How Goddess Amina Supports the Restoration and Reclamation of Erotic Pleasure & Power for Black Women and Men

 

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I had been aware of Goddess Amina and the Atlanta Institute of Tantra for some time, but what brought her work to my attention was her Divine Portal Yoni Oracle Deck & Guidebook – a magnificent oracle deck celebrating and honoring the wide variety of exquisite and beautiful black and brown vulvas with celebrated correlations to elements, qualities, rituals and stones.  A dear friend of Amina’s, Kimberly, had participated in one of my live Genital Dearmouring trainings, and filled me in on the magnificence of Goddess Amina and the sacred spaces she’s created for Black women and the safe and sacred exploration and reclamation of embodied pleasure.  Since then, we’ve been collaborating on a 3 Keys to Genital Dearmouring training for her practitioners and holding space for what else wants to come forward from our alignment and shared values in this sacred work.

The Atlanta Institute of Tantra: AtlTantra.org

 

Goddess Amina Peterson is a force of nature, a sexual revolutionary, and erotic abolitionist.  She holds a sacred space for our natural and authentic sexual embodiment to be remembered, reclaimed, and honored in a variety of spaces.  Some of the experiences that have informed her journey have included serving as a somatic healer, trained in Somatic Experiencing, Reiki and Yoga, as well as serving as a birth doula, sexual surrogate, personal trainer and sex coach. 

She founded the Atlanta Institute of Tantra in 2017 which has become the premier institute for training, certifying, and providing resources to Sexologists, Sacred Sex Workers, Sex Doulas, Cuddle Professionals and Bodyworkers who specialize in Somatic Sexology – a spiritual embodiment organization and community that centers on Black women and their pleasure.  Amina and the Institute also trains and certifies Somatic Sexologists, hosts multi-day Bliss retreats and works with clients 1:1 virtually and in person in Panama City and Atlanta.

We explore: 

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How receiving a non-erotic Esalen-style massage when Amina owned a coffee cafe in Chicago in 2004, felt like being made love to and changed her life – inspiring her body to want to heal people with her hands, and within 10 days, asked for a divorce, closed her cafe, and enrolled in massage school.

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How Amina wanted to make her clients feel how she felt receiving that massage – waking up the erotic intelligence of the body and how it wants to be touched and showing that this is possible through one’s hands. 

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How Dr. Reggie Ray’s “somatic descent” practice – a deep diving meditation of traversing the body from a place of inquiry and presence lead to navigating a new relationship with her body and understanding what is a true yes and “authentic consent.”

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How there are infinitely vast terrains to feel within the vaginal canal, or between the toes and how inviting a level of playfulness and curiosity supports deepening this intimate awareness with our selves.

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How once belonging is no longer an issue – within one’s self, in relationship, or within a group space, how real consent can feel and look very different for the body.

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How historical societal structures of patriarchy and racism are such that unless you are consciously anti-racist, you can unconsciously be affirming the racist norms that are in existence and the ways this affects particularly women of color in sacred sexuality circles. 

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How sacred sexuality practitioners who are not familiar with the racialized experiences of Black women can start creating safer, more inclusive spaces by co-creating with partners who have the lived experiences of knowing the sensitivities and offenses to the nervous system this can bring, especially in such vulnerable and trust-required spaces involving sexual embodiment and well-being. 

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How models of vulvas, breasts, lingams, and bodies are largely reflective of the white majority and how this affects the developing minds and self-identities of black or brown people who look different from the white majority. 

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How many sacred sexuality teachings and spaces often miss the essential foundations of feeling embodied safety, learning how to down-regulate the nervous system, and nurturing a sense of belonging – a core need of our human species – before jumping into sexual “techniques” and result-oriented practices.

Rahi: Welcome to Organic Sexuality where we explore the restoration of pleasure, the reclamation of sexual sovereignty, and the realization of our embodied sexual nature. An invitation to honor the pleasures of your body by embodying the pleasures of your nature. I'm your host, Rahi Chun. I'm a certified somatic sex educator, a sexological bodyworker and creator of somatic sexual Wholeness.

Rahi: Before today's interview, an announcement that registration for the three keys to genital disarming for reclaiming and expanding pleasure. 2025 is now open. For all details about the course content and super early bird rates, go to somaticsexualwholeness.mykajabi.com. In today's interview with Amina Peterson, we explore questions about spaces exploring the sacredness of sexuality. How is it possible to attune to the authentic consent of the body before developing an intimate connection with our body parts? How can a space be sacred to sexuality if it is not familiar with the ethnic or sociocultural experiences of the sexual beings inhabiting the space?

Rahi: And since safety and belonging is central to the nervous system's, openness and receptivity to pleasure, how safe are tantric and sacred sexuality circles when the space holders are unfamiliar with the racialized experiences of the bodies participating in the spaces they are facilitating? I am so excited to invite Goddess Amina Peterson to the podcast today. Um, I've been following Amina for a couple of years, and it was very fortuitous that I had someone in a recent training who's a dear friend of Amina's, and Kimberly linked this up, and we've been communicating since then and, um, working towards collaborating, and I'm very, very excited to have her on the podcast today. So, goddess Amina Peterson is a force of nature, a sexual revolutionary and erotic abolitionist. I've never heard that term before. I love it. Um, she holds sacred space for our natural and authentic sexual embodiment to be remembered, reclaimed, and honored in a variety of space.

Rahi: Some of the experiences that have informed her journey have included serving as a somatic healer, trained in somatic experiencing reiki and yoga, as well as serving as a birth doula, sexual surrogate personal trainer and sex coach. She founded The Atlanta Institute of Tantra in 2017, which has become the premier institute for training, certifying and providing resources to sexologists sacred sex workers, sex doulas, cuddle professionals and body workers who specialize in somatic sexology. It's become a spiritual embodiment organization and community that centers on black women and their pleasure. Amina in the institute also trains and certifies somatics. Sexologists hosts multi-Day bliss retreats and works with clients one-on-one virtually, and in person in Panama City and in Atlanta, as well as mentoring professional Sexologists Goddess Amina, thank you for joining us today. It's great to see you.

Amina: Thank you for having me. It's, it's great to be here. I'm looking forward to this conversation.

Rahi: Awesome. Me too. So, um, Amina, I usually start off many interviews by asking about the pivotal experiences that have informed guests with what they're doing now. And you have such a, like, varied and, um, diverse, uh, like influences of experiences having been a birth doula, a sexual surrogate, a personal trainer. But I read in a medium, um, article that you received an Esalen-style massage in 2004 that seemed to have really changed your life and lead you to working with sexual embodiment. Um, I'd love to know what was that experience that seemed to have, like, influenced your trajectory?

Amina: Yeah. Uh, it's interesting. I often, I wish I could find the woman that that was, that whose hands were on my body. It was a time in my life where things were, I was young and I was, uh, a go-getter, of sorts. So I had already opened my own business. I have a, I had a cafe, uh, slash bookstore with a performance space. I was a performance poet hobbyist. And so I had this space in, in Chicago on the south side where we, we really didn't have coffee houses. We, this is a food desert and, uh, an area where there weren't a lot of community resources. And so there was a lot of community support in creating this space. But I was exhausted because when you open a coffee shop, you have to wake up at four in the morning to get the coffee ready by five mm-Hmm, and and maybe five 30, but you know, you gotta be ready with coffee or it's not profitable.

Amina: And I was sleep deprived. I was in a marriage that was reflective of lack of sleep, lack of connection, lack of intimacy. Um, and I was just really, really burning both ends of the candle. And I decided to, uh, coming up on my one year anniversary of opening the cafe to have a a get together with some of my girlfriends. And I hired, I brought in a massage therapist. I brought in, um, a like pedicure, a facial, all these people to come in and just kind of pamper us and everybody could just, you know, book their sessions as they wanted when they got there. My only rule was that I was going first for the massage, and I got on that table, and that woman changed my entire life. Um, the style of touch that she offered was a blend between, uh, some like lomi-lomi but really nurturing and almost like a hug. Mm. Uh, and that the ollin technique was just really, uh, it felt like I was being made love to in a way that I had never been made love to before in a way that didn't involve, um, any erotic Mm-Hmm. parts of me, so to speak. Like it awakened erotic energy, but it, it wasn't, it wasn't essential massage. I, you know, she was barefoot hippied out, and I, I was under a sheet. Um, it was, there was no eroticism per se Mm-Hmm.

Rahi: .

Amina: But this, the massage really made me realize that I wanted to make people feel the way that I felt in that moment. Mm-Hmm. And I just remember crying after this session and not like, being really confused about everything, what path I was on, what journey I had taken, what marriage I was in. Um, Mm-Hmm. , everything was all of a sudden just like, what are you doing? Yeah. Like, you could be, you could be doing this, you could be actually healing people with your hands. Wow. And, um, and in the next, you know, seven to 10 days, I, I asked for a divorce. I Whoa. I announced that I would be closing my cafe and I enrolled in massage school. Wow. Like a true Aquarius . Yes.

Rahi: Yes. I know. As a fellow Aquarion. I know, I know . Yes. Yes. Well, this is so amazing because what you are describing is, you know, as you said, it wasn't a, a erotic massage per se, but the quality of presence and touch Mm-Hmm. woke up this, this erotic energy in you, this aliveness in you.

Amina: Right? Yeah. It shifted so much of just like how I understood my body Mm-Hmm. and how really, like how people had been touching my body Mm-Hmm. , like how I had been allowing people to touch me, not knowing what I wanted, how I wanted to be touched. Yes. And she showed me really how I wanted to be touched. Mm-Hmm. . And, um, and she also just showed me that, like, that, that this was possible from the hands. Like that this was possible somehow some way to learn and be skilled enough to place your hands on someone and and awaken everything in them.

Rahi: Yes. Yes. That's the other great thing is it does, like, you know, people really over overfocus on the genitalia and associate sexuality with the genitalia, the skin is like the biggest sex organ. Yes. And you know, just what you shared Amina about, like not knowing what quality of touch that your body wanted until it received it. Mm-Hmm. can just wake up this dormant, you know, this dormant primal aliveness.

Amina: Yeah. Yeah. And it, it did, it did just that, it woke, it woke me up in a way that I, but nothing I was doing, I could continue. Like I've never been so sure about anything in my life except that I was on the wrong path in every way at that moment. And, um, and then that changed.

Rahi: That's amazing.

Amina: Yeah. I went to massage school and I had worked previously as a sex surrogate, not for a very long time. I'd worked under Dr. Dean Dowell in Chicago. And, um, I worked for a little under a year. So I had already been awakened and exposed to the reality that sex work was something beyond survival sex work, which is all I had witnessed up until that point was sex work as street walker. Mm-Hmm. sex work, as, you know, as, as the pimped woman on the street. Mm-Hmm. , I had not seen or had any exposure to sex work before I started working as a sex surrogate. And when I went to massage school, I still wasn't on the mindset that I wanna go back into any sort of sex work. Mm-Hmm. . But when I got there and I started touching people, it was, um, I, the way that I touched, the way that I naturally went to touch people was sensuous. It was something where I really wanted to make contact with all of their skin. I wanted to feel what I felt on the table. And I wanted them to feel that. And I remember my teachers, some of my teachers just, you know, really saying, wow, you really, you have the touch part down. We gotta get you on the muscles and the, you know, naming you pass the test, but the touch part you have down. Right. And shortly after, after completing school I school, I started adding sensual touch, erotic touch to my sessions.

Rahi: Yeah, yeah.

Amina: Yeah. And that's what led me to even find the word tantra, because up until that moment, I had never heard the word tantra. Mm-Hmm. . Mm-Hmm. . Um, and it wasn't until I completed massage school and, you know, offer started offering sensual massage and someone asked for a tantra massage. I look up tantra massage, they're making more money. I was like, well, what is this tantra stuff? Yeah. Uh, . And, and that led me down v various rabbit holes, uh, led me to Buddhism. It led me to, um, uh, to understanding neo tantra to, uh, it led me down so many pathways after that, which . Yeah.

Rahi: This is so awesome. I, I, I want to explore some of those rabbit holes, but specifically like, you know, Amina, I feel, feel like the, the, the sanctuary you've created with the institute, the Atlanta Institute of Tantra, specifically as a sanctuary to cultivate and, and, and have a safe space for black women to explore their pleasure, their embodiment, you know, their desires is such a unique haven. Um, I'd love to know, what were some of those, like most influential rabbit holes, you know, since massage school that made you specifically envision the Atlanta Institute of Tantra for black women to really be, feel safe in really embodying all of who they are?

Amina: Yeah. So there were a few, um, one of the rabbit holes that was probably the biggest and has been the most influential was, um, some just learning about what somatics was like. Just the Mm-Hmm. the language, the, the history. Uh, I was taking, um, an online course with Reggie Ray and, um, who, and I just had never heard anybody speak of the body in that way. Wow. I had never thought of my body in that way. And at this point I'm, I'm pretty well versed in the body. Mm-Hmm. , I thought Mm-Hmm. . Totally. So that was, yeah, that was one rabbit hole that just like, I was like, oh my goodness. Like, this is, I I was longing also for spirituality. Um, I had, you know, left my spiritual tradition and was visiting other spiritual, spiritual traditions and nothing felt right until I found one that was really rooted in the body.

Amina: Hmm. Um, and so that rabbit hole really, really, really shifted things. It also changed my understanding 'cause I was looking for tantra. That's how I ran up on Reggie Ray. Uh, he wrote a book called Tantra, and I was like, oh, he is a tantric llama, let me study on and brought, you know, wrong tantra in my mind once I got there. But also very much the right tantra because it really shifted my understanding about how the body, um, communicates with us. And it allowed me to apply all of that to my erotic work and Mm-Hmm. the spaces that I'm in. So that was one rabbit hole. Mm-Hmm. Yeah. What I, yeah, go ahead. Sorry.

Rahi: Well, no, I, I wanted, because, uh, like I'm not familiar with Reggie's work, and maybe some of our audience members aren't either. So, like, by this time, I understand that you had completed your massage school training, so you understand the anatomy. You, you kind of natural, you know, it sounds like your touch just became very innate, natural. What was it about, um, what you discovered studying with Reggie and, and his approach to Tantra that, um, like built new layers of understanding of, you know, uh, embodiment?

Amina: Yeah. It's, the biggest thing was like, it was, there was no focus on sex at all. So I, like, there was one part of me that was, that was, I'm in the wrong classroom. Where am I at? Mm-Hmm. What's happening here? And but then, because that wasn't the focus, it was just the focus on the entire body. And really, um, one of the lessons was about just diving deep in, there's a practice called somatic descent, and you can Google this. Um, Reggie Ray is, I think it's, it's also on audible with Sounds True, or you can go to Sounds True and, and find, find his work there. But the somatic descent is a meditation that takes place, um, where you just, you literally go into the body, you go behind all of the story, and you just work to drop into the body. And in that space, you get to ask your body questions.

Amina: Mm-Hmm. that you, that you're curious about. And for me, it was in that practice that I really found consent for myself. Mm-Hmm. Right. Like, up until that moment, I don't think I, I knew consent is like no means no, and yes means yes. Mm-Hmm. , I don't, I don't think until I started actually being in my body, practicing trying to exist inside of me being worried about just me for a bit. It wasn't until then that I really started navigating a relationship with, with consent as I now know it. Like this thing that, that bubbles up inside of me and allows me to allow, that allows me to say yes. Um, yeah. That, that's truly my own. Yeah. Yeah. And, and so that embodiment work really, like, um, his work is so deeply rooted in embodiment. Like it is just, it is tantra, it is meditation, it is embodiment.

Amina: It is So, you know, from the tips of your toes, uh, there was one practice where we just had to find like the space in between our big toe and our little toe, our second toe. And just like, feel into that space. Like such, such very specific things that allowed me to realize like just how much I, you know, had been dissociating from my body. Mm-Hmm. had been disconnected from my body. And this is coming from somebody who thinks I know my body and I'm in touch with my body. Mm-Hmm. . And then I moved through this practice and I'm like, oh, there's so much more to learn. I'm, I . I'm just a baby. I don't know what I'm doing here. So that's, and I'm still in that rabbit hole. That rabbit hole has blown my mind. And I, I hang out there quite often. Mm-Hmm. , because it's led me, it's led me to a lot of different somatic practices, a lot of different, um, studying and learning and then also looking at that. 'cause one of the things about a lot of the somatic schools of thought is that they, it's very interesting. They talk about everything except for the genitals. They're like, right. Somatic, somatic somatics, not sex .

Rahi: Yeah. Right.

Amina: Totally. And yeah, so it has left me with this space to play and explore, um, how to articulate Mm-Hmm. All of this beautiful somatic theory from Strozzi, from Peter Levine and from, you know, uh, Stacy Haynes and folks like that. And then like, bring it into this erotic space. Mm-Hmm. , which is so important, especially for those of us who are navigating racialized and gendered, uh, trauma. Societal trauma. Mm-Hmm. . Yeah.

Rahi: Yeah. Absolutely. Like, um, I mean, when you really look at tantra and its purity, it's the art of presence Mm-Hmm. And being present. Mm-Hmm. . And it sounds like Reggie's work just really creates this sanctuary of exploring presence with your own body and your intimate connection with your own body. Yeah. And it's infinite, like that space between the big toe and the second toe. Like, if you can, I mean, it sounds like you've, like bringing that kind quality of awareness to the genitalia and to the pelvis. Whoa. That's just like Yeah. Infinite terrains of, of, of sensation to explore.

Amina: Exactly. Exactly. And it's, it's interesting 'cause I think about like, the work I do with the vaginal canal, and like, how many of us just kind of think, oh, it's just a thing that's there. Not realize like, well, there's these muscles in the front and there's these muscles at in the back and on the right and the left are different muscles. Mm-Hmm. . And you can actually explore each part, front, side, back, whatever. Um, you can get to know the, like all of the layers Mm-Hmm. in the same way that you can get to know that space between your toe Mm-Hmm. . And, um, and so yeah, it just, it, it invites, uh, it invites a level of playfulness too, and curiosity to the body. Mm-Hmm. that I just love, I love to be with, with Yes. In my work. I just love to be with the playfulness that we have the capacity for as humans.

Rahi: Yeah. That's so beautiful. It's like being children. I get, it's like, it, you know, when I do my intakes with clients, I always ask about their first, um, introduction to their sexuality. And, you know, oftentimes it's, you know, playing with the teddy bear or the shower head or, you know, and it's kind of like re like reintroducing us to that playfulness as children, you know? Yeah. That gets like stomped or shamed or whatever. Um, yeah. But something that's so important, Amina, that you, you, you, you touched on is, it sounds like really authentic consent for you comes from being that intimate with your body sensations and being able to attune to what it is that your body's experiencing.

Amina: Right? Yeah, that's exactly it for me, because I think for a lot of my, a good chunk of my life consent was really rooted in what I thought I was supposed to do.

Amina: Like what I thought was the best option, according to whoever is measuring best . It wasn't me, it wasn't my body. And so I would say yes to things that made sense logically, but not somatically. I would say no to things that didn't make sense logically, but might have actually been exactly what my body was longing for. But I couldn't find that. I didn't know where to find that. Mm-Hmm. . And so, yeah. So go, going down the rabbit hole has allowed me to, uh, discover that and also get curious about other folks and, and say like, okay, well, well what does it look like inside of you? If, if all the, if, if belonging is no longer an issue Mm-Hmm. if, you know, you get to belong wherever you are. Right. What does consent then look like?

Rahi: Right. Right. That is such a huge point, because once one, once a a, a nervous system feels that safety and security, I believe it's only then that they can really attune to what's authentic in the body. It

Amina: Absolutely, absolutely. Mm-Hmm.

Rahi: . Mm-Hmm. . Beautiful. So, Amina, um, uh, so Reggie Ray was a big rabbit hole.

Amina: Yeah. Reggie Ray was a big one.

Rahi: Yeah. And then along your journey, what were the other kind of inspiring or influential experiences that made you really like create this vision for a sanctuary for black women and their pleasure?

Amina: Yeah. One . So there's a saying in the black community that is very common, and that is that you are doing white people . Right? And so I found myself historically in my family on the other end of that statement, like, oh, you know, I was the first one to be vegetarian. I was the first one to be vegan. I was the first one to, right. Like, so these things were just like, oh, this is not from our culture. You're doing that stuff that you're picking up over there from being around white folks, . And so that is one thing that is that I want you to hold that while I, while I move into what's next. So, mm-Hmm. , I, I start going to workshops and, you know, one day events that are talking about tantra because I'm trying to learn, I wanna figure out what, what this is all about.

Amina: Um, and sacred sexuality. I'm trying to expose myself. And every single one that I go to, I am at that time the youngest and the absolute darkest person in the room. It seemed like it was something that was not accessible to me or anybody that I knew. I could hear my family, I could hear my friends saying, I'm not going to that white people stuff. That's for you. Mm-Hmm. . Um, and I just kept seeing that over and over again everywhere I went. And it didn't matter. I lived in Oakland for a little, little bit, and even in the bay where you have all this diversity, right? It would still be the same in Hawaii, it was the same. I lived in Hawaii for, for 15 years, and with all of the native Hawaiians, all of the, uh, brown folks, all of the Asian people that are living there.

Amina: Mm-Hmm. , I would go and it would be, it would be all white people. Mm-Hmm. maybe, maybe an Asian here and there. But like that, that was just the spaces. And one of the things that I know, and I know this because I've worked in marketing in my muggle world, enough to that if I'm, whoever I'm talking to is who's gonna show up. And it, it is segregation is, is intentional. Mm-Hmm. it is not happenstance. So you have to actively, Angela Davis says, you, you know, you have to be anti-racist or else you're racist. You have to actively be doing the work to bring in folks that are, um, that have been historically disenfranchised from spaces. Right? Mm-Hmm. . And that wasn't happening. I was just finding them. 'cause I was nosy and I was trying to figure this thing out. Mm-Hmm. . But I also realized that like, there was a lot that was, that was missing a lot of things that like cultural competency that it wasn't even safe for me to bring up.

Amina: Like, I couldn't invite my friends and be like, y'all should come to this thing with me. Because it just, there were little things, little microaggressions. Mm-Hmm. , um, little, you know, little things where you are like, there's a, a water reality of black women in our hair, and if it's straightened, we're not getting in the water. So having a water ritual with no, um, protection for hair or no warning in advance is, oh, we're all up against the wall now. We're not participating in that. Mm-Hmm. . Um, we can't go back to anything after that. We gotta go home and we gotta flat iron our hair. We gotta do all these things. Mm-Hmm. . And so it was just like little things like that where I'm like, this space hasn't thought about us being in. Right. Right. Right. And that doesn't feel good to me. Mm-Hmm. . Mm-Hmm. . And, um, and I want us to have spaces where we feel, where we feel like we've been considered Absolutely.

Amina: And in the process. Yeah. And so eventually I started hosting my own little workshops Mm-Hmm. . And really speaking to black and brown women and saying, you know, there's a space for us here, and I'm not a guru, but I've learned a couple things and I'm having some fun, and let's get together and play. And, um, and that was good. That was fun. And I would have, you know, first, first, first one, there was like three people. It was great . Right, right. It was like 30 people. And then they started, like, then people started talking and they're like, oh, Mina's Mina's workshops, go to these. And I was having a blast doing that. Hmm. Um, that was really, so that was, but that was what led me into like, trying to create space, was just being in space, visiting spaces and realizing like, oh, this is actually not made for me. Yeah. I could be here, I could struggle to be here. I could struggle to be comfortable, but I'm not gonna open up. I'm not gonna be as wet as possible. I'm not gonna be as allowing. Um, and so that, that shifted things. And I started hosting, hosting events, and then I moved to Atlanta and started hosting events there. And Mm-Hmm. . And then, then it just like blew up.

Rahi: It blew up. It blew up. Yeah. Yeah. Well, um, you know, it goes back to what we were saying, that unless the nervous system really feels safe and met and attuned to Mm-Hmm. , you know, there's gonna be a, an a, a a hypervigilance in the, in the subconscious, you know, and then especially if a, a tantric kind of event or retreat is a reflection of kind of the microaggressions of the larger society, the patriarchy and the, and the, and the racist kind of structure, then you cannot expect oxytocin to flow and, and the oxygenation of the blood, and like all of the kind of physiological things that are necessary for sacred sexuality to emerge. So like, if it's a carbon kind of like, reflection of mainstream society, it's not gonna feel safe.

Amina: Exactly. Exactly. Mm-Hmm. . And I knew that, uh, I felt that deeply into my bones, um, that there needed to be space. I didn't realize how large the demand for that space was gonna be. Yeah. Once I gotta, once I left Hawaii and moved into a, a city where it's 70% black folks Right. Then that changed everything. Right.

Rahi: Well, let's talk about that. So when you say it exploded, like the demand, you know, you went from like your first gathering of three people to 30 people, and then like, like thinking back now to when you landed in Atlanta and started holding sacred, sacred space for, for, for the black community. Like, when did you realize, oh man, this isn't just a river, it's like a tidal wave of, of pent up demand.

Amina: Right? Yeah. It was really quickly actually, because I was not planning on staying in Atlanta.

Rahi: Oh, wow.

Amina: I was, it's, you know, time we're, we're back here again. But this was, I was on the plane to Seattle Uhhuh , the, the day that Trump was elected Uhhuh . And when the plane touched down, I turned my phone on and I saw the news and I just said, oh, out loud. Yeah. He won. Mm. And the plane erupted. There were tears. People were, you know, it was, it was a Honolulu to Seattle flight, so I'm very left-leaning flight . And, um, and, and I made that decision that day that I was leaving the country. I was like, that's it. I'm, I'm, I gotta get outta here. I can't keep doing this. And so I called my mom up when I landed and said, mom, I'm gonna move. Mm-Hmm. , this was like November 4th or fifth, whatever day. Mm-Hmm. . I went, by the time I got back, I gave my notice to my job, and I finished out, um, the most of the rest of the year with them before I left for Atlanta to help my mother pack up, because she said she was leaving the country too. Oh, wow. And so I was only gonna be in Atlanta for three months to help my mom pack up the house, figure out things, whether she was gonna sell it or rent it out. We thought we'd do, look at all these options and see, and I was just gonna be there to support. Well, I land, and like three days later, she's like, I don't wanna move .

Amina: Now I have chatted out these three months in Atlanta, and I, I thought, well, okay, I guess I'll, if I'm gonna be here, then I'll, I'll get a little office in town and I see. And start seeing people. And I was fully booked every day for, um, yeah. For the, for the whole three months I was fully booked. It was, was no break. And then I'm, I'm doing the events and people are just pouring into the events. This is the first three months where I said, okay, Costa Rica can wait. Uhhuh, , um, . And I just decided to, to stay. And I, at that point, I met my now husband. Yes. Also, like a month after I landed in Atlanta. And, um, and so he's watching me have these classes and these workshops, and he's coming to them, he's being my body. And we're, you know, deepening into a playful relationship. But I was very much like, I am, you know, I'm, I've been solo poly relationship anarchist. I just come on in for the ride and have some fun and .

Amina: And, uh, about six months in, he said to me one night, he said, I just, I want you to teach me how to be as free as you are. Mm-Hmm. . And he might as well ask me to marry him. 'cause I don't know, that was, that was probably the moment where I was like, nobody's ever said that to me. , Uhhuh, . Um, and I, I felt really seen and just loved in that moment. And I thought kind of arrogantly, well, of course I could teach you this, this is, and it, and then I set for the next six months really working on a curriculum . Wow. So trying to figure out, like, how do I teach what I've learned over 20 years? Like Mm-Hmm. , how do I do that? I don't know how to do that. What's important, what's the most important in trying to sort all that out?

Amina: And, you know, reaching out to, to mentors and friends who develop curriculum and asking for their help and support. And in, um, yeah. In that fall of, of 2017, I launched the institute with the first class, which was just, uh, was called Conscious Erotic Touch, and now it's called Eero Somatic Touch. Uh, we rebranded, uh, earlier this year. Mm-Hmm. . And, um, and my first group of students were, were six people. And, and one of them, uh, was my now husband. Mm-Hmm. , uh, we were already lovers before the Studenthood . Like, I don't sleep with my students, but was already sleeping with. And so, um, and so it was just this very beautiful, uh, practice of playing, and I didn't know if it was landing, and some of it was, and so Mm-Hmm. I reconfigured and now, now, you know, this is 2017 to now, so we're like five, six years. Like seven,

Rahi: Yeah. Yeah. Seven, eight years. Yeah. Wow.

Amina: Seven, eight years later. I know.

Rahi: Totally. Yeah.

Amina: Yeah. And so now things are a little more, a lot more structured, and we're accredited and we have, you know, um, we're now working on global accreditation and things like that. So Yeah. So, but it started off with, with just a very loving request. And I had never, I hadn't been thinking about, I hadn't, I wasn't seeing myself as a teacher. Mm-Hmm. , I was like hosting these events where I was technically teaching.

Rahi: Of course,

Amina: Of course. But I didn't feel like I was teacher. Yeah. I felt like I was, you know, leading a yoga practice, but it was just, you know, sexy play.

Rahi: Right, right.

Amina: And, um, and yeah, that, that, that gentle request just really

Rahi: Yeah. Started a revolution. , you know, it's like, it's so good. I mean, it was a very simple loving, you know, proposal of sorts, but it, look, look at what came out of that. It's amazing. Yeah.

Amina: Yeah.

Rahi: Um, you know, what I love Amina is it feels like it was a very organic process, because here for 20 years, you've been holding space. You know, it's not like it came from like an intellectual, like from books, it came from your life, intuitive, embodied, somatic experience. Right. Of what you worked over these, you know, two decades Mm-Hmm. . Um, and then with some tweaks and trials and errors over the years, you just, the structure kind of like finds itself. Yeah.

Amina: Yeah. And I, that's what I realized also was really challenging about teaching Right. Is that I had been in, you know, extreme Aquarius mode where things were flowing and fitting and molding and, and developing. And I would look around and say, that needs to be moved, or that needs to be changed. And, and, and what was created was just powerful, beautiful, um, exploration. And, and I could witness the way that it was impacting folks every day, and that was like fueling my, my fire. Yeah. And then to try and like encapsulate that into a program that now requires some structure Right. Has, has been probably one of my greatest life challenges.

Rahi: I'm sure. I'm sure.

Amina:

Rahi: As an aquar. I totally understand. Yeah.

Amina: Yeah. So yeah, the, I'm used to like this organic flow of things. Mm-Hmm. . And, and honestly, I think, you know, in over the years I've had the pleasure, especially recent years in the last really since, since the pandemic, I've had the pleasure to sit with teachers that move at a pace, even in structured, um, in a real structured learning style. Like these are the things that we're learning, but moving at a pace that's felt really settling for my nervous system and for my soul. Uh, and that has really also helped shape me holding space for others in, in this work so much. Like, how do I teach people to slow down in their love making, to slow down in their approach of the body if I'm teaching class and we're going from module to module so fast. Totally. Yeah. And so, like, really learning to being, being a student because I'm a forever student, and witnessing teachers move at that pace in this work. Mm-Hmm. Has also really shaped how our hold space Mm-Hmm. And I think it's also really offered, uh, a bit of, it was like some medicine that was necessary in this work, because so many of my students and clients are coming to me on that little bit of free time that they get from their life.

Rahi: Of course.

Amina: And if I can't slow down in this space, and it feels just like what they're used to. Right. And that doesn't feel good.

Rahi: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What you're, what you're sharing is really profound because we have to walk or talk and we have to, um, demonstrate really by example. Right. You know, the benefits of slowing down and allowing the nervous system to really feel settled and down, regulate and feel itself and, you know, allow emotion to come forward when it wants to, and, and sensations to come forward when, when there's space for it. Mm-Hmm. , um, Mm-Hmm. Yeah. That's really, really beautiful.

Amina: Um, and to notice when there's no space. And I think for me, that's been a big part of my work for myself is just like noticing there's no space for emotion. That I'm too busy, that I'm moving too fast. Mm-Hmm. That I'm, I'm placing unreasonable demands on my own self Yeah. And, and have left no space for emotional experience.

Rahi: Yeah. And, you know, running an institute and the retreats and, you know, having your clients, you've, you have to really, uh, you know, kind of assert boundaries. Mm-Hmm. . And I love, like, I remember like one of the first emails I sent you, I got a, a response right away saying, I love you so much, you're wonderful. And on these days, I will not be answering emails, you know, .

Amina: Yeah.

Rahi: It's great. You're, you have to do that to allow for that spaciousness.

Amina: Yeah, you do. You really do. Because it'll blow right past you. And I'm, you know, I'm, I've, it's, there's also like this chunk of me moving from, uh, relationship anarchist, solo, poly to really what feels like, I, I wanna say it's still anarchy, but it's still, you know, we're, we're, we're nesting partners. And so there's also this like, consideration of like, the space that you're sharing with someone. Um, and then like also my own space and time and all of these things that are, that will just get tossed to the wayside, um, . Right. And

Rahi: That's, that's like the soil from which you are teaching the soil that's nourishing your embodiment that's holding space and, you know, bringing your intuition and creativity forward.

Amina: Yes. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah.

Rahi: Um, Amina, I, I, I wanna take the opportunity to ask you, because I think a lot of our listeners are either sexological body workers or hold retreats and are not aware of how, you know, they're, they, they don't know what they don't know when it comes to holding space for people of color. Mm-Hmm. . So I wanna ask you, like, you know, you've been in, you've been a participant in spaces where you were one or the, the, the only, you know, uh, black or brown person. And again, the microaggressions that are reflected in our major society can show up in these retreats. Can you help our listeners understand, what do you feel like makes your spaces that are so inviting and allows the nervous system to feel at ease for black women? Like, what are the qualities would you say that are different? Or what are the considerations that are different? I mean, just, you know, immediately I think seeing other people who share your experience in the space relaxes the nervous system. And certainly having a leader, like being able to empathize and understand your experience as a black woman growing up in this patriarchal society, patriarchal, racist society is very reassuring. But are there other elements that, that would be informative for listeners to kind of like research or examine on their own to make spaces more conducive and inviting?

Amina: Yeah, absolutely. I think I will put at the front of that is that I've had the joy, the pleasure, and the honor of being a black woman my whole life. And so I've been surrounded by black women my whole life. And what, what other people will have to learn is innate for me. Mm-Hmm. . And I say that to say, if you're looking for like, increasing diversity, it will start from the top and bringing in somebody to partner with, um, that is a black person or a person of color that is racialized as a person of color. And I wanna say that because a lot of our bipoc spaces, and I enjoy being in them, but a lot of times I'll go in them and I'll still be the only black person. Mm-Hmm. . And I'll, I'll still be the only person that's experiencing, um, what it's like to be faced as a brown person.

Amina: Sure. The culture at home might, we might have some similarities and some overlaps there, but what I'm really thinking about is how I'm experiencing the world and how that's impacting my ability to experience myself at rest and at pleasure. Mm-Hmm. . And so that's one of the things is like making sure you have, um, have someone that's there in partnership or in consultation that Mm-Hmm. that has lived that experience of, of being a black person in the us in the west, um, or in Canada, wherever it is, because there's such a unique value that that brings. And it's something that we have innate. So what, when my, I have white folks that come to my events. I have folks from all walks of life that come to my events, and they feel at ease automatically because mm-Hmm. , the reality of my life has been that I have always been in white spaces.

Amina: Absolutely. Um, right. And so I know what that's like. Mm-Hmm. . But if you've never been in black spaces, right. If you've never looked around and thought, wow, I'm the only white girl here, or, wow, I'm the only Asian here. Right? Like, if you've never had that experience and looked around the room of black people, and there's a lot of things that you're gonna miss and, and, and making space safe, there's a lot of things that won't feel like much of an aggression to you won't, won't feel like violence to you that will feel so violent to us because of the histor, the historical, uh, experiencing of it. Mm-Hmm. . And so having that is, I think the biggest thing, the easiest thing. I also come from, like, my grandmother was a sharecropper. She was raised by a freed slave. I, I have heard these stories and I know what that looks like.

Amina: I know what it looks like to be a woman over the course of generations. I've said at the feet of my grandmother and my aunties, and listened to stories growing up. Um, and so that informs how I move with other black people because I know what, where our lineage of shame is coming from. Right. Right. Which is different than, like, there are some things that we, that are very much taboo, that are not taboo in other cultures, right. Next door, right around the corner. Um, and so I'm, uh, just that consciousness of like the things that I, that we will stigmatize that others might not stigmatize the things that feel normal for us, but not normal for someone else. Mm-Hmm. and, and navigating that, that is easier because of my lived experience. Mm-Hmm. . I, um, and it's easier, I think because I'm, I've lived, you know, know I live in Latin America now. I've lived in Hawaii for 15 years. I've been around very diverse communities also throughout my life. So that I, I've also been able to absorb and learn. I, I've, you know, spent a lot of time, um, praying five times a day and wearing, wearing the veil and the mosque. And so I also understand like my family, my mother's side of the family is coming from a very deep, uh, southern Baptist ritualistic, uh, belief system. And that influences and impacts what a black woman needs to feel safe in a space. Yeah. Mm-Hmm.

Amina: . Um, and also same thing for folks. You know, a lot of black Americans are Muslim Mm-Hmm. . And so they, they're bringing that into the space, having that awareness and being able to speak to that. When I speak about liberation and I speak about all these things that seem, uh, like they are countering certain religious and spiritual practices that might lose us Mm-Hmm. that might lose black women or black people in general, may just be like, this is, you know, this is, this is not something I wanna participate in. Like, I know, I know why, I know how to have that conversation as well in a way that, that allows them to still maintain whatever parts of them they wanna keep. Mm-Hmm. ,

Rahi: I mean, it's very clear in what you're outlining. I, I, I wonder also, Amina like the way black women have been sexualized by our society. You know, there's this, you know, I mean, when you speak about lineage, there's also, you know, women were, I mean, black people were slaves, but women in particular were used sexually when they were slaves. I mean, all the way, you know, Thomas Jefferson, et cetera, et cetera. And, um, you know, I'm also aware of like the, the, the history of gyno, how gynecology started in America is a really, really dark history. Right. Yeah. You know, where, where black enslaved women were essentially used as Guinea pigs without anesthesia, without, you know, they were just like practiced on by white men. Yeah. So, sexualization of a black body, you know, and then of course, with black men as well, it's got its own history, you know? Mm-Hmm. . And I'm guessing if I was a black, if I was the only black person in a white tantric, uh, retreat where we were exploring bodies, I, I would kind of, I don't know, I kind of wondered how, how that would affect my experience and my participation.

Amina: Yeah. It probably would. I could tell you from my experience, it just limits it. Like, you just don't want to participate. Um, you know, and for a lot of reasons, many of the ones that you named, like just the historical reality of how our bodies have been used in, um, in, in the us in the west, well, not just the US but in the West. Mm-Hmm. . But also in that, like, that light of everything that I grew up looking at when I looked at models of vulvas or breast, it did not look like me. Um, I remember just when I was younger, when I was like 13, trying to find my clitoris and looking at the picture. Mm-Hmm. . And then looking at mine, it was like, I could not find it. It was unidentifiable compared to the picture that I would had access to at the time. And so, going to a space where I'm looking at a lot of vulvas that I used to call them porn. 'cause that's what they look like. They look like, um, the perfect little ones that you would see on porn, which did not look like mine. Right. Mm-Hmm. My lips were, my, my, my lips are as full up here as they are down there. Mm. And, and how that can be intimidating to even disrobe.

Rahi: Mm

Amina: Mm-Hmm. how that can be intimidating. What's acceptable. And this is, I mean, we could , there's a lot that could be impact in, in spaces where, um, where tantra is, is being explored. Mm-Hmm. , but also body types. Right. Like in the black community, a little extra meat on the bones is, is desirable A bigger but is desirable. Yes. And, um, when I would go to a lot of spaces, I was also the largest person in the room. Mm-Hmm. . And I'm not a big woman. Mm-Hmm. , you know, but I would go into spaces and it would be full of very, very small framed, uh, white yogis. Right. And there's something about that that makes you say, oh, I don't wanna get naked in here. This Sure. Right. I don't wanna be bare. I don't wanna bear my soul in here. I don't wanna bear myself in here. I don't want that. There's the emotional part of like, no vulnerable,

Rahi: No.

Amina: Yeah. I'm gonna, what if I have to cry? And then who, oh, like all of this weight is on you. And that all gets to be lifted up a bit in a space where you are looking around and you know that people have a similar experience. Mm-Hmm. A similar body. Mm-Hmm mm-Hmm. . And they've seen bodies that look like yours, whether it was their mothers or their themselves, that we've seen our bodies and we are familiar with that. And we see them not in disgust or not in a way that needs to be changed. Mm-Hmm. . And that, that is really important in the sexual experience.

Rahi: Yeah. Yeah. Really celebrated for the beauty. Yeah. Absolutely. Um, I wanted to ask you Amina, um, I saw a Substack article that I hadn't, I hadn't read it 'cause I wasn't a member, but I saw a Substack article that you wrote about like the need for more black male sexual surrogates. Mm-Hmm. .

Amina: And

Rahi: I wanted to ask you whether this also ties into how black women are underserved, you know, in sacred sexuality and like what prompted you to write that article and what, what, what and what it was about?

Amina: Yeah. The, the prompt was how many women I have currently as clients. Mm-Hmm. who are at a point where they are ready to practice. Right. Um, you know, and, and outside of with me or with my husband, there's no one like that. There's not enough male practitioners. And so I'm like, there's a waiting list, . Like, I'm working, I'm trying to find some. Yeah. That was what prompted me in the conversation. And I went to talk about it in social media and like, what was coming at me with a lot of questions from Mm-Hmm. From men that were like, we could do this work. Like, what do you mean? Mm-Hmm. . Um, and it's a lot of curiosity. I've never heard of this. What is this thing? Mm-Hmm. . And so, um, so that was, that, that led me to just like, well, let me write something that's out there in the ether so people can understand like some of the, like, I, this, this languish needs to be in the ether with black men attached to it.

Amina: Right. Right. Uh, first and foremost. And then also there needs, we need more safe. 'cause it wasn't just about black male surrogates. It's like, we need more safe black male surrogates. And one of the reasons why I, I, I really emphasize that is in a culture where black men have been waiting, I, you know, I, I think of that song from, um, lion King, where I just can't wait to be king. Hmm. And a lot of this stuff, and this is true for all oppressed people, I think a lot of times when we're fighting for liberation, what we're really fighting for is like to be adjacent to power. Mm-Hmm. . Mm-Hmm. . And so what I keep witnessing in, in erotic spaces are black men who are, who have moved into the space because there is an opening with no training, um, no understanding of consent beyond what they got in high school, which we know what that looks like.

Amina: It's not much at all, or college or you, it's nothing totally informed. Consent has not been available to you, so how can you offer it to me? You know what I mean? And so, like all of these things are, are also happening where I'm witnessing, um, violence in, in the erotic space because there is no training, but we, like, we, we need it too, but there's not enough training. Yes. And so, and so I'm, I wanted to put a call out so that people, so that black men could be aware Mm-Hmm. and that other instructors that are teaching Mm-Hmm. black men, or they're teaching men how to be surrogates or how to be sacred intimates can also realize like, oh yeah, I'm still missing, I'm still not serving black women because there's still this huge, this huge gap in, in, in the work that Mm-Hmm. we that we're missing and we're not talking to black men. And I know no one's talking because I put, I put one post up on social media and it, the number of people that reached out to me privately from that post was, I, I was almost overwhelmed by it. Wow. I was like, oh, wow. Wow. This is just, these conversations are just not happening. Yeah.

Rahi: Yeah. And just even, you know, I mean, to be honest with you, I didn't even consider, uh, that that would, that that could be such a major issue. But it makes so much sense here. You are a haven for women, for black women to really return and reclaim their sexuality and agency and, and, and resource in their life force, and they wanna practice, you know? And if there aren't black male surrogates, you know, like who, like what, what's, what's, where can they go? You know, it's not something that I think the average person considers like, you know, even in the, in the, you know, sexuality space.

Amina: Yeah, no, it's, yeah. It's something that I think just gets, you know, kind of laid left off to the side and in these spaces that, you know, even in my space, they're so. It's like we, we have this inherent queerness in our spaces that's beautiful for me. Mm-Hmm. . Right. But, um, but for my, my cis heterosexual that are like clearly identifying as heterosexual and would like to be in these practices with a heterosexual male, or a male that wants to have sex with wo women, that is where we're, we're really falling apart at the seams at. And it's, um, it's really, yeah. It's really heavy on me right now. It's like, how do I mm-Hmm. call more black men in, and also, how do I hold that space? Because then once I've called you in, I really feel, um, I get really maternal about the work in a way where I'm like, okay, mom's gonna make sure that this space is safe for everybody.

Amina: Right. And I wanna make sure that those that are stepping in, especially, uh, the, the black women are putting a great amount of trust on me to say, Mm-Hmm. you, I trust you to make the recommendation. I trust you to make the referral. Mm-Hmm. , I trust you to train this person. Mm-Hmm. . And so I have, I stay in community with my, with my students because in that trust is also like, I wanna make sure that we are all, we have, we have, uh, you know, ways to navigate, um, thing issues that come up. We have ways to ensure that we're holding spaces safely as we can. Yeah. We have ways to ensure that we're honoring the needs and the sacredness of this work. Like Yes. Making sure that that's held.

Rahi: Yeah. Yeah. I love, um, for our audience members, uh, you had just completed these, this four free day boundaries and consents, uh, forum or summit. Mm-Hmm. . Um, it's, uh, you know, I love, like, it, it seemed to me like the summit was really explor exploring the nuances of consent. Right. Um, you know, there was one, uh, headline I saw about the impact of trauma in accessing choice and voice. I mean, these are all subtle things. Mm-Hmm. that impact one's sense of agency and, uh, consent in an intimate situation that often get overlooked.

Amina: Yeah. Yeah. I think, I think they too often get overlooked and then we start working on something that doesn't need repair. Mm-Hmm. in, instead of actually just working on, like, feeling into the body learning regulation, um, getting familiar with our own nervous system, uh, tending to our own needs. That, that those things will be so much more simpler than, uh, some of the work that we, that, that the healing community tends to do around sex, from doctors to therapists, to everyone has got their own thing that they, pelvic floor therapists, we can do this. And, you know, and at the end of the day, it's like, if I'm not, if I'm not navigating or understanding the impact, that even some of the smallest traumas that I've experienced are showing up in my, in the way I get to say yes and no, then all the other work is, um, is very auxiliary. It's not,

Rahi: Yeah. It's, it's, it's like, um, it's like you have to have a foundation to the house before you add, like, you know, higher stories to it. Yeah. Like if, if, if a body doesn't even feel safe, attuning to what is authentic consent, then what is, what do the, all these other things matter? You know, they don't, they don't, you know, it really comes down to, you know, the safety and security and, and, and authentics consent of the body. Mm-Hmm. . Um, I, I feel like we are, we're coming full circle back to Reggie's like, you know, somatic descent and really like developing this attuned, intimate communication with one's own body in order to really discover what the authentic consent of the body is.

Amina: Yes. Yeah. Yeah. As it, as it starts. So it ends, right? Yeah. Because it, that's really at the root of, of all that is right for me. Mm-Hmm. . It's like, have I sat with myself to see how much of myself is available for this? Yeah. For whatever this is. And, and if there's any of me that's available. Mm. And that is something that comes, that, that is from that practice of somatic descent.

Rahi: Yes. Yes. Yes. Beautiful. Beautiful. And, um, Amina, where can people find out more about you and your, um, certification for se somatic sexologists?

Amina: Yeah. So I'm a TL Tantra pretty much everywhere. Mm-Hmm. , A TL, like Atlanta's airport code and T-A-N-T-R-A.

Rahi: Wow. Amina. It's just, uh, I'm marveling at what you've created, you know, this safe sanctuary for black women and black men to really come into that sense of agency and resource and life force that's, you know, that we're born with. That's our inherent, right. And, um, everything that you really meditate on, you know, the slowing down, the consent, the somatic descent to really be attuned to what the body's authentic desire is like, it's just so beautiful and so necessary. And, you know, I, I resonate with it 'cause it's so aligned with my approach and, um, I just, I think it's fabulous what you've created. It's, it's so great that you, um, yeah. That you're holding space for so many people.

Amina: Thank you. Yeah. I do feel very aligned with your work, so I'm really looking forward to, to not just this upcoming partnership, but to continued partnerships to see your work also just mushroom into, into our communities as well, because Yeah. There's so much alignment. Mm-Hmm. and I, I feel that deeply.

Rahi: How is today's interview landing in your body right now? Are there aspects of your sexuality and their expression that feel unsafe to be seen as if they do not belong? And if so, how can you provide that sense of belonging and acceptance to those aspects of yourself? How would it be to seek out containers that reflect your lived-in embodied experiences in which your sexuality in all of its expressions would be recognized and celebrated? Links to Goddess Amina's Atlanta Institute of Tantra are in the show notes. Until next time, take good care.

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About the Show

We explore the restoration of pleasure, the reclamation of sexual sovereignty, and the realization of our organic sexual wholeness. We engage with leading somatic therapists, sexologists & sexological bodyworkers, and holistic practitioners worldwide who provide practical wisdom from hands-on experiences of working with clients and their embodied sexuality. We invite a deep listening to the organic nature of the body, its sexual essence, and the bounty of wisdom embodied in its life force.

Rahi Chun
Creator: Somatic Sexual Wholeness

Rahi is fascinated by the intersection of sexuality, psychology, spirituality and their authentic embodiment. Based in Los Angeles, he is an avid traveler and loves exploring cultures, practices of embodiment, and healing modalities around the world.