More on the Power of Radical Honesty

orgy saving the planet

Philippe and I in the shower

So apparently I am a little bit dense lol. Last night I ended nearly two years of celibacy and had sex with my new lover. For me, this romance feels very new. Apparently, according to him, he’s been flirting with me for a long time lol. Like … years. The reason I didn’t think of it as flirting was that there was so much genuine caring in it that I thought of it as friendship. Not superficial friendship. Real friendship.

I felt comfortable having sex with him, even though he is married and has several other lovers, because of the presence and communication skills that he brings to every one of his relationships. His real life is very close to alignment with one of my ideal life mantras:

“All of your relationships are total commitments, and do not conflict with each other in any way.”

– A Course in Miracles

feeling not good enoughSo of course as our entire relationship has been built on radical honesty and communication skills, last night before we had sex, I continued to be as transparent and honest as I possibly could. (After all, I tried to talk him out of dating me at our erotic party lol.)

One of the fears that came up for me quite suddenly while we were drinking raspberry liqueur and holding each other was fear that I would not “measure up” as a lover. After all, he has so many lovers, and I have been celibate for so long.

Many people would never say this out loud, but I did. It sounded very serious coming out of my mouth, like the WORST POSSIBLE THING EVER.

“I’m worried that compared to all your other lovers, I just won’t be good enough.”

There was a very pregnant pause as the street cars of San Francisco clanged in the background and we looked at each other, perhaps both shocked by the confession…

And then we both started laughing. Hard. We could not stop laughing. How big and ugly this fear seemed before I said it, and how puny and ridiculous it sounded when it actually came out of my mouth and was confronted with the light of consciousness.

Still laughing, he pulled me to his chest and kissed me. And he said:

“Well, my dear … If you’re not good enough … [long pause] … we’ll just have to practice some more.”

LOL. It was an amazing night. Full of honesty and connection and mutual acceptance and discovery. And today not only do I feel joyful, I also celebrate that this new relationship lives in freedom. Excluding nothing and nobody. I celebrate his wife and his other lovers as contributors to … not detractors from … our relationship. I feel no co-dependent pulling on each other in either direction, just loving in freedom. And I feel excited to explore the possibilities.

Love,
Erika Awakening

If you’d like to learn how to become this honest, present, and fearless, check out:

The 30-Day Communication Challenge

The 30-Day Sexual Abundance Challenge

The 30-Day Becoming Fearless Challenge

The 30-Day Quantum Leap

If you missed our earlier articles about monogamy, check them out here:

The Quiet Desperation of Monogamy

Five Reasons Why Monogamy Is An Absolute Bar to World Peace

How Monogamy Is Like Racial Segregation

How Specialness Ruined Sex for Everyone

Saving the Planet One “Orgy” At A Time

Love,

Erika Awakening, Teaching People How to Create Everyday Miracles at TAPsmarter

Erika Awakening is one of the world’s foremost experts on eradicating limiting beliefs and living life on your own terms.