Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast The RISE to Intimacy Podcast
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
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| Fixing a Sexless Relationship Starts with Emotional Regulation | 27 Jan 2026 | 00:19:08 | |
When couples stop having sex, they usually assume it's about laziness, manipulation, or lack of attraction. But sexual disconnection is actually a signal that something deeper needs attention—usually safety, repair, and attunement. Your nervous system, emotional dysregulation, and unspoken resentment all play a part in creating sexless relationships. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy, I walk through the critical difference between consent and coercion, avoidance and control, protection and rejection. I explain how unresolved emotional dysregulation keeps couples stuck in cycles of shutdown and escalation, and why communication alone isn't enough without the ability to stay present in your body. 1:06 – Why sexless relationships are about more than frequency 3:43 – The subtle difference between withholding and self-protection 6:53 – How safety (not desire) often determines sexual availability 9:36 – The unseen role emotional dysregulation plays in disconnection 12:18 – What must be restored before intimacy can return
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| What Actually Happens in Sex Therapy? | 27 Jan 2026 | 00:09:59 | |
When most people hear "sex therapy," they assume it's about technique or performance. It's not. Sex therapy is about understanding how your nervous system, past experiences, and attachment patterns show up in intimacy. For years, I only associated sex with pressure and duty. I sabotaged a relationship I cared about because my body was screaming no, and I had no idea how to restore safety after my own trauma. That experience is why I do this work, and why I never separate trauma from sexual healing. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy, I walk you through what actually happens in a sex therapy session, who it's for, and why so many people struggle to stay present during physical intimacy. If you've ever felt disconnected from your body during sex, this episode will show you why healing starts with safety, not performance. 1:26 – What sex therapy actually looks like behind closed doors 2:57 – Who sex therapy is for and the common issue of desire discrepancy 4:08 – How my childhood trauma led to a career as a sex therapist 5:22 – Why sex therapy and trauma therapy are connected 6:25 – Example of how trauma can quietly reshape desire, safety, and connection 7:41 – Reframe of sex as something that can heal, not harm
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| Why Sex Feels Like Pressure Instead of Pleasure | 21 Jan 2026 | 00:15:02 | |
Sex is everywhere. Yet meaningful conversations about intimacy are still wrapped in silence, shame, and confusion. Low desire, erectile struggles, or difficulty with orgasm get framed as personal failures when they should be framed as messages from the body shaped by culture, conditioning, anxiety, and emotional overwhelm. In this premiere episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I invite you to gain a deeper understanding of what actually gets in the way of desire. Drawing on my decade of experience as a sex and couples therapist, I unpack how social expectations quietly disconnect us from our bodies, how performance anxiety hijacks pleasure, and why emotional regulation and communication are the missing foundations for intimacy. 2:37 – A cultural myth that quietly shapes how desire shows up or shuts down in women 5:42 – An example of how men also face societal conditioning during their childhood 7:34 – The impact on romantic relationships between men and women as a result 8:33 – How performance anxiety can sneak into the bedroom 11:23 – How a lack of emotional regulation creates distance before sex even enters the picture 12:25 – What rebuilding desire actually requires
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| Communication in Polyamorous Relationships Is Never a One-Time Event | 14 Apr 2026 | 00:18:48 | |
You may have had one big conversation about opening your relationship and assumed that was enough. Or you haven't been able to have the first one yet because you don't know how to start without derailing it before it goes anywhere. Either way, communication in polyamorous relationships is where things most often break down, and it's rarely because people aren't willing to talk. What feels okay to agree to in theory doesn't always hold once you're living it. Agreements that made sense six months ago stop fitting, and jealousy, when it shows up, needs its own conversation rather than being pushed through or explained away. If you're not in the habit of returning to these conversations, resentment starts building in the gap between what you said you were okay with and what you're actually experiencing. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk through what communication in a polyamorous relationship actually has to look like. I cover the specific conversations about structure, expectations, and jealousy that need to happen more than once, the fear that stops people before they even begin, and what I've seen in my practice when these conversations happen well and when they don't. 0:55 – Why this episode applies to monogamous couples too 2:57 – What effective communication in a polyamorous relationship actually requires 4:08 – What happens when couples assume they're on the same page and stop checking in 4:58 – Jealousy, compersion, and what to do when your nervous system signals a threat 6:08 – The fear that stops people before the first conversation begins 8:20 – What to get clear on before you try to have the conversation 8:53 – Two clinical examples of what it costs when these conversations don't happen 11:04 – What Valerie learned from her own time practicing polyamory 12:29 – Questions to work through with your partner when considering polyamory 16:20 – Why emotional regulation is the prerequisite for every hard conversation
Polyamory and Non-Monogamy: What a Sex Therapist Wants You to Know | |||
| Polyamory and Non-Monogamy: What a Sex Therapist Wants You to Know | 07 Apr 2026 | 00:28:46 | |
Non-monogamy is no longer a fringe idea. It's showing up on dating apps, in therapy rooms, in late-night Google searches, and inside long-term relationships that look completely fine from the outside. But curiosity alone isn't enough to navigate it well. The choice to open a relationship matters far less than the skills you bring into it, and the quality of your conversations will shape everything that follows. If you or your partner have been thinking about this, or if the conversation has already started, this episode is not a pitch for or against any relationship structure. It's an honest look at what non-monogamous relationships actually require, and why opening a relationship that's already struggling almost never fixes it. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk through how polyamory, ethical non-monogamy, and open relationships actually function, what the latest research says about satisfaction and commitment, and the emotional labor these structures demand. I also share what I've seen in my practice when couples navigate this well and when it causes further damage, and I name the assumptions that most reliably lead to failure. 1:31 – The difference between polyamory and open relationships 5:16 – Two main polyamory structures and research-backed findings about non-monogamous relationships that might surprise you 9:52 – Examples of successful and non-successful polyamorous relationships I’ve seen in my practice 13:12 – Five core motivations behind why people genuinely pursue polyamory 16:30 – Four common myths that prevent people from choosing non‑monogamy or polyamory 21:48 – Four assumptions that often lead to failure for couples considering these types of relationships 25:00 – The conversation that matters more than the decision itself
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| How PTSD Affects Romantic Relationships and What Actually Helps | 03 Feb 2026 | 00:19:13 | |
When difficult conversations with your partner feel overwhelming, when you need to resolve things right away or you need space to process, when a look or a tone shift sends your nervous system into overdrive, that's often PTSD showing up in your relationship. It doesn't mean you're broken or that you're the problem in the relationship. There's a learnable process for managing your symptoms so they don't manage you. You can find the moment between what triggers you and how you respond. You can stay connected to your partner even when your nervous system wants to fight, flee, or freeze. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy, I'm walking through what happens in your body when you're triggered, why PTSD impacts romantic relationships the way it does, and the specific steps that help you notice and name emotions before they take over. I'm also sharing how my partner and I have learned to navigate this together. This is about taking ownership of your healing and learning practical regulation skills that actually work. 1:45 – How my PTSD symptoms show up in the context of romantic relationships 4:16 – Why PTSD impacts romantic relationships (and a quick disclaimer before diving deeper) 5:46 – Common PTSD triggers that cause the nervous system to go into survival mode 7:40 – How learning to slow down internally can transform relationship conflict patterns 9:49 – The difference between character flaws and nervous system survival responses 13:09 – The moment between the stimulus and the response and how to find it 14:35 – What it really means to “feel your feelings” without being consumed by them
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| How Healthy Couples Stay Connected While Others Drift | 31 Mar 2026 | 00:25:59 | |
The honeymoon phase is over, and real life has taken its place. When routines settle in, the stress piles up, and the spark no longer feels automatic, it’s common to wonder if something has gone wrong. But healthy relationships aren’t conflict-free, and healthy love isn’t accidental; it’s a practice. From validating your partner before you try to fix the problem to creating novelty on purpose, there is a roadmap for building a connection that is resilient rather than reactive. Whether you feel distant, stuck in recurring arguments, or simply want to protect the life you’ve built, you can learn to cultivate intimacy with intention. You don't have to settle for a "comfortable numbness" where your only time together is spent sitting in silence across from one another. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I break down the foundational elements that separate couples who drift apart from those who deepen their connection over time. I reveal how ingredients like emotional safety, friendship, conflict repair, and sexual well-being form the backbone of lasting intimacy. I also discuss how to apply the RISE model to look beneath the surface of your conflicts and rebuild real connection. 00:53 – Why conflict itself is not the red flag most couples think it is 2:35 – What emotionally safe couples do differently during hard conversations 4:25 – How validation can calm disconnection before solutions are even discussed 5:56 – One thing that most of us do when our partner upsets or triggers us 7:57 – The overlooked friendship factor that predicts long-term satisfaction 10:33 – Why most recurring fights are not actually about the topic on the surface 14:29 – The impact of working as a team when under stress, instead of each person dealing with it alone 15:42 – How novelty can reignite connection after the honeymoon phase in your relationship ends 17:20 – The difference between independence that strengthens a bond and control that weakens it 19:24 – Why sexual well-being reflects far more than frequency 20:18 – Who couples therapy is for and the model I developed and use to teach foundational relationship skills
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| Why Great Long-Term Relationships Still Struggle With Sex | 24 Mar 2026 | 00:27:05 | |
You’re still in love with your partner and committed to a fulfilling life together, yet something feels off. The chemistry that once felt effortless now feels unpredictable or absent. You care deeply for each other, but you are completely out of sync sexually. If you’ve ever wondered why sex feels so hard when the rest of the relationship is fine, it isn’t necessarily a sign that you’re failing. It’s more likely a sign that stress, emotional disconnection, or old conditioning are quietly shaping your desire. When this tension lingers, sex starts to feel loaded. You might find yourself making excuses, feeling pressured, or waiting to want sex the way you used to. Attraction becomes something you analyze instead of something you feel, and you may begin to interpret a lack of desire as a personal rejection. Meanwhile, routines take over, the same old scripts repeat, and the emotional safety you need to feel open begins to erode. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I reveal what is actually happening beneath the surface when desire becomes mismatched in long-term relationships. I explore how the mental load, trauma, and toxic cultural messaging impact your connection. You’ll learn the vital difference between spontaneous and responsive desire, why feeling "seen" is a prerequisite for arousal, and how you can begin rewriting your sexual script to find that spark again. 1:33 – Why fluctuating desire is often a signal for conversation rather than a sign of failure 4:27 – The hidden impact of stress, mental load, and survival mode on erotic energy 5:58 – The difference between spontaneous desire and responsive desire, and why it matters 7:55 – Emotional connection as a prerequisite for physical intimacy for many partners 10:07 – Why asking “What does emotional connection mean to you?” changes everything 12:21 – The powerful role of social, cultural, and religious conditioning in shaping desire 15:42 – How shame around pleasure can quietly suppress sexual expression 18:21 – Trauma’s influence on agency, boundaries, and sexual safety 20:10 – Practical shifts that help couples reconnect without pressure or performance
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| How AI Is Quietly Rewiring the Modern Dating World | 17 Mar 2026 | 00:22:15 | |
You want real connection in a world that feels increasingly artificial, but the modern dating scene often leaves you feeling exhausted and quietly discouraged. You long for something organic and meaningful, yet you’re navigating systems that reward speed and constant availability over depth. If you feel like retreating from the apps and the emotional whiplash, it is a sign that your nervous system is trying to adapt to an environment that was never designed for your emotional safety. When you are caught in this tension, attraction starts to feel confusing. You might find your chemistry going flat or feel overstimulated by options while staying undernourished by connection. Intimacy can start to feel like something you measure rather than something you experience. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I explain why dating feels so different right now and how AI is quietly restructuring the way we experience attraction. I explore how these platforms are designed for engagement rather than bonding, and how a lack of relational education affects the way we approach each other. You can learn how to reclaim your agency, slow down, and build a foundation for dating that prioritizes authentic curiosity. 2:26 – How algorithms are narrowing attraction in ways most people never consciously notice 7:02 – How engagement metrics on dating apps are quietly training users 12:11 – How choice overload impacts satisfaction and why trust is now harder to build on the apps 13:38 – The pros and cons of AI companions and how they’re designed to mirror emotional validation 17:41 – What you can do as a single person in the AI-mediated space of online dating 18:42 – Why the real fracture in modern dating is educational, not ideological Mentioned In How AI Is Quietly Rewiring the Modern Dating World | |||
| How Erectile Dysfunction Is a Nervous System Response | 10 Mar 2026 | 00:23:49 | |
When my partner Dallas experienced erectile dysfunction in his mid-twenties, he felt broken. He believed something was fundamentally wrong with him, and struggling with anxiety and PTSD only added fuel to those feelings. Erectile dysfunction is often attributed to age, hormones, or attraction, but when it happens in your twenties, the confusion feels even sharper. The shame can spiral quickly when you love your partner but your body still goes into protection mode. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, Dallas joins me to talk about his journey. We discuss how silence and misunderstanding lead to conflict and why this is actually a nervous system response rather than a lack of attraction. We look at how performance pressure and hypervigilance keep the body stuck and why there is no "quick fix" for these complex patterns. Dallas shares how he used emotional regulation to stop being afraid and find his way back to pleasure. 00:52 – Common myths about erectile dysfunction and what you should do before you see a sex therapist 2:56 – What Dallas was thinking before sex even began and how one difficult experience can create an anxiety loop that feeds itself 5:59 – Statistics that prove how common erectile dysfunction really is 7:08 – The conflict that grew between Dallas and his ex-partner when he couldn’t talk about sex 8:12 – Why performance pressure blocks pleasure at the nervous system level and the role of hypervigilance, dissociation, and emotional withdrawal 10:36 – Why 12 weeks of therapy is rarely the full story and the importance of practicing regulation skills outside the therapy room 14:19 – How waiting too long to seek help can harden resentment and how long you should wait to re-engage in sex conversation after regulation 18:18 – What you can start doing if you’re experiencing erectile dysfunction 21:20 – Dallas’ final words of wisdom and how he feels now after therapy
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| Why Unmet Attachment Needs Sabotage Your Sex Life | 03 Mar 2026 | 00:16:08 | |
You love your partner, but you feel your body shut down the moment intimacy begins. Something inside you tightens even when you want to feel close. These moments don't mean you have a lack of love or desire. They are often signals from your attachment system. Your nervous system has built-in needs for safety, trust, and emotional closeness. When those needs aren't met, your brain can interpret your partner as a source of threat or pressure instead of a safe space. There is a learnable process for creating the emotional safety your nervous system needs to soften. You can understand why closeness feels risky and learn how to interrupt patterns before they spiral. Building responsiveness outside the bedroom creates the climate where sex becomes appealing again. It is about moving away from performance so intimacy can feel inviting instead of overwhelming. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I talk about four reasons why unmet attachment needs quietly sabotage your sex life. I explore what is happening beneath the surface when desire drops or the pressure to perform rises. I also break down exactly what to do using the tools of regulation, clarity, repair, and emotional safety. 2:19 – Why your nervous system can’t access arousal without safety and tips to get into a regulated space before initiating (or even talking about) sex 5:30 – Subtle ways emotional unavailability erodes sexual desire over time and a 5-minute daily ritual to rebuild emotional responsiveness 8:15 – How reassurance-seeking through sex can unintentionally create pressure and the reframing language that reveals the real need 12:02 – Why avoiding conversations about sex often leads to mechanical or resentful intimacy 13:27 – The link between early messaging about sex and avoidance as an adult and how to make space for honesty, clarity, and safer sexual exploration
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| How to Stop the Pursue Withdraw Cycle Without Blame | 24 Feb 2026 | 00:14:12 | |
One of you moves toward the relationship to close the gap. The other moves away to reduce overwhelm or conflict. This is the pursue-withdraw cycle, and it is one of the most common and painful patterns in any relationship. If you have ever felt like you are chasing connection while your partner shuts down, you are not alone. This cycle does not mean your relationship is broken. It means your nervous systems are trying to protect you in opposing ways. When you are stuck in this loop, intimacy starts to feel like a threat to your sense of self. The pursuer often wonders if they are too much or if they even matter. The person who withdraws often feels like they can never do anything right. To break this cycle, you have to look beneath the surface of the conflict and dive into the deeper, unspoken wounds. You have to learn how to regulate your body so you can move from being adversaries to being teammates. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk through why you fall into this dynamic and what is happening in your body when it triggers. I share four powerful, trauma-informed strategies to help you break the cycle for good. We talk about how to name the pattern out loud, how to speak from your fears instead of your defenses, and how to create repair rituals that stick. You can learn how to find your way back to each other without losing yourselves. 1:47 – How opposing protective strategies can create a loop that neither partner intends 3:49 – What makes high-functioning, high-achieving couples especially vulnerable to this cycle 4:52 – Ways to regulate before you withdraw from or pursue your partner 6:49 – How naming the pattern out loud causes the cycle to lose its power 7:47 – The subtle difference between fighting about logistics and revealing emotional truth 10:04 – Repair rituals you can create to reconnect after a cycle occurs
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| Why People Pleasers Lose Desire and How to Reclaim It | 17 Feb 2026 | 00:14:16 | |
If you have ever felt like sex is just another chore, you are not alone. Many people find themselves saying "yes" simply because saying "no" feels too hard. This isn't a character flaw. It is a survival strategy that usually begins in childhood. When you grow up learning that love is conditional, you become an expert at abandoning your own needs to take care of everyone else. By the time you reach adulthood, sex can easily become an obligation fueled by pressure. It stops being an expression of your own pleasure. Reclaiming your desire requires unlearning these old patterns. It is impossible for desire to thrive when you are stuck in a survival response like "fawn" or "freeze". The truth is that your desire may not actually be low. It is more likely that your permission to feel desire is low. Healing comes when you stop performing for others and start reconnecting with your own inner world. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I dive into the origin stories of people pleasing and how they quietly reshape your sexual energy. I walk through why pushing through sex to avoid conflict creates a cycle of withdrawal. I also share practical steps to help you notice your own internal cues. From challenging the guilt of setting boundaries to finding micro-moments of pleasure, we explore how to stop self-abandoning and start wanting again. 1:37 – How childhood survival strategies quietly shape adult desire and sexual patterns 3:30 – Why sex begins to feel like work when self-abandonment becomes a habit 5:21 – The neurological states that block arousal and create shutdown 6:22 – What the pursuer–withdrawer dynamic reveals about relational disconnection 7:15 – How I help clients when this dynamic shows up in therapy 10:22 – The most important thing for people pleasers to take away from this episode 11:10 – Practical steps you can take starting today to rebuild your capacity for sexual desire Mentioned In Why People Pleasers Lose Desire and How to Reclaim It | |||
| How the RISE Model Moves You from Roommates to Teammates | 10 Feb 2026 | 00:35:50 | |
Long-term couples rarely fall out of love overnight. Usually, they just fall into "logistics mode" where work, kids, and chores crowd out the space for connection. When life feels like an endless to-do list, intimacy starts to feel like just another chore. This shift into the "roommate phase" doesn't mean you are a failure. It is often a sign that your nervous system is overwhelmed and doesn't have the capacity for desire in this moment. I developed the RISE model based on a decade of experience as a therapist and my own journey of moving from performance pressure to true connection. By focusing on how we regulate, illuminate, strengthen, and empower, we can look beneath the surface of our patterns to restore safety and play. Rebuilding intimacy is not about perfect performance. It is about learning how to stay present in your body and choosing intentional connection one small habit at a time. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk through four of the most common questions I hear in therapy to show you how the RISE model works. We explore why you might still feel attracted to a partner you don’t want to sleep with, how to bring back passion when things feel routine, and how to stop being "ships passing in the night" so you can start feeling like teammates again. 1:57 – Why long-term couples feel like “roommates” and how to start reconnecting with your spouse 6:46 – The internal battle that can silently switch off desire (even when you’re still attracted to the other person) and why most people never recognize it 11:18 – An overlooked climate that is needed for desire to grow and shapes how the body responds to touch and closeness 15:21 – A counterintuitive truth about passion that challenges everything we’ve been taught about spontaneity 16:59 – Why you shouldn’t wait to go to couples therapy if you or your spouse has mentioned the idea of doing so 21:21 – How to bring back passion and sex when everything feels routine or awkward 30:17 – How to prevent drifting apart in a long-term relationship so you can continue growing together
Come As You Are and other books by Emily Nagoski | |||