Pleasure Mechanics

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    The Come As You Are 2.0 Interview:

    Come As You Are Inspired Podcast Episodes

    Here are some Speaking Of Sex Podcast episodes covering some of the key concepts from Come As You Are, along with our interviews with author Emily Nagoski.

    • Get To Know The Gas and Brakes Of Your Arousal: Manage Your Turn Ons and Turn Offs
    • Discover Spontaneous Vs. Responsive Desire
    • Cultivate Your Erotic Context
    • Emily Nagoski Interview on her book Come As You Are
    • Emily Nagoski Interview on her book Burnout

    Click Here For Emily Nagoski’s TED Talks + A Burnout Bonus

    Sex Addiction Myth & Facts

    • What is sex addiction?
    • Can sex be addictive?
    • Am I addicted to sex?
    • How do I treat my sex addiction?
    • Is sex addiction really a myth?

    Here’s what is undeniably true: many people struggle with an experience that has been named sex addiction. Unwanted desire, distracting lust, unsafe behavior, consuming focus on porn, cheating and more has been blamed on the experience of sex addiction. The experience is real, and often painful, and unwanted. We have compassion for everyone feeling this kind of pain and struggle.

    But here’s what’s also true: sex addiction is (often) a myth.

    The research is still out on if very few people prone to addiction can tangle sexual behavior into already addictive behaviors and personalities – but currently, sex addiction is not a diagnosis supported by any major mental health association.

    We are not mental health experts nor therapists. Here are resources, links and research we have gathered from across the fields to help you get a conversation started about Sex Addiction.

    Sexual Shame has been weaponized, and there is a huge industry built around “treating” sex addiction.

    The biggest predictor of the experience of “sex addiction” is religious shame.

    Sex Addiction is usually Compulsive Sexual Behavior – and there are effective treatments and interventions available to help folks manage all kinds of compulsive behavior while also addressing the underlying pain, shame or trauma that is causing it.

    Here is the American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) position statement on sex addiction:

    AASECT recognizes that people may experience significant physical, psychological, spiritual and sexual health consequences related to their sexual urges, thoughts or behaviors. AASECT recommends that its members utilize models that do not unduly pathologize consensual sexual behaviors. AASECT 1) does not find sufficient empirical evidence to support the classification of sex addiction or porn addiction as a mental health disorder, and 2) does not find the sexual addiction training and treatment methods and educational pedagogies to be adequately informed by accurate human sexuality knowledge. Therefore, it is the position of AASECT that linking problems related to sexual urges, thoughts or behaviors to a porn/sexual addiction process cannot be advanced by AASECT as a standard of practice for sexuality education delivery, counseling or therapy.

    If you are experiencing compulsive sexual behavior, addiction like experiences or if sex is an ongoing source of pain for you, please ask for help. Use AASECT’s therapist finder or the tools here to help you locate professional support that is culturally relevant, accessible and affordable for you.

    Sex Worth Wanting

    A lot of people ask us about desire – why don’t I want sex more? I used to want sex way more than I do now. What is wrong with me? What does it mean if I want sex, but not with my partner?

    These are all questions worth exploring – but perhaps a more useful question is Is The Sex You Are Having Sex Worth Wanting? Here is an excerpt from our recent interview with Emily Nagoski, author of the bestselling book on female sexuality, Come As You Are:

    “Many people are expecting to have high desire for whatever forms of sex are available. There is little questioning of which kinds of sex one is expected to desire. It has been a quantity-focused discourse. The reality is that those who refuse to settle are creating the foundations for having sex worth wanting” – Sex Researcher Peggy Kleinplatz

    What kind of sex is worth wanting for you, at this stage of your life? What would make sex more worth wanting? How can you get specific about what you are longing for, so you can take steps towards feeling more sexually satisfied and perhaps even fulfilled!

    We’re here for you as you explore your pleasures, desires and wants.

    Here are some resources for you to help you make your sex worth wanting!

    Need personalized support? Join our newsletter community below (or better yet, enroll in our free online course!) and you’ll be in direct email communication with us – we’d love to hear what is on your mind!

    Sex Worth Wanting : Start Here

    • The Erotic Essentials: Free Online Course
    • Your Body Is Good Enough : Podcast Episode
    • What Do You Want? : Podcast Episode
    • Finding New Pleasure Pathways : Podcast Episode
    • Your Pleasure Constellations : Podcast Episode

    What Would Make Your Sex Worth Wanting?

    Build your erotic capacity with our online courses:

    • Erotic Touch Mastery : Exquisite Touch, Foreplay & More!
    • Mindful Sex & Erotic Self Awareness
    • Erotic Spanking & Light Kink

    “Optimal sexual experience may involve those moments of deep connection in which both lovers are psychologically and sexually accessible, engaged and responsive to whatever lies deep within.” ~ Kleinplatz, Ménard, Paquet, Paradis, Campbell, et al (2009). The components of optimal sexuality: A portrait of “great sex” Canadian Journal of Human Sexuality, 18(1-2), 1-13.)

    We are grateful to Kleinplatz, Ménard and their colleagues who are choosing to research Optimal Sexual Experiences. Far too much research is focused on “dysfunctions” while there has been far too little inquiry into pleasure, joy and bliss. We look forward to further conversations about Optimal Sexual Experiences. Find out more about their research here.

    Pleasure Is The Measure

    “Pleasure Is The Measure! Of sexual wellbeing, I mean. Pleasure. Not how much you want sex, not how much sex you have, or with whom, or what you do, or where or how often. The key to assessing your own sexual wellbeing is not how much you want sex, but how much you like the sex you are having. Pleasure is the measure.” ~ Emily Nagoski, Ph.D.

    Pleasure Is The Measure means that the only standard or aspirational goal to strive for is your pleasure, on your own terms. Does it feel good to you? That means you are doing it right!

    Far too much of our attention and awareness is given over to harmful standards and oppressive norms that tells us we are broken – when really we are all quite normal and operating within a healthy range of the human experience.

    Pleasure Is The Measure can remind you that you are normal, you are not broken and your pleasure and joy matters.

    In 2017 we designed a set of 6 PleasureMechanics stickers and wrote to Emily Nagoski for permission to use this phrase she had coined in 2016. She graciously agreed and in the years since Pleasure Is The Measure has become a community anthem amongst the growing ranks of Pleasure Activists, Erotic Educators and sex positive therapists and doctors who all believe that Pleasure Is The Measure!

    What does #PleasureIsTheMeasure mean to you?

    Join our newsletter community below (or better yet, enroll in our free online course!) and you’ll be in direct email communication with us – we’d love to hear what is on your mind!

    Come As You Are

    Come As You Are: the surprising new science that will transform your sex life by Emily Nagoski is a must-read for anyone interested in human sexuality – and since you are here, we bet that is you!

    This book introduces you to research-backed frameworks that help you understand your own experience of sex. You’ll get tools to understand the most essential lessons of all: you are normal, your body isn’t broken, and you can gain erotic joy and confidence over time. Come As You Are invites you to come home to yourself, just as you are, and that’s why it will always be one of our foundational texts and recommendations.

    Nagoski shines in making even the geekiest science relatable and accessible for us all. With equal parts science and story, this book offers a wellspring of erotic knowledge that we all need – and need to share!

    Come As You Are is now out in a revised 2nd edition, and pairs fabulously with Nagoski’s companion Come As You Are Workbook – an interactive guide with plenty of space for you to explore your own truths.

    Come As You Are Inspired Podcast Episodes

    Here are some Speaking Of Sex Podcast episodes covering some of the key concepts from Come As You Are, along with our interviews with author Emily Nagoski.

    • Come As You Are 2.0 : An Interview With Emily Nagoski
    • Get To Know The Gas and Brakes Of Your Arousal: Manage Your Turn Ons and Turn Offs
    • Discover Spontaneous Vs. Responsive Desire
    • Cultivate Your Erotic Context
    • Emily Nagoski Interview on her book Come As You Are
    • Emily Nagoski Interview on her book Burnout

    Emily Nagoski’s TED Talks + A Burnout Bonus

    And there’s more! Here’s a roundup of other great interviews and resources!

    https://youtu.be/jVKo_VwuMoQ

    Sing It With Us: Emily & Amelia Nagoski lead the crowd at NinjaTED Vancouver in The Genital Song

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