Monday, December 27, 2010

It's All About Building Healthy Relationships at Blissful Lotus

December 13th, 2010 by Michael Freeman of FREELINE MEDIA

Stacey Murphy shows off the products sold at Blissful Lotus that help couples discover intimacy and romance.

ORLANDO – Stacey Murphy gets a lot of people who sign up for her classes, particularly women, and “a lot of our clients, they’re professional, educated people.”  But Murphy still knows that when a few of them start the class, there’s always going to be that initial giggle factor.  "I say, ‘Ladies, this is a participatory class, you didn’t come here to look at me, you came to learn a technique,’ “ Murphy said. “And some of the women are giggling.”  On the other hand, for some of the couples who show up, her class turns out to be a major revelation. “We have a lot of men who come in with their girlfriend, and by the end they say, ‘Girl, I’m seeing you in a whole new light,’ “ Murphy said.

That doesn’t surprise Murphy, who with her husband Sean Ramsay runs Blissful Lotus, a boutique on Orange Avenue that puts an emphasis on romance – specificially, by selling products from linqerie to oils, books to artwork, designed to help couples discover what works for them romantically, and what makes them tick.  

Husband and wife owners Sean Ramsay and Stacey Murphy opened Blissful Lotus a year ago in October.  At the same time, the boutique – which celebrated its one year anniversary in October – also hosts classes for couples and individuals that run every Tuesday through Thursday from 7-9 p.m. The educational component of the business is “huge,” Murphy said, since the classes are designed to teach couples and individuals about healthy ways of embracing their sexuality.

“What makes it positive is we try to teach men and women about authentic and empowered sensuality,” Murphy said. “It’s all about teaching people to embrace themselves and their sexuality. We have a school for loving arts.”

It’s also, Ramsay said, a way to get people to talk and think about a subject that people often are uncomfortable confronting: their sexual feelings. In a sense, he said, it becomes about strengthening relationships by teaching people how to be more open about feelings and desires.
“It’s okay to talk about this,” he said. “We’re letting the guys know it’s okay to be in touch with this stuff. It’s about relationships, and the experience of creating an intimate relationship.”

So how does a couple get into the business of teaching intimacy education through classes on “Erotic Kissing for Couples” and “Seven Days to Sex Appeal”? In some ways, it all happened rather accidentally, Murphy said.

Both of the store owners have backgrounds in other fields – Murphy has worked for years in corporate marketing, while Ramsay has a background in retail. “My husband and I got into it initially because I wanted to take Tantra yoga lessons,” Murphy said. But she needed a way to pay for the lessons.
“I actually came across selling romance enhancement products to help pay for the Tanta lessons,” she said. “I started selling this at home.” She quickly discovered that women calling for information about these products had a lot of questions – far more than Murphy initially expected.

“Many of the women were hungry for information, and I was able to sell the products by giving them information as well, on how to get in touch with their sensuality,” she said.  “That’s when I came across this concept.”

Romance boutiques, she said, are easy to find in big cities like Chicago and Los Angeles, but the concept was unheard of in Florida until last October, when a similar boutique opened in Miami. Murphy and Ramsay opened their shop at 1810 N. Orange Ave. at the same time, and it turned out to be the perfect location, she said. It’s a neighborhood that includes the Rock N Roll Heaven used record store, the White Wolf Cafe, Theatre Downtown, and the Savoy gay nightclub.

“This area is just very eclectic, very down to Earth, and they seem more receptive to this concept,” she said.
Did they have a difficult time opening a romance boutique in a conservative Southern state? Murphy said Orlando city officials never gave them a difficult time.

“We worked with the city for about a year to get a clear and defining line about what we can and can’t do,” she said. “We were very open about it, saying “This is what we want to do,’ so the city worked with us. Other parts of the area wouldn’t work – we wouldn’t be going to Winter Park. But we find that we’re bringing a resource here.”

It’s also important to keep in mind, Murphy noted, that her boutique is not the same thing as a store selling pornography.

“Romance boutiques are different,” she said. “None of them have offensive packaging. We don’t sell porn. Many of them have an art gallery as well, as we do.”

Rather than explicit DVDs and magazines, Blissful Lotus has an art gallery for adults.
What’s more challenging for them is dealing with the fact that sex remains one of those subjects that everyone wants to hear about, but at the same time it makes so many people very uncomfortable.
“We have a very schizophrenic view of sex,” Murphy said. “We use it to sell everything, but we don’t want to talk about it.”

Sex is so popular, though, that the subject matter saturates the media, she noted. Murphy said she got a laugh recently when she saw a television commercial about pest control.
“They were using sex to sell it – ‘The roaches are doing it,’ “ she laughed. “We try to give this subject a different face – something very educated.”  The key to making it work, she added, is to help people walking through the door feel comfortable talking about their feelings and desires.

“The biggest feedback I get is because we’re very relaxed, it makes people comfortable with us,” she said. “You’ll have a woman that says, ‘You know what I’m talking about, his … his …’ And we say, ‘We know what you’re talking about – his Love Wand.’ And they say ‘Yeah,’ and that helps make people feel comfortable.”

Murphy said Blissful Lotus shouldn’t be confused with a medical office that deals with physical issues requiring medication or surgery, and it isn’t a sex club, either.

“In our society, we’re either too clinical or too crass,” she said. “We try to bridge it in the middle.”
To learn more, call Blissful Lotus at 407-704-3357, email blissfullotus@gmail.com or log on to www.Theblissfullotus.Blogspot.com.

Written by: Michael Freeman for Freeline Media on December 13, 2010.
Posted in After Dark

Saturday, February 27, 2010

An Intimacy Educator by Orlando Magazine

With Valentine’s Day coming up, we asked STACEY MURPHY, 42, co-owner of a ‘romance boutique’ in Orlando, for advice about the often-elusive ways of love.
Interview by Jay Boyar

Photo By Mark Losh Photography

“I have always been giving people relationship advice ever since I was in high school—constantly,” says Murphy, who, with her husband owns Blissful Lotus, a “romance boutique” at 1810 N. Orange Avenue, where she hosts intimacy workshops for women and couples, and sells everything from self-help books to sexy lingerie. “I remember one time I said to a person, ‘I don’t even have a boyfriend. Why are you asking me for relationship advice?’ And they said, ‘Because you give very good, practical advice.’”

“With romance, we like to believe that it comes naturally. But what we’ve found with a lot of people is that there’s a hesitation to tap into that [natural impulse] from various societal conditioning or societal issues. Men are raised that they have to be tough and strong, [so] it’s harder for them to tap into that.”

“A lot of women, whether it’s right or wrong, have these high expectations about Valentine’s Day. Other than marriage and your anniversary, it’s like the crescendo of showing how much you love this other person. And then, on the other end, men go through this major anxiety because they’re like, ‘I don’t know what the heck to do!’ They get lost.”

“Valentine’s Day is one day that a lot of people get engaged. And a lot of people break up. Both ways. Sometimes the true meaning of it gets lost. It’s about appreciation and showing your love for the other person.”

“Those who are not in a relationship, [sometimes] come to hate Valentine’s Day because they feel left out. Just because you don’t have a partner in your life doesn’t mean that you can’t enjoy this day. Buy yourself flowers. I’ve had people that actually have ordered flowers and had them sent to their job for them to receive the flowers. And then on the little card it says, ‘I love you.’”

Whether or not it’s Valentine’s Day, flirting can be an effective way to make a romantic connection, providing it’s done correctly. “It’s about being subtle. It’s not about hitting them over the head with: I want to be in your space.”

“The first thing you would do [when flirting] is compliment them. But you would compliment them in a way that would not make them feel uncomfortable. With men, sometimes why they get shot down so quickly is they come up with these kooky lines.” But if the conversation goes well, it can lead to tactile flirting.

“For a man, if he puts the hand on the shoulder, that’s OK. No reaching over and hugging. That comes later. For guys, don’t [put your hand] on the woman’s leg. This is where sometimes you have double standards. If a woman puts her hand on a guy’s knee, she’s really giving him an indication.”

“One of the things the recession has shown us is that when the money is gone, all you have is each other. When everything else goes crumbling down, what’s important are the people in your life, the relationships that you have.”

This article appears in the February 2010 issue of Orlando Magazine
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