Practice - Wild Love: Where Magic Meets the Untamed Heart
58m
Wild love is not accidental - it is cultivated and has a texture to it. In long-term intimacy, couples often lose the edge of wildness or the depth of heart, swinging unconsciously between intensity and tenderness. To embody wild love requires training your sensitivity to its texture: when does the moment call for more magic - slower, fuller, more heart - and when does it call for more wild - raw, untamed, unapologetic life force? Honest feedback becomes essential. Not to please or perform, but to support one another in finding the precise blend where sexual polarity and devotion meet.
In this 58-minute partner practice from Fierce Love (Austin, 2026), John guides couples into an exploration of breath as a portal to the wild within. Through attuned presence and simple, direct feedback - “more wild” or “more love” - partners learn to refine the texture of their connection.
You are invited to feel more of your partner’s heart or more of their fire, to express your yearning clearly, and to let go of “getting it right”. The practice trains you to stay embodied, not carried away, discovering the ancient magic that lives at the intersection of containment and intensity.
This is an invitation to love boldly. To be the call for more wild magic. And to let your heart be filled by the very love you dare to ask for.
Disclaimer: Although anyone may find this practice to be useful, it is made available with the understanding that we are not engaged in presenting specific medical, psychological, emotional, sexual or spiritual advice. Nor is anything in this practice intended to be a diagnosis, prescription, recommendation or cure for any specific kind of medical, psychological, emotional, sexual or spiritual problem. Each individual has unique needs, and this practice cannot take these individual differences into account. Each person should engage in a program of treatment, prevention, cure, or general health only in consultation with a licensed, qualified physician, therapist or other competent professional. Any person suffering from a sexually transmitted disease or any local illness of his or her sexual organs should consult a medical doctor and a qualified instructor of sexual yoga before practicing the sexual methods described.