Beyond Hormones: The Elements
of Love, Sex & Spirituality
by Diana Daffner
In the beginning, when love is new, romance, courting and conquest
are aphrodisiacs, stimulants that increase our appetite for sexual union.
Eventually the chase ends, hearts are won, and lifetime pledges are made.
The happy couple says “I do,” strolls off into the sunset together, destined
to be lovers forever.
So what happens? The newness fades, the passion flees. Where does
it go? Does it get mortgaged along with the house? Disposed
with the diapers?
Years ago, Mary, age 49, shyly told her family doctor that she had lost
interest in having sex with her husband. She was told this was a
natural event, that women eventually lose interest and that’s the way it
is. For some women, she was told, it comes earlier. Today, Mary might
be offered testosterone patches to fire up her lagging libido!
Martin, age 59, is having erectile difficulties. Viagra® to the
rescue!
Times may have changed, but is it really just a story of diminishing
hormones and loss of blood flow? The popularity of these new biologically-based
treatments attest to their effectiveness as sexual aids. Yet we continue
to yearn for the fulfillment of a deeper intimacy. Reviving the mechanics
of our sex life may help, but it does not fully address the hunger in our
hearts.
We desire even more than the wonderful climax of sexual release. We
crave a connection with our partner’s soul. We ache to embrace a love that
lights up our eyes, that enlivens our very being.
More than one divorcee has stated, “the sex was great, but there was
no intimacy.” Without intimacy, sex is not lovemaking. Without
lovemaking, hearts are empty.
Laura, married 22 years, loves her husband immensely. Therefore, she
has “sex” with him at least once a week, because he has needs that must
be met. Yet each time, when it is over, she experiences loneliness and
loss. Something is missing.
A Chinese saying tells us that “young love is from earth; mature love
from heaven.” Could it be that our bodies are trying to tell us something
as they slow down and cool off? Could it be that it is not our biology
which needs assistance, but our spiritual self?
If we look at relationships from a perspective of the Chinese five-element
system, we can gain some insight and direction. In this ancient understanding
of the cosmos, the elements that describe all the phases of creation are
wood, fire, earth, metal and water. Each influences the next, in
a nourishing cycle of harmonious development.
Wood is represented by the flexibility and rapid growth of bamboo. When
love is first born, it too grows rapidly. Its season is Spring, a time
when plants sprout new life and blossom profusely. There is tender excitement,
exploration and discovery. As the day brightens from dawn to noon,
relationship proceeds to the next phase, which is fire. Wood provides fuel
for fire.
Fire burns erratically and represents the passion and turmoil of life.
The season is Summer, and the heat is strong. In relationships, fire
represents the energetic and creative clamor of life’s demands, the tears
and laughter of sexual drama and delight.
When fire burns out, ashes remain, which turn into earth. Earth gives
shape and structure to relationship. Although more than fifty percent of
marriages end in divorce, this does not seem to slow down our “urge to
merge.” We keep trying, looking for the right partner, a life partner,
a lover forever.
It is the nature of earth to slow things down, providing stability and
a sense of restfulness. It is here, in the earth phase of the five-element
system, that our relationships are often lulled to sleep. The sex medicines
and hormones temporarily awaken us, remind us of the burning fire we thought
we had left behind.
Yet something is missing. We cannot stay here or we will get stuck
in a rut! What is essential in the Chinese system is a dynamic balance
of all the elements. What will energize our relationships is a movement
forward from earth into metal. It takes effort to draw metal from
the earth, to extract the gold from the dirt. Yet it is here, as
the day darkens and the season moves to Autumn, that we can best harvest
the deeper love that we desire. Dr. Victoria Lee writes in Soulful
Sex, “each moment in which you are conscious of the sacred sexual energy
that runs through your veins becomes one in which you experience the divine.”
The key words here are conscious, sacred, divine and sexual.
From this perspective, we mindfully transform our relationship into
a meaningful spiritual path that finally brings the fulfillment we have
longed for. Our sexual love becomes the aphrodisiac and opens the
doorway to our soul. We draw on ancient wisdom, we explore the energy
of sexuality through Tantra, we communicate, we touch our beloved attentively
and with intention.
Ultimately, the cycle releases into the element of water, as we awaken
to our inner self in the presence of our beloved. Water nourishes
the growth of wood, and thus the cycle continues, passion is renewed and
our relationship becomes an ongoing love affair.
All writing © Diana Daffner
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