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What To Do With Desires Unfulfilled

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Your erotic desires may be far more vast than can ever be met in your lifetime. What do we do with desires unfulfilled – so that we can be free to pursue more erotic fulfillment? In this paradox there is a rich terrain of both personal and relational exploration – so you can figure out which of your desires might be met more fully and which may never be touched.

Do you have erotic desires buried under layers of sexual shame? Check out our podcast on How To Overcome Sexual Shame

Dig into the work of leading shame researcher Brené Brown here.

Want to get more specific about your relationship agreements? Check out our podcast on Monogamy Agreements


Podcast transcripts are generated with love by humans, and thus may not be 100% accurate. Time stamps are included so you can cross reference or jump to any point in the podcast episode above. THANKS to the members of our Pleasure Pod for helping make transcripts and the rest of our free offerings happen! If you love what we offer, find ways to show your love and dive deeper with us here: SHOW SOME LOVE

Podcast Transcript for Unfulfilled Desires Podcast

Chris Rose: 00:00 Hi, welcome to Speaking of Sex with the Pleasure Mechanics. I’m Chris.

Charlotte Rose: 00:06 I’m Charlotte.

Chris Rose: 00:07 We are the Pleasure Mechanics, and on this podcast we have explicit yet soulful conversations about every facet of sexuality and pleasure. Come on over to PleasureMechanics.com, where you will find a complete podcast archive. And while you were there, go to PleasureMechanics.com/free and sign up for the Erotic Essentials. It is a treasure trove of strategies and resources for you to get started with tonight. That’s PleasureMechanics.com/free.

Chris Rose: 00:42 On today’s episode, we are going to be continuing last week’s conversation and diving into the pools of desire unfulfilled. What do we do when we start to recognize that we have desires, longings, achings, for pleasures that may never be fulfilled right now or in our lifetimes? What do we do with desires unfulfilled so that we can have a fulfilling sex life? There’s a paradox here, and we will be exploring it.

Chris Rose: 01:15 Before we get started, I would love to thank our new sponsor for this podcast, #LubeLife. Lube is a very important ingredient for just about any sex act. So if you need a new bottle of lube, go on over to lubelife.com and check out their line of all natural organic lubricants. They make water based lubricants, and silicone lubricants, and flavor lubricants, oh my. Go to lubelife.com and use the code 20Mechanics for 20% off your entire order. And we’ll also throw a link in the show notes page. That’s lubelife.com. Use the code 20mechanics. Thanks #LubeLife.

Chris Rose: 02:01 All right. Let’s dive in. Last week we talked all about mapping your pleasure constellations. The idea that we are all unique individuals and we can figure out who we are and what life and love we want to make through looking at our unique pleasure constellations.

Chris Rose: 02:22 And this is pleasure in the broadest sense, so what are the activities and hobbies and work that you love to do. But also sexual pleasures. Who are you as a pleasure being? And really doing the internal work of figuring out what lights you up, what is your pleasure constellation?

Chris Rose: 02:44 And then within this work, there is an acknowledgement that not all pleasures can be fulfilled. Certainly not all at once, but perhaps not even in your lifetime. So what do we do? How do we work with the pleasures that are going unfulfilled?

Chris Rose: 03:04 And our focus here will be on thinking about unfulfilled pleasures through the lens of how to become more fulfilled, how to lessen the struggle and the suffering around desires unfulfilled. Yeah?

Charlotte Rose: 03:21 Yeah. It’s such a charged subject. It’s so emotional. I think it creates so much pain and suffering for a lot of people, having this deep well of desires that you feel frustrated, or sad, or upset about, that you can’t have happen right now.

Charlotte Rose: 03:41 And we really want to just dig into that, because we are interested in you feeling less pain around your sexuality. And this is one piece of it.

Chris Rose: 03:52 Totally. And it’s interesting just to start to think about in the broadest category of pleasures, many of us have unfulfilled pleasures. But we can sit with them and feel a little bit more neutral about the fact that we can’t have everything we want all the time. If you think about travel for example, many of us would love to travel more, and may even have specific places on the globe that we would love to go given the chance. But we don’t tend to suffer a lot around the fact that we will never get to Paris, Laos, and Thailand this year. We have a little bit more perspective that this world is a really big place, and we all have to make choices, and we can’t do it all at once.

Chris Rose: 04:42 When it comes to sex, there is a lot more suffering around our unfulfilled desires. And we need to think about why that is. And through this conversation, just know that if you feel unfulfilled in your sex life in general, you are not alone. Very few people we have ever spoken to self report sexual fulfillment. So while this is always something that we want to center, this idea that we can experience sexual fulfillment and that that is a very real goal for us humans. We want to explore what that would feel like and what that would look like for all of us. We want to acknowledge that most of us are starting from a place of deficit, of feeling a lifetime of unfulfilled sexual desires and needs.

Chris Rose: 05:43 So let’s just start there, and I’ll just acknowledge that the thousands of us listening to this around the world are all together in this place of feeling sexual longing and a sense of unfulfilled wants and desires.

Charlotte Rose: 06:00 But also, I want to-

Chris Rose: 06:04 Uplift us Charlotte, come on.

Charlotte Rose: 06:05 This is a very nuanced conversation because it is possible to have a fulfilling sex life currently, presently while also having unfulfilled desires.

Chris Rose: 06:19 Right. There is this paradox here of how do we acknowledge unfulfilled desires, make friends with them, be realistic and mature about that? While also going after that, which would be more fulfilling, and giving ourselves permission to ask for what we want. And set the bar higher. Part of the reason so many of us are so sexually unfulfilled is because we have not been guided in how to reach sexual fulfillment, and the bar is so low. The cultural bar here is so low, that we just need to all raise it up together and ask for more from each other as humans. And we’re going to look at that. All right?

Chris Rose: 07:07 So let’s first acknowledge that there are many categories of unfulfilled desires that we can identify, and they require different kinds of emotional work. So first, the easiest category is the really outlandish desires, the moonshot desires that we can acknowledge as more of a fantasy. Fantasy being the realm where we’re in the erotic imagination and anything is possible. So there are things that you may love to do if given the chance, but we can honestly say the chance of those actually happening are slim to null. Getting a blowjob in a helicopter would be fun. That would be thrilling, but you’d have to find yourself on a helicopter with a willing partner.

Chris Rose: 07:56 So we can allow ourselves to enjoy these ideas and mine them for clues about what we want more of. If the blowjob on the helicopter feels super thrilling, maybe you’re looking for more excitement and thrills and different context for sex. This is a lot of what we talk about when we talk about fantasy, is allowing them to be fantasy only. But that is still a real part of who you are. Fantasies are real because there are real in your mind, and your mind can create very real pleasure in your body when you explore fantasies. So they are part of who you are. But we don’t need to walk around expecting all of our wildest fantasies will ever come true, right?

Chris Rose: 08:44 So think through your unfulfilled desires and think about what might just be fantasy alone, and that’s okay, and they can be a joyful, pleasurable part of who you in fantasy alone. But then there are desires unfulfilled that are actually quite realistic. Things that you could have more in your life, and for many reasons don’t. And these are the desires I think that the most struggle and suffering comes from. It’s the things that we really do want that are realistic within reach, but somehow we’re not getting, and therein is the frustration.

Charlotte Rose: 09:22 Absolutely. And those are things that we could ask for. We could make requests around, and there’s something in the way of that. So that can be feeling like we’re not worthy. it would be shameful to ask. It would be taking up too much time and space, our partner might not want to. There’s a whole list of reasons and justifications why we might feel like we can’t ask for what we most want.

Chris Rose: 09:49 And Charlotte, and we were just talking recently after we got into a good flow of giving each other more massage. And you admitted that you had been longing for, but not asking for a more touch. Can you take us into that moment of you have a willing partner, you know that I’m not going to freak out in a shame response? So why would someone not ask?

Charlotte Rose: 10:16 Yeah. Life gets in the way where I feel like I needed to finish cleaning the house and I felt like you’d been working so hard, and I didn’t want to ask you to do more work at the end of the day. The concern that it’s too much to ask for, that it is uncomfortable to request more from somebody who is already got so much on their plate. All of those can get in the way from just asking. ‘Cause all of that might be true, but it’s still also is lovely to give to a love us. So I didn’t take up space where I could have, for a variety of reasons.

Chris Rose: 10:54 I just wanted to highlight that, because we talk all the time about willingness to receive and the worthiness to receive, and we live this. But it is still hard for us to ask for what we want sometimes. This is not simple. This is not a simple thing to prioritize your own pleasure over the laundry, the dishes, the work, the caretaking, the millions of other things that are begging for our attention. But when we do, something magic happens. When we prioritize our pleasure and say this is something I really want, I’m going to ask for it. You might just get it, and you might just discover that it is exactly what your partner was wanting too, or that you invited them into a very pleasurable experience. And that that in the long run may be more important the dishes getting done tonight.

Chris Rose: 11:56 So sometimes it’s just about taking a step back and realizing that your pleasure matters, that you’re feeling a little depleted, that you want to be filled up. In one way or the other. And asking out loud for what you want.

Charlotte Rose: 12:14 I will say that the first ask is the hardest. That as you do it more and more, it gets so much easier. And once you open that up, it just feels simpler and simpler. So just know that.

Chris Rose: 12:27 But another reason we don’t ask for what we want is because of the big S. Shame. Shame buries our wants and buries our desires under all of these layers of feeling. If we were to ask for what we actually wanted, we would lose love. We would lose our relationship, we would lose our partner’s respect. The worry, the anxiety about being judged for what we want is one of the primary reasons we never even bring our desires to light, let alone ask for them out loud.

Chris Rose: 13:05 So we really need to look at this category of desires unfulfilled. What are the things that you want, that your body responds to with a big yes, but that have been buried by shame, buried by guilt, buried by fear? What is in that cave within you? Because for so many of us, this is perhaps the deepest well of our desires that we haven’t even peered into. So it can be a really beautiful and tender thing to start recognizing and naming the things that we would want if we felt safe to ask.

Charlotte Rose: 13:47 Yeah, this is huge. And we might be concerned about what it means to ask for these things. What it says about us, who we might be seen as, how we might think of ourselves. So I’m thinking about men who might be interested in prostate or anal touch in some way. Women who might be interested in being spanked or any kind of kinky play of any sort. Does that undo being a good girl? We have so many stories about what wanting or desiring these kinds of sex acts mean about us. And if we give ourselves permission just to explore and wonder privately in the safety of our own mind and being, and notice what we notice. So letting ourselves explore what we might feel shame about is so valuable.

Chris Rose: 14:46 And how to work with that shame is perhaps a bigger conversation than we can go into right now. But I will link in the show notes page to a few podcast episodes that we’ve done all about shame and some other shame resources. But what’s important here is when you recognize those desires that are buried by shame, just start asking yourself, where did I learn that that was wrong? Where did these messages come from? And do I agree that it is wrong? Do I inherently believe what I am feeling here?

Chris Rose: 15:21 But the key here is to be gentle with yourself, and as much as possible to stop judging your desires. Self compassion and self empathy are super important when we are in this category of desires buried by shame.

Charlotte Rose: 15:40 Brené Brown talks about this brilliantly. She says, “If you put shame in a Petri dish, it needs three things to grow exponentially. Secrecy, silence, and judgment. If you put the same amount of shame in a Petri dish and douse it with empathy, it can’t survive.”

Charlotte Rose: 15:57 I just love that. We can bring some kindness to ourselves, and in doing that we can dissolve the shame that we might feel about certain desires that are unfulfilled. That neutralizes the deep shame.

Chris Rose: 16:12 Yeah, we can do this for ourselves to a certain degree. But I also think it’s important to recognize that shame is a social phenomena. And when we’re talking about sexual pleasures and things we might want to ask for, a big part of this is what is the context in your relationship? How judgmental, how open minded, how free do you feel within your relationship to ask for new things, to stretch your comfort zone? Because if you do your own work and then externalize a desire and it is met with harsh judgment, shaming behavior, and negative repercussions, then it is not safe to ask for what we want.

Chris Rose: 17:00 So this is internal work, but it’s also relational work of creating the conditions in your relationship where it is safe to ask for what you want, to try new things, or to at least talk about them. Because as we recognize these desires unfulfilled, as we excavate this shame, that doesn’t mean that you’re going to get these desires fulfilled. Right? There’s going to be this process of the excavation and then looking at these things and being like, “Is this realistic given the context of our relationship?” So we will continue to talk about unfulfilled desires and particularly what to do within unfulfilled desires within your relationship.

Chris Rose: 17:48 But first, I want to take a moment and thank our sponsor for this episode. Lubelife.com is our new sponsor. #LubeLife offers a complete line of sexual lubricants for all of your slipping, sliding, stroking needs. Go to lubelife.com and check it out. They have water based lubricants, silicone based lubricant, and flavored lubes if you are into that thing. And you can use the code 20 mechanics for 20% off all of your orders at lubelife.com, or on amazon.com. And we will put that link in the show notes page preloaded with your discount, because #LubeLife is the best selling lube on Amazon for a reason. It’s a great product at a great value. So go to lubelife.com and use the code 20 mechanics for 20% off your entire order. And we will link that up in the show notes below. Big thanks to #LubeLife for sponsoring this episode and making this podcast possible. We love lube and we love you #LubeLife. Alright, back to desires unfulfilled.

Chris Rose: 19:05 And this brings us to our next bucket of desires unfulfilled, which are desires that we can recognize that would be realistic, but that don’t fit into our relationship right now. This could be something like being queer or bisexual, and having a partner of one gender presentation. And having a whole universe of desires for people of other gender presentations. This could be something like identifying kinky desires and you talk to your partner about it. You have really great conversations, but you realize you’re both really submissive and neither one of you wants to be dominant. What do you do then?

Chris Rose: 19:48 This could be recognizing that you want to be in an open relationship and be poly, your partner feels more monogamous at heart. What then? So there’s so many possibilities here where desires can be acknowledged, excavated from the shame, named out loud, and still don’t get fulfilled. Right?

Chris Rose: 20:14 What do we do with these? And this is a category that Charlotte and I are super familiar with because we’ve done a lot of the work of excavating shame, right? We’ve done a lot of the work about learning how to ask for what we want. And we are queer women in a relationship with each other and both of us have both the experience in our past and the desire within for kinds of sex with kinds of people that we are not. So Charlotte, how do you interact with this category of acknowledging desires within yourself that I as your skilled, loving, wonderful, low judgment lover, I cannot provide for you? What do you do with that?

Charlotte Rose: 21:04 Well, I think it’s so much easier in a way in queer relationships, being that we both have had relationships and loved men and trans people, that we really understand that that is, we are not that. And so there is no way, there is no physical way that you could be three different kinds of people.

Chris Rose: 21:24 As if there’s three.

Charlotte Rose: 21:25 Yeah. But as a general broad categories, that’s just not possible. So I don’t want that from you, because that’s physically impossible. So I feel like I have so much love for what we do and who we are together, while also knowing that I have loved and I could love other people and the kind of sex I could be having with them. But it doesn’t become a personal failing of yours or a disappointment in you or our relationship that we are not doing that and we cannot do that.

Chris Rose: 21:59 I want to stop you there because I think yes, it is easier if we think about, “I desire sex with men, and you are not a man. Therefore I cannot expect that from you.” There’s a lot of space and freedom in naming these things and being like, “My desire is bigger than you.” But what this points to is how we can personalize it. If your partner wants to be spanked and you don’t want to spank them, there’s a way you can make that a failing of your own. What in me is not kinky enough to do this? Or if I was more sexually liberated, I would be able to do this. So it’s really important not to personalize this.

Chris Rose: 22:42 The places where your Venn diagrams of pleasure overlap, that is your place where you get to play and explore. But it is not a personal failing if you cannot show up for your partner in all of the ways they desire. And to recognize the charge there of you want to have sex with other women, therefore that means I’m not good enough, I’m not attractive enough. It can be really easy to internalize these things as not enoughness.

Charlotte Rose: 23:12 Absolutely. What I feel like what makes the most sense is looking at the Venn diagram of where you do overlap in the sex that you have, and the kind of pleasures you enjoy together, and going so deep into that and enjoying it so deeply and fully. Because that’s where sexual fulfillment for the two of you can live and can breathe, even with this whole other world of unfulfilled interests and desires on the outside of those two intersecting circles. And I feel like that image is so helpful.

Chris Rose: 23:45 And to know that that Venn diagram shifts and changes, right? And so it’s not a static thing of this is what I want, this is what you want. And we have these five things where it overlaps. So many factors will expand or contract our desire circles, will change how we overlap. So I know this is getting a little bit metaphor-y he and confusing maybe. But the point here is at any given time within the context of your relationship, there are desires that you can fulfill for one another. There are needs, sexual needs you can fulfill for one another. And there are things you can’t. And just to be mature about that, and to recognize that that is both because our desires are more expansive, hopefully, than we can ever fit into a lifetime. And, and this is the crucial point. Your partner has chosen you. In this moment, your partner has chosen you. You are together creating a life and a sex life, and that’s where you need to focus your attention.

Chris Rose: 24:54 So in recognizing all of these expansive desires and being honest about who we are, there is a way that can then take us out of our relationship and start being an energy bleed. And thinking that if I was different or my partner was different, then I would be more fulfilled. This idea of the grass is always greener on the other side. And that is the place of suffering. If I came to bed with Charlotte every night wanting her to have a cock, I’m going to be in for a lifetime of disappointment. But instead, I come to bed with Charlotte every night knowing that within me yes, there is a desire for sex with people with penises. And so many other kinds of desires. With all of that, from that place, I am choosing partnership with her. And in that is a radical devotion and a radical commitment to seeking fulfillment within the container we are creating for one another.

Charlotte Rose: 26:01 And also making space for all those other pieces of your desire to live, and to breathe, and to be okay. They aren’t something that you need to deny or forget or suppress, or ignore. They may not be things that you’re acting on in this moment, but they can live quietly and coexist … Not so quickly, but they can coexist in your being because that is part of who you are as a sexual being. And to try and cut it off would minimize who you are, and what you have loved and what you love. It is part of your pleasure constellation. You just don’t need to suffer about it. I think that’s the piece we really want you all to know is that you can see those desires and they can live with you and they can be okay. And that is powerful.

Chris Rose: 26:48 And they can be part of just your fantasy. Your personal internal fantasies never named to another human being, and still be integrated in who you are. They can be part of shared fantasy. So say you’re really into cuckolding and want your wife to fuck other men, but she doesn’t want to fuck other men. But through conversation, you discover that talking about it turns both of you on. Right? So you have then found that place in your Venn diagram where you can integrate that desire in a way that feels good for both of you, knowing that that is where it’s going to stay, and then savor and enjoy that. You might find out that your partner is okay with you exploring desires through online forums or through specific kinds of porn you watch once in a while. And this is part of the question about monogamy agreements, right? If you are in a monogamous relationship, what does that mean? What are the specific agreements that means? And I’ll link again to that podcast episode in the show notes. But you and your partner can find ways to welcome, and acknowledge, and celebrate all the parts of who you both are as sexual beings, while also acknowledging where you overlap.

Chris Rose: 28:08 Charlotte and I sometimes will be in a restaurant, and she knows the kinds of guys I’m into and I know the kinds of guys she is into. And there’s a lot of overlap there, but then we have our specific interests. And a beautiful man will walk in, and then we will share this smile knowing that the other person has been sparked a little bit. She knows who I’m into, and so we can share that and enjoy that moment of pleasure together.

Chris Rose: 28:38 Or sometimes, we will send one another things that we know the other person will enjoy, or tease that part of one another out. Right? So this is just an example of when you know who you are as a sexual being in your completion, and knowing that that will always change and expand. It’s not a static thing. But when you know who you are and you start sharing that with your partner, your orotic world together can expand and become more permissive even if the sex acts you do don’t change. Just by acknowledging and giving these things space, instead of silencing, and repressing them, and burying them. And we will say again, the context of the relationship in order to be able to share these things has to be worked on. So you might need to baby step your way into this. And I always encourage you to stay on the side of safety within your relationship rather than just blurt it all out and overwhelm and flood your partner with new information. You will have to titrate this depending on your perceptions of how safe and open minded you both are within the relationship.

Charlotte Rose: 29:53 This is such a nuanced conversation because while we want you to accept a notice and honor your huge realm of desires that may be fulfilled or maybe not, and we want you to enjoy what is in your current present reality, we also don’t want you to feel like this is about settling, right? This is not about settling, but it is about acknowledging and appreciating what you do have while also stretching yourself where you can to ask for more of what you want. So this is all very nuanced.

Chris Rose: 30:27 We don’t shy away from the complicated conversations around here. Yeah. When you say settling, there’s this sense … But I struggle with that word because we all settle in some way. We all say this, this is good enough. This is what I want. But, we then have to interrogate that good enough, right? We settle in the sense of we acknowledge that we all have to make choices. And by living in Philadelphia, I’m not living in San Francisco. By being in bed with you, I’m not being in bed with the other billions of people on the earth. And there is as I said, that radical devotion in that and the idea of paying attention to where you are instead of having that suffering of imagining that someone else will be better. Or that if you were different, if you lost weight, if you got a better job, if you had more money, then you would be better.

Chris Rose: 31:32 So I think there is this thing of stopping the aspirational culture that tells us that we constantly need to be better in order to be fulfilled. And but, and/but, we also want to invite you to constantly be expanding your capacity for pleasure, your ability to stay present with one another, your ability to go deep with one another. Because when we talk about unfulfilled desires and acknowledging them, that doesn’t mean you have to be unfulfilled.

Chris Rose: 32:07 Sexual fulfillment is not about having all of your desires met all of the time. Sexual fulfillment for many of us is much simpler than blow jobs in a helicopter and whatever. Penthouse orgies. Sexual fulfillment for many of us comes from the feeling of being seen, and loved, and cherished, and held, and touched, and safe to explore different sides of our sexuality. It can actually be quite simple to feel sexually fulfilled, and yet that is really far away from many of us. Because as a culture, we’re not even at the point of honoring and celebrating, and having people feel safe in the basic sense of who they are as sexual beings. Many of us can’t even look at our own genitals without a feeling of shame. And that’s profound. These things are real. The shame and the fear, and the guilt around sexuality are so real and that is what is preventing us from feeling sexually fulfilled. Not the lack of penthouse orgies.

Charlotte Rose: 33:20 Sometimes it is not about expanding our pleasures to make them bigger, but to learn how to go deeper within the ones that we have and that are in our life, and that that is a pathway to sexual fulfillment.

Chris Rose: 33:36 Yeah. I was working with this couple over email and they’re working through a lot of trauma, and using our massage course to introduce touch back into their relationship. He wrote to me and he said, “I was giving my wife a hand and arm massage because that’s all she can tolerate right now. And at one point, she looked up, our eyes made contact, and I knew she was grateful for my touch.” He wrote to thank me about that moment. And that moment for them was fulfilling, because given the context of their life circumstances, given the context of what has happened to them, they were able to find a very real moment of intimacy and connection and mutual care, and mutual pleasure. That is what is going to push their relationship forward. That is what is going to fill their wells of feeling loved and cared for, and seen. Right?

Chris Rose: 34:34 So we need to stop talking about sexual fulfillment as this idea of doing all the things all around the world all at once, because that is not how our real lives, sex lives work. But just to acknowledge that sexual fulfillment for you right now might just be the simplest of touch with the kindest of intentions, across a kitchen table. How can you find fulfillment in that moment? Because what it means is I am not alone. I have this lover. They are showing up for me how they can. Let’s focus there. Let’s find fulfillment there.

Chris Rose: 35:13 So how do we leave this on a more uplifting note? I would love to hear from people about what sexual fulfillment, this idea of being sexually fulfilled, what that has felt like in different points of your life or what it might look like for you. Let’s help one another paint the picture of what this feels like and looks like together. Yeah?

Chris Rose: 35:40 So be gentle with yourself around this conversation. As I said, we do not want to shy away from the complicated conversations around sexuality. Next week, we will try to bring you a more explicit, fun conversation, because we do want to strike that balance within your feed. What we feed you on this podcast I want to be a balance between these deeper, more intense conversations about what is real around sexuality, and also give you tools to access more joy, and pleasure, and orgasm, and ecstasy in your body. We want to be there on both ends of your holes. Okay. I’m Chris.

Charlotte Rose: 36:29 I’m Charlotte.

Chris Rose: 36:30 We are the Pleasure Mechanics.

Charlotte Rose: 36:31 Wishing you a lifetime of pleasure.

Chris Rose: 36:34 And hey, I didn’t say it before, but if you love this show and you want to support our work, come on over to patreon.com/pleasuremechanics. Patreon.com/pleasuremechanics, and jump in with a monthly pledge so we can continue to fill your feed and holes.

Exploring Attachment Theory with Aida Manduley

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What is attachment theory? How do different attachment styles show up in our most intimate relationships and in our sex lives?

Therapist and social justice consultant Aida Manduley joins us to discuss attachment theory and how we can learn about ourselves and our relationships with this powerful tool.

Resources Mentioned In This Episode:

Wired for Love: How Understanding Your Partner’s Brain and Attachment Style Can Help You Defuse Conflict and Build a Secure Relationship by Stan Tatkin PsyD MFT


Transcript of Exploring Attachment Theory Episode

Podcast transcripts are generated with love by humans, and thus may not be 100% accurate. Time stamps are included so you can cross reference or jump to any point in the podcast episode above. THANKS to the members of our Pleasure Pod for helping make transcripts and the rest of our free offerings happen! If you love what we offer, find ways to show your love and dive deeper with us here: SHOW SOME LOVE

[00:00] Hi. Welcome to Speaking of Sex with the Pleasure Mechanics. I’m Chris from pleasuremechanics.com, and on today’s episode, we have a fabulous conversation with Aida Manduley about attachment theory, and how different styles of attachment show up in our most intimate relationships and our sex lives.

[00:21] Come on over to pleasuremechanics.com for the full podcast archive, and while you are there, go to pleaseuremechanics.com/free to sign up for our free online course so you can get started building a more satisfying and fulfilling sex life on your own terms. That’s pleaseuremechanics.com/free.

[00:46] All right, so on today’s episode, we have one of my favorite thought leaders in the sexuality field, here with us to talk about attachment theory and how it shows up, and what we can do to manage our own attachment styles in and out of the bedroom. If you don’t even know what I’m talking about by attachment styles, you are in for a treat.

[01:10] Attachment theory is one of the primary lenses that relationship therapists and sex therapists and all kinds of therapists look at to think about how we have learned to love, how we have learned to co-regulated with other human beings, and how we act in conflict and in moments of threat with other human beings. So this is a primary lens to look at your own patterns within your relationship and your love life in general.

[01:41] Alright, here is my conversation with Aida Manduley.

[01:46] Can you introduce yourself and the work that you do?

[01:48] Yeah, so my name is Aida Manduley. I am Boston-based, though born and raised in Puerto Rico. I am a trauma-focused clinician. I am also a sexuality educator, and I am a consultant/presenter that works with both micro-interventions … a.k.a. the sort of small, one-on-one parts of the work … and someone who also does larger-scale intervention and prevention … so the policy, the rules, the larger events, national work … because I like to do a little bit of everything.

[02:23] And so my mission in my work is to build the better world that can actually hold us all, and that is a world where there’s racial justice, that’s a world where we have more options in the criminal legal system to address harm, that’s a world where pleasure is an option for all those who wanna take it and experience it, and … yeah, all my work is really about fantasy and trying to bring that fantasy to fruition.

[02:54] Mm, I love that.

[02:56] And you’re one of the most brilliant minds that I look to to really think about how these external systems, the social world we live in, impact our most intimate arenas of love and eroticism, and even how we embody our own skin. So thank you for all of that.

[03:18] When I saw you post on Facebook about enjoying talking about attachment theory, I kinda jumped in my seat, because attachment theory is something that we haven’t really tackled in over 300 episodes. I have a sense it’s super important to sexuality and eroticism, but I’ve been looking for a guide in this, so thank you for jumping on the line with us.

[03:42] We’re gonna talk about attachment theory. Can you start us from the total beginning? What is attachment theory? Why is it important?

[03:49] For sure.

[03:49] So attachment theory is this idea that we work to connect to primary caregivers when we’re young … particularly in times of distress … and that the ways that we bond or don’t bond with them physically and emotionally sets up a blueprint for how, then, we connect to other important figures in our future, whether that’s bosses or partners or other family members and things like that. So it accounts for some of this biological drive to connect and feel safety, but it also then looks at how that gets woven through with experience. So attachment theory is not purely a biological theory, it’s not purely a social theory, and there is a lot of work around it. A lot of research focused on children … and that’s kind of where the theory started … and then there’s also been research on attachment in adults specifically.

[04:44] We have a lot of research, and we still have, honestly, more questions than we have answers, but for me, it feels really important because it is something that allows us to have language and context to discuss how we build relationships and why. And to me, it can help people give context and words to address their relationship needs and their issues.

[05:10] Is it something that’s gonna work 100% for everyone? No. Nothing … nothing works that way. But to me, it feels like a helpful shared language that we can use to talk about our wounds and the way that we can heal from them to build better relationships with any person in our lives, but particularly in what we consider intimate relationships, whether that’s romantic or sexual or something else.

[05:34] Beautiful. And so what is attachment? What does that look like between a child and a caregiver? What role does it play for us as humans? Why do we learn this skill?

[05:46] For a lot of reasons. Part of it is dealing with distress. So part of the reason we biologically want to attach to a caregiver is because we are experiencing the world and we’re trying to figure out how to do it and how to do it safely. So part of it is about calming ourselves down if we’re freaked out as babies, but part of it is also to learn about how to be in the world.

[06:10] Very early on, when we’re zero to two or three, our caregivers … whether that’s parents or someone else … these are the people that we as children are relying on to teach us, what does it mean to be a human? How are we supposed to react to things? Am I a different being than you? Are we the same kind of being? And so all these really big, existential questions are getting addressed through the relationships that we have. And that obviously varies across cultures, it varies depending on the household setup people have and what they’re exposed to … that all of it at its core is about the relationships that we have, and what those teach us about what it is to be human, how we’re supposed to deal with our emotions, the role that emotions have in our lives and all of that stuff.

[07:02] So attachment relates to how we get calmed down when we are in distress, how those caregivers react to us if we reach out to them, and it’s not just about physical reaching out. It’s also about emotional reaching out.

[07:19] One of the main gaps that I’ve seen when people talk about attachment is just assuming that it’s all about the physical outreach, and, “Oh, I had parents that were very involved. They went to all my soccer games and they took me to ballet and they helped me financially, so of course I had a great upbringing. Of course I have secure attachment. Everything is fine.” And when we actually dig a little big deeper, we see that, “Oh, they were there for you financially and physically and materially, but you could never talk to them about your feelings. They never expressed interest in your inner workings. They never were there for you when you were upset.” And so that creates a disconnect. That creates a gap or a void, and it can lead to what we would call and attachment injury.

[08:11] And so it’s all about the relational piece, and how others react to us in relationships … whether that’s physical, whether that’s emotional, whether that’s verbal … and it starts very, very young.

[08:26] So I’m hearing this piece of finding safety and comfort with other humans, and being able to return to that place of safety and comfort when we perceive threat or when harm comes.

[08:39] You know, I have a four-year-old daughter, and I’ve seen this cycle, and it’s so interesting how it gets further and further away from your body. You know, she becomes a toddler and falls, and then immediately runs back into our arms and we kind of co-regulate. Is this the kind of system we’re talking about? That being an independent person in the world, but then having other humans to come home to and find safety with. Is that [crosstalk 00:09:08]

[09:08] Exactly. Yeah, that’s exactly it. And so the hallmark of what is considered secure attachment … we have secure and insecure attachment. There’s only one type, allegedly, of secure attachment … for now … and then we have various types of insecure attachment.

[09:23] For someone who has secure attachment, the idea is that they are both able to return to a safe haven, and that’s usually related to other people, but also a safe haven within themselves, and this person having the ability to explore, with some degree of security and with some degree of confidence. So you can be away and close, and both of those are doable, they feel easy, to some extent, and like there are options.

[09:53] Versus if you have insecure attachment, one of those arenas is compromised. Maybe you don’t feel like you can ever go to a safe haven. You don’t feel like you have anyone that you can rely on or connect to or maybe you feel really freaked out at the idea of someone trying to connect with you and you actually avoid it and fear it and dismiss it or minimize it. And so secure attachment gets formed by having those caregivers be there for you, and the cycle of secure attachment is someone … let’s say a child, in this case … a child experiences distress, or perceives a triggering event or something that’s starting to get their system activated. That provokes some level of anxiety, or alteration in their body. They generally then try to seek a connection to their caregiver, try to look toward the parent or the grandmother or anything like that, for some kind of reassurance or mirroring, and in a secure cycle, that adult or that caregiver will give them a good response.

[11:00] And a good response has a few different components, but primarily, a good response involves an acknowledgement of whatever the emotion is or whatever that child is coming with. It involves some co-regulations, so I can mirror the distress that you’re feeling, but I’m not as freaked out as you are, so I can give you a little bit of security and like, “Hey, it’s okay,” and then a being with. And through that process, then, the child can feel chill, basically, or feel less anxious and de-escalated. And then they know that, “Hey, if I’m ever distressed again, I can probably enter the cycle again. I can seek reassurance and comfort, and I will get it, and then I will feel fine, and this is an option for me.”

[11:44] Whereas if it’s an insecure attachment cycle, at some point in there, there’s a breakdown. So either you’re distressed, you feel anxious, you seek connection, and you get a bad response … and then we fork off into either, when you get a bad response, you say, “Okay, I just need to try harder. I’m gonna do that again. Let me seek connection again,” and you get stuck in a loop … or, very often, you seek connection, you get a bad response … or there’s no response … and then you’re like, “Okay, time to give up because I cannot trust anyone. Time to fling myself into the Sun and suppress the hell out of every emotion I ever have again. ‘Cause I can’t rely on any of you. Peace.” And then you just don’t try to connect again, or it feels really fraught.

[12:32] And then the other cycle is one that’s more erratic, where you may not even seek connection. You might seek connection sometimes, but you get a bad response and you get stuck in one of the two loops and it’s messier, and each of those cycles corresponds with a different insecure attachment style. Which I know is also one of your questions, so maybe I can briefly give an overview of that.

[12:57] Perfect. That last one, did you call it “erratic” or “erotic”?

[13:03] Erratic. I’m sure it’s erotic for someone, too.

[13:05] Amazing.

[13:07] But yeah, so we have the secure attachment style in adults, which is that cycle where there’s a good response and there’s some de-escalation and chill. Then we have anxious preoccupied, which is the one where you get a bad response but you seek connection again.

[13:23] For someone who’s anxious-preoccupied or has that as their primary attachment style, they do a lot of reassurance-seeking, there may be a lot of nervous energy, they want intimacy and they want approval, sometimes to the point of dependence. They’re afraid of abandonment or rejection. But also … some might qualify those as negative things … but also people who are more anxious-preoccupied tend to care a lot about how other people feel. They can be very empathetic. They can be very kind. They can be very observant.

[13:55] And so, as I talk through each of these, one of the things that I want listeners to remember is, none of these is a bad thing. None of these attachment styles is inherently more valuable than another, or better than another. If you’re securely attached, congratulations. But the idea isn’t to shame or malign any attachment style, just to say, “Hey, these are different. Some will face greater struggles in our world than others. How, then, do we interact with each other with as much compassion as we can, knowing some of these cycles and what it might take for us to get out of them?” So I just wanna say that really loudly, ’cause this can get very easily into, “Well, the avoidance and the anxious people are terrible,” and that’s not the point.

[14:42] So secure, we got that one. Anxious-preoccupied, talked about that one. Dismissive avoidance, which is mine. And I like to say that’s the one that I have as my baseline operating system. Sometimes I use a machine metaphor, so here we are. And I feel it’s important to acknowledge that, because often therapists have this clinical distance where we pretend that none of this affects us, none of this is relevant to us, we are perfect and all securely attached. And it’s not true.

[15:14] And I think that if I can be open about, “Hey, I have this particular style and this is how I’m making it work for me,” or, “This is how I’m getting security,” or, “This is how I’ve dealt with my baseline dismissive avoidant attachment style to build healthy relationships,” I think that can also be a really hopeful thing to share with people, so that if they feel like they’re stuck or they feel like, “Oh, I have this style that’s not helpful, I guess I’m living in this forever,” and it’s like, “No, you can make a difference. You can change things. You can build new strategies for yourself.” So I like to very clearly own my dismissive avoidant baseline operating system.

[15:54] People with dismissive avoidant attachment styles can be really confident, very independent, they feel very strongly about self-sufficiency often, and they generally report that they have very few emotional needs, like, “I’m good. I’m all set. I got me.” That’s kinda the upside of it.

[16:20] The sort of a little bit more complicated side of it is that if you’re dismissive avoidant, intimacy can freak you out. One of your biggest fears is of having other people control you, having other people depend on you, having other people hampering your freedom and kinda being stuck, and some of the strategies that people with dismissive avoidant use are suppression and distancing. So rather than having the anxiety and trying to be close and just running toward someone, they just … throw up a peace sign and are like, “I’m all set. Heck you forever. I don’t need this, I don’t need you.” And so it can be really difficult to build intimacy in that way.

[17:07] But it can also be really, like the word says, dismissive of other people’s feelings, and the dismissive in the title is not about necessarily dismissing other people’s feelings. It’s about dismissing certain kinds of connection and avoiding it, but I’ve seen a lot of dismissals. I like to bring that up as well.

[17:28] And then, the final one is fearful-avoidant, which comes from the same attachment style in kids as the previous one, but also, I think, relates a lot to what’s called disorganized attachment, or mixed attachment. And that is the one that is more noticeable because it’s erratic, and there’s this push/pull. Like, “I wanna get close to you, but then I’m gonna push you away, and I really want you, but I’m freaked out, so I’m gonna run away. I both highly avoid the intimacy and the connection, and I also have a lot of anxiety about it, but I also want it,” and it’s the one that’s a little bit more volatile, I would say. And again, not as a judgment, but as a … this one has a little bit of a mix. It’s a combo platter. And it’s sometimes a little bit harder to predict than the other ones.

[18:27] And so those cycles for each are a bit different when we perceive threat, and it’s really useful for people to know which one they gravitate to, which one might be part of their original programming for their flesh computer, because then that can give them a clue as to why they are getting triggered or activated during certain conversations or interactions with their partner. And especially if they can see what dynamic they’re creating between the two of them, what cycle they’re creating, it becomes much, much easier to intervene and change it. Because you have to name it before you can fix it.

[19:06] For example, if we have someone who’s dismissive-avoidant with someone who’s anxious-preoccupied, that’s gonna be quite tough. ‘Cause you have someone who’s like, “Please, please, please, please, come to me,” and the other person’s like, “I am freaked out. I need to run far away,” and the person then keeps chasing. And it becomes a really unhelpful cycle where everyone’s unhappy and no one’s getting their needs met, but they think it’s the other person’s fault. Or they think that somehow they’re ruining it, and rather than getting caught up in shame, we can say, “Okay, this is the cycle that we’re in. I’m doing that thing where I’m running away,” and then the other person’s like, “I’m doing that thing where I’m chasing after you. What do each of us need, in this moment, to create more trust, more safety, and better emotional regulation so that we can both be present and we can both address whatever actually is the conflict.”

[20:06] I think even just listening to you now, most listeners are probably feeling themselves kind of align with one of these patterns. How do we … over the course of our lives, in our workplace, and then especially in our intimate relationships … start noticing … both about ourselves and about the people we love … and start articulating these patterns? Where are some … you said when a threat comes up … is it usually around fights or conflict that these patterns emerge most strongly?

[20:38] Yeah. I would say so. But that’s also where the question of trauma comes in. Because for some people, they’re always in a low-grade state of anxiety, or a low-grade state of trigger, if not a high-grade state of trigger. So if you’re living in poverty, if you don’t know where your next meal is gonna come from, if you were raised in an abusive household, if you’re currently in a toxic, unhealthy, or abusive relationship, all of those can make it so that it’s really hard to tell when there’s a discrete moment of activation, ’cause you’re kind of always there.

[21:18] That feels important to mention, but regardless, one of the things that I encourage people to do is attune to both physical and emotional changes, and that can be really hard to tell if we don’t have any external measures or places where we’re putting that information, because recalling feelings … especially when you’re activated … or recalling information when your system’s on high alert is really hard. Biologically, neurologically, some of your brain functions a little bit go down the drain when you’re really activated or freaked out. So for me, one of the things that I encourage people to do is to log the emotions or what went on during their day, whether that’s journaling, whether that’s using a mood-tracking app, whether that’s having a calendar where you put highlights and low lights of your day … whatever the form or the shape, some method for tracking so that you can establish patterns over time and see when things come up or how often things are coming up.

[22:28] Because honestly, that’s also one of the biggest questions that if you seek any kind of mental health help, that’s one of the biggest questions that you’re gonna get asked. “How often is this happening? When was the onset of this feeling or this episode? How long did it last?” So if you can do some of that work … whether or not you’re gonna see a therapist or a doctor or anything … it can give you more insight into the when, how, possibly why some of these things are happening.

[22:59] The other piece is to pay attention to what your fears are, and to articulate them. You don’t have to wait for them to be activated to look into them, but sometimes that’s when they come up most easily. So for example, in arguments, when a partner comes to me with an argument, or we’re fighting or anything like that, I know that one of my core worries is that we will be so focused on the feelings and how badly they or I feel that we won’t get to a resolution and how to do it better in the future. So I know that my instinct is to say, “Okay, let’s be done with the feelings now. Can we talk about how we’re not gonna mess this up in the future?” And for a partner who is maybe really stressed out about not being validated or not having their emotional needs cared for, that can be terrifying. And so their fear, in that moment, is that we will focus so much on the “what next” that they will be invisible, that they won’t be listened to again, as a pattern that they’ve had in their life.

[24:08] So if you think about what you’re afraid of when you’re fighting with someone, or what you’re worried will happen in a moment of conflict, that can usually be a really good place to start to see how these attachment styles relate to you.

[24:26] Another piece is looking at … as cliché as it may sound … looking at your upbringing and where you grew up. So kinda doing a little bit of a mental inventory of, “Who was I around when I was growing up? Was it a stable home, or was I moving around a lot? Was I around many adults or simply one? Who could I talk to about my feelings, if anyone? Who would I rush toward if I had a physical injury? Who would I rush toward if I had a complex emotion? Who could hold a secret if I had it to share? When I was young, who made me scared? Who were the people that I very much wanted to flee from? What were the situations that would make me really nervous or anxious or upset? Who was there? What was happening?”

[25:20] Through that mix of tracking what’s happening now, looking at the worries during arguments or times where you clearly identify conflict, and assessing and inventorying your upbringing and what happened when you were young … and when I say young, yes, I mean when we’re children, but I also mean up to the teen years, for sure.

[25:43] With those three pieces, you can have a really, really good starting point … with any one of those, but ideally all three … you have a really good starting point to see what are some of your strengths, and what are some of your points of challenge or some of your wounds in a relationship, and it can be much easier to communicate that with a partner. And having that information for yourself, being able to vulnerably share that with a partner, can help them also be more vulnerable in looking into that for themselves and being able to share. Because you’re not saying, “You’re a jerk and you’re terrible when you argue because you do this and this and this and this.” You’re saying, “Hey, this is some of my stuff. Here’s some of my baggage. How does that interact with the baggage that you have as well?”

[26:34] And not everyone’s ready to do that work. Not everyone’s ready to dig. Not everyone has the tools or the safety, even, to do that. But if we can do a little bit at a time, if we can find the ways to build that into our day and our lives, I think it can have a really, really huge impact … not just for romantic or sexual relationships, but also in the workplace. Because there’s some interesting research about workplace interactions and how that relates to attachment styles as well. Because we’re not just attaching to the people that we want to be intimate with in sexual romantic settings, we attach to people that we see on a daily basis. We figure out how to build those communities at work, and that’s why this, to me, is so important. Because we’re in relationships all the time. We’re a social species as humans. We’re in relationships constantly. And so if we have these tools to better understand our relationships, defacto, they are tools to better understand ourselves and our purpose and how we can be in the world and make it better.

[27:40] Yes. Beautiful. Beautiful.

[27:44] How do you see this playing out in eroticism and the ability to get sexual? I’ve been thinking a lot about how sexuality is kind of built on this platform of the vagal safety of being able to be safely immobilized with other people. So that’s maybe a whole ‘nother podcast, but how does attachment and … because I feel like sex is a little bit of a threat in and of itself. We’re vulnerable, we’re naked, we’re letting people inside our organism. So how do these attachment styles play out in eroticism?

[28:21] Oh my God, great question.

[28:23] So some of the same patterns that I just discussed play out in erotic situations, because part of what’s happening in an erotic situation is we’re communicating with each other, using our bodies, using our words … whether those are text or coming out of a mouth or being signed by our hands, anything like that … we’re using a lot of channels to communicate what we want, what we don’t want, what we’re insecure about or unsure about, to another person. And so sex is just the topic, and I think sometimes we … in the world, societally … treat sex like this very special, specific thing that’s very different from everything else. I’m like, “Yes, and, it’s also really just kinda the same as many other topics. It’s just … we could talk about sex or talk about money.”

[29:14] But the communication pieces that underlie our communication in general are still there. And so looking at … how difficult might it be to ask a partner to do something sexually might be very tied to how hard is it to ask a partner to do literally anything.

[29:36] But with sex, we’re adding layers, generally, of shame … generally, layers of taboo … generally, layers of some kind of societal pressure on top of it … so it’s our usual communication with a bit of a twist, because the topic of sex has its own baggage, culturally and familially. And so the way that some of that plays out is people who are more on the dismissive-avoidant side of things might be less attuned to the emotions of their partner in a sexual situation. They might display a lot of confidence in a sexual situation. They might, out of fear … right, that’s actually what’s underlying it … out of fear of rejection or an inability to cope well with ambiguity or rejection or something like that … they might just never bring up a sexual thing that they’re interested in because they have already given up, preemptively, that it would even be available or something that their partner would be interested in.

[30:38] If you have someone with a more anxious style, they might be really nervous to bring something up, and they might seek a lot of reassurance. They might, when they do a sexual act or have a sexual interaction, check in a lot about, “Was that okay? Did you like that? How was that?” Basically, “Did I do a good job? Am I safe? Are you okay? Is everyone okay?” And so that kind of nervous energy or that checking in might be there a little bit more than if you just had someone with, quote/unquote, “baseline secure attachment”, who would check in. That person cares about your emotions. That person is gonna check in. But they won’t, quote/unquote, “overly” check in, or seem super preoccupied with that.

[31:23] So a lot of this attachment stuff, to me, plays out in how we communicate about sex, what we would think it’s okay to ask for, how much we censor ourselves in our desires, and how safe we feel letting go. And what we classify as vulnerability. Because a lot of people attach vulnerability to certain topics, when I don’t believe that that’s actually the way it works.

[31:49] So a lot of people say, “Oh, talking about sex is vulnerable.” Talking about sex is not vulnerable to everyone. I’m a sexuality professional. For me, talking about sex, generally, isn’t a huge deal. However, talking about my sex life or specific details about my sex life, some of those are really vulnerable.

[32:10] The idea that talking about trauma is a vulnerable act … also incorrect, if we just paint it with this broad brush. Talking about their trauma can be a very vulnerable act for some people, because they’ve had to rehash it so often … especially to be believed … it’s just business as usual. It’s not vulnerable. In fact, the most vulnerable thing some people can do if they have a trauma history and they’ve had to rehash it a lot, the most vulnerable thing they can do is feel joy again, is feel sexual pleasure again. Because that’s the actually terrifying thing, when you’re in a world that says you have to look like this perfect victim, and you have to be perpetually upset to be believed, the scariest thing to do is to fall outside of that trope, to fall outside of the, quote/unquote, “acceptable” range of victimhood.

[33:02] And so this idea of what is vulnerable … ’cause vulnerability is crucial to building intimacy into attachment … comes through a variety of ways. And if we all just assume, “Ah, you are being vulnerable ’cause you had sex with me,” that’s missing the point. ‘Cause for someone having sex, even if it is sharing body fluids, even if it’s getting naked, that might not be a vulnerable act to them. Who even knows if they were embodied at any point during that? They maybe were dissociating half the time.

[33:35] So when we’re looking at attachment styles, and when we’re looking at how they play into our sexual communication or erotic scenarios, that’s again why I would invite people to look at, “What is my style? Or the one that I gravitate to more frequently? What do I do when I really, really want something? Do I run toward it full speed? Do I kinda circle it for a few months and then go for it? Do I run in the other direction?” Because then that can give them a blueprint for what they might be struggling with, what they might wanna communicate to a partner.

[34:11] I’ve had conversations with partners where they automatically say no to things … kind of no matter what it is. No matter if they want it, they will automatically say no. And for my avoidant-dismissive self, I’m like, “Okay. You said no. I’m gonna respect your no and I’m just not gonna ask about it again.” When in fact, what would be more helpful is actually asking them again, or asking them in a different way.

[34:41] So a lot of communication mismatches can happen when people have different styles and don’t know about it and don’t communicate about it. So eventually, after this partner and I had a conversation of, “Oh, you automatically say no to things. It would be helpful if I checked in with you after or gave you another opportunity to reconsider, while still saying, ‘Hey, this is your decision. I’m not asking to pressure you. You mentioned sometimes you automatically so no, so I just wanna check in. Is this a for-sure, 100% no, or was this an automatic no that you might wanna revise? I’m cool either way.’”

[35:22] Wow.

[35:23] And that kinda thing honestly wouldn’t have happened if we hadn’t been talking about these patterns. I just would’ve been like, “All right, no. You said no. Cool, we’re just never gonna do that.” And the person would’ve probably been like, “Oh, man, but I … maybe I wanted to.”

[35:37] And that’s also where it connects to trauma and our upbringing. If you are in a home where you’re often told you can’t want things, or that safety is contingent upon you being as small and unobtrusive as possible, taking up any space, acknowledging any want, is gonna be really difficult.

[35:56] Wow.

[35:57] So in your modeling here of these varsity-level communication skills, you are mentioning various partners. So you live a poly love life, is that right?

[36:10] I do. That’s correct.

[36:11] I wonder what wisdom you’ve found there, because when we are in a poly relationships, I think there’s a little more space to understand what’s yours and what’s your partners, ’cause you get these multiple reflecting ponds. But when we’re in a long-term, committed relationship … and so many listeners of this podcast maybe even have only had one or two long-term, committed relationships … the sense of “we” becomes very murky, like, “What’s yours? What’s mine? And what’s the relationship’s?”

[36:43] So how do you discern that for yourself, and how does your poly experience give you some skills or strategies there that we might learn from?

[36:51] I think you nailed it with this metaphor of the multiple reflecting pools. And that’s a really pretty way of putting it. The less pretty way of putting it, that I’ve discussed with one of my partners in specific, like, “Oh, by having multiple partners, you get to see your shit reflected back at you in multiple directions.” And because you’re … at least for me, because I’m building with different kinds of people that have different styles; I don’t just go for one kind of attachment or body or gender or anything like that … I get to be in multiple roles, and I get to see what behaviors come out in each of those, and how maybe they all connect to certain core wounds that I carry or certain core issues from my upbringing, but also how interestingly flexible we can all be, and then how we process it based on our context.

[37:45] And so the lesson for me has been around seeing my own flexibility and my own change capacity in non-monogamous relationships. And also, if someone’s not polyamorous, if someone’s monogamous, we can still do that. You have more than one human relationship, generally, in your life at a time. How does this play out with the people that you call your friends? How does this play out with the people that you call your family? How does this play out with the people that you call neighbors? There’s always more than one reflection pool, but because of the way that society has structured monogamy and the way that we generally privilege romantic and sexual connections, we often don’t move those lessons and open them up to the full breadth of our connections and our relationships. ‘Cause we’re like, “Oh, this is about dating. This is about long-term monogamy,” or long-term blah-blah-blah, and it’s … a lot of the same lessons and a lot of the same milestones and markers are applicable to a wide range of connections that we have.

[38:53] So that’s another piece that I think feels really important and that I have noticed. Because as I’ve opened up to thinking about my broad sexual and romantic connections, I’ve also applied a lot of those lessons to my non-romantic or non-sexual connections, and found a lot of utility in doing so, as well.

[39:13] The other lesson piece there is that approaching our relationships through this lens of, “How can I be kind toward the things that are painful for you, and how can that be reciprocal?” feels really important. Because … again, I’ll use myself as an example … avoidant-dismissive, there’s a part of me that doesn’t want to take on someone else’s baggage. I’m like, “I have worked so hard to manage my own. Why do I have to carry yours? That’s unfair! Meh-meh-meh-meh-meh!” There’s a angry little person in me that’s like, “Ugh! I don’t wanna have to carry your stuff!”

[39:54] But my values … which are deeply related to the reason I’m non-monogamous in the first place … my values around community, my values around building a world that is not just centered on capitalism, my values around understanding that we’re a social species that requires others to thrive, my values around being Puerto Rican and Cuban that make family the center of everything, that make community the center of everything … all of that has taught me that it’s really important and valuable to approach things with compassion and kindness, and think about … reframe it, basically, from, “I’m carrying your baggage because you’re incompetent and can’t carry it yourself!” to, “Hey, we both have a responsibility to our own baggage, and because we are in a relationship together and we care for each other, we have a responsibility, to differing degrees, toward each other’s baggage. Because your baggage affects me, and it is an investment in both our relationship and my own well-being for me to help you with your baggage in as much as I am able to.” And so rather than looking at it as this chore, as this obligation that someone’s just foisting on me, I can look at it as an act of care, as an act of mutuality.

[41:17] That is hard to do if it is not reciprocal, though. Or if you can’t see how it is reciprocal. And so another piece that I guess comes from the land of polyamory is processing. Not that every polyamorous person processes a lot, but the people I tend to hang out with sure do, and so there’s a lot of attention to not just what we’re saying, but how we’re saying it. Not just where we are, but how we are. Not just what we want, but how we want it, and the urgency that we may have around it.

[41:52] So a lot of it is about being able to attune to yourself and others, and in those ways, model more secure attachment. And frankly … the last piece of non-monogamy lessons … is that A.) a lot of the literature on attachment is extremely monogamous, extremely heterosexual, and [inaudible 00:42:14], you know … blah blah blah blah blah. So a lot of it we have to look at critically, and figure out how it works for us, if we’re not monogamous. ‘Cause a lot of attachment literature is actually actively anti-non-monogamy. And 2.) that either extreme of “relationships should be work, relationships are hard” or “relationships should be easy; if it’s hard, you’re doing it wrong.” None of those are actually useful, and none of them are true. Especially for people who have multiple marginalization.

[42:51] Because if you are trying to build a relationship with someone who has trauma … whether that’s diagnosed or not, whether that’s clear or not … if you’re trying to build relationships as a person with trauma, as a person who lives under patriarchy and capitalism and blah blah blah blah blah … there are things that we are carrying that are toxic. There are things that we are carrying that are difficult. There are things that we are carrying that are different. And if you’re building a relationship with someone who’s just of a different culture, regardless of if there’s, quote/unquote, “any trauma” or not, there will be things that will produce conflict. And conflict … especially if you’re attending to all its intricacies … is not simple. If you’re seeing it as simple, you’re missing something.

[43:42] However, relationships … even though they should be partly work … they should also be partly joy. They should also have the things that make you excited to be in it. So if a relationship, for a long period of time … however you define that … is just work and you can find no joy in it, no safety, no sense of pleasure, no sense of reciprocity … that’s a big red flag. I’m not saying that you immediately have to get out, ’cause rough patches are real, especially for the longer a relationship lasts … but if a relationship is so skewed, it’s really important to see why, how long, what are we doing to fix it.

[44:25] And that’s also sometimes what having multiple relationships can throw into such sharp contrast. Because if you’re struggling with one partner, but with another partner, there’s a certain kind of ease and you do feel a connection to joy, you can remember what that feels like. You’re at least aware, “Oh. Not all my relationships have to be like this. So what should I do now? What change do I wanna make or do I wanna request from my partner so that we can be relating differently in a better way?” Not to mimic another relationship, but to give perspective on, “Hey, not all relationships have to look the same, and I have the power to be in relationships in a different way so that if there’s a struggle, I can take some action to make that happen in whatever relationship I’m enmeshed in at a time.”

[45:12] I’m really glad you mention that not everyone will be resourced enough to do this work.

[45:17] So how do you, as a therapist or as a friend, kind of guide people in pacing growth and expansion versus staying safe within the comfort zone?

[45:31] Right, great question.

[45:34] Part of it … unsurprisingly … goes back to the body, and letting your body tell you, and being able to listen to your body when it’s telling you something. Which, again, on a basic level, is something that not all of us are attuned to. Some of us were specifically discouraged from listening to our bodies, or had to dissociate from our bodies as a survival strategy. Especially if there was any kind of early childhood trauma or there has been sexual trauma.

[46:02] But one of the pieces, as far as pacing, is getting a sense for those non-verbal, body-based cues that either we are seeing in ourselves, or our partners are seeing in us. And so I like to encourage folks to be descriptive about themselves and partners, in as much as that’s allowed for them, and notice, “Oh, hey, my eyebrow is twitching,” or, “I’m tapping my feet,” or anything like that. So as a therapist … but also sometimes as a partner and friend … what I’ll draw people’s attention to is what their body’s doing. Or I’ll invite them to think, “Where do you feel tension right now? Is there any part of your body that feels really tight? Is there any part of your body that feels really relaxed?” So that can help with pacing, because those are the first cues that tell us something is activating our system.

[46:52] Before we have an intellectual understanding of threat, we generally have a body-based understanding of threat. Our pupils may change size, our breath may catch, our movement may slow down. We may start to have our adrenaline pumping and we’re getting ready to fight, maybe we’re getting ready to run. Maybe we’re getting ready to try to assuage the person via compliments so that they won’t hurt us or that they’ll protect us. So listening to those body cues and being descriptive about what your body is doing physically or internally, is really, really key to understanding pacing and what you’re ready for.

[47:31] Another piece is around timing. So doing a three-hour-long conversation … especially around really volatile matter … is not useful. So I generally tell people, “Hey, if you’re having a really intense conversation, cap it at 45 minutes and/or give yourself a break between 45-minute chunks. Don’t just perseverate,” because if we give ourselves more time, it can be very easy to lose the thread of what we’re talking about, it can be very easy to get derailed, and our emotional resources generally are going down when we’re in a conflict situation. We’re not getting more resources as we’re in a conflict. So we are trying to do more with less, which is not good math. And I didn’t even major in math, but I know that’s not good math.

[48:22] So having some institutionalized breaks around certain conversations … and again, not to be super inflexible, not to say, “and every conversation will be 45-minutes!” but … if you’re tackling something difficult, make sure that you’re not just talking for three hours. You may choose that your minimum or maximum is 30 minutes, and maybe choose that it’s 120. I don’t particularly care. Just put some kind of break.

[48:51] Another piece, in terms of pacing and figuring out how to do this, is having access to resources. And I mentioned not everyone is resourced, or resourced in the exact same way, but there are resources that we can access. Especially if we know that they’re there.

[49:05] So 1.) people can read books about attachment. There is a book that’s pretty monogamy-centric, but very easy for lay people to read, that has some useful content that people can adapt. It’s called “Wired For Love”, and I believe it’s by Stan Tatkin … and figuring out and sort of taking inventory of who in your life has done this work, is interested in doing this work, if you wanna pursue any kind of professional support, what does that look like? Who would you want to reach out to? There’s a National Queer and Trans Therapists of Color network, which is really great and it’s all across the US. There’s other different resources locally. Often, there’s free therapy in many states for people who have experienced trauma, interpersonal violence, sometimes people who are going through traumatic grief, there’s resources.

[50:06] When I think of resources, I want people to think as expansively as possible. What are the resources that can help all of your sense digest this information? Maybe you’re really terrible at reading content, but you’re really good at listening, so podcasts can be really helpful, whether they’re for therapists or not. Looking at audiobooks can be another resource. Looking at in-person peer support groups can also be helpful. But looking at all the ways human and non-human, intimate and non-intimate, that you can give yourself tools and skills to learn more about attachment, but also practice self-regulation and emotional regulation, and paying attention to your own body. So those would be the main things.

[50:54] And reaching out, ’cause a lot of this is long-term work, so not thinking that you’re gonna have it all figured out or done in one day, one meeting, one class. Seeing it as a marathon, not a sprint, is really integral to being able to actually do the work. ‘Cause if you think that you’re doing it wrong and that it’s taking you too long, you’re more likely to go into a shame spiral about it. But if you can realize, “Hey, the goal here is management. The goal here is not eradicating bad feelings. The goal is having more resources and options, not taking one specific path. The goal here is me being able to be whoever it is that I want to be, and be in good relationship with other people.” That’s a much easier frame to exist in.

[51:40] Mm-hmm (affirmative). To love well and be loved well.

[51:43] Mm-hmm (affirmative)!

[51:45] Aida Manduley, thank you so much for your time.

[51:47] Yay! It was a pleasure.

[51:50] All right, thank you so much for listening. We will be back with you next week with another episode of Speaking of Sex. Come on over to pleaseuremechanics.com for our full podcast archive. To sign up for our free online course, to go pleasuremechanics.com/free. And when you are ready for your next erotic adventure, check out our online courses, where we guide you in everything from couples massage to mindful sex to kinky sex, so you can choose your next erotic adventure with us and get stroke-by-stroke guidance. Go to pleasuremechanics.com, check out our online courses, and use the code “speaking of sex” for 20% of the online course of your choice.

[52:39] All right, this is Chris from pleasuremechanics.com wishing you a lifetime of pleasure. Cheers.

Making Noise During Sex

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The sounds of sex range from the sweetest of moans to the cacophony of bestial bodies banging the bed into the wall. Making noise during sex is one of the primary ways we communicate with our partner, and one of the most essential embodied skills for more sexual pleasure. Making noise is as important to the sexual experience as touch or the visual experience – so why do we talk about it so little? More importantly, why do so many of us stay so quiet during sex?

In this episode, we explore the big topic of making noise during sex. Join us to discover both why it is important to make MORE noise during sex – and to develop strategies to make LESS noise when your neighbors or kids can’t be disturbed.

Thanks to our episode sponsors, CloneAWilly.com – use the code PLEASURE for 20% off your entire order!

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Transcript of Making Noise During Sex Podcast Episode

Podcast transcripts are generated with love by humans, and thus may not be 100% accurate. Time stamps are included so you can cross reference or jump to any point in the podcast episode above. THANKS to the members of our Pleasure Pod for helping make transcripts and the rest of our free offerings happen! If you love what we offer, find ways to show your love and dive deeper with us here: SHOW SOME LOVE

Chris Rose: 00:00 Hi. Welcome to Speaking of Sex with the Pleasure Mechanics. I’m Chris.

Charlotte Rose: 00:05 And I’m Charlotte.

Chris Rose: 00:06 We are the Pleasure Mechanics. And on this podcast we have soulful yet explicit conversations about every facet of human sexuality. Come on over to PleasureMechanics.com where you will find the complete podcast archive. And while you are there go to PleaseMechanics.com/free and sign up for our free online course, the Erotic Essentials, our foundational guidance for you to have a happier, healthier sex life on your own terms.

Chris Rose: 00:38 On today’s episode we are going to be talking about making noise in bed. Making noise, why we hesitate to make noise, and some strategies around noisiness in the bedroom. And before we get started, I want to give a quick thanks to our sponsor for this episode, Clone a Willy. At cloneawilly.com you can order a DIY kit to make a silicon replica of your favorite genitals. Go to cloneawilly.com and use the code pleasure for 20% of your entire order.

Chris Rose: 01:12 We also want to give big love to our patrons over at Patreon.com/pleasuremechanics. If you love this show and want to support the work we do in the world, come on over to Patreon.com/pleasuremechanics. Show us some love with a monthly donation and unlock add free episodes, bonus episodes, bonus resources, direct access to us, all for as little as a dollar a month. How about that? We really appreciate the support. We are very very grateful for our growing community over at Patreon.com/Pleasuremechanics and invite you to join us there.

Chris Rose: 01:52 Today’s episode was inspired by an email from one of our listeners. Charlotte’s going to get us started by reading the email. All right. Here we go.

Charlotte Rose: 02:03 I’ve been experimenting with prostate massage.

Chris Rose: 02:05 Yay.

Charlotte Rose: 02:07 Good for you. I haven’t climaxed from the prostate yet and last time it felt like I was close. Then I got nervous that the vocal noise at climax might be so loud the neighbors would hear it through the wall. Which took me out of the moment as I thought of strategies to keep from being loud at climax. I would guess I’m overthinking this and just need to not worry about it. Have you had people concerned with being too loud before? And any recommendations for that?

Charlotte Rose: 02:37 I think this is a great and extremely common question, query, worry. And I am excited to talk about it. In fact I have been concerned about there being too much noise sometimes.

Chris Rose: 02:50 You are way more concerned than I am.

Charlotte Rose: 02:53 Yes. For those of you that don’t know Chris is operatic. She’s just so loud and I really admire her ability to feel unconcerned about other people around. And I have had some contractions around the level of noise in moments. So I understand dear listener how you feel and what to do about it.

Chris Rose: 03:21 Yes. Okay. Well this is actually good because I yes, when I have orgasms I like to really open my throat, let it rip, and when I do you can hear it maybe from a block away. I’m aware of this. I love having rip roar and screaming orgasms. I really love just opening my throat and at the moment of climax it’s often for me it often sounds like one big sustained I don’t even know what to call it.

Charlotte Rose: 03:55 (( Long sound))

Chris Rose: 03:58 Ahh. Something like that.

Charlotte Rose: 03:59 But louder.

Chris Rose: 04:01 I will drop that into the background. But I am also very aware of other people and I respect other people and so I think when we’re talking about making noise during sex it’s very much about this balance between eradicating the shame that holds so much of our sound back during sex. And I really want to talk about that. Why are we afraid to make sound during sex? What are we worried other people will hear? But also respecting other people and not interrupting the world with your sounds of passion all the time. There’s something about especially if you live in a high density environment like in an apartment building or a dorm or a condo, you might have neighbors on the other side of your wall. And so what are the conversations about consent and respect and how do we have an unbridled free expressive sexual experience while also being realistic about who might be listening. We are also parents now. And so my unfettered wild orgasms have been much quieter recently. Or have been when our child has been out of the house. So let’s talk about all of this.

Chris Rose: 05:18 So when we think about sound during sex, what are we even talking about?

Charlotte Rose: 05:24 Well there’s an enormous range from sweet sweet moans and breathiness to the sound of that kind of bodies slamming against each other to beds shaking.

Chris Rose: 05:40 So we might want to say right now that if you’re listening to this episode choose when you listen to this episode because it might be more… like we might make some demonstrations like I’ll say no more.

Charlotte Rose: 05:52 And assume that no one is listening to this when there were children around. I’m assuming that no one.

Chris Rose: 05:55 But whether or not you have headphones in, if you’re on a walk or your commute this might be a more explicit episode and a more… because I think one of the things we’ll talk about is hearing the sounds of sex as arousing.

Charlotte Rose: 06:07 Right.

Chris Rose: 06:08 That’s just a human thing. Hearing the sounds of sex is arousing. And so we might arouse you. We might be, we’re talking about sex and so I’m just saying.

Charlotte Rose: 06:17 Yeah, great.

Chris Rose: 06:18 So you named the breathiness of sex, the sounds of vocalizations, the sounds of the bodies thumping against each other. Often that can create a slapping percussive rhythm. Sometimes the bed squeaks or thumps against the wall. And then sex toys sometimes have noise, the sound of vibrators, the sound of paddles or floggers. Okay so that’s the whole symphony of sex. So from the simplest change of your breath to the cacoughony of spanking and sex toys and the bed thumping against the wall. And we all have a sense of that range. And the truth is here that most of us most of the time keep ourselves in the lower decibel safer ranges of this spectrum. Why? Mostly because of shame and because of training. Shame because we do not live in a culture that celebrates sex sounds. There’s not a hallmark card for hey neighbor I heard you making great love last night. Congratulations. We don’t give each other high fives.

Chris Rose: 07:31 I remember so in college when I first had a girlfriend and we were really fucking for the first time, her dorm mates requested a change of room because they didn’t want to be next to us. Meanwhile I was living next to a couple that was fighting all the time and having these screaming brawls. And when I went to request intervention with that it was like oh we can’t intervene there. So as a culture we’re more comfortable with fighting than we are with sex.

Charlotte Rose: 08:02 That’s so profound.

Chris Rose: 08:03 Take that in for a moment. It’s true. We are more comfortable with sounds of anger and we won’t even.. anyway that’s a whole other conversation. So there’s the shame of who might hear me and that who might hear me when we’re younger it’s roommates or apartment neighbors. As we grow older in our families it’s the neighbors and then also our children. And when the who might hear me is the children, a whole different level of shame and embarrassment and cultural conditioning kicks in. And we should just really recognize this is very cultural. Throughout human history, humans have lived in very tight quarters in multi generational housing and still around the world this is normal. And where do people have sex in apartments where there’s 12 people living? You got to make it work.

Chris Rose: 08:59 So even the sense of privacy kind of, it’s a cultural idea and it’s also a class based idea to have enough space where no one will hear you is a great privilege in this crowded world. So we have to reconcile this. We have to figure out how can we be freely sexually expressive beings while also respecting the kind of cultural conditions we live in. The other layer of this of course is that most of us learn how to have sex while masturbating as children and most of us masturbate as children under the duress of shame and out of fear of discovery and so we try to be as quiet as possible and as quick as possible and as discreet as possible. And that builds a lot of shame based behaviors into our erotic and to our sexual wiring.

Chris Rose: 09:47 A lot of us probably can have an orgasm easier, like it’s a psychologically easier thing to have a quiet orgasm than a loud orgasm even though sound and breath improve the sexual experience.

Charlotte Rose: 10:03 And there is a process of unlearning that practice of being really quiet and quick that we embody as a kid.

Chris Rose: 10:12 And I just want to pause that for a moment because this is really I think we have trained ourselves to be small. We have trained ourselves to be quiet. And just take a moment and reflect how true is that for you and when have been the moment where you have felt totally free to let it rip. What conditions created that? And what did that feel like to be able to be as loud as you want without any shame or holding back? And have you even had that experience? I don’t want to assume you have.

Charlotte Rose: 10:44 Yeah, I want to encourage we’re talking about what to do and we’re being too noisy. But for most people I think we want to encourage you to experiment with being a little bit louder and a little bit bigger and really think about if there’s going to be any harm or concern about being loud. Because some people will peep and then feel like they’re being too loud. So we just really kind of want to for a lot of people try and stretch how much sound you feel comfortable making if you really feel like it’s safe.

Chris Rose: 11:14 Yeah, and we’re going to talk about this within the context of realistic conditions. We have a four year old sleeping down the hall way from us and we change our sex life based on that information.

Charlotte Rose: 11:25 Because that’s what we feel like we want to do. We have particular boundaries. Other people won’t feel like that’s necessary. But for us that makes me feel like I can really go into my sex more joyfully and with more ease.

Chris Rose: 11:38 And this negotiation, how you choose how to have sex, when to have sex, how loud, what kinds of noises is a very personal choice. And we’re going to leave that up to you. We have different kinds of sex when different people are around. If you’re on a family reunion in a house with 20 people, you might not break out the paddles. So some of this is just bringing some maturity and clarity to it. And we want to have this whole conversation with that context. We’re not going to be the sex educators that just say go wild. Full stop. But how do we get you a little more wild? All right. So why is it important to make sound? Why are we even talking about this?

Chris Rose: 12:24 Sound is important during sex for so many reasons. Primarily it’s a form of expression and communication. Our sounds as human and that includes the grunting breathiness and also words, words are sounds after all. Words are noise. Sounds for us as human is one of the primary ways we communicate. And when we slip into this sexual erotic zone a lot of people go non verbal. And this is why we encourage you to have really articulate conversations about sex while walking the dog and while in bed communicate in other ways. Yes, use your words if you have them. But for a lot of people moaning and grunting and breathing is easier than forming full sentences in the height of arousal. So this becomes a tool of communication with our lover but only if it’s honest. Only if it’s honest. If it’s honest, authentic communication it becomes one of the primary ways we communicate during sex and show one another what is pleasurable, what is exciting, what needs to change. It becomes a map. It’s so important.

Chris Rose: 13:40 It’s also incredibly arousing to hear your partner make noise. For many people the sounds of sex is just as arousing as the visuals. And I encourage you to experiment with this by watching some porn with your eyes closed. Or turning on porn and then turning away from the screen and just letting the sounds of the porn fill your head and where does that take you, what does it do to you as a human to hear other humans in pleasure. And again, the authenticity of that pleasure matters. We’ve talked about this on previous episodes I think on the ethical porn episode about as empathetic beings we pick up and we attune to one another’s physical states. And so if we’re listening to someone in authentic pleasure it feels good in our body.

Chris Rose: 14:36 And this isn’t an esoteric thing. It’s biology. And as social human beings hearing someone else’s arousal is arousing. And usually the unit of this is too. So it’s you and your partner and you get in this feedback loop of grunting and moaning and breathing and sighing and it’s a conversation. And it’s a conversation that can elevate one another’s arousal. And then this can go into the whole realm of dirty talk and I think we’ll just kind of set that aside because it’s a whole other topic it feels like. But for some people dirty talk and using very specific words and specific kinds of attitudes through vocalization. Just the difference of being like oh you sweet thing versus oh you bad girl. Those are two very different attitudes to bring through vocalizations and this can be a primary tool of power play and role playing and fantasy where we can spin stories and actually step into new personas with our voices.

Chris Rose: 15:47 So this is a huge tool set for us. It’s not even one tool. It’s an arena that we can play with and really customize to our own erotic pleasures. And yet do we take full advantage of this? Most of us do not. Ourselves included. So I’m going to throw this over to you, Charlotte. So it was a very important part of my process to find my voice and start making noise during sex. What is your experience of sound during sex? It’s not as big a part of your eroticism it feels like but I don’t also feel like that’s shame based. Can you?

Charlotte Rose: 16:29 I feel like, yeah it doesn’t feel like a big charge for me either way. I feel like I felt happy being loud but I don’t feel like crazy loud. But I don’t feel like I’ve held it in. It just feels like I think I definitely grew up being quiet and so I feel like I can have strong powerful orgasms that are quiet. I feel like my body has learnt how to do that.

Chris Rose: 16:52 Because you were masturbating with family in the house?

Charlotte Rose: 16:54 Yes as a teenager. And I think I’ve carried that over into my adult life. But I also feel like it can be really fun to unleash sound and I really love breathiness and moans more than words. I really just the kind of non verbal sound making and I certainly enjoy hearing that. I know when I’ve been to sex parties the sound, hearing other people is what’s been the most arousing to me. Just closing my eyes and just hearing the cacophony of sound and turn on is amazing. It’s amazing. And to hear that live is really an awesome experience that is rare I think or I don’t know. For me it was rare but beautiful.

Chris Rose: 17:38 So you mentioned breath and I think that’s really important and it brings us to the next reason why sound is so important. so your throat and your genitals are really connected. And when you create a lot of tension in your body during sex and you constrict your throat your genitals also carry tension and cannot fully expand into their erotic capacity. And I’m going to try to lay this out. We’ve talked in more detail about some of these things in other episodes so I want to make this point without geeking out too much on the anatomy. But knowing that your throat and genitals are connected and if you want proof of that, next time you are pooping cough. And feel the connection between your throat and your genitals. It’s a really easy way to feel that. Or sneeze. Open your throat and your sinuses while you’re aware of your butt and see if you can feel that connection.

Chris Rose: 18:36 They are two ends of the same tube if you think about it. Your throat and your anus, your diaphragm where you’re breathing happens. So the muscle umbrella underneath your lungs that helps your lungs inflate, your breathing diaphragm is directly related to your pelvic diaphragm, the sheath of muscles at the bottom of your pelvic floor. So breath and your pelvis are super related. So we have throat and anus, diaphragm and diaphragm and you can start seeing how physiologically this is all very connected. And so in tantra for example sounding and breathing are two of the primary tools for exploring sexual energy.

Chris Rose: 19:20 And in our paradigm, in the Pleasure Mechanics world breath is so important for so many reasons. It is one of my favorite erotic tools in the tool kit. Breathing brings you into the present moment. It oxygenates the body. It really prepares the body for arousal. It’s super super important. But it also carries sound. Your breath and your each inhale and exhale is one of the ways you’re communicating with your lover. And so creating an authentic embodied connection between the breath and the sound and your sexual experience it’s a game changer. It’s one of these ways that we can be more honest about our sexual experience.

Charlotte Rose: 20:13 And more present.

Chris Rose: 20:14 Right. Yes. Well yeah and that presence is part of the honesty. So you’re breathing, you’re feeling present, you’re being honest about the sensation you’re feeling, you’re paying attention to the sensations in your body, and then you’re communicating your pleasure on your breath, on your sound. And I’m hoping this is making sense for people. And the difference here is you know having sex and you’re not super paying attention and you’re worried about, and we should go back to the original question here, he got to a new level of arousal. He was exploring his prostate, exploring a prostate massager, started hitting a new edge of arousal, and shut down. And he named it about sound but it’s shutting down all of that arousal, shutting down out of a shame response, but also out of a fear response. And when we can just be with our breath and our sounds in a more honest way, not only are we communicating honestly, but we are embodying honestly and that honesty, that authenticity makes such a huge difference in your lived experience of whatever is happening sexually.

Chris Rose: 21:28 This could be a lovely back rub. And the difference between paying attention and really sighing when something feels good and taking a big deep breath and letting it feel even better versus holding your breath and worrying about something else and holding all this tension is your body. It’s just that difference of going ah. And again I don’t want to geek out too much but some of this is about your sense of safety. Can you relax into arousal and start breathing and moaning into it? How do we get there? And knowing that so much of this rides on the breath is actually really useful when we think about not wanting to make so much noise to wake up the kids. Because I actually experimented with this last night. Did you hear me orgasming when you were down the hall way?

Chris Rose: 22:18 So I did an experiment last night. I often now masturbate when our child is out of the house so I can have these big moaning orgasms and I don’t worry too much about our next door neighbor who’s a cop. But hey there neighbor. You can put music on to muffle your sounds. If you just bring up something with heavy bass and your children are just like oh they’re having a dance party again. If you can create an excuse to close the door, bring up some music, and use that. There’s all these different ways of kind of playing with your volume while still being free to express I guess is the theme we’re talking about here. But one of those is to open your throat big and wide, do lots of breathing but don’t add sound to it. So it’s kind of like a silent scream if you can imagine you’re breathing and breathing and moaning but without the moan. And again I don’t want to assault your ear holes too much but it’s like, instead of. You just don’t add the extra tension in your vocal chords that make the sound.

Charlotte Rose: 23:31 So you’re breathing big in and out through an open mouth in order to get as much breath into your body so you can feel as much as possible but you are not making sound on the exhale. You are merely breathing out.

Chris Rose: 23:44 Yeah, it’s becoming aware of how we make sound is by tensing our vocal chords. And humans have this beautiful ability to create small little variations that allow us to talk to you through these microphones and you understand our meaning. Like how magical is this right now. We are vibrating air with our muscles to communicate. That’s all it is. We’re vibrating air. When you are aware of that and you allow yourself full volume of air, full relaxation of the throat, and full expression but just don’t create sound behind it it just becomes a whoosh of air. And you can have, I had a great orgasm last night at like one in the morning. We stayed up late envisioning last night and I was so charged that I kind of needed to come before falling asleep. But our child’s sleeping. You were in the shower. And so I just let it rip but without a peep. But it was so much breath. It was so much movement and it was beautiful. So experiment with this. How can you breathe more, feel more, express more with or without vocalization?

Chris Rose: 25:02 Whispers can be incredibly sexy. How can you communicate through whispers, through smaller sounds, but still let your sounds be authentic and open and free. So we have a ton more to talk about about making noise, creating the context for making more noise. Before we do I want to thank Cloneawilly.com for sponsoring this episode. At Cloneawilly.com you can find DIY kits to make silicone replicas of your favorite genitals. There are Clone a Willy kits, Clone a Pussy kits, and you can also make milk chocolate replicas just in time for Valentine’s day. You can make a replica of your genitals in chocolate.

Charlotte Rose: 25:47 That’s awesome. Come on that’s amazing. What a memorable gift and an experience to make.

Chris Rose: 25:54 Because if you present your pussy cast in chocolate in a beautiful box and your lover opens it, at first they’re going to be like oh wow a chocolate pussy. And then they’ll notice that it’s yours.

Charlotte Rose: 26:05 It’s kind of awesome.

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Charlotte Rose: 26:15 Enjoy.

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Charlotte Rose: 26:22 To consume.

Chris Rose: 26:23 It’s an experience that can’t be beat. I should go in the jingle business. Cloneawilly.com thank you so much for your sponsorship. We can’t wait to hang out next time we’re in Portland, Oregon. Use the code pleasure for 20% off your entire order at Cloneawilly.com. All right. Back to making noise.

Chris Rose: 26:43 All right so the whole theme here, what we’ve been talking about is how to free up the erotic communication and the expression and the breath during sex while also respecting our audience. And who might that audience be and kind of taking the context into consideration.

Charlotte Rose: 27:03 Definitely experiment with the breath as Chris was talking about. But also if you want to play with muffling the sound that you’re experiencing some people really find it hard to try and muffle their orgasm and their noise into the bed sheets or with a pillow. You can really know that you’re about to come and cover your mouth in some variety of way that feels hot. So some people really enjoy playing with that and some people will find that that does constrict their sensation and feeling.

Chris Rose: 27:36 Although it’s coming to me as you’re saying that, I feel I know what you’re saying and it is so hot and you can throw your hand over someone’s mouth and say don’t make a sound. And this can be part of power play but would that work if your child is sleeping next door and the reason you don’t want to make sound is because. Do you know what I mean? Sometimes it’s also the energetics. And we talk about it through sounds but it’s actually like I don’t want to be fucked roughly while my sweet child is sleeping next door. Or my sick mother in law is down the hall. So I think there’s this interplay between context, energy, sound, and you might find it really hot to sneak off at the family reunion and have a quickie that’s really quiet. And if you’re respecting everyone and no one finds out and it helps you get through the family holiday and it’s a stress relief great. And this is so much of we can’t give universal advice. Because everything is so situational and relational. And also specific to your erotic personality.

Chris Rose: 28:40 For some people sneaking off into the broom closet for a quickie and being really quiet will be super hot and other people it will be so stressful. So you have to know yourself here and be willing to experiment and find what works for you. Oh my gosh a pillow over my mouth in that moment was awesome. And now we can have this kind of sex we want and this is awesome for me as a new mom versus no we’re going to have to schedule our child to be out of the house to even get close to that state.

Chris Rose: 29:08 So find what works for you.

Charlotte Rose: 29:10 I love that. Just highlighting that piece that sex is always relational and context dependent. So everyone has to assess what is going to work for them. But in terms of making space where you can be louder I do want to encourage you to try and figure that out. Is there a time when the neighbors are at work and you’re at home where kids are out of the house and that is a moment that you can choose to be louder. You might not have those pockets of time. But if you do, can you take advantage of them. There was one time we were in a hotel and it was like three in the afternoon and we were making lots of sound. And somebody knocked on the wall. And I just was like it’s three in the afternoon sorry buddy. It wasn’t a sleeping time. We were in a hotel. I was sorry this is fair game for us to be loud. You’re going to have to deal with your issues. Turn up your TV. I felt like we were being polite. It wasn’t a home situation at ten at night when people were trying to sleep next door. So I felt like good about taking up space in that space and in other moments being respectful of other people around makes a lot of sense.

Chris Rose: 30:20 Well and the hotel thing is interesting because hotels are actually these liminal spaces where we have more erotic freedom. They’re a little anonymous. They’re temporary. We don’t know who that guy thumping on the wall is and we never will. And that’s different than your apartment or your dorm room. And take this into account when traveling. We have sometimes chosen to stay at hotels versus B&Bs for example. Or chosen specific kinds of hotels because we knew we wanted to have sex. And while that charming Victorian B&B might be really quaint, is that the kind of environment you want to have for your weekend vacation that you’ve been saving up for.

Chris Rose: 31:08 So I think some of it’s pre planning and kind of thinking about what are the conditions that will give you the most erotic freedom. And this isn’t so much about noise but also is that frilly Victorian four poster bed your erotic space or is it more modern sleek hotel sexier? The environment of a hotel can actually really change. Some of them feel quite frumpy and some people love.. choose your environments and this is about cultivating zones for erotic freedom. And travel gives us that opportunity so when you get the opportunity to travel choose wisely.

Chris Rose: 31:52 Okay so we’ve talked about why sound is important. How the throat and the genitals are linked. How breathing is linked into the sexual experience. How sound acts as an erotic communicator. How it can arouse both yourself and your partner when you make noise. I hope we’re painting the picture of why the freedom to make noise is important and why that noise should be authentic. This is communication and when I was thinking about this it reminded me that a lot of people make inauthentic noise during sex. Faking an orgasm is primarily a vocal act. And in researching this episode, I was looking at the numbers of women specifically who use noise to make their partner ejaculate faster to end sex.

Charlotte Rose: 32:46 Oh wow.

Chris Rose: 32:46 As a form of faking or use noise to fake orgasm to stroke their partner’s ego to perform arousal. So they’re performing sex with noise and a lot of this is the pornification of sex where we perform in a certain way in order to appear successful at a sex act. Does that make sense? And I think we all know what these sounds sound like. And it’s interesting to notice that we can do this. We can lie and fake our way through a sexual experience. But is that what you want for yourself in a long term relationship? I think it’s a good strategy actually if you’re having casual sex and you want it to be over. It can be a survival mechanism. It can be a tool to end sex that you don’t want to be in if you don’t have a no available to you. I just want to honor that.

Chris Rose: 33:39 There are times I have faked sex. It’s like sometimes it is important to do so. I don’t want to dishonor it. But if it is a consistent pattern in your relationship you have to ask yourself is this what I owe myself. Is this the kind of sex I want to be having where I am performing something, I am performing my pleasure rather than actually experiencing my pleasure and communicating honestly about that pleasure. And the pressure to have an orgasm is the problem. It’s not whether or not you are having an orgasm. It’s the expectation that sex looks a certain way and sounds a certain way in order to be successful. And that’s what everyone is kind of shooting for instead of the authentic expression of your two bodies in the moment. And if what your body really wants is a back rub that you can sigh into and then fall asleep, maybe that’s the kind of pleasure sounds you want to be making rather than faking an orgasm while your husband fucks you.

Chris Rose: 34:43 And this goes for men too. Men fake orgasms and men perform sex in order to get through it and have the perception of successful sex. And sound is one of the primary ways we do it. So we just should acknowledge this. We should acknowledge that just as it si a tool and it’s a whole tool kit for more pleasure, for more arousal, more communication and connection and intimacy and being in that sexual moment together in that way that we all crave. Hearing your partners authentic pleasure hit your ear drum and vibrate into your brain, it’s a gift.

Charlotte Rose: 35:25 It’s hot.

Chris Rose: 35:25 It’s a gift of two bodies going somewhere together and that trust that’s between you. And the pleasure that’s being exchanged. Hearing real authentic pleasure is amazing.

Charlotte Rose: 35:38 And also experiencing it as you are making sound it can turn yourself on where you are really hearing your own pleasure and hearing your own breathiness. It can be something that is erotic to you about yourself even if you’re in a partnership.

Chris Rose: 35:53 And it’s your erotic power. And when I let out my full operatic that for me is a statement of power and it vibrates through my body in a way that I sit up from ne of those orgasms and I feel like completely charged, completely ready to like face the day. It resonates. It vibrates and we should remember vibrators are the greet sex toy. Sound is vibration. Oh bonus skill here is make sound into your partners genitals. Use this tool of vibration. Put your mouth on the most sensitive bits and make noise and feel that vibration move into the flesh. Like you can use your voice as a vibrator and different sounds make different sensations. So a really low rumbly groan into the clitoris feels different than a high buzzed pitch.

Charlotte Rose: 36:50 And this is a really fun thing to do. This is like I don’t know. I feel like it’s fun as opposed to this really sexy thing. But having a time to really play with this. Like how does this feel? Let’s just play with this.

Chris Rose: 37:03 But that playfulness.

Charlotte Rose: 37:04 Totally as an inquiry.

Chris Rose: 37:06 Is sexy. I feel like this is where we can’t separate this serious sexiness from the ability to laugh and make noise with our mouths and to each others junk. And that’s I don’t know. So for me when I think about sound so much when I think back on different sexual experiences I can track how I feel about those experiences like by the sounds I was making. It’s so expressive. It’s kind of the soundtrack to the experience and how do we make that sound track more of what we want. More joyful, more playful, more romantic, more intimate. Or rougher, more dominant, boss me around, like what do you want to hear. What noise do you want to feel resonate through your flesh in these moments of arousal and orgasm.

Chris Rose: 38:05 What does your pleasure sound like? And what is the range there? What is the pleasure? What is the sound of compete enjoyment? What is the pleasure of complete excitation and feeling so charged and thundering with your erotic power? What would that sound like? And how do we embody these? How do we give ourselves permission to embody these energies and bring voice to them? And I don’t know this whole episode, I thought it was this really practical we’re going to talk about making noise in bed. It’s gotten a little bit more soulful.

Charlotte Rose: 38:43 Esoteric.

Chris Rose: 38:45 But I guess that’s what we’re doing. We’re blending the soulful and the explicit. I don’t know. I think I can’t separate them because sound is our expression and our breath and our breath is connection to spirit and connection to the outside world and so this is how energy travels through us. And it’s just as important as touch. And we talk so much about touch but how are you breathing and emoting and feeling through that sound. What is traveling on the breath on the noise on the sound?

Chris Rose: 39:19 It’s about more than decibels. It’s about more than volume.

Charlotte Rose: 39:28 I just love that the breath helps you feel so much more and so when we’re paying attention to that and letting ourselves make some sound that come from deep authenticity.

Chris Rose: 39:38 And you talk about feeling emotions or feeling sensation?

Charlotte Rose: 39:41 Feeling sensation in your body. It is such a tool to feel more sensation in your body. And then from that place, expressing sound even if that’s just an exhale or a moan as you breathe out. It is an expression of what you’re feelings. It’s an invitation to your partner. It’s a congratulations to your partner. It’s so much and it can be so gentle to start doing more of. I think we have so much fear around making noise but if we just open that up a little bit and it’s not really making tons of crazy porn soundtrack kind of things. It’s just about breathing and sighing and grunting and groaning. Those are easy sounds to make in a way if they’re just on your exhale. And you’re focusing on your inhale.

Chris Rose: 40:33 Right. So focus on your inhale breathe a little bigger and fuller, and let the exhale go with a little bit of sound. A little bit of a moan.

Charlotte Rose: 40:41 Yeah.

Chris Rose: 40:42 And see what happens. See how your partner responds. And maybe we need to do a part two here because there’s a whole other conversation about interpersonal permission to make noise. And the shame or the worry about being judged for making noise and what kind of noise will I make and do good girls make noise. And are men expected to make noise? And there’s a lot of social conditioning around the noise we are allowed to make kind of beyond the blanket statement of everyone should masturbate in silence. We’ve all been given the same rules. And then there’s kind of addendums for different social categories of what kind of noise we’re expected from us, permitted from us, and how that fear. I’ve been thinking so much about fear and safety in the bedroom recently. And not on like the trauma level but on kind of just the energetic level of do we feel safe and relaxed with our partners and thinking a lot about how the pre judgment, the pre worry of how my partner might react holds so much back.

Chris Rose: 41:51 And makes us so disconnected from our authentic what our bodies want to express. And yet the most memorable sexual moments, the most joyous sexual moments are often the ones where we drop that pre worry and we just get real and as crazy as that real might look, as funny as it might look, however it lands that’s kind of what we’re all craving is more realness and rawness and permission to be ourselves. So permission granted. Make some noise. See how it feels. Of course take your context into consideration. We are not encouraging you to wake up granny with your spanking scene. Because that’s just about efficiency. You will then have to explain that and deal with the social. You just, do you want to? Whatever.

Charlotte Rose: 42:40 Do what you want to do.

Chris Rose: 42:41 Wake up granny if that’s right for you. But we are encouraging you to be mature adults about this but also give yourself permission to be sexual beings. And even if you’re alone in the woods and there’s no one to hear you but the trees, what sound could you make then? What does it feel like to be an erotic being out in the woods alone and let your sound more the leaves and shake the trees? There’s something really freeing about this. And so if this is all landing as really scary, start with Charlotte’s sigh on the exhale. Just let your voice open up a little bit. Let your breath open up a little bit. And if the invitation lands for you, find a place and a space where you can really let it rip and see what you are capable of. And it’s also like primal scream therapy. Some of us just need to make more noise and open that up and open up our voice and feel the power of that.

Chris Rose: 43:43 So loud orgasms can be very therapeutic.

Charlotte Rose: 43:46 Mm-hmm (affirmative). If you can find a space to do that, please do. I think it’s a great experiment for anyone, solo or partnered.

Chris Rose: 43:54 Yeah exactly. You can check into a hotel room and make a ton of noise by yourself. This is not a partnered thing.

Charlotte Rose: 44:01 If you are able, please do.

Chris Rose: 44:04 All right. So we hope this has been useful to you. Come on over to Pleasuremechanics.com and be in touch with us, better yet join our Patreon at patreon.com/pleasuremechanics, all one word. Patreon.com/pleasuremechanics and support the show for as little as a dollar a month. Unlock bonus resources, bonus episodes, and community conversation. We would love to have you support the show on patreon.com/pleasuremechanics. And thanks again to Cloneawilly.com for sponsoring this episode. We will be back with you next week with another episode of speaking of sex. I’m Chris.

Charlotte Rose: 44:49 I’m Charlotte.

Chris Rose: 44:49 We are the pleasure mechanics.

Charlotte Rose: 44:51 Wishing you a lifetime of pleasure.

Help! My Partner Won’t Play Along

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What happens when you are ready to explore sexually, and your partner doesn’t want to play along? How do you move forward as a couple when only one of you wants to get kinky?

If you have ever felt like you were ready to explore new sexual thrills or go on new erotic adventures, but your partner was not willing to participate, this episode is for you. Or maybe YOU are the one who is terrified of your partner’s new desires and feel totally freaked out about what is being asked of you.

We ALL have felt the fear and resistance that comes when we confront change or are asked to try something new. Let’s face it – it is way easier to keep things the same. It is way easier to stay safe. But what gets lost is the adventure, the pleasure and the potentially transformative experience of trying something new. We all need to grow and change, and in long term relationships, we need to learn how to grow and change together, one step at a time.

Resources Mentioned In This Episode:

Couples Massage Mastery – no matter where you are on your erotic path, learning the skills of couples massage will lay a foundation of touch, pleasure and communication that will support all of your other erotic adventures. If we could give all couples one gift, this would be it.

Big thanks to our new sponsor, CloneAWilly.com! CloneAWilly.com offers DIY at home kits so you can make a silicone replica of your own beautiful genitals. Check out CloneAWilly.com and use the code pleasure for 20% off your order.

Begging For It

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Imagine a lover gasping for air, begging for it, begging for YOU, begging for the release of your touch – is this a fantasy alone? Or is there a way to make begging for it something we can all do a bit more of, each in our own way?

In this episode we explore the erotic art of begging for it. What does begging for it mean – begging FOR sex vs. begging DURING sex? Begging for a specific sex act vs. begging for pleasure? Begging for orgasm vs. begging for mercy?

When we imagine erotic begging, we also need to think about the erotic energy behind the begging. Begging can range from bratty to reverent, from demanding to humiliating, from thrilling to flirty.

And, as Charlotte points out, isn’t begging really just an extreme form of consent? Of saying, out loud, what it is you want and how you want it? How can we leverage the sexiness of begging to make consent clear, honest and exciting?

If you are ready to explore your kinky side together, check out our Kinky Sex course – we’ll take you on a guided adventure, date by date, in the privacy of your own home.

 

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