Is a Sex Surrogate Right for You?
Sexual Healer
Mare Simone
By Michelle Burford
Mare Simone
is in a decidedly unconventional -- and sometimes controversial -- line
of work. Simone, 54, is a tantra sex educator (someone who helps people
prolong and relish their lovemaking) and sex surrogate. For the last
two decades, Simone has had intimate physical contact with clients who
pay her between $100 and $200 a session, to help them restore their
sexual vibrancy, overcome dysfunction or learn how to be better givers
and receivers of pleasure.
Many view Simone’s work (which is
entirely legal), as a legitimate form of sex therapy, but others raise
an eyebrow at the potential for contacting and spreading STDs, or the
impact that it could have on her own personal relationships as well as
that of her clients. Simone, however, is firm believer in the sex
surrogacy and it's ability to revitalize and heal a person's sexual
self. She credits sex surrogacy with helping her move on from the
trauma she suffered after being a victim of rape twice by the age of
22. Without it, she says, she might never have been able to release
what she calls the “layers of angst" that haunted her after the
assaults. AOL Health interviewed Simone to understand exactly what is
involved in the work of sex surrogate, to learn how it fosters healthy
sexual relationships and to find out what she tells people she does for
a living when she goes to parties.
AOL Health: What is a sex surrogate?
Mare Simone: A sex surrogate is a member of a sex therapy
team who engages in intimate physical contact with clients, usually in
conjunction with a therapy, in order to achieve therapeutic goals. I
was trained as a sex surrogate in 1986, and I worked professionally for
about two years. Now, I use some of my training as a sex surrogate
in conjunction with my training as a certified tantra educator. I work
privately with individuals both in the United States and
internationally.
AOL Health: Who comes to you for help -- single and married men, as well as women?
Simone: All of the above. My primary expertise is working
with people who have any kind of sexual dysfunction. I also work with
people who want to advance their sexual experience from a short-lived
fulfillment to something that enhances body, mind and soul.
AOL Health: What are some typical challenges your clients face, and how do you help them work through these challenges?
Simone: The majority of men come to me because they have premature ejaculation.
One area that I'm very skillful in is helping men learn to relax. The
second most common challenge for my clients is learning how to give
more pleasure to their partners. The third most common issue is men who
have trouble getting an erection. Among women, the issue is that they need to learn how to honor their body's rhythms and what satisfies them.
AOL Health: How have you improved the sex lives of your clients?
Simone: Men have said how much more confident they feel
about having a sexual encounter. Also, a lot of men will say that they
never knew that their partners could have so much pleasure, and they're
partners are really grateful about the number of orgasms they've been
able to give their partner. There's great joy and celebration in the
fact they've been able to help their partners achieve much greater
sexual satisfaction.
AOL Health: Before having intercourse, are there certain guidelines you and your clients agree to follow?
Simone: I don't usually have intercourse with clients.
I've worked with over 10,000 clients in 23 years, and I have had close
intimate connections with maybe 1,500 of them. Some of those
connections might include intercourse, but very often, it's manual
stimulation for the purpose of practicing techniques that can help them
to expand their orgasmic ability.
It's very rare, even in surrogate practices, to have
intercourse with a client. It's often considered a kind of graduation
of the course. Before then, there's a slow, methodical process that
includes a lot of different levels of touch, from hand and back
caressing to genital caressing. If the client reaches an achievement
level where he is ready, intercourse might be part of it. And even the
intercourse process is very controlled. You don't just go at it with
passion. It's about re-programming the client's body to slow down and
learn how to feel and be present with their eyes open and the lights
on.
Many clients never need intercourse with the surrogate, because they
have partners that they practice with. I don't really have sex with
other women's husbands; in fact, when I'm working with a client who is
married, I request that the client invite his wife to have a session.
It really helps if I can speak to the woman about her partner's
condition so that she's in alignment with me.
AOL Health: You never have sex with men who are married or who have girlfriends?
Simone: I don't. I always ask my clients about their
relationship status, and I do not have intercourse with them if they
are in a committed relationship. Also, I don't "sleep" with my clients.
I awaken them and send them home to be with their partners. Tantric sex
is about awakening to the power of pleasure, with love.
AOL Health: Are you intimate with women?
Simone: I've taught women how to find their G-spot. I've
given them ways to relax and feel their bodies in a different way. I've
helped them tap into their femininity. But I don't do oral contact with
women. I try to help women relax. The main reason that women are not orgasmic
is that they try too hard. I did the same before I learned tantra. I
was anxiously chasing that fleeting feeling, and it would slip through
my fingers a lot. Tantra has taught me how to become 100 percent
present. A lot of people are in their heads when they're making love.
They're trying to do some techniques and they're really not feeling
their partner's response to them in the moment.
AOL Health: When you are intimate with a client, do you disconnect emotionally?
Simone: I don't disconnect. I become 100 percent present
with them. I tell them whatever it is I'm feeling, whether it's
beautiful or joyful. I try to avoid the L word, but I do let them know
that I'm loving what's happening. Sometimes more than anything, clients
want to know that they're appreciated and valued, especially in that
moment when they're most vulnerable and impressionable.
AOL Health: Have you ever developed feelings for someone along the way?
Simone: Yes. I have had a relationship with somebody who
was a client. Initially, he found me on a personals website where I
mentioned something about tantra. He then tried to contact me, and I
didn't respond, because he wasn't a tantra master and I wanted an
equal. So he decided to become my student. But it wasn't until our
third month working together that he revealed to me that he'd
originally found me on a personals website. So when I took him on as a
client, I didn't know that he wanted to be my boyfriend. He was a
client for several months, and then one day, he gave me a large sum of
money and said, "Let me know when this runs out." At that point, things
shifted and we started falling in love. We went off to a tantra
workshop together. Eventually, he moved on to be with someone else, and
he's now happily married.
AOL Health: When you do have intercourse with clients, do they have an STD test beforehand?
Simone: Yes -- but because I don't have direct oral or
fluid exchange with most clients, I don't request that everyone has an
STD test. If I know that we'll have any kind of fluid exchange, I
insist that we have STD tests before we go there.
Before intercourse, I make sure that everybody is scrupulously
clean. Also, I don't have oral exchange with clients, or anything that
involves fluid exchange. I don't even kiss them. It's not about
titillating them. It's about giving them an experienced practice at how
to feel aroused without being rushed or feeling stressed. It's about
teaching them to relax and ride the peak numerous times before they
climax so that they have a handle on this wild energy that is taking
them over.
AOL Health: If a client's pre-test shows that he or she has a STD, do you turn down the client?
Simone: Not because he or she has an STD. I have turned people away because they weren't sincere. They were looking for a good time.
AOL Health: Do you always use a condom?
Simone: Absolutely.
AOL Health: Has a condom ever broken or slipped off, and have you ever had an STD?
Simone: I'm so careful, but on two occasions, I did have
STDs. One was during my training, and I don't how I got it. I was
working with a lot of different students, and everyone was supposed to
have been tested. But somehow, I ended up with chlamydia. I managed it and it wasn't a big deal. And then once again years later, I discovered that I had gonorrhea.
I checked with all of my clients and with two lovers I'd been with, and
I never found out how it occurred. These are such baffling things. It
has made me become even more scrupulously clean and conscientious
because the last thing I want to do is give someone a disease when I'm
trying to help them.
AOL Health: Do you tell clients that you've had STDs?
Simone: The way that I handle it is that I tell them that
I have been tested regularly, and that I've had STDs in the past that
have since been managed and that are gone now. I've taken it upon
myself to be very forthcoming about my condition -- and I ask that they
do the same.
AOL Health: At a cocktail party when people ask you what you do for a living, do you fib?
Simone: Tantra is a form a yoga,
and I tell people that I'm a yoga teacher. And if they say, "What kind
of yoga," then I look closely into who they are and how much they can
understand what I do without judging me. Sometimes I say that I'm a
relationship or love coach. I don't say "sex surrogate" very much
because most people don't understand what that is. I sometimes tell
people that I'm a certified tantra educator.
AOL Health: Are you in a relationship now, and if so, has your work hindered that?
Simone: I'm not in a relationship. But I don't hide my
job from men. Ideally, I would love to have a partner who could
co-teach with me.
AOL Health: How do you respond to those who think that your work seems immoral or disrespectful?
Simone: When I'm working with a couple, or with someone
who is in a committed relationship, I encourage the participation of
both partners even if they are not both present at the session
together. I like to get the consent and blessings of the other partner
if at all possible. At the same time I don't judge my clients if they
would prefer to learn these skills on their own and bring them back to
their partners. I've had many occasions where one partner will say to
the other, "You investigate this experience and find out what it's like
and tell me all about it." In those cases, I often try to at least
speak with the other partner over the phone if they are willing, so
that I understand them and their needs and then include them in the
session by referring to them and suggest how to incorporate this
experience into their love life, with their partners.
Ultimately my intention is to send them back home with more knowledge,
skill and confidence. I understand that some people will criticize my
work because they don't understand that my work is about healing,
educating and empowering men, women and couples to live a more
satisfying sex life. It's not about me. I'm just the messenger.
AOL Health: What do wish more people understood about your work?
Simone: I wish people understood its therapeutic value
and the impact that this work has had on me and others. It's important
to remove negative imprints from our psyche that are interfering with a
healthy sex life. It could be shame, guilt or fear that we harbor
because our culture doesn't invite us to talk about this openly. People
like me are considered shadowy people of the night who others can
confess their feelings and fears. There's such a stigma and shame
that's debilitating.
Recent Comments


x0xGothicRosex0x 06:12:13 PM Sep 20 2009
Oh wow. Clearly people cannot read. So she did intercourse with a few clients, but its not like with a h**ker who does intercourse with almost every guy that pays her. Second, she comes out saying she has had an STD before, while most h**kers won't say it at all. Third, it is legal, prostitution is not. Fourth, it is part of sex therapy. Do you honestly think sex would not be involved in SEX therapy? She is a healer. She is helping other people know how to have better sex, or improve themselves with sex. And so she has sessions with people who are in a committed relationship. Did you ever think that the people in the relationship are fine with it? She doesn't do oral. For her to have intercourse with her clients its rare, but doesn't mean it doesn't happen. This is not prostitution. Its legal, its part of sex therapy. So anyone who thinks differently needs to shut the f*ck up. Because anyone who says that without reading the article well, are nothing but close-minded twits. I

MusicCityPress 01:26:14 PM Sep 19 2009
You people screening this site are such hypocrites. You allow someone to say shit but, when I call a spade, a spade and say she is what she really is, a W****, you cut that out??????? Give me a break. Shame on you.

MusicCityPress 01:22:21 PM Sep 19 2009
A legal EXCUSE to be a prostitute. ISnt it funny how some use cover over words to make light of their sins?

MusicCityPress 01:20:24 PM Sep 19 2009
A legal EXCUSE to sell her body for money and be a *****. Isnt kit funny the excuses people use to gtry to cover over their sins.

DDillinger 09:40:54 AM Sep 19 2009
Simone!, I want you! But first I have a few questions. I can not tell by your picture--How big are your ****? I hope your cup size is 34C or over. Also do you have any ears or any teeth on your lower gums? How tall are you? You do look cute and sexy in the photo. Do you have some really short skirts to wear? . . . maybe with some crotchless panties!. . . And lastly, would you speak real dirty . . . REAL nasty to me? That turns me on. I look forward to hearing from you or your pimp. Thank you, Lee, with the Big D

DSUMM 06:30:33 AM Sep 19 2009
Very interesting article. I wish that I were a wee bit younger to learn her technics. I have read that tantrac can be a very exotic experience bringing one to a high never before reached. If this is what she is teaching..great.

Claerity 06:25:44 AM Sep 19 2009
<cheers Gamefowl Fan on in their admonishment of the volka>

Wepaloli 06:18:20 AM Sep 19 2009
HEY THE WAY THE WORLD IS GOING, JUST BE POLITICALLY CORRECT AND LEGALIZE PROSTITUTION.SAME SHIT WITH A DIFFERENT STENCH. SEX SURROGATE.. HAHAHAAHHAHAAHAHHAHAHAHAAHHAHAHAHAAHHAHAAA

LeAvantGuardian 06:00:41 AM Sep 19 2009
Under no circumstances should paying for sex ever be legal. In my opinion this women is just a ***** with a loophole.

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