Reader’s Response to Great Sex

logo_2In this reply from Robert, I am once again reminded of the diversity of our experiences as bisexual men.  We all come from different places and we all have different experiences.  Every man has his own story, his own truth. The key is to understand ourselves, love ourselves and learn to experience sex and life at the highest levels.

“As a bisexual man, great sex is where you find it… but it begins inside your head, your thoughts and feelings about sex both generally and specifically. I learned to adopt the mindset that any time I can have sex either way (guy or gal), this is a damned good thing ….

Do you have to sense that bonding factor to have great sex? No doubt – it does help; as they say, the more you care for someone, the better the sex is… but I’m not totally sold on this given that we all don’t look at sex in the same way – we all have different triggers that are affected by our past experiences and, sometimes, even when the bonding/love is there, we can find reason to engage in sex… but not to enjoy it as it’s meant to be enjoyed. I’ve learned, in the decades of my bisexuality, that I have to make the best of any situation, to do whatever I have to do to make the sexual experience “great” rather than mundane or just doing it by rote and not with much in the way of enthusiasm for the pleasures sex can afford. Instead of depending on someone to put me in the mood – and since I believe that my sexual pleasure is my responsibility – I have to be self-motivating.

Can we have a bonding relationship with another man and remain true to our bonded female partner? Yes, we can… provided we know how to do it and not, like so many people do, stay locked into a monogamous mindset that demands that we only bond with one person at a time and then insist that any additional bonds aren’t possible… or required.

They’re wrong… and while many people can agree intelligently that having multiple bonds is possible, emotionally and morally, nah, they don’t believe it’s the right thing to do. It’s a mindset that denies our innate and natural ability to be able to be emotionally bonded to more than one person….

I could talk about this aspect for days…”

Robert at blog kdaddy23.wordpress.com

 

My comment:  Bonding is the key.  It is the difference between good sex and great sex. Sex can be, but need not be, an end in itself.  We can ride the waves of sexual pleasure into deeper commitment and intimacy and therefore into deeper, more passionate experiences with our partners. Bonding does not guarantee great sex but it does make it possible.  The rest is up to you and your partner.  You have to work at bringing pleasure and ecstasy to each other.

However, Robert does bring up a good point about bonding. I believe that bonding between men, and between a man and a woman, is different and I do believe that it is not only possible but almost necessary to be bonded with a male friend as well as a female partner.  But does the bonding have to be sexual? But more of that in another blog.  In either case bonding is where it’s at .  Bonding is where we share soul and spirit feelings and energy as well as sexual gratification.

Bisexuality – Beyond Gender – Great Sex

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Sex has the potential to be magic, to light up the dark part of our heart, to bring the juices of living to the brain, to allow the soul to quiet the noise of the mind so that we can enter a moment of mindfulness through the power of our thought-free senses. But above all, it is the sharing of a special energy that can live and grow exponentially when two people allow their spirits to come together and embrace.

According to Gretchen Rubin[1], it takes six seconds for a good warm frontal hug to activate the Oxytocin drive needed for arousal and bonding.  Once activated, a special body/soul glow begins to form.  The body provides the juices, the hormones that supercharge the body with a mixture of adrenaline and testosterone. But the soul is also activated by using the oxytocin rush to  touch all the old neural pathways of the brain, not the thoughts, but the memories related to feelings and emotions. It perhaps goes right back to the primal connection of our infancy to feelings of been nurtured and loved by our mothers in the breasts of life, or the feelings of total peace and security in the arms of our fathers.  All of these unlabeled feelings become activated, just through a hug.  This is the core of our sense of well being.  It is this male feeling of self-worth and self-belief in the power of our own minds and bodies that gives us the drive for great sex.

Unfortunately, we do not all have this infinite well of passion from which to draw. In my case, my infancy left me with a personality disorder, so I did not have this resource as an avenue to great sex.  I have spent my life trying to create it but it is a very difficult thing to do as I had to leave the inner child behind. Not until my present relationship with my Beloved have I been able to build the body of feelings needed to create this foundation for great sex.

To have great sex with our female partners, we need to be aware, to be conscious that we are engaging in a bonding experience.  Our female partner is good at this; it is built into her biological structure to build partnerships through bonding, Bonding allows for the creation of an emotionally stable and secure home in which love can grow, blossom and bear seed. There is so much that can be done in this area but let’s leave that for another blog.

In our gay life, there is sex, good sex, and then there is great sex. Just sex usually happens in anonymous encounters that releases sexual tension but leaves a bad aftertaste in our mouths and hearts. Good sex has two possible sources — eroticism and passionate love.  Speaking to bisexual men, I do not think I have to tell you about eroticism.  It comes naturally. We are automatically aroused.  If we are bottom men we hope for our partner’s hard stiff penis and orgasm.  If we are top we look for teasing and exciting our partner before pushing through to our own orgasm. Good erotic gay sex is simple and carries no story.  It is sex for the sake of sex, the more erotic the better.  It may be good sex, but is it great sex?

Can we have great sex with another man?  Of course we can, but it does not come naturally.  We have to build that body of memories.  We have to bond.  We have to be aware of our partner and his wants and needs.  We have to make sex into love-making.   We have to let  these sensations imprint themselves indelibly into our souls, allowing ourselves to create and recreate the love story over and over again.  Letting our souls be bonded together in bliss.

If we are emotionally tied into in a heterosexual relationship, it can be difficult to build great sex into our love relationships with another man. We cannot have great sex in a twenty minute encounter. There can be no urgency.  It means letting that six second hug  expand to minutes and then to hours. That means taking our time, letting the rush linger and build through the feeling of touch, letting our hands caress our lover’s body, the hair, the face, the arms, the chest, over and over again, letting the oxytocin work its magic through powerful surges of energy through our neural pathways. We have to build the bond because it is the bond that contains the memories of feelings and emotions that can occupy the entire nervous system thereby expanding into the warm feelings and sensations that we know as great sex.  It is a whole body and soul experience.  It is the glow, it is the magic. It is what makes sex great.

Which begs the question – can we have a bonding relationship with another man and still be true to our bond with our female partner?  Alas, we will have to examine this question in another blog.

[1] Rubin, Gretchen. The Happiness project. Collins, 2009.

Bisexuality – Brokeback Mountain

logo_2My wife of 18 months hadn’t known much about bisexuality before she met me. After that her knowledge grew in leaps and bounds because we had deep conversations and also because she became the editor of my book “Bi”.  She has acquired a physical as well as intellectual understanding about bisexuality and is fascinated by the subject of how bisexual roles are almost predictably executed.

The other day we watched Brokeback Mountain and she shared her observations and insights with me. Ennis is the top boy in the movie, aggressive, emotionally detached, controlled. He has a more passionate sex life with his wife, and when she says she wants no more kids , he flips her over and enters her from behind ­ as obvious from the surprised and pained look in her face. He is a determined and willing husband albeit emotionally unavailable to his wife. Same as some heterosexual men can be.

Jack is the bottom boy, feminine, soft, emotional. He confesses that his marital relations are weak or non existent and goes off to meet male prostitutes across the border in Mexico to meet his sexual needs. What he doesn’t seem to understand is that in order to have a fulfilling sex life with his wife he would have to be a more aggressive lover. However, he likes to receive, be conquered, be more passive, play the feminine role. So his wife may assume he is not attracted to her and lay the blame on herself, withdrawing emotionally and physically and driving her husband further away. A vicious circle.

Yet there is a way out of this dilemma: honest sharing of each other’s needs. That requires trust and a willingness to make oneself vulnerable, for the  passive man to let his wife take the lead and be willing to flow into the beauty of sexual play.

Let’s see how we can achieve that. If the woman has a passive husband she may need to take the male lead role, be sexually proactive, let the man know emotionally and physically that she wants him, adores him,really enjoys their sexual encounters. Through good talk, particularly after sex,he can become more assertive and get to enjoy the foreplay as much as his wife. This is not an easy job for the wife, but if she doesn’t coach him along, she’ll be frustrated by a husband who feels more comfortable being the receiver of sex than the giver. If the man does not respond to his wife’s needs and learn to enjoy and initiate the sexual play, she may tire of the role reversal and look for other ways to make her own sex life more fulfilling, possibly through an affair with a heterosexual man.