Sensory exploration and awareness of the moment
Sensory exploration and awareness of the moment
A sensual massage or tantric massage is merely a tiny step towards true Tantrism but is a great step to feeling free.
Daniel Odier Hindu Tantrism teaches in Paris. In a book of fire, Tantra: initiation of a Westerner in absolute love (Lattès ed.), he tells how he was initiated by a woman, tantric master, met in the mountains of Kashmir.
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She submits to countless events, including a period of three days and three nights when he is left naked and alone in the forest. These tests are a work on emotions, intended to awaken the senses, to "polish the ego" and pacify the mind, to reach the top of this tutorial with "maithuna": the ritual of the sacred sexual union.
The story of this union with that which is its initiator has accents that recall the eroticism. This initiation story looks like a myth. Perhaps is it primarily a symbolic narrative, although autobiographical elements mingle closely.
Daniel Odier also explains in a second book, desires, passions and spirituality (ed. Lattes), that the rite of "maithuna" is rarely practiced and can be used after a long preparation. Above all, he says, it can be done, without genital contact, by any form of sensorial relationship, through the voice, the look, feel.
Despite using a very suggestive erotic symbolism, Tantric practices can be summarized to sexuality. They are first learning of the dual polarity male and female within us all, whether we are male or female. Daniel Odier's uses this primarily as a sensory exploration, destined to live the moment of consciousness, the integration of emotion and thought in daily life.
In Tantrism, the frantic search for a path that will come out of our problems is an illusion, only acceptance of our reality with its lights and shadows can we afford to live mindfully.
It is in this perspective that proposes an alternative approach to sexuality, seen as a form of meditation, where each partner learns to live a deep sense of unity with itself and with each other. Specific techniques can be used to facilitate this approach: different forms of meditation, massage ...
Breathing is central and, through it, a relaxation of the body and an awareness of the muscles of the lower abdomen, perineum, genitals. Men and women are invited to deepen orgasm, what passes for men with a discovery of orgasm without ejaculation. It is not to control ejaculation, but to progressively forget, insists Daniel Odier.
The ecstasy beyond Tantric Massage performance
He warns against placements that reduce Tantrism to a set of techniques leading to ecstasy and offering dances, massages and energy technologies, enhanced by various rituals and a so-called spiritual discourse.
All this is a fantasy, it is only to seek a more powerful sexuality. If Tantra is an art of ecstasy in love is all that life has to become a trance and that by an awareness of the moment, our unity to the world, at all times and in all activities of life. Research techniques of ecstasy is the opposite of that Tantra Daniel Odier defined as "spontaneous ecstasy," the title of his latest book (ed. Actes Sud).
But the intuitions Tantric well understood can be used to encourage reflection that revolves around the personal development, as explained Paule Solomon in his book The Light of Burning Love (ed. Albin Michel). A theme that takes in personal development, seminars on the relationship and the exploration of the five senses.
MAJESTIC Tantric Massage provides the way to take this step, to relax the mind and body.
She submits to countless events, including a period of three days and three nights when he is left naked and alone in the forest. These tests are a work on emotions, intended to awaken the senses, to "polish the ego" and pacify the mind, to reach the top of this tutorial with "maithuna": the ritual of the sacred sexual union.
The story of this union with that which is its initiator has accents that recall the eroticism. This initiation story looks like a myth. Perhaps is it primarily a symbolic narrative, although autobiographical elements mingle closely.
Daniel Odier also explains in a second book, desires, passions and spirituality (ed. Lattes), that the rite of "maithuna" is rarely practiced and can be used after a long preparation. Above all, he says, it can be done, without genital contact, by any form of sensorial relationship, through the voice, the look, feel.
Despite using a very suggestive erotic symbolism, Tantric practices can be summarized to sexuality. They are first learning of the dual polarity male and female within us all, whether we are male or female. Daniel Odier's uses this primarily as a sensory exploration, destined to live the moment of consciousness, the integration of emotion and thought in daily life.
In Tantrism, the frantic search for a path that will come out of our problems is an illusion, only acceptance of our reality with its lights and shadows can we afford to live mindfully.
It is in this perspective that proposes an alternative approach to sexuality, seen as a form of meditation, where each partner learns to live a deep sense of unity with itself and with each other. Specific techniques can be used to facilitate this approach: different forms of meditation, massage ...
Breathing is central and, through it, a relaxation of the body and an awareness of the muscles of the lower abdomen, perineum, genitals. Men and women are invited to deepen orgasm, what passes for men with a discovery of orgasm without ejaculation. It is not to control ejaculation, but to progressively forget, insists Daniel Odier.
The ecstasy beyond Tantric Massage performance
He warns against placements that reduce Tantrism to a set of techniques leading to ecstasy and offering dances, massages and energy technologies, enhanced by various rituals and a so-called spiritual discourse.
All this is a fantasy, it is only to seek a more powerful sexuality. If Tantra is an art of ecstasy in love is all that life has to become a trance and that by an awareness of the moment, our unity to the world, at all times and in all activities of life. Research techniques of ecstasy is the opposite of that Tantra Daniel Odier defined as "spontaneous ecstasy," the title of his latest book (ed. Actes Sud).
But the intuitions Tantric well understood can be used to encourage reflection that revolves around the personal development, as explained Paule Solomon in his book The Light of Burning Love (ed. Albin Michel). A theme that takes in personal development, seminars on the relationship and the exploration of the five senses.
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