After you’ve done both the lingam and yoni massages and
you’ve taken a short break (optional), move on to your preferred version of
yab-yum. My description of the basics last month was fairly complete, so I
won’t duplicate it here, but just as a reminder, the yab-yum phase is a time
for stillness and deep intimacy, for erotic connection without erotic friction.
Many Variations on a Few Key Themes
There were almost as many patterns of yab-yum meditation as
there were couples in my sample, but the common denominator was arousal without
(much) actual friction. All the couples begin by synchronizing their breathing
and meditating on each other’s perceptions, almost always with an imagery of
exchanging energy with each breath. Together with the close physical contact,
warmth, and intimate caresses, this mental process typically creates just as
much arousal as more direct physical measures would, but it does it much more
slowly.
For those couples who respond unevenly, direct physical stimulation is
always on option for helping one partner “catch up” in the middle or at the end
of this phase. In most couples, the man typically begins yab-yum with a
soft penis and does not insert it until he has an erection and his partner is
ready. However, some couples prefer to begin with a little bit of physical
stimulation for one or both partners, as needed, to allow for insertion at the
start.
Three couples use a “soft-insertion” technique to start this
phase of meditation with the soft or partially erect penis in the vagina,
allowing the man’s erection to develop over time with the help of this extra
warmth and pressure. All three of these couples use a horizontal position instead
of a seated version of yab-yum. Two use inverted missionary, with the woman
lying on the man’s chest and her knees straddling his waist, while the third
begins in missionary and rolls to one side, again with the woman’s legs
straddling the man’s waist. (The last position may require either a waterbed or
some strategically placed pillows or cushions to prevent the man’s weight from
cutting off circulation in the woman’s lower leg.)
Two of our couples originally used positions, including a
standing hug, that did not allow for insertion of the penis. They waited until
after the end of the meditation phase to become physically joined.
Significantly, neither couple had experienced the “body sharing” illusion that we
will be discussing later, so I suggested that they might want to experiment
with positions that allowed for insertion at the start of yab-yum. Both did so,
and have now switched to that pattern, and both couples began having the
body-sharing experience for the first time after making the switch.
In all cases where couples start this phase with insertion,
the assumption is that the break, if any, after yoni worship will be short
enough so that the woman will still be somewhat aroused and ready. When that
isn’t true, these couples either choose to delay insertion until she is ready,
or use some sort of foreplay to get her aroused enough and ready for
comfortable insertion.
I’ve always enjoyed the communion of just sitting in my
partner’s lap, linked to him in the most intimate way, with his penis
motionless inside me and my arms and legs wrapped around him, looking into his
eyes and sharing nose bumps and soft kisses as our passion slowly rekindles. So
I was a bit surprised that two thirds of our couples do not actually use the
traditional yab-yum position.
As I spoke with them, though, it became clear that yab-yum
comes in many forms, not just with the woman sitting on her partner’s lap. The
essence of yab-yum is not the posture, but the intimacy, close contact, deep
communion, and minimal motion. It’s not about a lot of rubbing and friction. It’s
about blurring the boundaries between yourself and your partner, feeling what
the other person feels. I will come back to this in later posts, when I look at
what it is about human evolution and the way our brains work that makes this
possible, but it’s clear that the classic yab-yum position is not required.
How long Should Yab-Yum Last?
All of the couples I interviewed agreed that a period of
sexual rekindling, communion, and “mingling of the senses” is essential to the
deepest Tantric union. It’s that closeness and relative immobility that gives
the yab-yum phase its special characteristic. It begins with couple meditation,
but this time it is an erotically charged kind of meditation. The closeness of
skin-to-skin contact, the lack of clothing, the erotic carry-over from the
lingam and yoni massages, and the anticipation of what is to come all ensure
that this is meditation of a very different sort.
But everyone agrees that there eventually comes a point when
the immobility and intensity of the yab-yum phase goes from being intimate and
joyful to being almost intolerable. Some couples typically spend as little as
ten minutes rekindling their arousal and establishing communion in yab-yum. Others
spend twenty minutes, half an hour, or more.
Several couples felt that getting this timing “in synch” was
actually one of the hardest things they had to learn to do as a couple, with
the man usually feeling a desire to move on and become more active before his
partner was ready. Two of these couples said that the first few times they had
tried to delay until the female partner was ready, the male partner reached
orgasm and ejaculated while they were still in yab-yum.
Neither of these couples seemed to feel that this was a
problem in itself; one of the women said it was “just an unplanned detour and a
slight delay in our plans.” Of course, it is much easier to be relaxed about
such “detours” if you have plenty of time, so this is yet another reason to be
especially sure you are not rushed while you are learning Tantra together.
But once you are both comfortable with the process and able
to stay in it, how long should it last? Since there was a lot of variation, it
took me awhile to figure out that there were two different things going on.
The first pattern was fairly obvious. The couples who had
been able to block out less time for Tantra spent noticeably less time on both
yab-yum and maithuna, typically around 30-35 minutes total. The second pattern
was more subtle, but also clear. The couples who spent the least time in
maithuna generally tried to stretch out the time in yab-yum the most.
Couples seemed to be adjusting the time spent in the two
phases as they experimented and found the best way for them to extend the
combined total. If they had trouble making maithuna last as long as they wanted
it to, they extended yab-yum instead. Although no one was using stopwatches and
many of the time estimates I got were pretty vague, all of the couples said
that the total time that they spent in these two phases was usually at least half an
hour, preferably more, and that they were disappointed if it ended sooner.
This makes sense. The purpose of meditation during the
yab-yum phase is two-fold: to get each partner deeply into the process of
feeling what their partner feels, but also to extend the arousal process, just
as we did in yoni and lingam massage. As we’ve already seen, a longer arousal
period triggers (or in this case extends and increases) the “Tantric high” and
creates a longer, more intense orgasm. Simply preceding maithuna, or active sexual
union, with a long period of immobility turns out to be one of
the keys to having true Tantric orgasms during the active phase.
But, as we will see, the couple meditation during yab-yum is also the key to something else entirely, a profound sense of sharing directly in your partner’s arousal and orgasms.
But, as we will see, the couple meditation during yab-yum is also the key to something else entirely, a profound sense of sharing directly in your partner’s arousal and orgasms.
No comments:
Post a Comment