Weekend
to Remember:
SSS Discovered
The story below of a powerful weekend retreat tells how the
cultural concept of the sexual-spiritual split "came to me." This awareness
also fueled my years of research since on common challenges that can be
healed more efficiently in a cultural rather than strictly personal context.
MP
Discovery of the
Sexual-Spiritual Split: A Weekend to Remember
The discovery of the sexual-spiritual split first inspired
the creation of Authentic Process Therapy during a weekend spirituality
retreat that I presented in 1984 at Veritas Villa in New York's Catskill
Mountains. On Friday evening, I polled the group of forty women and men
to determine what areas of recovery they would like to focus on. A young
man in the back of the room sheepishly yelled out, "Let's talk about sex!"
Since this was scheduled to be a workshop on "spirituality in recovery"
everyone found the suggestion amusing. A raucous conversation took place
in the room, after which the group implored me to address sex.
Always up for a good challenge, I agreed to schedule a Saturday
afternoon workshop to investigate sexuality in recovery. In 1984 this
was more challenging than it is today. Since the weekend had been created
to explore spirituality issues, I felt additionally challenged to integrate
the two. There was another aspect of challenge that tested me in the fifteen
hours I would have to prepare for the Saturday afternoon workshop. My
co-facilitator was a Catholic nun named Sister Greta!
A significantly painful aspect of my own internalized sexual-spiritual
split was planted by a nun when I was about seven. I had never totally
healed from that trauma - talk about synchronicity! Although I knew Sister
Greta to be a highly compassionate addictions counselor, I could feel
a critical mass building inside. The universe was going to heal me whether
I liked it or not.
Friday evening, before I went to sleep, I felt deep within
that this situation offered a serendipitous occasion for healing. At that
point I still didn't know what to do to create interactive participation
around this theme of sexuality within the framework of a spiritual retreat.
With all the symbolic transference that Sister Greta elicited, the lingering
awareness that she would be observing and participating, embarrassed and
unsettled me. It triggered all my unconscious fears surrounding my own
split. It was hell!
In the few spare moments I had between facilitating other
aspects of the retreat, I observed my experience with sex as it relates
to my concept of spirituality in addictions recovery. I decided that I
would share my personal experiences with the group as a stimulus for discussion.
As the afternoon approached, I could feel both a fear and
a mysterious power building inside of me. At lunch I told Sister Greta
how nervous I was discussing sex with her in the room. Of course, I see
in retrospect that this was highlighting my own sexual-spiritual split
even before I had named it. She fortuitously replied, "Oh, go ahead, go
for it Michael! You aren't going to say anything I haven't already heard;
and if you do, I look forward to hearing it."
As the session started, I stood in front of the room nervously
holding a piece of chalk. Sister Greta was sitting on a piano bench in
the back corner. I looked back at her and we both began to laugh, and
at that moment it came to me. I would share with the group my most recent
discovery - how I have been separating the concepts of intimacy, sensuality,
and sex in my own mind, and how helpful that realization has been to my
own sexuality breakthroughs. I darted to the blackboard and put those
three words, intimacy, sensuality, and sex, in that order, from left to
right at the top of the board, and started discussing the words.
Initially, the group was enlivened though chaotic. They
tended to want to lump the words together. I could actually see participants'
faces twisted in confusion as they attempted to define these words as
independent concepts. When the confusion was well established, I suggested
that group members call out words they associated with the word "intimacy."
As they did so, I wrote the following words under the intimacy column
on the board: "warmth," "communication," "honesty," "caring," "smile,"
"knowing," "trust," "openness," and so on.
Then we moved to the center column headed by the word "sensuality."
As people got silly and awkward they began calling out these words: "touching,"
"candlelight," "smell," "lick," "biting," "tickling," "music," "whispering,"
"massage." The list went on and on.
Last, I called for words associated with sex, requesting
that we not repeat words already used even though they may have sexual
associations. People were obviously embarrassed, as I observed them slyly
looking at each other. The presence of Sister Greta was ominous. One woman
in front of the room whispered "penis," and everyone in the room giggled
as I put it on the board. Then Sister Greta shouted out "orgasm," and
the room went into a roar. I listed it on the board, too. Then the words
just started coming: "vagina," "cum" (and everyone was curious as to where
that spelling originated), "fuck," "suck," "fantasy," "cunnilingus," and
a few others. Sister Greta laughed and laughed with a magical healing
energy. Without needing to overtly acknowledge or define it, everyone
knew that a very special healing was touching us all.
This laugher fueled another insight in me. I was reminded
of my own recent thoughts on how difficult it had been to merge my sexuality
with an on-going, loving relationship. My fear of self-disclosure relaxed
and I saw how I might bring the group to a second (and even third) tier
of discovery by sharing my own polarizations in these areas for the group
to identify with.
For a few more minutes we lingered with our creation on
the board. There were still some confused expressions in the room and
some quasi-enlightened remarks. Sam, a 22-year-old former marijuana addict
shared, "I have never thought of separating those ideas before. To me
they are all the same thing. Looking at them separately sort of twists
my brain. I don't know what to do with it, but it looks like an important
discovery. What should I do with it?"
Allowing this question to provide a transition into the
next level of the exercise, I asked Sam if he would join me in the front
of the room to help demonstrate an answer to his question. He agreed.
Sam and I stood facing the blackboard. I suggested that he was representing
the entire group in this exercise.
I already knew that Sam was not married, he did not have
a significant other, and he wasn't dating at the time. I asked him, "Sam,
if you met someone that you were attracted to, what would you aim toward
first, intimacy or sex?" While doing this I paced back and forth in front
of the board pointing at the three headings, first in one direction, then
the other. As I "walked the board," I demonstrated the "journey" from
each side, first starting with sex (a very common starting point when
one has an addictions history), through sensuality and finally to intimacy.
Reversing myself, I started at intimacy, moved through sensuality, and
then to sex. I then asked Sam and the group to tune into their bodies
and feelings and imagine that they were entering a dating situation from
both sides, and note their feelings and sensations.
Sam blurted out, "I can't do it. I can't go either way.
I can start OK, I can do that from either side, although the intimacy
would be new to me. But I don't think I can have both. When I was using
pot, it was easy to just have sex. Now that I'm clean, it doesn't work
that way. My sponsor says I should date and get to know someone first,
but I get terrified and just shut down."
As I continued walking the board, I asked all the participants
to raise their hands as soon as I got to a place where they felt they
got stuck or paralyzed. In one walk across, every hand in the room, including
Sister Greta's, went up. Everyone looked around in surprise - no one more
surprised than me. Every one of the forty participants experienced the
same paralysis that I had thought was my unique struggle. Everyone in
the room acknowledged that they had all thought it was their unique struggle.
We were all suffering from a sexual-spiritual split.
I shared some of the other damaging sexual messages that
I received early on: that God was synonymous with love, warmth, family,
goodness and wholesomeness, and that sex was shameful, disgusting, sinful
(mortally so), ungodly and spoken of only in whispers, dirty jokes and
sneers. I also told the group that I had uncovered this internalized unconscious
split in myself only recently, and that this discovery was finally allowing
me to merge these two dynamic, energetic birthrights.
We all have our own version of this internalization. With
such a deeply embedded, dualistic concept, how can one possibly bond in
love and bring shame-based sex into relationship? The unconscious sends
up powerful, though often deceptive, barriers that prevent a fulfilling
merger. A good example of this comes from my own childhood. When I was
about seven, I attended catechism class, which was a requirement for all
good Catholics. The class was taught by a nun in full habit: an imposing
authority figure to a little boy! The class had about thirty students;
in fact, I can remember sitting in the middle of a row on the left. The
nun was explaining the difference between venial and mortal sin (venial
being the lesser one, while mortal seemed to mean that you would be doomed
to eternal hell). With these definitions on the blackboard, she pointed
at them and strongly proclaimed, "To touch your private parts, or someone
else's, is a MORTAL sin! MORTAL, mind you, not venial."
I was in shock: I was already doomed. Not only had I touched
my private parts, but I had explored the private parts of friends during
our games of "doctor." It was devastating to me: not even eight years
old, and I was going to hell. I spent many years thereafter trying to
repent to God, making deals to not do it again, only to fail in humiliation
and sinfulness. I regretfully share that I was 31 years old before I was
able to uproot this demon and quiet the internalized havoc that it brought
to my intimate relationships.
Patrick Carnes touched on the subject of the sexual-spiritual
split in his book on sex addiction, Don't Call It Love. He writes,
"Much damage has been done to sexuality in the name of religion. The
result inhibits progress on both planes. To heal, start by acknowledging
that sexuality is about meaning and that spirituality is about meaning.
Search for areas of commonness between the two. Be gentle with yourself
about old tortuous conflicts. They are not about you. They never were."
Initially, most adults in recovery do not realize that they
have incurred this psychic split, nor do they remember its origins, but
they certainly experience the results. You might find the scenario familiar:
once you begin to date, you may experience infatuation, even love and
eros. Sex may be very pleasurable. Usually within three to six months,
bonding begins as you share struggles and joys. At this point the unconscious
polarity begins to haunt the relationship. Since you are not necessarily
aware of your past damages or repressed traumas, you may begin to amplify
your partner's imperfections in an unconscious attempt to sabotage the
relationship. Or you might stay in the relationship and feel inadequate
because sex is more work than fulfillment. You may even avoid sex altogether.
Simply stated, once bonding occurs, either love or sex must be abandoned.
Until we heal this sexual-spiritual split, they cannot seem to live in
the same house.
People began to ask, "How can we do it?" In the uncanny,
magical flow of that afternoon, I suggested that we move on to the final
piece of the exercise and asked for another volunteer. A man in his mid-40s
named Gary stood up. His wife Carol, who was sitting beside him, was aghast,
laughing and turning red with embarrassment. Someone else roared out,
"You can't do it, you're married."
Gary cut through the lighthearted bantering and replied,
"Yes I can. I've been married 14 years and sober for 16, and this damn
split has haunted every minute of every day of my marriage. I love Carol,
but you would never know it by the way I act sexually and intimately.
I'd really like to work on this." So we did.
During a break that preceded this part of the exercise,
we had moved the chairs from the center and I procured some large 16"
x 20" sheets of paper and some felt-tipped marker to make signs with.
I asked Gary to stand in the center of the room.
I thanked Gary for his honesty and courage to take part
in this psychodrama, and then asked him to take a deep breath and relax,
look around the room, and notice all the friendly faces. He did so, beginning
to smile and relax. I asked him to go deep into his memory and share with
us an early message that he received about sex, and to just look within
and say whatever comes up without censoring himself. Gary related, "You'll
go blind if you play with yourself." I thanked him and wrote that message
with a felt-tip marker on a placard.
Then I asked Gary to pick another participant to represent
whoever gave him that message, and he selected an older women named Martha.
I asked Martha to hold up the placard six feet in front of Gary and face
him.
Then I asked Gary for another message that he had received
while growing up. He responded, "Women are sluts." I put it on a placard
and Gary picked another workshop participant to represent the person who
had given him this message. This time he picked a big, strapping man in
his late thirties named Mike. I invited Mike to hold the placard in front
of Gary next to Martha, and begin to form a circle.
This continued with messages like "Sex is sinful," "Vaginas
are ugly," "You are a pervert," "Women should be virgins," and so on until
we had eight people circling Gary and holding placards toward him.
The last message he shared was, "You will do it if you love
me." As I wrote the placard, I asked him what it meant. He answered, almost
crying, "That's what my uncle would say to me when he molested me."
As Gary took some deep breaths to regain his composure he
said, "I've never told anyone, not even Carol, about this before. I can't
believe I said it." The visual image was quite profound: Gary in the center
of the room being encircled by these early messages.
As Gary tried to compose himself further, I encouraged him
to stay present and avoid zipping up his defenses. To enhance the experiential
component of the vignette, I asked the "message bearers" to turn the placards
toward themselves and loudly read the messages to Gary one by one. I instructed
them to keep going around and reading them louder and faster until I asked
them to stop. This continued for about two minutes, bringing everyone
in the room (especially Gary) to a fevered pitch of discomfort. After
stopping the action, I checked in with Gary and asked how he was doing.
He replied, "I can't believe I carry all that with me all the time, especially
to bed."
I then asked Carol if she would participate, to help us
complete the exercise. She said yes, and I asked her to stand about six
feet outside the circle facing Gary. I instructed the message bearers
to go around reading the messages one more time. Then I asked Carol if
all of this made her feel close or distant from Gary. I said, "Does it
make you want to move closer or further away?" She replied, "I want to
stay right here, I feel like there is a wall between us."
I then invited the group to share. Everyone was enlightened
by the realization of how these deep inner messages make sexual intimacy
impossible. They could see it and they could feel it; it was crystal clear.
I suggested that we move on to a symbolic exercise that would release
these unwelcome, uninvited demons. I directed Gary to slowly, one by one,
tell the message bearers, "Take back your lousy message. I don't want
it. It isn't mine and it never was." I suggested that as he addressed
each one, to tear up the placard and then either throw it on the floor
or give it back to the bearer and dismiss them from their role. After
Gary "gave back" the first two messages, I checked in with Carol. I asked
her if she was feeling any different. She reported that she felt a little
closer to Gary, that he seemed more open and available as he discharged
the symbolic carriers of these messages. I suggested that she move closer
as she intuitively felt his availability. When all the messages were confronted,
Gary just stood there facing Carol and began to gently weep.
As all the walls and barriers melted, Carol gracefully moved
towards him. As she did, Gary fell to his knees sobbing, "I'm sorry, I
didn't know. I didn't mean to push you away like that. I have been bringing
all of these ghosts into bed with us all these years." Carol joined him
in a kneeling position. They embraced in a manner that included all of
us in their intimate connection. The wall of shame was gone. The room
glowed with a healing spirit. We all spontaneously became more open, affectionate,
and tactile. I stood in warm embrace with Sister Greta. Other participants
gently touched or leaned on each other as we all bathed in the intimate
healing energy generated by Gary's courageous uncovery process. In those
moments I experienced transcendence and simultaneously understood what
the humanist therapist Carl Rogers meant when he said, "Whatever is most
personal is most general."
As the afternoon session came to a close, participants were
sharing their insights regarding their own repressed shaming messages,
and wanted to know how they could continue this healing work on their
own. I offered to share some techniques with them, and we designated time
on Sunday morning for this purpose.
I was awed and positively overwhelmed by the grace and power
in these various exercises which have since been incorporated into these
recovery workshops. I have come to realize the resolution of the sexual-spiritual
split as a milestone in this work. I have not met a recovering person
who was not shamefully and often unconsciously walled off from tender,
loving intimacy (or hot juicy intimacy, for that matter!).
Excerpted from The
Journey Toward Complete Recovery: Reclaiming Your Emotional, Spiritual
& Sexual Wholeness by Michael Picucci.
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