We have to talk....! by Diana Daffner
There’s a popular cliché about being able to recognize married
couples at a restaurant – they’re the ones not talking
to each other! Two people sitting quietly, each preoccupied
with their own thoughts. Well, you might say, of course spouses
speak, and they do so frequently. How else could we handle the
myriad tasks of living together? Yet many of us yearn for something
more intimate than the logistical dialogs required to organize
family outings, deal with illnesses, take the car to the repair
shop or pick up a child after school.
We may remember how it was when we first met. We may remember
how we hung on each other’s words, spent hours on the phone,
listened with rapt attention to each other’s stories. At the
beginning, we may have overflowed with things to share with
each other. Each story, regardless of how many times we had
told it before, was new to the listener.
When stories are told, an inner spirit within us is nourished,
both as speaker and as listener. As listener, we absorb not
just the content of the story, but also the enthusiasm or concern
of the person telling it. When we listen closely to our beloved
partner, we become aware of the non-verbal communication that
comes with the story. Our shared experience of listening and
being listened to makes us feel closer, more intimate, more
drawn toward each other.
So, what happens as time goes by and we have heard all the
stories, when even talking about our day at work seems like
a huge effort, when we just want to come home and relax, when
it feels as if there are no more stories?
What happens when the excitement of a new relationship simmers
down, when we are no longer motivated by a desire to get to
know this new person in our lives?
What happens is that we no longer have the mutual benefit
that once enriched our being together. What happens is that
this natural pathway toward intimate union becomes less available
to us. The energy within our relationship and between our souls
begins to diminish.
The spirit within us seeks to join us together, delights
in the experience of lovers in love with each other! A flow
of words from one to the other, and back again, can be an exciting
dance of energy that opens our hearts and awakens our sexual
interest.
Surprisingly, it is not always the content of the
conversation that matters. In fact, sometimes content can distract
us from the deeper loving presence that we desire. Here are
some fun ways to communicate out loud and verbally without specific
content:
+ Sit quietly for five minutes, gaze softly at one another and
say your names back and forth to each other.
+ Speak to each other using gibberish - nonsense words that
you make up. Try saying something like “Ummba gamani saysay
nubanee!” A playful and silly reply might be, “Menocka du nuba
su!” Experiment with expressing different emotions and feel
the intimacy grow!
+ A Hakomi exercise called “Me, Me, Me” invites each person
to tell a story about themselves using only the words “I” or
“me.” Although the speaker feels as if he or she is telling
a complete story (maybe even an important and oft-repeated story!)
but only the words “I” or “me” are spoken allowed. The partner
listening tries to understand what is being said, not by paying
attention to the words, but by noticing what is significant
about the speaker, appreciating who they are, what their attitude
is, how they express themselves. The key here, as in all of
these practices, is that the listener is engaged with the speaker,
listening to the story-telling rather than the story-content.
In this exercise, both people are nourished in the same way
that new lovers are when they first begin to hear each other’s
stories. Mutual attraction builds, creating a magnetic and authentic
resonance between the two.
+ Pillow Talk: Invite your beloved to lay his or her head
on your pillow, with your faces only inches apart. For the next
five minutes, speak to each other only in present tense, describing
whatever you notice in the current moment, whether it is pleasant
or unpleasant. There are no replies to what is said, only each
person taking a turn to make a statement about something being
felt, noticed, touched, heard, smelled or seen. For example,
you might say “I feel your knees touching mine,” or “I hear
the clock ticking,” or “I see a smile on your face.” Your
partner might say “My shoulder feels sore,” or “I’m having trouble
breathing,” or “My stomach is growling.” Keep the "conversation"
going, each of you taking turns making a statement. You can
even repeat yourself if you notice nothing new. It is not the
specific statements, but the shared experience of each of you
being authentically present that begins to lure you together.
As the cliché goes, when someone says the dreaded words “We
have to talk,” it signifies a dissatisfaction, an unhappiness,
a problem. Before it gets to that point, consider inviting your
partner to play one of these verbal games with you. Get undressed
and speak gibberish, or tell a meaningful story using only “me”
and “I.” Try adding the word “you.” Or lay naked,
faces close together, and report to each other what your moment-by-moment
experience is. Say your names back and forth to each other.
If you’ve been to an Intimacy Retreat or learned some Tantra
Tai Chi, use the “Tantra Trilogy” of sex, heart and Bindi! Snuggle
close together as you experience and name aloud each of these
powerful centers of energy.
Notice how your bodies respond as the energy between you
starts to heat up, as the space between you becomes charged
with the dynamic presence of love.
Or ... play one of these conversation games when you’re sitting
at a restaurant, waiting to be served. No one will ever guess
that you’re married!
© Diana Daffner
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HeartSpeak Conversation
Cards: Questions to share with your Beloved
(some are silly, some profound, some sexual...).
A great way to get a conversation going!
CD: Guided Practices in Sacred Loving
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