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Nina Silver, Ph.D. THE BIOLOGY OF PASSION: A REICHIAN VIEW OF SEX AND LOVE Ó 2000 by Nina Silver, Ph.D. You are in a laboratory witnessing an unusual experiment. Two people
are hooked up via electrodes to a millivoltmeter, oscillograph and a camera.
The scientist in charge asks them to hold hands, kiss, embrace. Readouts
from the machines flash into view, squiggles that look like elaborate sine
waves. But rather than administering an electrocardiogram or electroencephalogram,
the scientist is measuring the physiological changes that occur when lovers
feel sexual. Our life force has been explored by every culture in Earth's history. Patriarchal societies called this energy "God." The Celts, Minoans and Sumerians worshipped the "Goddess." The Chinese inserted needles along acupuncture channels to cure illness by unblocking life energy (which they called "chi" or "qi"). Hindus focused this energy (called "kundalini") up the spine to produce enlightenment. At the beginning of the 19th century, German industrialist Karl von Reichenbach named the cosmic current "odic force," elaborating on what Frenchman Franz Anton Mesmer (the founder of hypnosis) had a century earlier termed "animal magnetism."1 And Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, called it "libido," viewing it as a primitive drive residing in the unconscious. |
. . |
By the time Freud was born in 1856,
the idea of our universe suffused with an energy force was replaced by
the notion of the cosmos as a giant, well-run machine. Humans were minuscule
parts of this system, though complete unto themselves. If a part broke
down, it got fixed so the machine would run smoothly again. But if the
universe was a giant machine, that made us soul-less robots. Emotional
expressiveness was considered unimportant, even dangerous. This mechanistic
philosophy encouraged people to live solely in their heads, disconnected
from their bodies.
Freud's background in neurology, which
taught him that nerve impulses are electrical, helped him understand that
libido is not just an intellectual abstraction: the energy of sexual drive
had to come from somewhere, and that "somewhere" was the
body. Given the mechanistic climate in which Freud developed his psychoanalytic
theories, his claim that libido was a naturally-occurring, quantifiable
amount of energy was radical. But Freud, trapped by the social mores of
his period, regarded this energy negatively. He taught that neurosis results
from yielding to one's sexual impulses, a healthy psyche is based on one's
ability to control the need for sex, and that society best flourishes when
people rechannel their natural impulses into more "civilized"
activities like work or artistic endeavors. Freud called the ability to
harness the libido "sublimation" and said that if the sublimation
was incomplete or not attained at all, neurosis also results.
It was a no-win situation. Passion, which
Freud conceded was inborn, nonetheless caused neurosis.
It was Freud's protégé, Wilhelm Reich, who re-unified the
mind and body. Born in 1897 and raised on a farm, Reich viewed sex as a
normal part of life. He enjoyed sexually relating and called the universal
force "orgone." The young man appreciated Freud's insight that
the libido was a physical, tangible thing, but he disputed that the libido
required restraint. Sublimation did not support the normal human need for
sensual satisfaction and communication through touch. And it did not concede
the possibility that people can be sensual and civilized at the same time.
"The overwhelming majority of sick people do not have the capacity
for sublimation,"2 Reich observed, doubting
the wisdom and desirability of sublimation in the first place. Meanwhile,
psychoanalysis was proving unsuccessful in helping people sublimate their
sex drive.
Reich recognized that since people
couldn't sublimate, they could be cured only by fully expressing their
sexual potential. He developed an extraordinary psychotherapy based on
the needs of the entire bodymind. Normally, an emotion consists of electrical
impulses in the nervous system and hormones in the bloodstream, accompanied
by vocalizing (laughing, sobbing, etc.) along with movement or an act that
expresses the feeling (hugging, hitting, etc.). Affection involves increased
bioelectrical charge radiating from the heart out through the arms; the
vocalization might be a sigh, moan or "I love you"; and the unsuppressed
act is a friendly touch or gesture or a hug, which expresses and literally
releases the energy. Anger, a different set of neurological impulses and
hormones, is manifested by shouting and yelling or speaking firmly, together
with the act of posturing the body in an aggressive manner or (in the extreme)
striking out. Grief has its own combination of signals, and so on. But
when someone holds back psychologically - through fear that their emotional
states and needs might be ignored, trivialized or ridiculed - the bodily
musculature is similarly contracted, with restricted breathing and energy
flow. Over time the physical tension becomes automatic, hiding both the
feeling and knowledge of the feeling from the person's conscious awareness.
In psychoanalytic therapy, people customarily
spend lots of time talking about their feelings rather than experiencing
them. They do not learn to integrate their body and emotions with their
intellect. Reich addressed this by designing his therapy to reestablish
"biopsychic motility through the dissolution of the [rigid] character
and muscular" armor.3 First, he verbally
challenged clients' defensive attitudes and behaviors by relating how physical
tension and body language mirror inner emotional states. If a person smiled
but had an angry gaze, Reich asked what angry feelings she was masking
with a false smile. If someone puffed out his chest, Reich inquired why
he was protecting his heart from hurt.
By definition, chronic muscle tightness
becomes so habitual that one no longer knows how to loosen up, even
if s/he is intellectually aware of being out of touch with feelings. After
his clients acknowledged their defenses -yet were still unable to feel
the emotions beneath their blocks - Reich further facilitated body awareness
by directing them to breathe, move, shout or moan into their tension. He
eventually touched the body to offer support or awaken stuck and numb areas.
The release of long-held tension from muscles organically inspired the
emotion corresponding to the impulse held in that portion of the person's
bodymind. When the subject physically reached out, repressed love and longing
- and sometimes sorrow at not having been loved - emerged. When Reich pressed
and kneaded the tight abdominal musculature holding the diaphragm in spasm,
the client would sob deeply. As Reich loosened tight muscles (or awakened
flaccid ones), years of sadness, fear, terror, rage, sexual desire, joy
and love were experienced directly instead of merely discussed. When the
clients were physically touched by their therapist, their hearts became
correspondingly touched and more open to loving and being loved. Once they
released their stuck energy, they were control of their lives, no longer
driven by unresolved emotions and traumas. Choice instead of compulsion
directed their feelings and actions.
Reich's colleagues hailed him as a
genius for his insights on human nature and psychoanalysis until he began
touching his patients. If you think that body-oriented therapy is radical
today, imagine the rumors circulating in uptight Vienna. Reich's good reputation
began to decline as people wrongly gossiped that he was a sexual pervert.
Undaunted, Reich asked: What
happens when someone is unable to sublimate sexual energy? Repressed sexual
desire caused myriad problems when it remained stuck in the body. "Neurosis
does not exist without genital disturbances and gross signs of sexual stasis
[stagnation and imbalance]," he wrote.4
"The establishment of full genital organization and genital gratification
[are] the essential and indispensable factor for a cure….Only genital gratification,
as distinct from non-genital sexual drives [Freud's sublimated urges],
is capable of dispelling sexual stasis, thus withdrawing the source
of energy from neurotic symptoms." Neurosis remains "when
treatment has not given the patient the capacity for satisfactory and regular
sexual intercourse."5
That people need genital gratification
in order to become psychologically healthy was not what turn-of-the-century
wealthy Viennese psychoanalysts - most of whom were sexually repressed
themselves - wanted to hear. Once Reich insisted that it was their responsibility
to help clients achieve sexual satisfaction, his reputation further plummeted.
Now he was falsely accused of having sexual intercourse with his patients.
Nonetheless, Reich next tested
heterosexual couples with laboratory equipment to measure their physiological,
biological and psychological responses in various states of sexual arousal
and non-arousal. He observed that people who were emotionally open and
relaxed (and had deep easy breathing) routinely gave stronger millivoltmeter
readings than contracted and emotionally repressed people (whose obstructed
breathing accompanied their anxiety). Pleasure-seeking and pleasure-avoiding
(pain-seeking) behaviors respectively and consistently correlated with
high or low bioelectrical charge.
Reich also discovered that sexual
intercourse for both sexes consists of pulsing energy movement in four
beats: mechanical tension, bioelectric charge, bioelectric discharge, and
relaxation. The entire body conducts electricity: all bodily cells radiate
charge and the energy fields of the partners fuse. The positive and negative
charge flow back and forth between the couple until the current equalizes.
"The surface of the penis must be seen as one electrode and the vaginal
mucosa [mucous membrane] as the other," Reich wrote. "The contact
between the two is made by the acidic female secretion acting as an electrolyte
[charged fluid functioning as a battery]."6
Moreover, the male and female genitalia were discovered to be analogous
in form, function and sensitivity. "Orgastic phenomena in the healthy
woman…fully resemble those of the man," Reich asserted. "Women
are able to experience the same kind of rhythmic…convulsions of the involuntary
muscles; they experience peripheral concentration of excitation before
climax and centripetal draining and ebbing away of excitation after climax,
exactly the way men do."7 Reich's description
of "pleasurable tension" that is felt during sex might sound
paradoxical, since bodily tension is normally an expression of armor (emotional
repression). But there is a crucial difference between unobstructed sexual
tension and the tension that results from emotional repression. "Certainly
each new friction movement increases the electric surface potential"
during sex, Reich wrote, "but at the same time, the ensuing spasmodic
muscle contractions discharge this accumulated energy, and it is these
contractions which render the experience of increasing tension as pleasurable
rather than unpleasurable."8
An
unobstructed orgasm consists of undulating unbroken energy waves moving
rhythmically up and down the body.9 A person
experiencing this has "the capacity to surrender to the flow of biological
energy, free of any inhibitions [and] the capacity to discharge completely
the damned-up sexual excitation through involuntary, pleasurable convulsions
of the body." Reich termed such a sexually healthy individual "orgastically
potent." His meaning of the word "potency" was different
from how the term might be used today in a macho, ego-inflated sense. Orgastic
potency indicates the ability to surrender to one's own life force without
self-conscious monitoring, fear, or attempts by the ego to control movements
and feelings. Reich consistently noticed that an orgastically potent person
feels tenderness and gratitude toward the partner as well as satiation.
He repeatedly correlated an unobstructed biological/physiological sexual
response with love, because the energetic and bodily expression of full
orgasmic release and what we perceive as an emotion cannot be separated.
In order to further
understand how completely our biological makeup determines sexual functioning,
how unimpeded orgasmic release is connected to love, and how sexual pleasure
is integrally tied to an overall sense of well-being, we need to know how
the autonomic nervous system is involved during a full orgasmic release.
The autonomic or involuntary nervous system, which functions independently
of conscious will, is divided into the sympathetic and parasympathetic
components. The sympathetic nervous system governs contraction of the organism,
which relates to feelings of unpleasure. The parasympathetic nervous system
governs expansion of the organism, which relates to feelings of pleasure.
Unpleasurable and pleasurable responses span a continuum: on one end, terror
to mild discomfort, becoming neutral at mid-point, gravitating to serenity
and eventually a full body orgasm. The following chart is adapted from
Reich's The Function of the Orgasm and his 1934 article, "The Basic
Antithesis of Vegetative Life Functions."
|
Parasympathetic Nervous System Relates to: Pleasure and
Contentment, |
Sympathetic Nervous System Relates to: Unpeasure and
Anxiety, |
| Activity of salivary glands to produce a moist mouth – a "mouth watering" situation | Inactivity of salivary glands to produce a dry mouth – where the mouth is "dry with fright" |
| The smooth muscle of the iris in the eye relaxes, allowing the pupil to constrict and less light to enter the eye (so the person literally sees more clearly) | The smooth muscle of the iris in the eye contracts, allowing the pupil to dilate and more light to enter the eye (so the person is literally blinded by fear) |
| Stimulation of the tear glands, producing moist and lubricated, glowing eyes: associated with joy | Inhibition of the tear glands, producing "dry eyes": associated with depression |
| Reduction of activity of sweat glands in face and body so that skin is dry: person feels "cool, calm and collected" | Stimulation of the sweat glands in face and body so that the skin is moist: person feels "clammy and cold with fear" |
| Activity of digestive movements and increased secretion of digestive fluids: being at ease fosters assimilation of nourishment | Reduction of digestive movements and secretion of digestive fluids: too anxiety-ridden to assimilate food well |
| Dilation of the arteries: blood flows to surface of skin, producing a healthy glow and psychologically and physiologically indicating warmth | Contraction of the arteries: blood flows away from surface of skin, producing a pallor and psychologically and physiologically indicating a coolness or coldness |
| Decreased secretion of adrenal hormones, indicating feelings of security and peace | Increased output of adrenal hormones (typical fight-or-flight response), indicating fear and anxiety |
| Scalp muscles are relaxed | Scalp muscles are excited, so hair literally "stands on end" |
| Potassium ion mineral group predominates | Calcium ion mineral group predominates |
| Increased secretion of alkaline fluids, which hydrate the system and stimulate good health | Increased secretion of acid fluids, which dehydrate the system and lead to illness |
| Increased susceptibility to electrical stimulation | Decreased susceptibility to electrical stimulation |
| Decreased oxygen consumption | Increased oxygen consumption |
| Decreased blood pressure | Increased blood pressure |
|
Sex Organs (Female and Male) Relaxation of smooth musculature (vagina and scrotum), stimulation of glandular secretions, increased blood supply, increase of sexual feeling |
Sex Organs (Female and Male) Tightening of smooth musculature (vagina and scrotum), inhibition of glandular secretions, decrease of blood supply, reduction of sexual feeling |
"Sexuality and anxiety are functions
of the living organism operating in opposite directions: pleasurable expansion
and anxious contraction," Reich observed.10
Simply put, when excitement is blocked, it transforms into anxiety.
How can we practically use this knowledge?
Take a condition such as a heart attack.
"Genital excitation and the anticipation of sexual pleasure produce
the same phenomena in the heart and the vasomotor system as does anxiety,"
Reich wrote.11
When we observe the vasomotor phenomena connected with the state of sexual excitation, we notice primarily the pounding of the heart and the physical sensation of warmth. There is also a sense of pleasurable and anxious anticipation intermingled, due to the fact that the pulse accelerates with the idea of impending danger just as it does with the expectation of sexual pleasure, producing the same specific sensation in the heart in both cases….[Also] a very brief cardiac dilation precedes acceleration of the pulse. Those kinesthetic sensations accompanying sexuality that are localized specifically in the cardiac area form the basis for numerous idioms such as…"to lose one's heart," "a [loving and] generous heart" (applied to someone who is easily approachable), and so forth.
"To the extent that no inhibition
is present," the sexual excitement "subsequently shifts to the
genital organ system, thus unburdening the cardiac system.12
" However, note at which point the physiological similarities
between sexual excitement and anxiety become differences. In a person unable
to surrender to passion and love, the undischarged energy in the heart
can remain stuck in the cardiovascular system; and if enough pressure accumulates
it can weaken the heart muscle. The constricting, stifling feeling in the
pericardium region during cardiac arrest is literally due to the tightening
of the muscle. A psychological corollary might be someone who is afraid
to express love, eventually becoming sick or dying from a broken heart.
There are many psychological
and physiological manifestations of withholding one's love and not being
able to "let go" sexually. Reich constantly observed in his armored
clients how repressed sexual excitement manifests in distorted sexual behavior.
The "pathological counterpart" to tender and loving feelings
is expressed in "the urge to produce violent frictions," "especially
pronounced in sadistic compulsive characters who suffer from penis anesthesia
and the inability to discharge semen. Another example [of pathology] is
the nervous haste of those who suffer from premature ejaculations."
Reich also regarded the learned sexual passivity of women as dysfunctional.
In short, "the orgastically impotent person experiences a leaden exhaustion,
disgust, repulsion, weariness, or indifference and, occasionally, hatred
toward the partner.13 " Either men
or women could be orgastically impotent.
Severe blockage can correlate
with depression and self-effacement if the energy/impulse is turned inward
against oneself, but for this discussion I want to focus on the anger,
rage and outright sadism that occur when sexual energy is turned outward
against others. The negative feelings toward their partners that Reich
observed in sexually blocked people are evident in rape, wife battering
and other sexual crimes. These all demonstrate the anger and frustration
that result when expressions of love, passion and affection are obstructed.
Prostitution illustrates the mind/body split of those who are unable to
integrate their sexual self with their loving self. Pornography (as opposed
to erotica) - which portrays people in sexual situations without a mutually
respectful connection to each other - is the pictorial or written depiction
of people with this mind/body split. No person fully connected to their
ability to love would willingly engage in such acts.
Now I want to address
sexual sadomasochism (S/M), bondage and other behaviors that are distortions
of our sexual energy - despite the libertarian rhetoric of "consentual
activity," and "sex is an abstract construct; we give sex its
meaning." ("Libertarian" shares the same root as "libertine"
and "lecherous.") The ritualized domination of one person by
another that occurs in these sexual settings creates what contemporary
author Riane Eisler calls the "dominator" rather than "partnership"
model of relationships. The reason, however, for the pathology can
be found in the biology and physiology of these practices. Sadomasochism
is an effective catalyst for inducing excitement because in simulating
a perception of life-threatening circumstances, it duplicates some of the
conditions of sexual arousal: similar heart and vasomotor system activity,
elevated blood pressure, increased pulse rate and respiration, higher skin
temperature, and augmented muscular tension. (Whipping and smacking bring
the circulation to the surface of the body, forcing sensation and response
to an armored area in a person who has trouble feeling.) Contemporary psychiatrist
Anthony Storr writes,
The Kinsey researchers point out that this close relation [fourteen identical physiological changes] between the two states of arousal may explain why frustrated sexual responses so often turn into rage, or conversely, why anger, fighting, and quarrels may suddenly turn into sexual responses. Subjectively, both states postpone fatigue and increase the individual's muscular tension and capacity, thus enhancing a sense of well-being and of vital participation in life. It is not surprising that adolescent males seek out situations like football games in which they become aggressively aroused, since such arousal is life-enhancing. Perhaps one reason "macho" displays and football violence are phenomena predominantly found amongst the young is that such activities, for individuals whose sexual life is not yet established, constitute alternative ways of seeking the excitement of physiological arousal.
We have all heard of lovers
who need a good quarrel to get their sexual juices flowing. Sadomasochistic
sex lies much further along the continuum, followed by torture, murder
and war. We violate our innate neurological, hormonal and emotional wiring
when we accept violence or inflict it on others in a sexual setting. Erotic
charge flows unimpeded in the body only in an atmosphere of complete safety,
since fear or threat by definition cause muscular, energetic and emotional
contraction that work against a full body orgasm. But S/M sex, even if
presumed to be consentual, does not create an atmosphere of safety. It
cannot, since by definition what gives S/M its sexual thrill is the implied
danger or potential of danger.
"Orgasm does not usually occur
in anger," Storr writes, echoing Reich; "nor do erection and
other manifestations of vasodilation. The increased glandular secretion
connected with the sexual organs is generally absent in anger; and so are
the rhythmical muscular movements characteristic of sexual excitement.14
" It is these important differences between anger and sexual
excitement that give sadomasochistic sex and sexual crimes such as rape
their compulsive, addictive quality. Although bondage does help build
a sexual charge and even induce orgasm, the original need to "let
go" during sex is never truly satisfied because the release is incomplete.
The person - unable to completely surrender to his/her own desire for connection
and love, or to be aroused by being respectfully and passionately loved
- continues to need situations of duress to experience release. As long
as the origin of the stuck energy is not addressed, the tight (or abnormally
flaccid) muscles and suppressed emotions remain.
On one level, participating
in sexually distorted practices can be compassionately understood as someone's
attempt to become whole by rectifying the past. Sadomasochistic sex, for
instance, can simulate or invoke earlier traumas to which one tries to
respond differently now by reversing or seizing control of a potentially
harmful situation. I remember a client who reported becoming frozen when
she was sexually assaulted as a child. She shrank in terror, hardly moving
or making a sound. Later as an adult she enacted bondage scenes, insisting
that the practice was under her control because it was consentual. "My
father used to beat me," she said. "But now I get to choose who
hits me, how hard and for how long. This way, I'm in charge of when it
will stop." She did not want to admit that despite her apparent control
over the smaller details, as long as she was still being hit she did not
have control over her life. Moreover, using dominance/submission tactics
to build up a sexual charge reinforces the very power dynamics that led
to the original abuse in the first place. The patriarchal condition of
dominance and power-over cannot be dismantled by duplicating the violence.
The damming up of
passion profoundly affects the entire self. When energy in one part of
the body becomes obstructed, the rest of the bodymind suffers. If someone
is afraid to be emotionally open in some way, some aspect of the body becomes
rigid. So will part of the person's thinking, emotions and world view,
since mind and body cannot be separated. Body armoring reflects and perpetuates
mental and emotional blocks; and conversely, emotional blocks reflect and
perpetuate body armoring. Armoring always occurs when our life force has
only an indirect route of discharge. Denying passion means dividing ourselves
into two people, a logical "mind" and an irrational "body."
But this dis-integration leads us away from our true purpose. "Life
is characterized by a remarkable rationality and purposefulness of instinctive,
involuntary action. The life process is inherently 'rational.' It becomes
distorted and grotesque when it is not allowed to develop freely,"
Reich wrote.15 We function effectively only
when our energy flows, not when it is stuck. Reich invented the term "sex-economy"
to indicate the efficiency and grace with which people move, think, feel
and interact when they are unarmored. The most efficient use of energy
is love.
As long as sexual release
is merged with anger and violence, we are neither sexually free nor loving.
We cannot commune with ourselves, each other, or feel connected to the
universe if our life energy is blocked. Contemporary sex therapist Margo
Anand writes how "body-to-body and soul-to-soul communion" brings
ecstatic states. It is this ecstasy to which Reich referred when he wrote
that the involuntary spiral streaming of orgonotic energy that exists in
the upper atmosphere of the earth is the same energy in quality and movement
that manifests in the unarmored pelvic musculature during sexual release.
Heartfelt, connected sex is a genuine spiritual experience because the
spiraling movements of life force in the human body mirror the spiraling
energetic currents in the cosmos.
Understanding the
biology of passion opens many doors. It helps us strive for complete sexual
expression: open-hearted, full-body (full-bodied), mutual honoring during
whatever time we relate as lovers. When we access our innate, biologically
programmed loving nature, the desire to inflict pain on others is eliminated.
As we strive for community (communion), we should ask ourselves: In what
areas are we tight or fearful, angry or rigid? Do we try to defend ourselves
against loving? Do we hold back sometimes, lash out at other times? Or
do we allow our energy to flow; are we willing to risk being emotionally
vulnerable? It can take a lifetime to discard the blocks that prevent us
from expressing our loving nature, but as the Beatles once sang, "Love
is all we need." Life is fundamentally simple. It is the blocking
of love that makes our lives difficult.
Wilhelm Reich helped
us understand that one of the most authentic ways of expressing love is
in the physical act of unarmored, connected sex. For those of us who dream
of adding more lovers into our family, may the quality of our love be as
important as the quantity.
1. Davis, Mikol and Earle Lane. Rainbows
of Life
(New York: Harper Colophon Books, 1987)
2. Reich, Wilhelm. The Invasion of Compulsory
Sex-Morality
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1971), p. xvi
3. Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1973), p. 8
4. Reich, Wilhelm. The Invasion of Compulsory
Sex-Morality
(New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 1971), p. xvi
5. Reich, Wilhelm. The Invasion of Compulsory
Sex-Morality
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1971), pp. xvii & xvi
6. Reich, Wilhelm. The Bioelectrical Investigation
of Sexuality and Anxiety
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1982), p.13
7. Reich, Wilhelm. The Bioelectrical Investigation
of Sexuality and Anxiety
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
1982), p. 5
8. Reich, Wilhelm. "The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological
Discharge"
in Pulse of the Planet
#4, 1993, pp. 24. Translated by Barbara Koopman from
Zeitschrift für
Politische Psychologie und Sexualökonomie, Vol. 1, 1934.
This English translation
first appeared in The Journal of Orgonomy 1(1-2): 4-22, 1967 and
2(1): 5-23, 1968.
9. Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm
(New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 1973), p. 102
10. Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm
(New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 1973), p. 8
11. Reich, Wilhelm. Genitality in the Theory and
Therapy of Neurosis
(New York: Farrar, Straus &
Giroux, 1980), p. 82
12. Reich, Wilhelm. Genitality in the Theory and
Therapy of Neurosis
(New York: Farrar, Straus &
Giroux, 1980), pp. 83-84
13. Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm
(New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 1973), pp. 104-105 & p. 107
14. Storr, Anthony. Human Destructiveness
(New York: Ballantine Books,
1991), p. 66
15. Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm
(New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 1973), pp. 18 & 22
Anand, Margo. The Art of Sexual Ecstasy: The Tantric Path of Sacred
Sexuality for Western Lovers (Los Angeles: Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc.,
1989)
Davis, Mikol and Earle Lane. Rainbows of Life (New York: Harper
Colophon Books, 1987)
Lowen, Alexander. Fear of Life (New York: Collier Books, 1980)
Meldman, Louis William. Mystical Sex: Love, Ecstasy and the Mystical Experience
(Tucson: Harbinger House, 1990)
Reich, Wilhelm. "The Basic Antithesis of Vegetative Life Functions"
in Pulse of the Planet #4, 1993, pp. 5-19. Translated by Barbara
Koopman from Zeitschrift für Politische Psychologie und Sexualökonomie,
Vol. 1, 1934. This English translation first appeared in The Journal
of Orgonomy 1(1-2): 4-22, 1967 and 2(1): 5-23, 1968.
Reich, Wilhelm. The Bioelectrical Investigation of Sexuality and Anxiety
(New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1982)
Reich, Wilhelm. The Function of the Orgasm (New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 1973)
Reich, Wilhelm. Genitality in the Theory and Therapy of Neurosis
(New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1980)
Reich, Wilhelm. The Invasion of Compulsory Sex-Morality (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1971)
Stoltenberg, John. The End of Manhood: A Book for Men of Conscience (New York: Penguin Books, 1993)
.
Nina Silver holds a Ph.D. in Transformational Psychology, which emphasizes bodymind psychotherapy, gender studies and holistic health. Her writing on feminism, psychology, holistic health, sexuality, and social change has appeared in The New Internationalist, Green Egg, Off Our Backs, Natural Living Today, and the anthologies Journeys of the Heart: Perspectives on Intimacy in America (Bruner-Mazel, 1999), Looking Queer: Body Image and Identity in Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay, and Transgender Communities (Hayworth Press, 1998), Women, Culture, and Society: Readings in Women's Studies (Simon & Schuster, 1994), Transforming A Rape Culture (Milkweed Editions, 1993), and Closer to Home: Bisexuality and Feminism (Seal Press, 1992). Her volume of poetry, Birthing, was published in 1996 by Woman In The Moon Publications. This article was excerpted from her recent manuscript, Healing Relationships Through Vulnerability: a feminist bodymind approach.
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