At 22, I was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease. The symptoms and debilitating flare-ups became so bad that it led to an invasive surgery in college. After that experience, I had constant anxiety because I knew that I could have a severe health crisis at any moment. It even impacted my social life, and I isolated myself to manage my anxiety.
One night, a friend had a birthday party, and I decided to go because I wanted some connection. I remember talking to a woman who had a vibrancy and magnetism about her. I was attracted to her confidence. In the conversation, she casually mentioned a practice called Orgasmic Meditation (OM). My interest was piqued, and I wanted to know more. A week later, I went to an OM event.
The event’s host had the same confidence and vibrancy as the woman at the birthday party. That night, she shared some very vulnerable stuff about herself—about her connection to women and how she came into her personal power due to Orgasmic Meditation. She felt so confident and alive. I wanted that kind of confidence for myself. I had always wanted to be able to express myself in a vulnerable way but didn’t know how. I thought perhaps OM would help.
I signed up for a class to learn about Orgasmic Meditation. I met more women who practiced OM and noticed they had an incredible ability to articulate their desires. That was something that I had a hard time doing. Although they supported me, it still took me a while to ask for an OM. I was just too timid.
Eventually, I gathered the courage to ask someone I knew who had done the practice. He assured me several times on the way that I could cancel the OM at any point, which I appreciated because it allowed me to relax a bit. In that first OM, I couldn’t feel a thing in my genitals. Was there something wrong with me? We decided to try a second OM. Still, I felt nothing. I remembered something someone had told me about noticing bodily sensations wherever they were. So that’s what I did. I noticed a buzzing heat in my arms and softness in my belly. I put my attention there. That helped me stay present during the early phase of my practice when the sensation in my genitals was faint.
Though I didn’t feel that much in my first OMs, I kept at it; I knew I was healing my body. I would always feel calmer by the end, as though a pressure in my body was released, and I could relax. I continued to OM more regularly, and I had to keep finding my voice to ask for OMs. Each time I asked, I felt I gained more access to my self-expression.
I’ve also gotten better at noticing my feelings as they come up in Orgasmic Meditation, which has helped me share them with people in my life. I remember an OM during which I felt a heavy sadness in my chest, and during the frames, my stroker shared that he felt sad during the same part of the OM. Something was healing about feeling that connection and intimacy with another person.
I feel more vibrant now than I have in years. My body doesn’t feel so inflamed with Crohn’s, which I attribute to my OM practice. Orgasmic Meditation has challenged me daily to keep showing up, heal in connection, and bring my voice out.