
They didn't teach you this in Sunday school: that before your body became something to sanitize and suppress, it was a living altar. That before "gay" became a culture war wedge issue, it was a shamanic calling that made you essential to your community's survival.
I'm writing this from Tampa, where the humidity makes everything stick—skin to skin, truth to throat. Where I'm learning to trust my body's hunger after decades of being told that hunger was the problem. That who I wanted was wrong. That how I wanted them was perverted. That the electric current running through me when another man's eyes meet mine across a bar is something to resist rather than recognize as ancient, electric, holy.
The queerness of my flesh isn't a modern aberration requiring archaeological justification. But knowing the deep roots? That changes how you walk. How you fuck. How you understand that the way pleasure splits you open and remakes you might be the most direct line to the divine you'll ever know.
The Navajo had a word: nádleehí. The Lakota: wíŋkte. The Zuni: lhamana. Across hundreds of Indigenous nations, variations of what white anthropologists would reduce to "two-spirit"—people who lived between genders, who embodied both masculine and feminine, who were recognized as shamans, healers, visionaries, medicine carriers.
They weren't tolerated with liberal politeness. They were revered. Sought out. Necessary.
Two-spirit people married couples, named babies, led the ceremonies that held communities together. Their bodies—and let's be explicit here, their sexuality—were understood as sacred precisely because they shattered the binary. Because they could see from both sides. Because transformation lived in their bone marrow, their bloodstream, their desire.
When Spanish conquistadors encountered two-spirit people, they fed them to dogs. Called them "sodomites" and orchestrated their systematic erasure with the kind of violence that only comes from deep, primal fear. What couldn't be destroyed was buried under layers of colonial shame so thick we're still clawing through the sediment.
But here's what they couldn't kill: the knowledge that a body loving outside prescribed boundaries isn't broken. It's a boundary-crosser by nature. A threshold creature. A doorway between worlds.
Your queerness isn't a glitch. It's literally the feature that makes you a portal.
In the Dagaara tradition of Burkina Faso, elder Malidoma Patrice Somé taught that gay people are "gatekeepers"—maintaining balance between the earthly and spiritual realms. Not despite their sexuality. Because of it.
The Yoruba recognize adofuro—those who love same-sex partners—within cosmologies that understood gender and spirit as fluid, complex, multiplicative long before Western academics discovered the word "non-binary." Before missionaries showed up with their impotent god and their rigid categories and their weaponized shame.
In temples across pre-colonial Africa, certain priest and priestess roles belonged to people whose gender and sexuality existed outside heteronormative frameworks. Bodies met bodies in acts understood as worship, as energy transmission, as literal communion with divine forces.
The joining of flesh wasn't separate from spiritual practice. It was spiritual practice. Sex was prayer. Orgasm was offering. The temple priestess fucking the initiate into altered consciousness wasn't scandal—it was technology.
This isn't romantic nostalgia for some imagined Eden. It's understanding that the shame coating your desire is newer than the desire itself. That bodies recognizing bodies in pleasure and hunger is older than any book telling you it's sin.
The guilt isn't ancient. The ecstasy is.
Western culture reduced tantra to a punchline about delayed orgasms and uncomfortable eye contact. But tantric traditions—Hindu and Buddhist both—understood something we keep forgetting through layers of Puritanical amnesia: sexual energy is spiritual energy. The kundalini rising up your spine doesn't give a fuck about your marriage certificate, your gender, who's inside you when it moves.
Tantric practice recognizes that when two bodies meet with intention, they're channeling the fundamental creative force that spins galaxies. That pleasure—real, embodied, consciousness-shattering pleasure—is a direct transmission route to the divine.
And here's what matters for those of us loving outside the permitted configurations: tantra never limited this wisdom to missionary position between married heterosexuals. The principles work because they're about energy, consciousness, presence. About meeting another human in their full humanity while you're fully alive in yours.
The channels through which ecstasy moves don't care about your genitals. They care about your attention, your breath, your willingness to stay present when pleasure threatens to annihilate your carefully constructed identity.
They care if you're actually there—in your body, in the moment, in the holy fucking now—when someone touches you like you matter.
So what does temple sexuality mean when you're navigating hookup apps, or explaining to family why their god seems smaller than your love, or just trying to figure out if the electricity in your body when you see him can be trusted?
It means this: The recognition between your body and another body—that magnetic pull, that instant knowing—might be older and wiser than any shame wrapped around it.
It means that when you fuck someone whose body echoes yours in ways that confuse people raised on binaries, you're not doing something new and deviant. You're doing something ancient and holy that got interrupted by colonization and missionary position and the lie that sex is only sacred when it's procreative.
It means you don't need permission from traditions that forgot their own foundations. The wisdom is already coded in your cells. In how your body reaches for certain beauty. In how touch can become prayer without anyone teaching you the liturgy.
In how sometimes, in the right bed with the right person with the right presence, you disappear into something larger than yourself and come back changed.
That's not recreation. That's re-creation.
I'm not saying every hookup is a spiritual experience. Sometimes sex is just friction and endorphins and skin hunger in a lonely world. Sometimes it's disappointing, mechanical, purely physical release.
But even that is holy. Because you're alive. Because you're in a body. Because in a world that spent centuries trying to convince you that your desire was demonic, you chose to desire anyway.
You chose your pleasure over their shame. That's revolutionary.
The truly radical act isn't claiming that queer sex is acceptable despite ancient traditions. It's remembering that many ancient traditions knew what we're rediscovering: that divinity expresses through all forms of love. That boundaries exist to be crossed by those called to cross them. That the medicine of transformation has always lived in bodies that refuse simple categorization.
Two-spirit people weren't tolerated as unfortunate exceptions. They were recognized as necessary. As carrying medicine the community needed to survive.
Your queerness isn't a bug in the divine operating system. It's a feature. It's literally what you're here to offer: the view from the threshold, the wisdom of between-worlds, the living reminder that all categories are more porous than we pretend.
The journey isn't back to some pristine past where everything was perfect and noble savages lived in harmony. That's a different kind of colonization.
The journey is forward, carrying what survived the burnings and the burials. Carrying the knowledge that your body is not wrong. That pleasure is not separate from the sacred. That sex—when engaged with consciousness, with presence, with the kind of care that sees another human being as holy—can be its own form of prayer.
Whether you're in committed partnership or navigating the beautiful mess of modern dating apps. Whether you're celibate by choice or exploring the edges of what desire can become. Whether you identify with ancient terms or forge entirely new language—the invitation is the same:
Trust that your body knows things your mind hasn't learned yet.
Trust that thousands of years of two-spirit medicine and African temple wisdom and tantric understanding live in your DNA. That when you love who you love, fuck who you fuck, show up as exactly who you are rather than who you were trained to be, you're not breaking with sacred tradition.
You're continuing it.
The ancestors whose wisdom was fed to dogs, buried under missions, beaten out of children in boarding schools, shamed into silence—they're not scandalized by your pleasure. They're celebrating your return.
To body. To truth. To ecstasy as birthright. To the understanding that divinity was always queerer, more erotic, more embodied than we were allowed to remember.
And your body already knows this. Has always known. Is teaching you still, if you'll let it.
Every time you let yourself feel what you actually feel. Every time you reach for what you actually want. Every time you choose the electric truth of your desire over the numbing safety of acceptability.
Every time you fuck like you mean it, like your pleasure matters, like your body is exactly the right instrument for the music it wants to make.
You're not just having sex.
You're remembering how to be a doorway. A threshold. A living temple.
You're doing what two-spirit people have always done: crossing boundaries, carrying medicine, holding the tension of opposites in your flesh until it transforms into something that heals.
The world needs your queerness. Your pleasure. Your refusal to shrink.
The divine is speaking through your body.
It's time to listen.

They didn't teach you this in Sunday school: that before your body became something to sanitize and suppress, it was a living altar. That before "gay" became a culture war wedge issue, it was a shamanic calling that made you essential to your community's survival.
I'm writing this from Tampa, where the humidity makes everything stick—skin to skin, truth to throat. Where I'm learning to trust my body's hunger after decades of being told that hunger was the problem. That who I wanted was wrong. That how I wanted them was perverted. That the electric current running through me when another man's eyes meet mine across a bar is something to resist rather than recognize as ancient, electric, holy.
The queerness of my flesh isn't a modern aberration requiring archaeological justification. But knowing the deep roots? That changes how you walk. How you fuck. How you understand that the way pleasure splits you open and remakes you might be the most direct line to the divine you'll ever know.
The Navajo had a word: nádleehí. The Lakota: wíŋkte. The Zuni: lhamana. Across hundreds of Indigenous nations, variations of what white anthropologists would reduce to "two-spirit"—people who lived between genders, who embodied both masculine and feminine, who were recognized as shamans, healers, visionaries, medicine carriers.
They weren't tolerated with liberal politeness. They were revered. Sought out. Necessary.
Two-spirit people married couples, named babies, led the ceremonies that held communities together. Their bodies—and let's be explicit here, their sexuality—were understood as sacred precisely because they shattered the binary. Because they could see from both sides. Because transformation lived in their bone marrow, their bloodstream, their desire.
When Spanish conquistadors encountered two-spirit people, they fed them to dogs. Called them "sodomites" and orchestrated their systematic erasure with the kind of violence that only comes from deep, primal fear. What couldn't be destroyed was buried under layers of colonial shame so thick we're still clawing through the sediment.
But here's what they couldn't kill: the knowledge that a body loving outside prescribed boundaries isn't broken. It's a boundary-crosser by nature. A threshold creature. A doorway between worlds.
Your queerness isn't a glitch. It's literally the feature that makes you a portal.
In the Dagaara tradition of Burkina Faso, elder Malidoma Patrice Somé taught that gay people are "gatekeepers"—maintaining balance between the earthly and spiritual realms. Not despite their sexuality. Because of it.
The Yoruba recognize adofuro—those who love same-sex partners—within cosmologies that understood gender and spirit as fluid, complex, multiplicative long before Western academics discovered the word "non-binary." Before missionaries showed up with their impotent god and their rigid categories and their weaponized shame.
In temples across pre-colonial Africa, certain priest and priestess roles belonged to people whose gender and sexuality existed outside heteronormative frameworks. Bodies met bodies in acts understood as worship, as energy transmission, as literal communion with divine forces.
The joining of flesh wasn't separate from spiritual practice. It was spiritual practice. Sex was prayer. Orgasm was offering. The temple priestess fucking the initiate into altered consciousness wasn't scandal—it was technology.
This isn't romantic nostalgia for some imagined Eden. It's understanding that the shame coating your desire is newer than the desire itself. That bodies recognizing bodies in pleasure and hunger is older than any book telling you it's sin.
The guilt isn't ancient. The ecstasy is.
Western culture reduced tantra to a punchline about delayed orgasms and uncomfortable eye contact. But tantric traditions—Hindu and Buddhist both—understood something we keep forgetting through layers of Puritanical amnesia: sexual energy is spiritual energy. The kundalini rising up your spine doesn't give a fuck about your marriage certificate, your gender, who's inside you when it moves.
Tantric practice recognizes that when two bodies meet with intention, they're channeling the fundamental creative force that spins galaxies. That pleasure—real, embodied, consciousness-shattering pleasure—is a direct transmission route to the divine.
And here's what matters for those of us loving outside the permitted configurations: tantra never limited this wisdom to missionary position between married heterosexuals. The principles work because they're about energy, consciousness, presence. About meeting another human in their full humanity while you're fully alive in yours.
The channels through which ecstasy moves don't care about your genitals. They care about your attention, your breath, your willingness to stay present when pleasure threatens to annihilate your carefully constructed identity.
They care if you're actually there—in your body, in the moment, in the holy fucking now—when someone touches you like you matter.
So what does temple sexuality mean when you're navigating hookup apps, or explaining to family why their god seems smaller than your love, or just trying to figure out if the electricity in your body when you see him can be trusted?
It means this: The recognition between your body and another body—that magnetic pull, that instant knowing—might be older and wiser than any shame wrapped around it.
It means that when you fuck someone whose body echoes yours in ways that confuse people raised on binaries, you're not doing something new and deviant. You're doing something ancient and holy that got interrupted by colonization and missionary position and the lie that sex is only sacred when it's procreative.
It means you don't need permission from traditions that forgot their own foundations. The wisdom is already coded in your cells. In how your body reaches for certain beauty. In how touch can become prayer without anyone teaching you the liturgy.
In how sometimes, in the right bed with the right person with the right presence, you disappear into something larger than yourself and come back changed.
That's not recreation. That's re-creation.
I'm not saying every hookup is a spiritual experience. Sometimes sex is just friction and endorphins and skin hunger in a lonely world. Sometimes it's disappointing, mechanical, purely physical release.
But even that is holy. Because you're alive. Because you're in a body. Because in a world that spent centuries trying to convince you that your desire was demonic, you chose to desire anyway.
You chose your pleasure over their shame. That's revolutionary.
The truly radical act isn't claiming that queer sex is acceptable despite ancient traditions. It's remembering that many ancient traditions knew what we're rediscovering: that divinity expresses through all forms of love. That boundaries exist to be crossed by those called to cross them. That the medicine of transformation has always lived in bodies that refuse simple categorization.
Two-spirit people weren't tolerated as unfortunate exceptions. They were recognized as necessary. As carrying medicine the community needed to survive.
Your queerness isn't a bug in the divine operating system. It's a feature. It's literally what you're here to offer: the view from the threshold, the wisdom of between-worlds, the living reminder that all categories are more porous than we pretend.
The journey isn't back to some pristine past where everything was perfect and noble savages lived in harmony. That's a different kind of colonization.
The journey is forward, carrying what survived the burnings and the burials. Carrying the knowledge that your body is not wrong. That pleasure is not separate from the sacred. That sex—when engaged with consciousness, with presence, with the kind of care that sees another human being as holy—can be its own form of prayer.
Whether you're in committed partnership or navigating the beautiful mess of modern dating apps. Whether you're celibate by choice or exploring the edges of what desire can become. Whether you identify with ancient terms or forge entirely new language—the invitation is the same:
Trust that your body knows things your mind hasn't learned yet.
Trust that thousands of years of two-spirit medicine and African temple wisdom and tantric understanding live in your DNA. That when you love who you love, fuck who you fuck, show up as exactly who you are rather than who you were trained to be, you're not breaking with sacred tradition.
You're continuing it.
The ancestors whose wisdom was fed to dogs, buried under missions, beaten out of children in boarding schools, shamed into silence—they're not scandalized by your pleasure. They're celebrating your return.
To body. To truth. To ecstasy as birthright. To the understanding that divinity was always queerer, more erotic, more embodied than we were allowed to remember.
And your body already knows this. Has always known. Is teaching you still, if you'll let it.
Every time you let yourself feel what you actually feel. Every time you reach for what you actually want. Every time you choose the electric truth of your desire over the numbing safety of acceptability.
Every time you fuck like you mean it, like your pleasure matters, like your body is exactly the right instrument for the music it wants to make.
You're not just having sex.
You're remembering how to be a doorway. A threshold. A living temple.
You're doing what two-spirit people have always done: crossing boundaries, carrying medicine, holding the tension of opposites in your flesh until it transforms into something that heals.
The world needs your queerness. Your pleasure. Your refusal to shrink.
The divine is speaking through your body.
It's time to listen.
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