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Monday mindfulness
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Saying no to the inner stories, so we can say yes to our life

Last week I was reflecting on the power of saying no to external events and a text conversation with a friend this week has reminded me of the power of learning to say no to the stories we tell ourselves.

The 8 week Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy course has a theme of 'propaganda' - the stories we tell ourselves so often that we come to believe them as objective truth rather than a subjective opinion. As the cartoon above suggests, it is so easy for us all to be going around with the same propaganda undermining us: the thought that it is only me who is not together, is broken and failed....whilst thinking that everyone else is together, purposeful and living to their full potential. 

Having the privilege of talking to so many people in my role as monk and then mindfulness teacher, and reading the emails that some people send me in response to these weekly reflections I have been privileged in my life to see behind the public mask so many of us present to the world. Behind that mask what so many of us share is a sense of confusion, fear and struggle. Often this is rooted in negative scripts that tell us we are in some way defective or lacking, or do not deserve the success we have, or will be seen to be the fraud we feel ourselves to be. 

Some people will have other more egotistical scripts, believing themselves to be amazing and wonderful, but this is still a fragile place to inhabit, as the moment this belief gets threatened the fragility of their identity easily cracks. People who have based their worth on being a high flying, high earning achiever can be the most  hard hit by loosing their job or position as they also loose everything that confirms their story of who they are. Rather than believing in themselves they believe in what their position says about them and loosing that position it can feel as if they have been destroyed. Unfortunately the number of suicides after executives or highly placed bankers have lost their position testifies to this. In contrast people with a low self-view are relatively comfortable with the world conforming this through a perception of failure! 

It does not matter then whether our inner script is one of lack or superiority, believing in the script and the stories that get generated by it can be destructive for anyone and learning to say no to the story teller is the first step in finding a deeper freedom.
 


Reading self-help books and attending workshops can be a useful way of becoming aware of the scripts - but can in themselves become part of the story: the one who is seeking, who is broken, who needs to find the right person or book or teaching to fix them. The people I know who have found their own freedom have all at some point stopped looking outside and instead taken the teaching they have and turned inside to fully explore the implications of that insight. 

The thought "I'll read just one more book", or "I'll visit just this one more teacher" and then I can start to explore the implications of their teaching is all a way of the storyteller delaying the deeper investigation of what is keeping one trapped: one's own addiction to the drama we have become familiar with. The friend I have been chatting with about this said it so well when he observed that he was addicted to his story. I've felt that with my own sadness at times, it's as if I am addicted to a state of being and make choices that perpetuate that experience. Partly it feels comfortable to rest in the familiar. But there also  seems to be a feedback loop where feeding the familiar emotional drama is like any other addiction in the way it gives rise to a dopamine hit that gives a sense of reward, even if the addictive emotion itself is an unpleasant one. 

The following information outlines this process, relating it to our ancient reward centre in the brain that assists in learning thorough giving a pleasurable experience through the production of neurotransmitters such as dopamine when we experience something which seems beneficial to our learning or survival: 

When we encounter beneficial stimuli, our reward system gives us pleasurable feelings by releasing chemicals manufactured within the brain called neurotransmitters. Because we want more of these good feelings, we seek out more of the stimuli. Each additional time we encounter these stimuli, we release more neurotransmitters, get more pleasure, and reinforce our drive to yet again seek out that stimuli.

 

This process is fundamental to how we learn to interact with our environment. It’s how we learn to seek out behaviors that are good for our survival and the survival of our species, behaviors like eating food, having sex, and spending time with people we enjoy.


Addiction is a disorder of this reward system, and since the reward system is all about learning, researchers have called addiction a kind of “pathological learning”. We learn to crave things in excess of what is healthy, to the point where we actually learn behaviors that are detrimental rather than beneficial for our survival. Therefore, we conclude the problem we call addiction is a phenomenon which develops when the reward system is distorted in such a way that we pathologically learn to crave our addiction.
 

In part, the reward system includes our “upper brain” prefrontal cortex, which can make sophisticated decisions and distinctions. But the parts of the reward system involved in sensing pleasure and storing memory are in the “lower brain” limbic system.

 

The limbic system is not very choosy. It evolved millions of years ago, long before humans developed refined thinking. Nothing in this primitive part of the brain was baked in to distinguish, say, fruit from candy bars, or sex from masturbating to pornography. The prefrontal cortex can make these distinctions–which is why we can make these distinctions–but as far as the limbic system is concerned, if you’re eating a colorful handheld snack packed with sugar, you’re eating fruit! And if you’re sexally aroused, looking at sexually aroused people, feeling genital pleasure, and climaxing… well, you’re having sex!


https://www.nofap.com (porn addiction website)

As the brain experiences a dopamine hit from turning towards this addictive behaviour it reinforces the feeling that this is a reward which encourages it to return to this behaviour more and more to get the reward again and again. So if our addiction is porn or food or buying shoes or feeling sad or self-blame the process is the same: our brain has learnt through a 'pathological learning' to identify that stimuli with a dopamine reward. 

Thus we return to the principle of learning to say no to the story teller: the urge to return to a familiar experience, whether it be an addictive sense of feeling sad, or and external addiction of shopping, food or porn. The story will be that when I have this I will feel better. Even though that may then be followed by a feeling of shame at having fallen into a pattern again that we feel does not really serve us. But that remorse passes and soon we are back in the loop again of seeking the dopamine reward for our familiar pattern. 

In this way these negative scripts have a double barb: they give rise to shame or a sense of not being fulfilled, yet by giving a false dopamine hit of reward they also mange to trick the brain into thinking they are beneficial by giving a brief experience of fulfilment followed by the crash of shame, and so we return to these activities again, in part to get away from the low feelings associated with the shame they have caused to arise. 

Logically I can look at my addiction to sadness and see that it serves no purpose other than to keep me sad in a world that is perceived as half empty. But if by returning to this familiar place I get a dopamine hit that briefly tells the brain this is a beneficial experience then there is an encouragement to keep returning. 

The benefit of mindfulness in this process is to learn to urge surf. This is a manfulness based approach to craving, where instead of trying to resist an urge one instead turns toward the experience of the craving with curiosity, and learns to sit in the experience, attending to it as one watches the breath and the body whilst meditating. In this way there is a beautifully paradoxical process of saying no by saying yes! We say "yes" to being present and allowing without judgement the urge or desire to be as it is, but this requires us to say "no" to acting on the urge in habitual ways so that we are able to sit with it and fully feel what it is like as an experience. In this way we can feel the discomfort within it, and also watch as it passes, without needing to get the hit of the familiar addictive behaviour to make the discomfort go away. 

Urge Surfing

As the intensity of a craving builds it feels like it is going to keep on getting worse and if you don’t give in to it, it will last forever. In actual fact, if you can just wait it out it will peak in intensity after a few minutes and then gradually subside into nothingness; just as a wave crests and falls. Cravings very rarely last for longer than half an hour and are generally briefer in duration.1

The trick is to forget fighting or suppressing cravings but instead to learn a technique that asks you to experience a craving fully so that you rob that craving of its power over you.

Mindfulness

Urge surfing is a relapse prevention technique based on the principles of mindfulness meditation. By paying great attention to what a craving actually feels like, by maintaining awareness on the craving on a second by second basis and by avoiding passing value judgments about what you are experiencing (this is good, this is terrible, this will never end etc.) you learn to ride over waves of cravings and you rob these cravings of much of their power.

To get started with urge surfing try these three steps:

  1. When you feel a craving coming on, sit down in a  comfortable chair (ideally in a place where you won’t be disturbed), put your feet flat on the floor and take a few deep breaths to relax yourself. Close your eyes and look inward into your body. Try to feel where in your body you experience sensations of cravings and describe to yourself what these cravings feel like in different parts of your body (for example "I feel a tightness in my legs and my stomach is kind of jumpy…").
  2. Pick one area in your body that seems most affected by sensations of craving and focus deeply on these sensations as they pass by. To keep your mind from wandering, describe the sensations you experience in your chosen part of the body as they arise (for example "my arm is kind of itchy, now it’s almost like a pins-and-needles sensation just below my elbow in my inner arm…It feels warm too now…"
  3. Next move to another affected part of the body and repeat the focused attention there, and then repeat with another part of the body. After a while, you will notice that the craving will have passed by.2

By learning a new way to experience cravings you learn a valuable skill in overcoming them, and as you learn to experience your cravings in a mindful way, without judging and without giving in, you will find that in time the frequency and intensity with which you experience them will diminish.

 The above is from the Choose Help website

A Brief introduction to Urge Surfing

 

As I write this email I am hailing to apply the principles to my experience right now. I had a date today, someone I met on the Tube a few weeks ago. This was to be our second date, after spending three hours together last Thursday. But he canceled yesterday, saying he is too busy with work. This immediately took me into the familiar story: "I'm not wanted", "why do I only find men who cannot commit", "what's wrong with me....what did I do wrong". The discomfort of all of this then just makes me want to find a way to escape the pain: either through indulging in the comfortably familiar place of melancholy or in some porn as a simulated experience of connection and sensuality. But this is the old story playing out and putting its shadow over the events. He's not said we will not meet, only that he is too busy today. It may be we never meet again, or it may be we have a date in a weeks time once I return from Queer Spirit.

My brain finds it so comfortable to go to the place of melancholy it immediately reads this as a rejection and a failure and bang, there is the dopamine hit of going to the familiar place of melancholy. Instead, by applying the urge surfing method in conjunction with Ajhan Chah's teaching "unsure uncertain" I can stay with this as an experience and recognise that the catastrophising that makes me feel so bad is not based on what is happening, but my fear of what will happen. I can be with the sadness of a canceled date: that is real. But the feelings of failure and of calamity are based on a familiar story of lack being projected into the future and creating a certainty that is not yet born out by any events. A similar story played itself out last month with a new friend whom I was convinced had lost interest in becoming friends. Now we text every  few days and are intermittent workout buddies. The story bore no reality to what was to happen but created a week of feeling dejected and a failure. Then when I dropped the story and sent him a text he replied and we carried on from there, so in fact there was no rejection...it was just he had not sent a text and needed me to do so to pick up the conversation again. 


I hope this helps you reflect on your own stories and how to relate to them as stories and not truth. 


To read any previous group emails click here for my blog


Peace,

Nick Kientsch


www.evolvingminds.org.uk


Community Notice Board

 
For a full list of sports, social  and recreational groups in London, compiled by GMFA click here  This  list is a few years old now so may be out of date in parts. 

 

No More Mr Nice Guy Info

A few people asked for more information about this after last week's email.

To buy the book click here

 
If you would like tread a free online PDF of the book click  here

There is also a Meet Up group on the last Friday of the month to meet and discuss issues that arise from the book. For details click here 
 

Nice guys are people pleasers, always putting others first rather than getting their own needs met. That’s how they’ve been conditioned in life, to seek the approval of others and survive life by being just... nice! Giving to get, fixing, keeping the peace, avoiding conflict, seeking approval, hiding mistakes… the list goes on. That’s being 'Nice'. It’s ultimately unfulfilling and prevents us from being the fullest version of ourselves and giving our best to others. Who should join this group? 

If you are you looking for a group of like-minded men where you can get to work on yourself and your Nice Guy-ness and have more of what you want in life, this is for you.

• Do you give in order to get?

• Do you avoid conflict and try to keep the peace?

• Do you try and get people to like you?

• Do you want to improve your relationships?

• Do you have more potential but you're just not achieving in life?

• Do you want stop people taking advantage of you?

• Do you want to bring more purpose and passion to your life?

If you are a man aged over 18 and answered 'yes' to one or more of these questions, this is the group for you.


QUEER SPIRIT FESTIVAL 2017

5 days of nature, magic, creativity, community and love!   

 

Thoulstone Park Events

Thoulstone, BA13 4AQ Chapmanslade

(about a 2 1/2 hour drive from London or accessible by train and taxi)


The second Queer Spirit Festival is taking place at a beautiful site in Wiltshire, easily reached by train or road, with ceremonies, performance, dance parties, campaigns, fire circles, stunning countryside to relax in and over 50 skilled facilitators offering a diverse and unique line up of activities and workshops. There are workshops to stretch body and mind, to uplift and connect soul and spirit, to honour and explore sexuality and to expand the possibilities of queer consciousness.

I went last year and it was an amazing time of community, sensual exploration, heart based connections, play, relaxation and celebration. The festival creates a heart space where you are invited to feel more deeply into who you wish to be and how you wish to be. There is a fantastic sense of belonging, of being in a Queer space where however you wish to be is allowed: to walk naked in the woods, to dance in the moonlight or sit and have a quiet cup of tea chatting with friends.  There is no pressure to conform to any idea of how you should be, instead you are invited to be how you wish to be, free from the constraints of fearing what others will think or say. 

To explore the different workshops and events on offer in more detail click here
 

I will be leading meditation sessions and there is a diverse range of workshops and activities over the festival so you can create an experience unique to your interests. For an over view of the workshops on offer see below.

Workshops range from events open to all ages to those for 18 over only. Some include nudity. Naturism is a part of the ethos of the event so for those who enjoy to be naked - or would like to try it for the first time -  this is an opportunity to relax in nature with no social taboos. I really enjoyed exploring this last year and it was amazing to be in a space where the usual restraints could be let go of, people naked mixing with those who were fully dressed in an atmosphere of openness and celebration. That said, if you prefer to stay well dressed there is no compulsion to be naked or attend any of the nude events, you create your personal programme over the five days. What is so great about the event is that it is  a space where it is possible to be who you wish to be.

There are a number of cafes on the site so you can buy food, or bring your own to cook. 

Workshops will range from Yoga, to sacred sexuality, healing and dance, discussions, activism and theatre.  There is a  more detailed list of events at the end of this email.

There will also be plenty of time to enjoy the beautiful nature all around us at the venue, to sit around a fire, to spend time talking with friends or reading on your own. 

Last year was a really fun and unique experience, I hope you will be able to join us again this year to make it even more amazing. 


 

5 day/weekend/concession tickets all available at: https://www.queerspirit.net/festival/tickets/

 


MORE VOLUNTEERS NEEDED TOO!

There are still volunteer roles up for grabs:  Stewards, Welfare, Cafe Crews and Box Office.

FREE TICKET TO THE FESTIVAL IN RETURN FOR A FEW HOURS WORK.

If you are  interested in volunteering:
 https://www.queerspirit.net/festival/festival-team


 


 

Events List for Queer Spirit Festival  2017


Spiritual Practice

Yoga, Pilates, Tai Chi, Meditation and Kung Fu!

Practice facilitators include Quishi Dominusj (Pilates), Andy Butterfield (Yoganu) and Nick Kientsch (Gay and Bi Men's Mindfulness class in Covent Garden)

Dance, Movement and Theatre

Naked Movement with Calu Lema, Drag up the Bollywood with Kali Chandresegam, Embodied Moves with Sonalle LaMariposa.

Plus Musical Theatre, Playback Theatre, Radical Ballet, and Ecstatic Dance.

Spirit Mysteries

Walk the Labyrinth, Connect with Source, Mediumship, 5th dimension, Native American Pipe Ceremonies, Ancestral Lineage

Spirit Mysteries facilitators include Lindsay River, Mountaine Jonas, Geoffrey Henning, Helen Moore and Stewart Lane.

Pagan Nature

Drum Practice and Trance Dance with Lou Hart and Andy Fowler, Goddess Inanna with Lindsay River, Shamanic Journeys led by DK Green.

Nature Meditation with Tom Cowan, Astrodrama with Hazel Birch.

The Intersections of Transness, Magic, Herbalism and Art with Chryssy Hunter and Jeanne Devlin.

Sacred Sexuality 

Workshops in the Sacred Sexuality Temple range from Conscious Speed Dating to Spiritual BDSM, via Pagan Sex Magic, Bonobo Birthing, Radical Self-Care, Eco-Sexuality, Massage, Sacred Intimacy and more. 

Also featuring the Sensual Jam, Queer Love Rites and early morning Love Lounge!

Connecting and Sharing

Heart Circles, Conscious Connection, Story Circle, Trans Support Meeting, Discussions.

Health and Healing

Gong Baths with Kamran Sarwar, Earth Medicine with Justin Luria, Hermit Practice with Tessa Wills.

Chinese Medicine with Titta Lalaala, Beginner's Guide to Veganism with Edward Daniel, Optimal Nutrition with Paz Banks.

Shiatsu with Andy Butterfield, Hypnosis with Hazel Birch.  Healing Garden with practitioners offering their services also.

Creative Crafts

Make your own Spirit Doll with Rosie Green

Explore Natural Dye Block Printing and Shibori Wall Hangings with Prince Lydia.

 

To explore the different workshops and events on offer in more detail click here

Queer Spirit Festival is a not-for-profit, community event, run by volunteers.

DANCE OUT LOUD - is a gay community focused group that is mixed and open to both gay and non-gay people who love to dance...

The 5 Rhythms can be seen as a dance workout, a social event or a deep spiritual practice when you get into it. People come to see this movement practice more as a meditation and a therapeutic meeting without words.   It can be fun, profound, silly, serious and playful.

Friday, 7 - 9.30pm
Venue: Central YMCA
Tube: Tottenham Court Road

Click here for more info


Open Connections
Sexuality Workshop for Gay/bi Men


Next meeting : 16 May 2017 - 'Non-sober' sex

Whether it's sex after a couple of drinks, a spliff, other drugs or chemsex, 'non-sober sex' can sometimes be a lot of fun, and often satisfies our transgressive urges and our fantasies to be sexual in an uninhibited way.

But things get problematic when we can only be sexual, or engage with others sexually, by being drunk or high.

The purpose of this workshop is to explore how we each relate to alcohol or drugs in our sexual lives, and what is uncomfortable about the sexual encounter that sometimes makes us prefer not being fully present.


Time: 8 - 9.30pm
Venue: Kobi Nazrul Centre, 30 Hanbury St, London E1 6QR
Cost: £20 (£10 concession)


Future meetings:
 

30 May 2017 - Sex in a relationship​

13 June 2017 - Limits and pleasure

27 June 2017 - Distance in intimacy


This is not something I am organising but I am participating in it and it gives an opportunity to have a more detailed discussion about subjects than we have time for in the class. To reserve you place please click on the link above.

Open Connection is a space where gay/bi men can experiment with connecting in more open and authentic ways. Every month we will be discussing a topic that relates generally to men (around the themes of sex/ sexuality/ physicality/ intimacy). The hope is that through personal sharing we can deepen self insight, and learn from each other's similarities and differences. 

What to expect? Expect to meet a group of interesting men in a relaxed, non-posturing setting. Most of the time at the gatherings will be allocated to a free group discussion, where everyone is encouraged to share from personal experience - there is however no pressure to share or reveal anything. Sometimes, depending on the topic we carry out some experiential exercises. 

What not to expect? This is not a debating society, and so we're staying away from discussing intellectual theories. This is also not group therapy. Although a lot of topics will evoke strong emotions, and we encourage everyone to be supportive of each other, this won't be the place to therapise, change or 'fix' any one.

Open Connections: the founder describes the purpose of the workshops
For more details click here

For more details click here

We provide personal development events and resources for gay and bi men to meet each other on a deeper level and experience a stronger sense of community.

We call our events 'adventures in intimacy' because they give you opportunities to get intimate, try out new things, make connections, step outside of your comfort zone and probably laugh harder than you have for a long time. We hope you find our events supportive, challenging, stimulating and inspiring. That’s all part of the adventure.

We welcome gay and bi men from all walks of life who want to develop their capacity to love other men. Reflecting our own diversity as a group of facilitators, we particularly encourage participation from black and ethnic minority men, HIV positive and negative men, young and older men, trans men and disabled men.

For more details click here

 


Men Get Eating Disorders Too is an award winning national charity is run by and for men with eating disorders including their carers and families.

Our website provides essential information that is specific to the unique needs of men and an online space for those affected to get their voices heard (e.g. peer support via our face to face groups and online chat sessions). We also campaign in the media and organise awareness raising events and training for professionals.

For more details click here
 


The Thrive Foundation was created to improve the mental, emotional and physical health and wellbeing of people of all ages, backgrounds, genders and races living with HIV.

For more details click here
 
 

Book Shop

 
Marrying the findings of the new field of social neuroscience together with gripping human stories, award-winning author and psychologist Susan Pinker explores the impact of face-to-face contact from cradle to grave, from city to Sardinian mountain village, from classroom to workplace, from love to marriage to divorce. Her results are enlightening and enlivening, and they challenge our assumptions.

Most of us have left the literal village behind, and don't want to give up our new technologies to go back there. But, as Pinker writes so compellingly, we need close social bonds and uninterrupted face-time with our friends and families in order to thrive - even to survive. Creating our own 'village effect' can make us happier. It can also save our lives.

To buy click here
Sane New World 

Ruby Wax - comedian, writer and mental health campaigner - shows us how our minds can jeopardize our sanity.

With her own periods of depression and now a Masters from Oxford in Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy to draw from, she explains how our busy, chattering, self-critical thoughts drive us to anxiety and stress. 

If we are to break the cycle, we need to understand how our brains work, rewire our thinking and find calm in a frenetic world.

Helping you become the master, not the slave, of your mind, here is the manual to saner living.

Click here to buy
No More Mr Nice Guy

Nice guys are people pleasers, always putting others first rather than getting their own needs met. That’s how they’ve been conditioned in life, to seek the approval of others and survive life by being just... nice! Giving to get, fixing, keeping the peace, avoiding conflict, seeking approval, hiding mistakes… the list goes on. That’s being 'Nice'. It’s ultimately unfulfilling and prevents us from being the fullest version of ourselves and giving our best to others. Who should join this group? 

If you are you looking for a group of like-minded men where you can get to work on yourself and your Nice Guy-ness and have more of what you want in life, this is for you.

• Do you give in order to get?

• Do you avoid conflict and try to keep the peace?

• Do you try and get people to like you?

• Do you want to improve your relationships?

• Do you have more potential but you're just not achieving in life?

• Do you want stop people taking advantage of you?

• Do you want to bring more purpose and passion to your life?


To buy the book click here

The Chimp Paradox

Do you sabotage your own happiness and success? Are you struggling to make sense of yourself? Do your emotions sometimes dictate your life?

The Chimp Paradox is an incredibly powerful mind management model that can help you become a happy, confident, healthier and more successful person. Prof Steve Peters explains the struggle that takes place within your mind and then shows how to apply this understanding to every area of your life so you can:

- Recognise how your mind is working
- Understand and manage your emotions and thoughts
- Manage yourself and become the person you would like to be

The Chimp Mind Management Model is based on scientific facts and principles, which have been simplified into a workable model for easy use. It will help you to develop yourself and give you the skills, for example, to remove anxiety, have confidence and choose your emotions. The book will do this by giving you an understanding of the way in which your mind works and how you can manage it. It will also help you to identify what is holding you back or preventing you from having a happier and more successful life. 

Each chapter explains different aspects of how you function and highlights key facts for you to understand. There are also exercises for you to work with. By undertaking these exercises you will see immediate improvements in your daily living and, over time, you will develop emotional skills and practical habits that will help you to become the person that you want to be, and live the life that you want to live.

Click here to buy
Food for the Heart

Chah offers a thorough exploration of Theravadan Buddhism in a gentle, sometimes humorous, style that makes the reader feel as though he or she is being entertained by a story. He emphasizes the path to freedom from emotional and psychological suffering and provides insight into the fact that taking ourselves seriously causes unnecessary hardship.

Click here to buy
Being Dharma

Renowned for the beauty and simplicity of his teachings, Ajahn Chah was Thailand's best-known meditation teacher. His charisma and wisdom influenced many American and European seekers, and helped shape the American Vipassana community. This collection brings together for the first time Ajahn Chah's most powerful teachings, including those on meditation, liberation from suffering, calming the mind, enlightenment and the 'living dhamma'. Most of these talks have previously only been available in limited, private editions and the publication of Food for the Heart therefore represents a momentous occasion: the hugely increased accessibility of his words and wisdom. Western teachers such as Ram Dass and Jack Kornfield have extolled Chah's teachings for years and now readers can experience them directly in this book.

Click here to buy
The Way It Is

A selection of talks by Ajahn Sumedho, an American disciple of Ajahn Chah. Simple, direct and inviting the reader to let go into a deeper experience of presence. 

Click here to buy
The Four Noble Truths

A selection of talks by Ajahn Sumedho outlining the core Buddhist teaching of suffering, its cause, the cessation of suffering and the path leading to the cessation of suffering. 

Click here to buy
A Little Gay History

How old is the oldest chat- up line between men? Who was the first ‘lesbian’? Were ancient Greek men who had sex together necessarily ‘gay’? And what did Shakespeare think about cross- dressing? 

A Little Gay History takes objects ranging from Ancient Egyptian papyri and the erotic scenes on the Roman Warren Cup to images by modern artists including David Hockney and Bhupen Khakhar to consider questions such as these. Explored are the issues behind forty artefacts from ancient times to the present, and from cultures across the world, to ask a question that concerns us all: how easily can we recognize love in history?

Click here to buy
Straight Jacket

Written by Matthew Todd, editor of Attitude, the UK's best-selling gay magazine, Straight Jacket is a revolutionary clarion call for gay men, the wider LGBT community, their friends and family. Part memoir, part ground-breaking polemic, it looks beneath the shiny facade of contemporary gay culture and asks if gay people are as happy as they could be – and if not, why not? 

In an attempt to find the answers to this and many other difficult questions, Matthew Todd explores why statistics show a disproportionate number of gay people suffer from mental health problems, including anxiety, depression, addiction, suicidal thoughts and behaviour, and why significant numbers experience difficulty in sustaining meaningful relationships. Bracingly honest, and drawing on his own experience, he breaks the silence surrounding a number of painful issues
To buy click here 
Velvet Rage

Today's gay man enjoys unprecedented, hard-won social acceptance. Despite this victory, however, serious problems still exist. Substance abuse, depression, suicide, and sex addiction among gay men are at an all-time high, causing many to ask, "Are we really better off?"

Drawing on contemporary research, psychologist Alan Downs's own struggle with shame and anger, and stories from his patients, The Velvet Rage passionately describes the stages of a gay man's journey out of shame and offers practical and inspired strategies to stop the cycle of avoidance and self-defeating behavior. Updated to reflect the effects of the many recent social, cultural, and political changes, The Velvet Rage is an empowering book that has already changed the public discourse on gay culture and helped shape the identity of an entire generation of gay men.
To buy click here 

 
 

Drop in class (open to anyone) 6.15-7.20pm (£8/ £5 concessions)

Gay and bi men's group
 
Time: 7.30-9.30pm 
 
Fee: £10
Concessions: £5
 
Venue: Friends Meeting House, 8 Hop Gardens, off St Martins Lane. 

Look for the large glass and concrete building with Gym Box on the corner, Hop Gardens is a pedestrian lane to the side of Gym Box.
 
Map

Meets every Monday except Bank Holidays.
 
Copyright © 2017 Evolving Minds, All rights reserved.