Let's Play Doctor
Feeling distracted, irritable and drained?
Crashing into the same walls in relationships and sexual communication?
Locked in unsuccessful, obsessive cycles?
Embarrassed to talk with your doctor, or anyone about your concerns?
By continually ignoring our thought and emotional patterns, we limit our choices of how to deal with daily challenges. We feel stuck because we are repeatedly fueling our stress engine – and most symptoms of dis-ease and that which ails you are caused or compounded by the chain reaction of stress.
Stress: The
• Ignites inflammatory process leading to sexual apathy, depression & illness
• 1 in 5 people suffer from chronic anxiety disorders
• 100 million people worldwide suffer from recurrent stress and depression
• In the U.S. alone, we spend 86 billion $$ a year on drugs to ‘fix’ ourselves which markedly decrease sexual arousal & prohibit orgasm – an essential component for quality of life
Many doctors frequently deal with symptoms of stress; but rarely inquire about their patients’ sexual health. Moreover, most people will never ask their doctor about sex, or their sexuality. Despite a growing body of evidence about mind-body unity, many physicians continue to treat physical symptoms rather than whole individuals. According to a recent Association of Reproductive Health Professionals survey:
• Only 14% of men and women between 40 and 80 years old said their doctor had asked them about sexual difficulties
• 68% of patients fear that raising concerns about sexual problems would embarrass their physician
• 71% believe their concerns would be dismissed.
The blind leading the blind…Doctors not only don’t address sexual issues, they aren’t taught to. Even with all the advances in medical science, there is little energy spent teaching human sexuality to med students. More than half of US medical schools dedicate fewer than 10 hours on the subject. So, if you do go to your doctor with questions, you’re possibly getting advice from an untrained person with their own biases, probably as embarrassed and ill informed as you are.
Do our stress levels always boil down to sex? “No, that’s not the point,” continues Dr. Kipper. “But many of our health and relative body issues are connected to our sexuality. The mind and body work together to create and heal symptoms of stress. It’s that simple.”
If there is any power in this universe, it is in you.
U.G. Krishnamurti
If our thought and expression determine our health and well being, that means our mind is our most powerful resource. Stephanie Moses, author of the upcoming book Getting to Neutral concurs. "Many of us have this sort of ‘it’s all so mysterious’ attitude. If you have a headache, you take a pill. If your stomach hurts, you’ll take something for that. Now, I certainly will take something for a headache, and I’m not suggesting for one second that you endure pain. What I am suggesting is that you examine what this pain or anxiety is connected to, and therefore causing these - symptoms of emotion - or bio-emotional effects, then you can begin to release them."
Still on the fence? Tune in to Esther Sternberg, M.D., Director, Integrative Neural Immune Program, National Institute of Mental Health. “Beneath our skins is a constantly changing world where our body’s cells fashion and refashion our solid-seeming tissues. We can finally see how tightly the nervous and immune systems are linked - through many interwoven strands of nerve pathways and communicating molecules. And once we understand that, it is not so difficult to imagine that forces that might perturb one system would have powerful effects on the functioning of the other.”
Here’s another scientific fact: Feeling the emotion of love is healthy, says Stella Resnick, PhD, a psychologist and psychotherapist in Los Angeles who specializes in relationship and sexual enrichment. “While understanding and releasing pain is certainly crucial for lasting results in psychotherapy, it’s not enough. Getting good at struggling with problems just makes you more skillful at struggling with problems. To enjoy your life more, and especially to have more love, it’s better to become skillful at what inspires our enthusiasm and generates vitality and good feelings.”
Love Yourself
Shake off apathy and get excited about feeling good. Approach your needs and issues with humility and compassion; truly care for yourself. Be grateful for the skin you’re in - your kingdom of heaven - actually say thank you to your body for taking care of, and putting up with, you (and your bullshit) all these years. Prioritize your well-being. Be proactive with your sexual and emotional health. Inquire within and take notes. Doctors are human and don’t have all the answers. They’re not God, not your father and aren’t mind readers.
Doctors do aim to be helpful, and often are. Yet dressing us in goofy paper, hiney-baring gowns and blue booties instills the business of sickness, when our natural state of being is that of beauty, health and vitality. Alas, our healthcare system itself is due for a shakedown, from the inside out. Dr. Donald Berwick shared some pivotal insights regarding how we should manage our health care. He recently spoke with Pauline W. Chen, M.D of The New York Times and said, “We don’t have a standard of services or processes that are comfortable for patients. We have built a technocratic castle, and when people come into it, they are intimidated.” In an essay titled "What 'Patient-Centered' Should Mean: Confessions Of An Extremist," Dr. Berwick, president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Massachusetts laid the system bare.
Dr. Berwick’s prescription? Be proactive! And include your sexual concerns and questions. He suggests that you -
• Speak up and be prepared. From research we know that patients who write down questions do better.
• Bring your digital recorder into the meeting so you can listen to the conversation several times after.
• Bring a companion along to be your sentinel, your advisor.
Use that paper gown for cleaning your windows (lint free) and clear your view for feeling good. Dare to evolve from frustration and suffering…forge new pathways of heightened awareness, increased pleasure and joy. Explore ways to improve your ability to communicate effectively, and to experience better health and sexual fulfillment. Oh, and slip on those blue booties, they make polishing your kitchen floor fun.
Checking in at the Paris Hilton
In the dark about your sexuality? You’re not alone.
Here we are in the 21st Century - where sex tapes make you famous (and rich), Dick in a Box wins an Emmy, 3rd graders know all the words to Jiz in my Pants and getting jizzed on will get you a book deal – yet, we’re still groping around for clues.Lights Out
Even though ‘sex’ seems to be everywhere in the media, much of the information throughout our culture and history is antiquated, oppressive, superficial, sensationalized, or questionable in its accuracy. We’re bombarded left and right with information and events that we take at face value and simply don’t question.Sex and sexuality influences - and is influenced by - nearly everything, all the way through to the biochemicals surging inside our skins. Ignorance, fear and emotional suppression – what psychologists call ‘shadows’ – fuel stress symptoms, and significantly affect our perceptions, our health, our sexual response, and how we relate to one another. “Our sexual and emotional health is essential to our physical vitality, and our mental health and well being,” says Dr. David Kipper, M.D., an eminent physician in Los Angeles for over 30 years.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 40 million American adults have anxiety disorders, over 19 million people are treated for recurrent stress and depression annually, and a vast majority of Americans from around the country that participated in a recent Kinsey Institute Sex Information Test FAILED. What gives?
“Our culture is sexually naïve,” says Dr. David Kipper. “In part because it’s a delicate subject to discuss. Many people will not really know if they’re having a healthy sexual expression, or how their emotional life is connected to their health. They just don’t know.”
Stress and sexuality - it’s a feedback loop where half of all marriages end in divorce and sexual difficulties preside as a leading complaint of both genders. Dr. David Schnarch, creator of the Crucible Approach to marital therapy, states, “Sex is inherently based on intimacy. The problem is that most people have a very misguided idea of what intimacy means.”
It’s good for you. Real intimacy requires us to push past boundaries and evolve – to become more fully developed human beings. When we open up, explore and align our emotional life and our sexuality, it brings a healthy, empowering, cathartic release that allows and encourages us to move forward. So ask yourself questions, be curious, and really listen for what feels good, or what doesn’t.
We are not passengers in our lives; we are the authors of our experience. Begin to recognize how your influences affect you and realize who’s in charge.
Reach Out
Sex is a natural form of communication. We want to open up and talk about our sexuality, but it often feels complicated and stressful, so we avoid it. “The lies we’re told about sex present a huge barrier to good sexual communication. Many sex myths encourage us to believe that to be great lovers we need to be mind readers, not communicators,” offers Cory Silverberg, co-author of The Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability.He adds, “Communication isn’t always about talking, but I can promise you that one of the keys to great sex is an ability to talk about it. I can also promise that it’s easier to learn to talk about sex than it is to learn to read minds.”
Not The Amazing Kreskin? Well here’s some helpful hints to get the ball rolling if you’re feeling ready to explore and speak up.
Get down off your high horse. Going in with guns blaring and a know-it-all attitude – such as thinking that you already know what he or she feels - raises a mighty thick barrier for honest, healthy communication and resolution. As Felix Unger of The Odd Couple wisely stated in that courtroom scene, “When you assume, you make an ‘ass’ out of ‘u’ and ‘me’. Get comfortable with the fact that you don’t know how they feel when you share a question, need or concern.
Open the airwaves to really hear their response, without your predisposed assumptions creating a party line, and you’ll experience what you’re there for in the first place – a real connection.
Avoid the stare down. Evolution explains that men are often side-by-side communicators and can interpret eye-to-eye contact in discussion as confrontational. Although women often prefer to ‘see’ another’s expression through visual contact, spark a healthy medium.
Approach with dignity. Criticism is a wrecking ball for building healthy communication bridges, especially regarding sensitive, sexual issues. ‘You don’t know how to please me,’ or ‘Your tongue feels like a dying slug when we kiss’ are not good choices. Frame what you desire as a mutual turn on; learn some new tricks yourself and use erotic wordplay to arouse you both.
Are you afraid of conflict, rejection or embarrassment? That’s natural, we all are to some degree, but that’s not an excuse to avoid creating a healthy dialogue. When you feel that knot swell in your belly, in your chest, or your throat, breathe deeply, because that’s a good sign for you to move forward and be heard. And let your partner know you’re nervous – doing so dissolves anxiety, and offers them the respect and awareness of their own possible emotions about intimacy.
Spell it out. “Vagueness, particularly around a topic like sex, can lead directly to confusion. And we have to remember that if we don't clearly ask for what we want, we reduce the chances that we'll ever get it,” says Cory Silverberg, an AASECT certified sexuality educator. To add levels of clarity and build confidence, try writing down your desires or needs first. Then speak what you wrote aloud, in private, to shape and emotionally align your thoughts.
Learn the art of instant replay. Have your partner repeat what they’ve heard you say until you are both on the same page. It’s interesting how all of us sometimes turn a phrase or twist another’s words, so this is a particularly helpful tool. If someone balks, reference how useful it is when sports commentators replay a game incident to clarify what happened. We become better listeners and communicators this way because our perspective is subjective, and it takes practice to clear out our own inner dialogue and become present.
Don’t step on each other’s dialogue. Agree to give each other the opportunity to speak freely and complete a thought without interruption. This takes practice and is well worth the effort. My husband’s going to love this one; thankfully I’m getting better at this myself.
Indulge in your daydreams, explore and visualize what arouses you. Your mind is your own private theatre. Plus, it’s a feel-good pharmacy for both of you, as their arousal is spurred on when you’re turned on. “When it comes to desire and attraction, a little unpredictability goes a long way: It spikes the brain’s natural amphetamines, dopamine and norepinephrine, which play a big role in sexual arousal. It doesn’t take much to get the dopamine going, so think about new things you can do together as a couple. A little novelty goes a long way,” offers sex therapist, Ian Kerner, Ph.D.
Leave room for your partner’s imagination by saying something like, ‘I fantasized about you earlier,’ to capture their attention when you’re just about to leave for work or appointments. Then seductively frame what happened in your ‘dream sequence or fantasy’ in an email or handwritten note, and leave some blanks for him to fill in. Remember Mad Libs? Now be patient. Let your juices simmer. They’ll need to wrap their mind and arousal around your suggestions and approach you at their own pace.
Give them plenty of positive feedback when they arrive, and enjoy!
Why Are We Whispering about Sexuality & Stress?
Communicating our sexuality is a constant challenge and often a profoundly confusing area of life. Most of us know more about our cell phone plans than we do about what makes us tick. And many feel isolated, especially regarding our most intimate concerns. It’s downright daunting and we often have a tough time talking about sex, usually feeling the need to hide our proclivities, our curiosities and innermost frustrations and desires.
except over the phone to people I don’t know.”
Garry Shandling
Don’t be shy. Be curious. Question ideological foundations in place since our first flickering of consciousness. Shake off cynicism, complacency and finger pointing.
Our Sexuality is of Profound Importance to our Health and Well-Being.
Co-founder of the Medical Group of Beverly Hills, Dr. David Kipper, M.D. believes in merging the science of medicine with exploring psychological and behavioral influences on patient’s symptoms. He says, “A key factor in managing stress is to explore your sexual life – and the deeper dynamics at the heart of sexuality.”
Open up; explore your emotional life, your sexuality and the healthy release this brings. Not merely the mechanics of sex, but the full expression. Sure, Viagra, sexy texts and Twister positions are helpful for a quick rush, but focusing on mechanics doesn’t solve sexual problems.
“Sex – even terrible sex – isn’t engineering. It’s a language, and its content is everything else happening in our emotional lives,” says David Schnarch, a maverick Marriage & Family Health Therapist and author of the book Passionate Marriage. Sex is a form of communication and our sexuality is a complex language. The body wants and needs to talk and our sexuality is an essential, primal avenue.
The Skeleton Key
Do our stress levels always boil down to sex? “No, that’s not the point,” continues Dr. Kipper. “But many of our health and relative body issues are connected to our sexuality. The mind and body work together to create and heal symptoms of stress. It’s that simple.”
Sexuality and stress is a formidable feedback loop that’s crucial to unravel. Mantak Chia, healer, teacher and legendary author of many essential books on cultivating male and female sexuality, states, “Human beings have powerful sex drives - and you cannot keep ping-pong balls under water. Sometime, somewhere, they pop back up, maybe as disease, maybe as emotional problems, causing energy blockages, leading to illness.”
Sure, candles, panties and porn make for titillating props and a sexual experience that, on the surface, is exciting and gratifying, yet without exploring our inner lives they’re often ineffective and we end up building a house of cards. The act of sex is the cards themselves, yet there is still an empty void in the middle. What should be inside? How we really feel about sex, and how we think about sex and our sexuality, fills us and fuels us.
So, tune in and turn up the volume of your mind~body connections. Our sexual health and our satisfaction is vital, because a truly satisfying sexual experience can prolong our life, increase our vitality, decrease blood pressure, reduce stress, strengthen our heart, relieve aches and pains, and boost our immune system, making us feel and look younger.
That rosy after-glow is radiating from within – not from outside sources. The most potent pharmacy of all is right inside of you and me. So, snooping inside that medicine cabinet of our own body-wide systems has far reaching benefits. “The human body is a remarkable symphony,” states Deepak Chopra in Soul of Healing. “There’s a genius inside you and me. And this genius is the inner intelligence of the body that mirrors the wisdom of the universe.”
Gain new respect for your mind and body’s power. Upgrade how you feel and deal.
Tap into the deeper dynamics at the heart of sexuality – examine the profound connections of stress, your sexuality, your consciousness and your emotional expression. Now use what you discover to improve your ‘whole body’ health and well-being. Spark a dialogue…and open the book of you.