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Sex, Orgasm, and the Mind of Clear Light: The Sixty-four Arts of Gay Male Love | 
enlarge | Author: Jeffrey Hopkins Publisher: North Atlantic Books Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $13.69 You Save: $1.26 (8%)
New (2) Used (6) from $13.67
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 747864
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 150 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.4
ISBN: 1556432747 Dewey Decimal Number: 613.96086642 EAN: 9781556432743 ASIN: 1556432747
Publication Date: June 25, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: New. We ship daily.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description In this ground-breaking work, Tibetan Buddhist scholar Jeffrey Hopkins has adapted Tibetan philosopher Gedun Chopel's heterosexual sex manual Tibetan Arts of Love as a gay sex guide. Interweaving ecstatic poetry and prose, Hopkins shows how sexual passion can open the door to spiritual growth.
Hopkins argues that orgasm itself can bring lovers to a powerful level of consciousness. Beautifully written, the techniques show that pinching, scratching, union from the rear, switching roles, thrill cries, and oral sex all have an impact on erotic life. Hopkins concludes with four "ruminations" on the sex-friendly nature of Tibetan Buddhism.
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| Customer Reviews:
Not problematic December 17, 2004 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
Those who are actually familiar with tantra know that certain generation practices may entail generating oneself as a consort regardless of one's current external gender. So for those who find the idea of polarity confusing - fear not, you have all the yab and all the yum you need regardless of what hangs betwixt thy knees. I cannot say more on this. In general, this book does wonders to correct the silly ideas regarding the relationship between gender versus sexuality (they ARE different you know) and the difference between inner channels and outer physical genitalia. Well, this book does that if you can read between the lines. The book makes much more sense if you have a background in both the shared and exceptional teachings. This book adds to the massive collection of evidence that says no gay practitioner should EVER doubt that his or her body, speech, and mind are a suitable basis for every possible realization. So go practice! The other shore awaits!
Problematic November 29, 2004 6 out of 39 found this review helpful
Everyone is worthy of compassionate understanding. Some people are just constituted differently. Nevertheless, re-writing this book to serve the gay community is problematic, when the underlying premise of the original (Tibetan) text was the ultimate union of the 'yab-yum' (Tibetan equivalent of yin-and-yang) - the 'male' and 'female' principles in the cosmos. Does it make any sense, when viewed as a union of two 'yabs' or two 'yums'? Without 'yab-yum' - none us could be born in the first place, the same applies to the phenomenal universe. How much so, then, must the ultimate union embrace finding ourselves in a 'union of the opposites.' Can you have a magnet, with two 'north poles' or two 'south poles'? Wil your electrical utilities work, with two positive or two negative wires? We all know the answer to that.
Good read for a Gay novice June 21, 2000 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
For anyone unfamilar with various Gay sexual activities or the theory of Tantra, this book can be enlightening. For anyone seeking revelatory practices or ideas, it is disappointing.
Good read for a Gay novice June 21, 2000 8 out of 14 found this review helpful
For anyone unfamilar with various Gay sexual activities or the theory of Tantra, this book can be enlightening. For anyone seeking revelatory practices or ideas, it is disappointging.
Get happy, get wise February 11, 1999 89 out of 96 found this review helpful
The premise of this work is that, as nearly everyone engages in sexual activity, it seems a shame to divorce it from one's (Buddhist) spiritual path since sexual activity offers one many opportunities to achieve knowledge and direct experience of the nature of one's mind. This book is a gay (male) adaptation by Dr. Hopkins of his earlier publication, a translation of Gendun Chopel's heterosexually oriented "Tibetan Arts of Love." Both books are a combination sex-primer (more detailed than the Kama Sutra) and introduction to some ways of thinking about sexuality in Buddhist and especially vajrayana contexts. Dr. Hopkins' gay adaptation is very well done, and it is illustrated with photos of two handsome models discreetly demonstrating the attitudes described in the "practical" chapters, though not the actual positions themselves (some of which are quite difficult to visualize from the text alone). Given that this is a close and faithful adaptation of the earlier work, its lack of interpretive material is understandable but sorely missed. I particularly wanted more on the different types of (gay) men and their subtypes. However, this is a groundbreaking work, and will continue to be a valuable resource for years to come. It definitely conveys a gay-affirmative view of sex and spirituality - something which is not easy to find anywhere, but is particularly difficult to find within the American Buddhist community.
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