Archive for September, 2009

Orgasm’s Hidden Cycle – You’re finished…but your brain has just begun.

Monday, September 28th, 2009

(I discovered Marnia Robinson’s work via her Cupid’s Poisoned Arrow blog at Psychology Today. I think her insights on orgasms, mood and relationships are important and may well provide a crucial piece of the relationship puzzle.)

Orgasm’s Hidden Cycle – You’re finished…but your brain has just begun.

(by Marnia Robinson, Psychology Today.)

Orgasm feels great, and if climax were the end of the story, partners would project the good feelings generated in the bedroom onto one another—and effortlessly dote on each other forever. Few do.

One challenge is that orgasm—especially that “I’m definitely done!” feeling after sex—isn’t an isolated event. It’s the beginning of a much longer cycle, which often includes subconscious neurochemical signals of discontent that tarnish lovers’ perceptions of each other. Consider this verse from the ancient Greek Anthology, which long ago captured the essence of the Coolidge Effect:

Once plighted, no men would go whoring,
They’d stay with the one they adore,
If women were half as alluring
After the act as before!

If you are familiar with the work of Masters & Johnson, you probably think of the “cycle of orgasm” as a brief series of observable genital events: arousal, plateau, climax and refractory period. The experience of orgasm, however, is produced in a primitive part of the brain. Without these neurochemical fireworks, the Big “O” wouldn’t feel like an orgasm regardless of what happens in your genitals.

But assuming you’re not trying to patent the next billion-dollar sexual enhancement drug, why do you care about the neurochemical aspects of orgasm? Here are two reasons:

1. Neurochemical events can have powerful effects on your behavior, mood and perceptions without your awareness. You probably don’t think of sexual arousal as correlating with rising dopamine, or orgasm as equating with surges of endorphins, adrenaline and so forth. Chances are you also don’t think of your feelings over the days after orgasm as being linked to a cascade of neurochemical events (fluctuating dopamine and prolactin levels, testosterone receptor declines, etc.).

2. There is growing evidence (details in a future post) that this complex neurochemical sequence after orgasm is much longer than the physical events after climax. It may even continue for up to two weeks after you roll over and snore, or look around for more. During this slow, somewhat erratic, return to neurochemical homeostasis after orgasm, it’s not unusual to experience intermittent sensations of lack, neediness, irritability, intense horniness and so forth. Most people climax again before the brain brings itself back to homeostasis. Interestingly, evidence suggests that the more thoroughly you sexually satiate yourself—that is, the more intense or numerous your orgasms—the more acute the overall effects on your outlook. For example, it has been observed that the more orgasms women have over a 30-day period, the more unfriendly and aggressive they perceive pictures of unknown men.

The point is that orgasm may innocently be influencing your subsequent moods, cravings, choices, and perceptions—and for longer than you would imagine possible. This hidden cycle and the subtle feelings it brings up are likely to be a factor in the Coolidge Effect. Scientists already know that, after sex, dropping dopamine (the signal for “less rewarding”) plays a role in habituation between mates, just a spike of dopamine (“rewarding!”) plays a role in the neurochemically induced attraction to novel partners.

Another consequence of the hidden phase of orgasm is the risk of getting caught up in an escalating cycle of seeking more and more intense sexual stimulation to “medicate” the lows in the sequence. But even if you elude this risk (lots of daily affection helps, for example), this hidden cycle may produce ripples in the harmony of your relationship.

Let’s say your neurochemistry hasn’t yet bounced back to equilibrium after the great sex you had on the weekend. Because it’s normal to project your subconscious mating-induced feelings onto your mate, you may be convinced that you would feel just fine if only your mate would, for example, show some appreciation for all you do, engage in more of your preferred foreplay, or simply put the dang cap on the toothpaste tube. Or you might find the thought of a novel partner (even a two-dimensional one) unusually enticing. As these feelings recur week after week, you may even wonder if you should have married that other person. You know, the one who realized how wonderful you are.

Why would our perception shift for the worse as we satiate ourselves sexually? To make sure we don’t go extinct. Inclinations that tend to pass on more genes are conserved. Maybe annoyance in our love lives, with fooling around on the side, or serial romances are ideal scenarios for our genes, whatever they cost us and our families. (Remember, we evolved in tribes, where romantic turnover would have been less harmful to kids.)

Instead of moving to a novel mate, many of us cope with this programmed restlessness in other ways. When your dopamine is low (as it can be from time to time during the post-orgasm cycle), you may feel like…well…like something is missing, even if you can’t put your finger on what it is. Perhaps you console yourself with some self-indulgent spending, too many drinks with pals, or a carton of Häagen-Dazs. Such things automatically reward you with brief surges of dopamine. They are especially seductive when you’re feeling flat for reasons you can’t fathom.

It’s rare for people to see the truth of this underlying cycle’s influence on their lives until they experiment. However, couples can usually spot its effects after the high-dopamine honeymoon “booster shot” wears off. To do so, they make love for several weeks using a technique like karezza (lots of bonding behaviors without sexual satiation), and then go back to conventional sex with orgasm. During the first part of the experiment they often grow more sensitive to playful affection, snuggling or gentle intercourse. When we experimented, my husband remarked, “Our kissing reminds me of my first teenage kisses.”

Eight years later, he interprets those same feelings as “I haven’t fertilized you yet, so my limbic system is still enchanted.” No fertilization attempt; no Coolidge Effect. And I continue to look cute (at least to him).

After orgasm, however, there tends to be a subtle shift. Here’s what one husband observed (who had assured me he experiences no fallout after orgasm):

Things have been good between my wife and me recently (lots of bonding behaviors and increased closeness), but about 12 hours after a night of great lovemaking, I’m feeling really needy around sex. I HATE that feeling. It is so energy depleting, worse than being sick. Only later did I realize, “Okay, THAT’S what this neurochemical cycle does.”

It makes a ton of difference to know what’s really going on. I can totally see how this feeling would affect a relationship, particularly if one person felt it while the other didn’t, or if they felt it at different times. The touch of a needy person is so different, and quite possibly the opposite of sexy for their partner, and it’s so hard NOT to project the feelings onto your partner. “Why doesn’t she want to meet my needs?”

The truth is that no partner can fully meet a need that is born of a neurochemical low. No wonder it sometimes seems that we just can’t please our mate no matter how hard we try, how much Viagra we invest in, or how many orgasms we deliver.

Every recovery cycle is unique, which is one reason couples’ sex drives may go out of sync. Often, men roll over and snore—and then over the days following experience some irritability or brain fog (forgetting to take out the trash, perhaps), and feel unusually horny. But orgasm catches up with women, too. Said one woman, “After three orgasms last night, in which my man was delighted to be affirmed of his stamina, I feel grumpy, guarded, and as snappy as an alligator.” Personally, I notice (or, at least my husband notices) more mood swings in my second week, when I tend to become judgmental and sharp of tongue.

Despite the glories of orgasm, and the many benefits of close, affectionate contact during intercourse, this hidden cycle after orgasm can evoke surprisingly powerful mood changes, which lovers haven’t been connecting with the Big “O.” That may be changing. Not long ago, psychiatrist Richard Friedman demonstrated that neurochemicals kicked in by orgasm, are apparently behind the depression and irritability of some patients, even those with no sexual hang-ups. When he gave SSRIs to suppress the intensity of his patients’ sexual response, their symptoms promptly disappeared (even before the drugs would have influenced emotional disorders).

Could more subtle versions of these neurochemical effects be at work in the rest of us, clouding the sunny skies of our romances? Perhaps striving for balance in our sex lives by adding to our lovemaking repertoire is more beneficial than we’ve realized.

So, what’s going on between our ears after climax? Although scientists haven’t been looking for this “passion cycle” directly, researchers questing after the next lucrative sexual enhancement drug have turned up evidence of it. In a future post, I’ll share what little is known.

Sexual synergy in action – Sexiest. Dance. Ever.

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Watch how this guy holds space for this woman.
Sexual synergy in action.
He doesn’t let her walk off.
He doesn’t try to control her.
He attends to her safety, while allowing her flow and providing structure for her movement.

And notice how the dance ends… until next time.

Thanks to Erin Michaela Brandt for recognizing the relevance and deep beauty of this and forwarding it to me.

Manology: Exploring 21st Century Masculinity

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

I’m very pleased to be presenting at this years Manology: Exploring 21st Century Masculinity event for men. Manology is an 11-week series of 2 hour evening workshops delivered by a diverse team of top-notch educators and facilitators.

Please join me October 29th when I present…

END RELATIONSHIP DRAMA:
How to STOP “working on your relationship”… and finally unlock your woman’s Natural Attraction, Sexual Desire and Deep Appreciation.

Get the free End Relationship Drama ebook here.

At the Roundhouse community centre in Vancouver BC. 7:30-9:45pm

View the complete schedule and themes for the Manology series here:
http://masculinity21st.wordpress.com/scheduleandthemes/

The Manology series is the brainchild of my friend David Hatfield. David has been doing male rites of passage work, group facilitation and men’s workshops for years. He’s a great guy and I recommend checking out his work:
http://www.davidhatfield.ca/bio.php

Here’s the overview of Manology: Exploring 21st Century Masculinity (from their website):
http://masculinity21st.wordpress.com/overview/

Manology is a new course for men of all stages, backgrounds, orientations, and ethnicities. This series acknowledges that this moment in culture is one of fast and profound change that affect all humanity.  Men as a major social group are thereby also affected. While Western women have been redefining their roles in society for decades, there have been very few places where men have been invited to examine and redefine their roles, relationships, and sense of purpose.  Manology is just such a place, where men are celebrated and supported, and are offered insight, experiences, and conversations on the physical, mental, and spiritual journey of manhood.  It’s for men who are interested in exploring male identity and are ready to encourage other men to do the same.  Manology is delivered by a diverse team of educators and facilitators with a wide range of knowledge and skills to share with men.

Male diversity is desired – all men aged 19 and older are welcome.

Come connect with yourself and with other men in an atmosphere of fun, respectful, open-minded, positive masculinity.

Manology is a new course, and a new experiment in promoting awareness, positive male community, and a skill set that will better help men to navigate and negotiate with the realities of the 21st Century.  And in doing so, Manology will benefit friendships, family, community, society, and ultimately, the global community and the earth itself.

On a less lofty level, Manology is a place to have fun, try new things, express yourself, and make new friendships as we learn and share together.  There will be insights, feelings, familiarity, challenge and opportunities to expand your comfort zones as well as your friendship circles.

Manology holds a set of evolving ideas about 21st Century masculinity:

A 21st Century masculinity seeks to create and sustain inclusive community among males, is respectful of the continuum of masculine and feminine, is healthy and flexible in body/mind/spirit, honoring and skilled in the arts of fathering and/or mentorship, in leadership and followership, honoring in relationships and conscious in sexuality, creatively alive, spontaneous, clear and aligned in life purpose, skilled in cooperation & open communication, self-aware and responsible, assertive in conflict, connected to the wider community, engaged in sustainability practices with self/others/the earth.

It’s a new century.  Manology holds a vision that the current global context of change and complexity, coupled with the urgency of climate change, demand that humanity come together with an intention of unprecedented willingness to work together to redefine cultural norms and roles  that have proven detrimentaland/or unsustainable.  In this vision, men, like all other social groups, have their own important role to play.  It is clear that in order for men to gain insight and clarity into what this era may be asking of them, they must first gather together to share their questions, values, strengths, vulnerabilities, stories, humor and wisdom.

Sadly, many/most men in Western society do not have any experience in doing so.  And some men have negative experiences of doing so.   The Industrial Revolution fostered new aspects of daily life for men that have proven very detrimental to men’s souls: to be separated from families, home and from the land itself; and a economic system that inspired systemic competition for opportunity, advancement and security.  With little change since, and persistent societal homophobia, men’s reluctance to gather together in open sharing is understandable.  Yet these times are calling for radical and courageous shifts in our daily living.  Men’s perceptions, styles, and ways of doing and being need to be validated, invited and engaged, and in new ways.  Manology hopes to the underline the conspicuous lack of and need for diverse forms of male studies in North America.  We hope you’ll drop in on a session and join us.

WHEN/WHERE/COST

Thursdays, Sept 17 – Nov 26, 2009, 7:30-9:45 pm

Roundhouse Community Centre
181 Roundhouse Mews (Davie St. & Pacific Blvd.), Vancouver.
www.roundhouse.ca
Telephone:  604-713-1800

11 sessions: $110 (plus gst) or $12 drop-in (plus gst)

Getting There: Men are encouraged to walk, bike, take transit, car pool, skateboard, rollerblade…

Driving? Underground pay parking is available (access off Drake St.), for a $2 max after 6 pm.

Wanna ruin your chances with your wife?

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Do pushups until you can’t move.
Run til you puke.
Meditate til your ass is numb.
Dance til your feet bleed.

But NO sulking.

You wanna ruin your chances with your wife?
Keep pleading.

The alternative that actually works?
Download the 8-page ebook End Relationship Drama

Is He/She “The One?”

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

This question… “Is He/She ‘The One???’” is coming at me from all sides recently.

Jayson Gaddis just posted on the topic over at Revolutionary Man.

Then Andrew Parkes tweeted me a version of the same question.

Now I have this in my inbox from a woman reader …

“I struggle not knowing for sure if “HE” is the one…After many failed relationships, it’s hard to put stock in some of my choices. At the age of 42, 2 failed marriages, and a tirad of failed short term relationships, where do you find stock in “knowing” for sure?”

When Andrew tweeted me, I had the limitation of a 140 character answer. I managed in 70.

“You can’t attract The One until you solidly know and love yourself.”

Your intimate relationship is life’s icing… not the cake. Of course it’s tasty and important, but the foundation of a happy life rests squarely on YOU. As long as you project that need outwards onto “The One”… you’ll always be searching… doubting… second guessing… and disappointed.

As a man who has spent most of his life grasping for fulfilment from a woman… I speak from agonizing experience.

A lot of people emphasize the importance of compatibility, but how can you even judge compatibility until you’re compatible with YOU – living in integrity with your values… honest and transparent and at home within?

From a slightly different perspective, I would add that ultimately you don’t FIND “the one.” You CHOOSE “the one.” And you continue to choose him or her every day. You say… “That’s my man.” “That’s my woman.” “Yep. They’re the one.”

You decide. Then you behave accordingly. And it becomes the truth.

Check out my man Goethe:

Until one is committed
There is hesitancy, the chance to draw back
Always ineffectiveness.

Concerning all acts of initiative (and Creation)
There is one elementary truth
The ignorance which kills countless ideas and splendid plans:

That the moment that one definitely commits ones self
Then Providence moves too.

All sorts of things occur to help one
That would never otherwise have occurred.

A whole stream of events issues from the decision
Raising in one’s favor all manner
Of unforeseen incidents and meetings
And material substance
Which no one could have dreamt
Would have come your way.

Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it.
Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.

Blame Your Wife… OR Be Happy (cuz you can’t do both)

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

The other day I stubbed my toe on the leg of our funky black velvet couch.

As ridiculous as it sounds, I immediately blamed the couch.

“Stupid F-ing couch!”

Then I blamed the people who MADE the couch.

“Stupid design… legs sticking out…”

Then I blamed myself.

“I ALWAYS stub my toe on this couch.”

I even blamed my wife.

“Why did she have to choose this freakin’ couch.”

The really amazing thing is that this all happened in under a second, and I was barely aware of it!

In that milli-second I automatically blamed 3 people plus an inanimate object, and I wouldn’t have even noticed it… except that I happen to practice noticing these things.

And this was just about stubbing my toe! Imagine the blame cycle that happens when the shit really hits the fan!

Of course, I don’t have to imagine it. I’m in the business of helping men turn challenging marriages around. And I come by this work honestly. I know all about blaming my woman. I know about blaming her for staying. Blaming her for leaving. I know about blaming her for the empty feeling inside. I know about blaming her for wanting someone else. Blaming her for ME wanting someone else.

And I certainly know about blaming myself.

And when that gets me nowhere, I can always blame the world. The weather. My job. The economy. My mother.

I’ve been down all these paths and they all lead to the same place: Suffering.

I’ve also discovered the alternative. The cure. The antidote.

It’s simple… but not easy.

It starts with this question:

What if no-one were to blame?

Whatever challenge you are struggling with in your relationship…

  • Infidelity
  • Death
  • Boredom
  • Money
  • In-laws
  • Parenting

What if no-one were to blame?

What if She… You… Them… were, at their core, INNOCENT?

What if whatever you are experiencing… simply IS?

Can you see how much energy this would free up to do the things that actually matter to you… to BE the man/husband/father you are meant to be?

How much energy are you currently wasting in the blame game?

Can you just BE WITH WHAT IS – without judgement – for even a few moments?

At first this is almost incomprehensible, right?

We get so used to blaming… to judging… to our stories of wrong and right… to our righteous indignation… that suspending it even for a few moments feels… unnatural.

It feels weird.

Our blame, our judgement, is SO automatic that it feels as though it is unarguably fused with our experience.

It isn’t.

Here’s the way out.

Notice what you’re feeling. The emotion that is present. Name it to yourself.

Naming the feeling/emotion happens in only 3 words. “I feel ….”

“I feel angry.”

“I feel sad.”

“I feel anxious.”

“I feel scared.”

“I feel hurt.”

It might be tempting to say “I feel hurt by her words” or “I’m angry at her for being late.” That’s all blame, story, judgement… right?

Even “I feel betrayed” is thinly veiled blame. Strip it down… ie – What’s the true emotion underneath “I feel betrayed?” Hurt? Anger? Scared?

For now, stick to the raw data. (You can always come back to blame later if you choose!)

Now notice the sensation in your body.

Maybe your chest is tight or your brow furrowed. Maybe your fists are clenched or your stomach hurts. Maybe your breath is constricted and shallow.

Just notice.

Now notice the story you are telling yourself. Are you blaming her? Yourself? The world?

What would it be like to let go of that? Even for just a few moments? Remember, you can always come back to blame later if you choose. See what’s it’s like to let go of it just for a few minutes right now.

What happens to the sensation in your body? Stay present to the raw data. Notice.

Now, is there an ajustment you’d like to make?

An adjustment to your posture? To the depth or fullness of your breath? To the words or images in your mind? To your speech or actions?

This kind of mindful awareness takes you out of your habitual blame/judgement and delivers you to a fresh vista where you can see more clearly. From here you can better choose actions that serve you, her and the world.

And you can always come back to blame… if you choose.