Studies show that approximately half of all women experience some kind of sexual difficulty at one point in their lives—from lack of interest to problems with orgasm and everything in between. These issues can follow them outside of the bedroom, impacting their health, happiness, and relationships.
But it doesn’t have to be that way. In her new book Better Sex through Mindfulness (Greystone Books, April 2018), psychologist and sex researcher Dr. Lori Brotto offers a groundbreaking approach to increasing desire, arousal, and satisfaction. Her secret? Mindfulness. By practicing simple exercises daily for at least 4-8 weeks, she’s found that women from all walks of life can improve their sexual experiences, reduce sex-related distress, boost mood, and increase overall sexual satisfaction.
Ready to give it a try? In this special for Wellness magazine, Dr. Brotto offers a sneak peek from Better Sex through Mindfulness, just for you:
The Raisin: Eating Meditation for Better Sex
Whether you have never practiced mindfulness in your life or you have a regular meditation practice, I encourage you to try the following eating meditation now. You may choose to read through the following exercise in full before moving on to the practice. Alternatively, the Internet offers an assortment of free audioguides of the eating meditation, delivered in slightly different ways. For example, Bob Stahl has a YouTube video entitled “Raisin Meditation”* that you can use if you prefer to be guided through the instructions.
As you practice, it is likely that your mind will wander. This is not your fault, and it does not mean you are doing the exercise incorrectly. When this happens, you are encouraged to just notice this and gently bring your attention back to the raisin. There is as much mindfulness in noticing that your mind has wandered off somewhere away from the raisin as there is in continually paying attention to the raisin.
You can then move through … three levels of inquiry. First, what physical sensations did you notice? What other sensations were you aware of? Could you describe those sensations in even more detail? How long did those sensations last? How did you know the taste was sweet? What part of the tongue tasted sweetness? Did it stay the same over time or did it shift in any way? If so, in what way? Did you notice an impulse or urge to chew? If so, how did you first notice that impulse/urge? How did you become aware of it?
Next, consider how being aware of a raisin in this way is different from how you normally interact with (that is, consume) raisins. Specifically, how was paying attention to eating a raisin in this way different from how you might normally eat a raisin?
Finally, consider how this exercise might be relevant to your own experience of sexuality. What was it like to focus intently on sensation moment by moment? Did you observe anything about the process of paying attention that could be relevant to sex? If you experienced some salivation while the raisin was in your mouth before you began chewing, could this teach you anything about your own anticipation of sex? Do you anticipate certain outcomes of events before they even happen? Do you anticipate disastrous outcomes from sex with a partner, such as a lack of your own response or negativity from a partner’s response? How might observing the link between expecting to chew the raisin and the mouth’s salivation in anticipation of chewing be relevant to how you anticipate events in your own life?
Excerpted from Better Sex through Mindfulness: How Women Can Cultivate Desire by Lori A. Brotto, PhD (Greystone Books, April 2018). Adapted and reproduced with permission
About author
Dr. Lori Brotto is a Professor in the UBC Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, and a Registered Psychologist in Vancouver, Canada. She is the Executive Director of the Women’s Health Research Institute of BC located at BC Women’s Hospital. Dr. Brotto holds a Canada Research Chair in Women’s Sexual Health. She is the director of the UBC Sexual Health Laboratory where research primarily focuses on developing and testing psychological and mindfulness-based interventions for women with sexual desire and arousal difficulties and women with chronic genital pain. Dr. Brotto is an Associate Editor for the Archives of Sexual Behavior, has 150 peer-reviewed publications, is the Sexual Health expert writer for the Globe and Mail, and is frequently featured in the media on topics related to sexuality.
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