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Research: An Analysis of Practitioners Journaled Experiences of Orgasmic Meditation (OM)

An Analysis of Practitioners Journaled Experiences of Orgasmic Meditation (OM)

Carline Griggs, PharmD

This study aims to evaluate OM practitioners’ journals and the link to eudaimonic well-being. We conducted an analysis of journal entries by OM practitioners. Summative content analysis followed by latent content analysis identified common themes. Fifty-five participants completed 1,506 journal entries. Nine distinct themes were identified (in no particular order). The strokers had five themes including: 1) connected with partner, 2) took control of the process, 3) conscious of the act and process, 4) post-OM experiences, and 5) struggled with the OM process. The strokees had four themes consisting of: 1) opened oneself to the sensation, 2) lost oneself, 3) a sense of security, and 4) felt freed. The qualitative results of this content analysis study show OM practitioners access eudaimonic well-being through flow, connection, and intimacy. This suggests Orgasmic Meditation may be a practice to enhance eudaimonic well-being, access states of flow, increase connection, and create experiences of intimacy. These results have implications for the practice and how it may be applied to well-being interventions.

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