Thursday, August 5, 2010

Special Touch


Posted: 04 Aug 2010 05:41 PM PDT
GAYTWOGETHER-100808-3w Developing skill with touch is an important part of having successful relationships. Touch is critical to human beings.The love and support communicated through touch affirms our connection to others and has even been shown to contribute to the health of our immune systems. Many studies have shown that when infants are neglected and not held, they fail to thrive. Something similar seems true for us adults.
Too many men have limited skill when it comes to touch. Their experience with the way men make contact is limited -- a slap on the back from Dad, wrestling with friends growing up, the touch of a boyfriend during sex. For others, touch has too often been abusive -- being smacked around by schoolmates or parents, or uninvited and unwanted sexual touch.
Maybe you’ve found yourself in a bar talking with a friend, only to find someone rubbing up against you. This can be fun and a turn-on or annoying and intrusive, depending on your frame of mind and how you feel about the person initiating the physical contact.
Unfortunately, some men have the opinion that if you’re a gay man and I’m a gay man, then I automatically have the right to touch or grope you if I want to. And even more unfortunately, others of us have never learned that we have the right to say “no” to unwelcome touch.

Have you ever gone to a movie with a date and found him stroking your arm over and over and over again in exactly the same way -- almost as if he was a robot? You suspected that he meant to be affectionate, but pretty soon you were ready to run screaming from your seat! Touch that doesn’t have presence and attention behind it can create the same sensation as fingernails raking down a black board.
Physical contact that works and is welcome can have just the opposite effect -- calming us, drawing us closer to the person with whom we are sharing touch.
To increase the quality of your touch, think of your hands as an extension of your heart. Instead of casually brushing your hand over someone, bring focus to your touching; you are touching them with your heart. Imagine that this is the only person in the world who exists right now. He has your undivided attention while you are in contact with him. Take your time.
Not all touch is sexual. If touch equals sex for you, you may need to slow down and explore a bit. Friendly, inviting contact between people can be reassuring, comforting and enjoyable in its own right and need not be an invitation to sex. Some people are uncomfortable with touch when they assume that the person initiating contact has an unspoken erotic agenda.
Touch which is repetitive or constant becomes boring and easy to ignore. Vary the intensity and pressure of your touch. This is true whether you are touching a friend to make a point during conversation or whether you are caressing your partner to bring him to orgasm. Touch can be with finger tips or the whole palm. It can be quick and invigorating -- think of a back rub -- or slow and soft.
Learning new ways to make physical contact increases our “touch vocabulary,” and helps us communicate with others.
John R. Ballew, M.S. an author and contributor to GAYTWOGETHER, is a licensed professional counselor in private practice in Atlanta. He specializes in issues related to coming out, sexuality, relationships and spirituality. If you have any questions or comments you can submit them directly to GAYTWOGETHER or John R. Ballew, M.S. - www.bodymindsoul.org

~~~ thanks to Michael of GAYTWOGETHE



5 comments:

PhotosbyErich said...

Justi... These posts are helpful for anyone in a relationship. Good ideas for making the people special to us feel special!

Thanks for passing along useful things like this to yer readers. Hope all is well with you!

jimm said...

hrmmm... i dont think any 'touch' is mind-less, incidental maybe. I had a boss who was too touchy-feely. Once i set him straight he didnt like me all that much. But being that im hearing impaired, friendly touches of assurance are kind of a confidence builder for me.

Unknown said...

Without touch, we all would go insane. I went through a stretch before I came out that I looked forward to handshakes. It was the only physical contact that I got. And I remember some AIDS patients saying that the only people that touched them was nurses taking blood samples.

Thanks for this post Justin. It's a reminder that we all need a little more physical interaction.

JustinO'Shea said...

TOUCH - an experiment. You may not want to read this; it's not nice.

"A hundred years ago" - give or take some decades either way, scientists on human behavior conducted an experiment on babies. . . (see, I told you. . ) and the need for touch.

Two controlled groups. Group A treated normally, with lots of touch, holding, coddling, cuddling etc. . all those nice feeley-touchey things.

Group B had none of this; just the barest minimum.

Group A "flourished", healthy, normal. . .Group B were sickly, apathetic, detached. These babies died!

Horrible, isn't it! In lectures on behavior and interaction if this study is even mentioned it always creates a sadness in the group. No one is proud of this at all.

It is used as a dire example of how important sensations of touch and the feelings communicated are so vital to our life. . .our self-esteem, all the stuff which makes being alive, in love, alert, awareness so tremedous and exciting.

Older people, those elderly who are alone, in nursing homes, hospitals, etc may have the best of physical care and such, but many many deeply craved being held, touched, comforted, feelings of affection and tenderness. It can be said, literally, many are STARVED for affection and touch.

A kiss on the forehead or cheek is something older folk cherish and hold onto. . .long after you've gone from their room.

Some people -- young and old, especially the young -- who are tuch-deprived seek it "in all the wrong places" often getting into trouble and in dangerous situations. They are starving. . .anything is better than nothing.

Read Stew's sharing about handshakes. . . . witness. . .

Think about it. . . ., you can convey much more oftentimes by a look or a touch than you can with words. Go up and read again jimm 's comments. ;-)

ciao ~ justin. . .[huggssss]

Gary Kelly said...

As much as I appreciate the value of touch, and happily recommend it to others, I can't handle it personally. Freaks me out... unless it's a dog.

Long and boring story but it's true that if you're deprived of touch and affection as a kid, you'll never be capable of expressing it - or even comfortable being on the receiving end, for that matter.