Personal growth is about becoming the best person you can possibly be, but change doesn’t occur in a vacuum. There are people around you, people with feelings, opinions, thoughts, and goals of their own. Achieving your goals does not mean that you can be a self-serving shark, cold and mindless of no one but yourself. It means you follow your dreams and improve yourself to become the man you strive to be.
At the same time, while taking other people’s opinions into account, no one should be ashamed of any efforts to improve, grow, and change their lives. No one should prevent you from making your dream a reality.
If you want to learn how to attract your preferred romantic or sexual partners, you must start doing things that are attractive to them. These include being more interesting, confident, humorous, self-aware, emphatic, authentic, positive, well-rounded, and spiritual. Ultimately, to form relationships with others more successfully, you have to become a better person.
Though the principles of attraction and seduction are inherently non-sexual, they can be used romantically. After years of teaching this material I’ve found it’s necessary to share this – many people are unaware of what exactly consent is. For this reason, I want to include this very important section:
Consent is when every person feels safe and comfortable in any – including sexual – scenario and wishes to do the same thing and let the other person or people know.
Consent means hearing the word “yes”. Silence isn’t consent. “Maybe” isn’t consent. “I guess so” isn’t consent and if you hear no, you stop whatever you are doing.
Don’t make assumptions about what someone is comfortable with in general or sexually. It’s up to both of you to learn each other’s limits. That’s why you ask questions like “Do you feel comfortable moving to the next level?” Trust is key. Never assume you have a yes; it’s not up to the other person to say “no”; it’s up to you to listen for the “yes”.
Nothing you’ve already done gives you permission to do the next thing. You’re kissing like mad; she’s totally into it; that must mean it’s okay to get your hand under her shirt. Wrong. You’ve got your clothes off and you’re all over each other; that must mean it’s okay to have intercourse. Wrong.
The truth is that, unless you’re involved in a regular relationship and have already worked out a set of rules, every time you go to a new “level” you’ve got to get consent.
Some people might say, “That’s not romantic. That totally breaks the flow.”
It depends on how you do it and how you bring it up. By both of you knowing you’re doing and what you want, there’ll be much more sexual energy than if one person is getting off and the other is bored, uncomfortable, or scared.
Rule 4: No one can’t give consent if they are drunk or stoned.
If a person is too intoxicated to know what they are doing then they can’t give consent.
If a person decides in the middle of an intimate moment that they don’t want to continue all previous yes’s are null and void. Whatever you were doing comes to an end, until you’re both consenting again.
Every approach, every sexual encounter, every romance you are in, do your best to ensure that the person not only doesn’t regret the experience but that it enriches their lives and is better off for having had it.
Safe sex is mandatory. However, there is no such thing as safe love. It is a risk of the heart. But it is well worth the reward.
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