The Politics of Ecstasy: Reflections on The Keys to Erotic Power with Kasia Urbaniak

I recently participated in a course led by Kasia Urbaniak called “The Keys to Erotic Power.” 

While a short course, I was impressed by how the elegantly framed ideas and simple exercises created powerful outcomes in a short amount of time.

I’d like to share here some of what I learned and experienced as a result of the course. If you find it interesting and think it would be useful, you can check out more of Urbaniak’s work here.

The course began by asking us to check in with ourselves first. Here are some of the first questions asked and my own responses to them.

What brought you here?

I want to feel more alive, and I know I can.

I want to let go of the shame that is holding me back and step into my radiance and power.

What do you want to feel?

Fully alive. Magnetic.

Pure magic.

Powerful, sexy, beautiful.

Loved and loving.

In control of and capable of directing my own experience.

The next step in the course was defining exactly what erotic power is. According to Urbaniak, “erotic power is the control over access to ecstasy.” Key elements of this involved the use of our attention and an ability to sense our own aliveness, an awareness of the life force as it moves through us.

The Politics of Ecstasy

Before beginning the next model, Urbaniak asked us to write on several questions, the first of which was: “What is your definition of ecstasy?” I wrote the following:

Ecstasy: a state outside of self

Being transported beyond the realm of normal, everyday experience 

into the transcendent

Where you feel at one with the object of perception and sensation

In union with the other or the world around you.

It is bliss, joy, aliveness: magic.

It is what makes life worth living.

In the next section, Urbaniak defined ecstasy in this way: “The Greek word ekstasis means to move out of yourself, and in the energetic state of ecstasy, your life force moves beyond the boundaries of your physical form.”

She continues by reading a passage from Robert A. Johnson’s book Ecstasy, where he tells of the long human history of seeking ecstatic states, noting that it has been a perennial human concern since the beginning of recorded history. 

Johnson also speaks of the current state of Western civilization, in which there appears to be no room for the seeking of ecstatic states, and the youth of our society are left unguided and resort to street drugs and other apparently deviant types of behavior.

I thought this was an interesting idea, and while I certainly agree that there is little room in our society for the sanctioned seeking of ecstatic states, I have to wonder if there ever really was.

Johnson cites as an example of previous human pleasure seeking the ancient Greek civilization, but even then, the cults of ecstasy (for example, of Dionysus or Bacchus) were not exactly fully sanctioned by the state or the mainstream of society.

While in later classical Greece the cult of Bacchus became more popular and widely accepted, it was never the most popular, and there were still many ways in which its devotees existed outside of respected norms. 

For example, according to the blog Wonderkat Studies, Bacchants wore fawn skins and ivy crowns as they drank wine to excess, caught and ate wild animals raw, and participated in orgies. 

As might be imagined, this type of behavior was not exactly celebrated by the local authorities of the time. In his work The Bacchae, Euripides has Pentheus, the king, describe the bacchants in this way:

“I hear of the Evils have just broken out in the city – our women have abandoned their homes in fake Bacchic revels, and are roaming around the mountains, honouring the new-made god of Dionysos, whoever he is; that wine-bowls are set among sacred companies full to the brim, and that one by one the women slink off into lonely places, to serve the lust of men – they profess to be Maenads making sacrifice, but actually they put Aphrodite before the Bacchic god.”

This description supports my suspicion that perhaps there never was an established or sanctioned place in Western civilization to begin with and perhaps there never will be.

After all, ecstasy is an experience which takes you outside of yourself. 

As a transcendent experience, it is also often a transgressive experience.

Ecstasy expands the boundaries of consciousness, bringing into your field of awareness ever greater levels of energy and experience.

An ecstatic state is by definition uncontainable, uncontrollable, unable to be forced within limits of the established.

As such, it doesn’t seem likely that the institutions of Western civilization (or any civilization, for that matter) would be likely to encourage it.

According to Timothy Leary, ecstasy can be defined as: “The experience of attaining freedom from limitations, either self-imposed or external; a state of exalted delight in which normal understanding is felt to be surpassed. From the Greek ‘ex-stasis.’ 

By definition, ecstasy is an ongoing on/off process. It requires a continual sequence of “dropping out.” On those occasions when many individuals share the ecstatic experience at the same time, they create a brief-lived counter-culture.’”

Urbaniak herself briefly addresses this in the next section when she says that “society does not allow our alive, erotic energy to flow freely.”

She also links the repression of the erotic with the oppression of women in general: “Our estrangement [as women] from our erotic power is wound up with the story of women decentered.”

The Erotic as a Revolutionary Act

How can we begin to free ourselves and become more alive?

According to Urbaniak, we must first recognize and resist two big lies our society tells us about ecstasy:

  1. That it comes from outside of yourself.
  2. It can exist only between you and another person.

In reflecting on this further, I see that I have fallen for the lies I’ve been told, and let myself be bound by them.

The truth is that I have often gotten stuck in what Urbaniak calls “the Sleeping Beauty Trap.” I find myself waiting for someone to save me, or for something outside of me to happen, before I can let myself feel pleasure, let myself enjoy the moment, or even let myself feel the full, vibrant aliveness of which I am capable of.

This trap also gets me in other areas of my life; for example, my self-esteem. I find myself believing that I can’t feel good about myself until someone or something good validates me and signs off on my right to be here.

It’s like I can’t feel good about myself or be fully confident unless I have been given permission. 

What I started to learn through my experiences during this course was that none of this is actually necessary. 

The key to erotic power is to remember that you are always in control, you always have the ability to shift your attention towards pleasure and what’s most alive in you.

In accessing that aliveness, I get in touch with not only pleasure but also the source of my own power, both of which are always within reach.

There are many reasons why the erotic has been repressed and denied, especially in women for whom it comes most naturally.

Audre Lorde writes in her famous essay The Uses of the Erotic, “The erotic is a measure between the beginnings of our sense of self and the chaos of our strongest feelings. It is an internal sense of satisfaction to which, once we have experienced it, we know we can aspire. For having experienced the fullness of this depth of feeling and recognizing its power, in honour and self-respect we can require no less of ourselves.”

Tuning into the erotic and the sense of aliveness in our bodies gets us in touch with what is true and real for us. There are many lies which can be told and ideas which can be distorted in our minds, but when we feel the truth of what we love deep down in our bones, we can gain the confidence to act in ways that honor that knowing.

According to Kasia Urbaniak, the practice of embodiment and cultivating erotic aliveness will only become more important as time goes on. The technological advances of the future seem geared towards disconnecting us even further from our bodies and our innate, intuitive wisdom. 

As even greater advances are made in computational speed and artificial intelligence grows more pervasive, this need for embodied wisdom will only become ever greater. 

According to Urbaniak, “The problem of our times is the disconnection from ourselves, each other and the Earth. By reclaiming your erotic power, you are also saving the world.”

Engaging the erotic is a practice of returning to ourselves. In the process of reclaiming ourselves, we create the potential to reclaim our world and guide our community towards a future filled with greater hope.

“When we live outside ourselves … then our lives are limited by external and alien forms, and we conform to the needs of a structure that is not based on human need, let alone an individual’s. 

But when we begin to live from within outward, in touch with the power of the erotic within ourselves, and allowing that power to inform and illuminate our actions upon the world around us, then we begin to be responsible to ourselves in the deepest sense. 

For as we begin to recognize our deepest feelings, we begin to give up, of necessity, being satisfied with suffering and self-negation, and with the numbness which so often seems like their only alternative in our society. Our acts against oppression become integral with self, motivated and empowered from within.”

Audre Lorde

Kurukulla: Goddess of Enchantment, Magnetism and Love

Kurukulla, an enchanting and dynamic deity in tantric Tibetan Buddhism, holds a unique and multifaceted place in the rich tapestry of Vajrayana traditions. 

As a manifestation of divine feminine energy, Kurukulla embodies the power of transformation, desire, and magnetism, making her a central figure in rituals and meditative practices.

At the heart of Kurukulla’s symbolism is her association with desire. Unlike conventional perceptions that often view desire as an obstacle on the spiritual path, Tibetan tantric traditions recognize its transformative potential. 

Kurukulla’s depiction with a bow and arrow signifies her ability to captivate and direct desire towards spiritual awakening. In this context, desire becomes a force that can propel practitioners beyond mundane attachments and into the realm of higher consciousness.

The vibrant red color that envelops Kurukulla is not merely a visual choice but a symbolic representation of passion and magnetism. Red is the color of life force, the pulsating energy that animates all existence. As practitioners engage with Kurukulla’s imagery, they are invited to embrace their own desires, recognizing them as a natural and potent aspect of their spiritual journey.

In Tibetan iconography, Kurukulla often stands atop a lotus, emphasizing her transcendence over worldly attachments. 

The lotus, with its roots in the mud and blossoms open towards the sun, mirrors the transformative journey from mundane existence to spiritual enlightenment. Kurukulla’s lotus throne serves as a reminder that, like the lotus, practitioners can rise above their circumstances through the alchemy of desire. She reminds us that in order to reach the heights of enlightenment we must first be rooted in the mundane world.

Kurukulla’s role as a magnetizing deity extends beyond personal transformation to encompass the magnetism of wisdom and compassion. Her enchanting presence is believed to draw forth the positive qualities of enlightened beings, amplifying the practitioner’s connection to the divine. Through invoking Kurukulla, practitioners seek to cultivate not only personal transformation but also a magnetic field of compassion and wisdom that can benefit all sentient beings.

In tantric practices, including those dedicated to Kurukulla, the erotic is seen as a potent force for spiritual awakening. Rather than suppressing or denying sexual energy, practitioners are encouraged to harness and transmute it into a tool for transformation. 

The erotic, in this context, becomes a metaphor for the intense, all-encompassing passion that can propel individuals beyond ordinary states of consciousness.

The erotic, in tantric philosophy, is viewed as a sacred expression of the union of wisdom and compassion. The dance of passion becomes a vehicle for experiencing the interconnectedness of all things and dissolving the boundaries between self and other. 

In tantric rituals dedicated to Kurukulla, practitioners may engage in visualizations that involve the union of male and female deities, symbolizing the integration of polarities within the individual psyche. The erotic imagery serves as a catalyst for transcending dualities and experiencing the divine union that lies at the core of enlightenment.

By embracing the erotic as a path to enlightenment, practitioners of Kurukulla’s teachings embark on a journey of profound self-discovery. The alchemical transformation of desire and the skillful integration of the erotic into spiritual practice become powerful tools for breaking through conventional boundaries and realizing the interconnected, non-dual nature of reality.

The path that Kurukulla represents is sometimes associated with the left hand path, as are many aspects of spirituality that are associated with desire or with the feminine.

As a result, some spiritual seekers shy away from Kurukulla and what she represents. I know that this was true for me when I first set out on the spiritual path. I was uncomfortable with many aspects of my self and my environment. I wanted to transcend reality, rather than embrace it.

When I speak of the erotic, I do so in the same way that Audre Lorde did when she said:

“The very word erotic comes from the Greek word eros, the personification of love in all its aspects – born of Chaos, and personifying creative power and harmony. When I speak of the erotic, then, I speak of it as an assertion of the lifeforce of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our work, our lives.”

The path of Kurukulla, and of the erotic in general, requires that we acknowledge all that is true on all dimensions of our being. It pulls us toward what is most true and alive within us. 

I believe this is especially true in my experience as a woman. I have had the type of experience that is common for many women, in which we are encouraged to deny what is real for us in order to please or pacify those around us.

“For the erotic is not a question only of what we do; it is a question of how acutely and fully we can feel in the doing. Once we know the extent to which we are capable of feeling that sense of satisfaction and completion, we can then observe which of our various life endeavors bring us closest to that fullness,” Lorde writes.

It is in the fullness of that experience that true enlightenment is to be found. It is in embracing all the elements of our aliveness that we can experience what it truly means to reach the highest experience as a human being. 

The goddess Kurukulla reminds us of this path toward an experience of the divine that we may choose to follow if we are brave enough and willing to do so.