Tao of Tantra

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The TAO OF TANTRA

Is it disgusting, boring, worthy and dangerous, or can Tantra offer self-realisation by


having a good time?

The Tao is the One, the source (1); Tantra is to expand and to liberate (2). Both see the
world "not as a vale of tears, of sorrow or of suffering, but of subjective and objective
beauty, a world of reality, neither an illusion nor an evil...the path is smooth and
straight". The aim is enlightenment: Union with the Divine (3), the means, sexual ecstasy.
The practices are lofty and profound, sacred and profane, barring nothing except harming
another.(4)

While the Tao is Harmony, Tantra "challenges practitioners immediately to see all things
and all experiences as intrinsically pure and innately perfect.... including situations
meant to shock, repulse or terrify ... heart and mind will be illuminated"(5). Courting
the disapproval of society, Tantra bashes down boundaries, barriers and taboos,
prescribing "forbidden acts"(6), opening windows to spiritual independence, creating
opportunities for grasping the moment, shoving you along the "short path" to ultimate
peace, the indescribable experience of subtle clear light.

Flavoured by its roots, Hindu ritual is based on surrender(6), eating forbidden meat and
drinking forbidden alcohol. Women practitioners (personifying the goddess Shakti) are
seated either Right or Left of their male (Shiva) partners in the tantric circle. In the Right-
Hand Ritual members enjoy sex with their own partner, in the Left-Hand Ritual with
others, of any or no caste and regardless of sexual appeal. Rituals culminate in orgasm,
with Shiva ejaculating in ecstatic surrender to the power of Shakti, the divine.

The mechanistic nature of the rituals and unofficial use of drugs help participants
overcome apprehension, inhibitions and aversion to such practices as breaking caste
taboos, ingrained over lifetimes in the Hindu consciousness. Liberation from conditioning
of caste, taboo and convention leads to a freedom from fear possibly comparable with
that of a committed Christian or Jew discovering that sin has been abolished.
For many this is enlightenment enough. Others continue to surrender: possessions,
dwelling, family, becoming Saddhu, beyond ritual. Beyond the beyond, the Aghora sect
live tantra "at the Left Hand of God" (7), frequenting cremation-grounds, eating human
flesh and excrement, having sex with the dead, surrendering all attachment to shorten
their chosen path by many incarnations.

For the male and female Buddhist, with their "inner experience of dissatisfaction with
this existence"(8), the focus is bliss rather than sexual ecstasy. The Right-Hand path
means practising alone or "Single Cultivation"; Left-Hand or "Dual Cultivation" is with a
partner, preferably a member of the same tantric family: teacher, pupil, co-practitioner(5).
A man should not surrender semen, in fact if he "spills it, this is considered a great fault
.... a very grave mistake"(9). The reward for correct practice is enlightenment in just one
lifetime.

"Addicted to sin and anger"(3), we in the West yearn for ecstasy yet pollute the practice
of pleasure with demons of Shame, Guilt, and Fear of punishment(10). A Western guru
diverts such "demons" by encouraging an attitude of Reverence or describing practices as
Sacred, but labels as "shame-muscles" parts of the body which might otherwise be
described as pleasure-zones. Judaeo-Christian patriarchal conditioning influences western
tantra towards the socially approved ideal of the faithful couple. Carefully drawn
boundaries and use of psycho-therapy and counselling help groups and individuals meet
fears and inhibitions arising from repression or sexual wounding earlier in life. This
approach suits seekers who might otherwise not take even a first step on the tantric path.
Enlightenment here could mean freedom from sexual trauma.

Indian classics advise setting aside twelve years yogic preparation of the physical and
energy-body, Taoists (11) recommend Tai Chi and QiGong to open and clear energy
channels(3). Western tantrics, wanting immediate enlightenment, now, at the weekend
workshop, might find certain practices overload the nervous system, with painful and
sometimes dangerous long-term side-effects.

Is Tantra something more than disgusting, boring, worthy and dangerous? Stoned and
inebriated, fearful of the great fault, the grave mistake, plagued by guru-demons of shame
and guilt, we seek the true spirit of tantra, the path of ecstasy. Can we attain self-
realisation by having a good time?

"Secret Instructions of the Jade Chamber"(12) is a Taoist text on harmonising male


(yang) and female (yin) energies. Sin is not recognised, nor any concept of right and
wrong beyond individual conscience. With "...all things and all experiences intrinsically
pure and innately perfect..." it is unnecessary to create difficult and painful processes.
Pain and difficulties arise only from our responses to experiences.

Taoist Tantra is mutual nourishment, yin drawing on yang and yang from yin. Single,
Dual and Multiple Cultivation can be practised, for pleasure, health and longevity,
healing, self-realisation and, ultimately, experiencing a self beyond the cycle of life and
death: Re-Union with the Tao, the universal Source. As above, so below: each of us a
microcosm, two heavenly cycles fusing in the moment of sexual climax.

Taoist methodology begins with the familiar: the physical and the formulaic. In
progressing from novice to adept, the practitioner learns to transcend form and formula.
There is no sacred focus, all human sex being sacred in the union of Yang, the force of
Heaven, with Yin, the power of Earth.

Sex is seen as the servant, not the master. Practitioners learn to control and harvest the
abundance of reproductive power, otherwise wasted in unmindful intercourse: yang
having the power to repopulate a continent in a single ejaculation, yin with eggs to
generate hundreds of lives. If the products of our pleasure are not being deployed to start
new life, say the Taoists, we can internalise the intense energy, all the hormones and
nutrients, to improve our own lives.

Repression of the natural urges is considered unhealthy. In the words of Mantak Chia, a
modern Taoist Master, "Sex is natural. The human being has a powerful sex drive - and
you cannot keep the pingpong balls under water. Sometime, somewhere, they pop back
up, maybe as disease, maybe as emotional problems, causing energy blockages, leading
to illness. The Tao is the way of recycling, not repression."

Men and women redirect orgasmic energy through the Microcosmic Orbit (Small
Heavenly Cycle), for good health and long life, with the additional benefit for women of
controllable and painless menstruation (13). Practitioners enjoy increased vigour,
improved stamina and enhanced sensation through "whole-body-orgasm". Harmonising
male and female peaks and valleys of arousal and orgasm without energy-loss enables
longer and more pleasurable sexual encounters.

Woman loses energy more through menstruation and childbirth than orgasm. For man, it
is vital to open the Orbit otherwise non-ejaculatory orgasm can cause aching, congestion,
wet dreams or headaches. Retention and recycling is important but Taoists also make
recommendations for seminal release related to the age of the practitioner and season e.g.
rarely in Winter, a time for conservation, more frequently in Spring - and the springtime
of a relationship, with its urgent need for surrender to the goddess. However, Secret
Instructions of the Jade Chamber contra-indicates practice when in the grip of emotional
extremes and unbridled passion, then adding that because you may become ill from it,
you may also be cured by it! Other contra-indications include practising when drunk, too
soon after a meal, and when constipated.

Mantak Chia speaks of the spiritual power: "You can either pray 100,000 hours, or you
can consciously guide the sexual energy in the Microcosmic Orbit"

The Tao is the way of harmony, Tantra expands and liberates. Without gender
discrimination, rules, hierarchy or clergy, requiring no conversion or belief system,
offering guidance rather than dogma, the Tao of Tantra is a short sweet path to spiritual
independence, or your own conception of self-realisation or enlightenment. These words
of the Dalai Lama capture the essence: "if the meditator applies certain meditative
techniques it is possible to create opportunities for grasping the moment and consciously
generating the experience of subtle clear light...during the time of death, of deep sleep,
and sexual climax."(9) If His Holiness were a woman, he might have included the
moment of childbirth!

RECOMMENDED FURTHER READING

Among the latest publications in this field is the delightful and informative

Learn more

For readable translations true to the traditional Indian and Chinese Tantric Classics, with
commentaries and stimulating illustrations, not much in 20 years has improved on:
Sexual Secrets, by Nik Douglas & Penny Slinger. Inner Traditions India 1979, ISBN
0892812664

Detailed formulas, practical applications, clear illustrations and step-by-step guidelines


from the definitive writer on Taoist Tantra:

REFERENCES

1. Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu tr JC Wu, Shambala 1989 ISBN 0877733880


2. Ecstasy through Tantra, John Mumford, Llewellyn 1988, ISBN 0875424945
3. Principles of Tantra, ed A Avalon. Ganesh & Co (Madras) 1914
4. Cultivating the Energy of Life, Eva Wong, Shambala 1998, ISBN 1570623422
5. Passionate Enlightenment, Miranda Shaw, Princeton 1994 ISBN 069101090
6. TheTantricTradition, Agehananda Bharati, Rider 1965
7. Aghora, Robert Svoboda, Sadhana 1999 ISBN 0965620840
8. The Dalai Lamas Book of Wisdom, ed M Bunson, Rider 1998 ISBN 0712671196
9. Healing Anger, The Dalai Lama tr GTJinpa, Snow Lion 1997 ISBN 1559390735
10. Emotional Intelligence, Daniel Goleman, Bloomsbury 1996, ISBN 0747528306
11. Taoist Secrets of Love, Mantak Chia, Aurora 1984 ISBN 0943358191
12. The Taoist Experience, Livia Kohn, SUNY 1993 ISBN 0791415805
13. Healing Love through the Tao, Mantak & Maneewan Chia, Healing Tao Books
1986 ISBN 0935621059

Kris Deva North

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