna in Buddhist Tantra and Sahaja in Hindu Yoga.[4]

The Rosicrucians have used "coitus reservatus" or "karezza" as an esoteric practice. The practice of "coitus reservatus" with vestal virgins during the first four centuries of Christianity descended as a tradition to the Cathars.

Some views on coitus reservatus
English novelist Aldous Huxley, in his last novel Island wrote that Maithuna, the Yoga of Love is... "the same as what Roman Catholicism means by coitus reservatus.[14] Getting to the point by discussing coitus reservatus, Alan W. Watts in Nature, Man and Woman notes: "...I would like to see someone make a case for the idea that the Apostles really did hand down an inner tradition to the Church, and that through all these centuries the Church has managed to guard it from the public eye. If so, it has remained far more secret and "esoteric" than in any of the other great spiritual traditions of the world, so much so that its existence is highly doubtful...[15] The Welsh writer Norman Lewis, in his celebrated account of life in Naples in 1944, claimed that San Rocco was the patron saint of coitus reservatus: "I recommended him to drink -- as the locals did -- marsala with the yolk of eggs stirred into it, and to wear a medal of San Rocco, patron of coitus reservatus, which could be had in any religious-supplies shop".[16] Coitus reservatus was admittedly part of the teachings of the Catholic church regarding sexual intercourse and was generally a permitted form of intercourse but was subject to the same arguments as coitus interruptus.[17]

The psychologist Havelock Ellis writes: "Coitus Reservatus, - in which intercourse is maintained even for very long periods, during which the woman may have orgasm several times while the man succeeds in holding back orgasm, - so far from being injurious to the woman, is probably the form of coitus which gives her the maximum gratification and relief".[18]

The Oneida Community, founded in the nineteenth century by John Humphrey Noyes experimented with coitus reservatus which was then called male continence in a religiously Christian communist environment. The experiment lasted for about a quarter of a century and then Noyes went on to create Oneida silverware and establish the Oneida Silver Co. that grew into Oneida Limited.[19]

The idea of "coitus reservatus" is not unknown in Islam. Tradition tells how the Prophet Mohammed practiced it to preserve his vitality.[20]




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