Energy Alchemy and Cervix activation
In this practice you will explore how to work with the energy in your body. Allowing yourself the practice of receiving your own wisdom through the body and energy work. You will receive in this practice ways to cultivate and transmute energy.
Chemistry and attraction is based on energy. You will learn in very subtle ways how to move and understand energy to become the most alive, healthy, integrated version of yourself. You will experience how to self-source your own energy & pleasure so that it supercharges all areas of your life, from work to relationships.
The Practice
We are going to use your own energy, you can either use sexual energy if that feels true to you today or you can use life force energy which is more experienced as a clear bright sensation.
You are going to use this powerful energy, to transmute the energy through each chakra.
We will also experience a cervical activation. We activate the cervical energy with the mantra of klim. This mantra klim is the essence of love and devotion. Your cervix will vibrate at the essence of love and devotion.
This will bring you into the subtleties of your body, how you relate to your body, the energies within you and as well on your sense of worthiness.
Following audio has been recorded without too much talking and explanation so you can watch every morning.
The Cervix
The cervix is a small round organ, with an opening called the os. The cervix forms a canal, which joins the top of the vagina to the lower part of the womb.
Most of us store so much emotional memory at the cervix and don’t even know it. You might have never tried to feel your cervix and it might take time and practice to feel that part of you. But reclaiming the cervix with tenderness is a radical act of self love.
Researched by people with brains
In 2017, Dr. Katharina Weitkamp headed research on the effects of Self:Cervix conducted at the Hamburg Medical School.
“We found that stimulation of the cervix caused a significant decrease in anxiety, depression, and somatisation. The practise also was effective in decreasing pain and increasing arousal and desire. The perception of the female genitals was more positive compared to the control group. Additionally, in-depth interviews revealed that women who took this course felt more self-compassion and empowerment.”
Dr. Katharina Weitkamp – Hamburg Medical School
If you are interested in some more historical research on the cervix:
For scientists and the medical industry, the cervix has largely been uncharted territory that usually only comes up in conversation during a pap smear. Reference to the cervix was associated with reproduction, cervical conditions, gynaecological examination and testing.
Dr Alfred Kinsey, known as the "father of the sexual revolution," reported in 1954 that the cervix did not respond to stimulation in his Kinsey Report “Sexual Behaviour in the Human Female”, revolutionising the way society thinks of sex. One particular statement in the book regarding the cervix, however, has been misinterpreted leading to a misconception in sexology and medicine that persists today, that the cervix is devoid of sensory nerves.
On page 584, Kinsey states, “All of the clinical and experimental data show that the surface of the cervix is the most completely insensitive part of the female genital anatomy.” It has led healthcare providers to conclude, erroneously, that the cervix is devoid of sensory nerves and can be cut or removed without consequence.
The Kinsey investigators reported when the cervix was “gently stroked” with a “glass, metal or cotton-tipped probe,” only 5% of 878 women reported they could feel it. Data was the basis of Kinsey’s claim of cervical insensitivity.
However, when the investigators stimulated the cervix of the same women with “distinct pressure” using “an object larger than a probe", 84% of the 878 women reported they could feel it. Kinsey’s conclusion did not take into account his own significant finding.
Female pleasure reimagined - the sensate cervix
In 1994, Dr Barry R. Komisaruk pioneered further research on female pleasure and confirmed that the cervix can respond to stimulation (with the absence of clitoral stimulation), uncovering that this reproductive organ is also the path to the deepest, full-bodied female orgasm! There is extensive clear data from diverse sources that women can certainly feel stimulation of the cervix. the cervix responds to stimulation - not only to pressure, but also to light touch.