This feeling that you miss - that feeling of intensity, passion, and excitement for one person - you may not have quite that again, although you might. You might have a deeper one that grows out of loss and gratitude. I've been saying for a long time that sex is easy, but feelings are hard. After several heartbreaks we might learn to protect our heart in various ways. One of those ways is to be more careful. Love, as you've discovered, is a vast territory, but in the Venn diagram of love, sex, time, and place the overlapping bits seem to grow smaller. When we try to make it wider - with what I call "concurrent monogamy" (as opposed to serial monogamy), you might be left with less genuine connection, rather than more. Like when you have homes in two cities, do you live anywhere? To feel a oneness with someone, you need to be present with them, and they with you, presence as a natural not forced or prescribed way of being You stop and lie down in a divine and circumscribed zone of acceptance, yet opening into worlds of possibility. The possibility of identities dissolving into oneness flowing from individuation to oneness to individuation to sameness to difference and back to oneness in those moment after moments you feel connected, accepted maybe, somehow understood without a lot of pre-judgements about who you are or might be not sex, not only sex, but what I call full-contact conversation. "Magic happens outside of our comfort zones." (read this today as I will likely take it down tomorrow.) _refugee_
That was a great discussion. I think it's in pm. I can't find it. Can you? Maybe it was posted? Text? Private email? Buried in some other shit? I had an interesting response from bf as well. He said something like "a bootie call doesn't stop the loneliness." What's the difference between a bootie call and a relationship? Do you want to make it a post?