![]() ![]() He lets out several loud moans, and Aphrodite cleans him up with a wet towel.Īfter he's dressed, Clayton tries to explain his session from a spiritual perspective. She puts on a "finger condom" and inserts a finger into his anus, while simultaneously gripping and stroking his penis.įive minutes of this, and Clayton's whole body starts shaking. She rubs coconut oil on him while saying things like, "We're all deserving of pleasure."Ībout 40 minutes into the session, Clayton turns over on his back. " She tells him she's going to run the sarong across his body a few times, and each time, he should imagine some pain he's had going away. She's wearing only a black G-string that reads "I O French. ![]() Aphrodite runs her hands over his back, then takes off her sarong and drapes it over him. A stick of Nag Champa incense fills the room with an earthy, spicy smell.Ĭlayton gets butt-naked and belly-down on a massage table. Books by Persian poet Rumi adorn the end tables, and sounds drift from a boom box - mostly birds chirping, combined with the sound of a sitar. This room is light blue, with accents that include billowy white curtains tacked across the ceiling. Just what is a "session," you ask? Step into the "Persian Room" with Aphrodite and Clayton. She says she conducts up to three sessions per day. She's tan, blond, and blue-eyed, with faint crow's feet in the corners of her eyes. Like the majority of the goddesses, she appears to be in her late 30s to early 40s. Aphrodite is one of about 14 women who work at the temple. Practitioners at this self-styled church near 24th Street and Thomas Road say that what they do is sacred work to balance energy and heal people, and Clayton really seems to believe it - at least enough to let New Times watch two of his all-too-revealing sessions.Ĭlayton's title is "touch healer." He's in his 50s, about 5-foot-8, heavyset, with glasses and salt-and-pepper hair. It helps "recharge energy" and maintains an all-important balance. ![]() Clayton says it's common for practitioners at Phoenix Goddess Temple to do sessions for each other. But first, he'll receive his own session with a temple "goddess" who calls herself Aphrodite. He will use them later in one of his "trauma healing" sessions. "These are all my healing tools," he says.Īmong them are a clear plastic bag stuffed with white latex gloves and a bottle of lubricant. On a brisk Sunday morning in mid-January, Wayne Clayton arrives at work at Phoenix Goddess Temple wheeling a brown piece of luggage. This story has been altered from its original version to remove any such suggestion. In addition, Goddess Temple of Orange County reports its registered as a church with the federal government and offers no sexual services. All Users of the Websites are therefore cautioned and advised to use their own judgment to evaluate all advertisements and other communications available at or through the use of the Websites prior to purchasing goods and/or services described at the Websites or otherwise responding to any communication at the Websites.Clarification: New Times didnt intend to imply that goddess temples in Orange County and Chico, California Asheville, North Carolina Ann Arbor, Michigan and Sedona offer sexual services like those observed at the Phoenix Goddess Temple. You further acknowledge that You understand that other than as set forth herein, we do not screen, endorse, monitor, control, investigate, supervise any advertisements or communications submitted to the Websites by third-party licensees, advertisers, or Users for electronic dissemination through the Websites. You further acknowledge and agree that other than as set forth herein, the Websites do not screen any Users or Advertisers of the Websites, has no control over their actions and makes no representations or warranties with respect to the character, veracity, age, health or any other attribute of Users of the Websites, including any person who places Advertisements in the Websites. ![]()
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