Emily Nagoski: How couples can sustain a strong sexual connection for a lifetime
Emily Nagoski teaches women to live with confidence and joy inside their bodies. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
with a couple of friends --
but very sleep-deprived.
I get asked more than any other question.
sustain a strong sexual connection
my friends ask me questions like this,
I can give them something like an answer.
pretty solid evidence
strong sexual connections
what those two things are,
that they are not.
who have sex very often.
have wild, adventurous sex.
who are most strongly predicted
and relationship satisfaction,
to keep their hands off each other.
call "spontaneous desire,"
to appear out of the blue.
who illustrated my book,
as a lightning bolt to the genitals --
out of the blue.
healthy way to experience sexual desire.
to experience sexual desire.
to emerge in anticipation of pleasure,
in response to pleasure.
named Christine Hyde,
she uses with her clients.
invites you to a party.
it's your best friend and a party.
you start thinking,
to put my party clothes on
and you show up to the party,
it's the same thing.
touch your partner's skin
to wake up and remember,
who sustain a strong sexual connection
where I tell my friends
do sustain a strong sexual connection --
at the foundation of their relationship.
present and available for me?
is that they prioritize sex.
for their relationship.
things that they could be doing --
and the jobs they could be going to,
to pay attention to,
want to hang out with.
to watch some television or go to sleep.
and create a protected space
is put your body in the bed
touch your partner's skin.
I told them about the party,
next to your partner's skin.
I was talking to goes, "Aaagh."
so, there's your problem."
want to go to the party, necessarily.
of spontaneous desire for party,
and show up for the party.
you're doing it right.
what there was available to eat,
about her relationships with people
come to dread sex.
between their bodies as they need
will make 20 feet of space.
is that space is not empty.
but your criticism isn't helping,"
and, "You're not there for me."
these difficult feelings.
this really silly metaphor
you can find a way to set them free
with kindness and compassion.
to maintain a strong sexual connection,
is crowded with these sleepy hedgehogs.
that lasts long enough.
a prickle of sleepy hedgehogs
special someone.
who sustain a strong sexual connection
these difficult hurt feelings,
those difficult feelings
with the question under the question,
a strong connection?"
to answer this question,
is sometimes, Emily,
the science of women's sexual well-being.
all day, every day,
that I had zero -- zero! -- interest
traveling all over,
of women's sexual well-being.
put my body in the bed,
I would just cry and fall asleep.
fostered fear and loneliness
I love and admire,
difficult feelings there were,
with kindness and compassion.
a strong sexual connection?
for their relationship,
to find their way back to the connection.
and researcher Peggy Kleinplatz says.
is worth wanting?
at the quality of our connection
of sleepy hedgehogs
what it took to find our way,
of those sleepy hedgehogs,
so that we could find our way back
for our relationship.
in long-term relationships.
difficult feelings into our relationship.
sexual connection over the long term?
of your best friend,
to find your way back.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Emily Nagoski - Sex educatorEmily Nagoski teaches women to live with confidence and joy inside their bodies.
Why you should listen
Emily Nagoski is a sex educator and the author of the best-selling Come as You Are: The Surprising New Science that Will Transform Your Sex Life. As she writes: "As an undergrad at the University of Delaware, I wanted some volunteer work for my resume, so I got trained as a peer sex educator, going into residence halls to talk about condoms, contraception and consent. Though I loved the brain science I was studying in my classes (BA in psychology, minors in cognitive science and philosophy), it was my work as a sex educator that made me like who I am as a person. So that's the path I chose. I went to Indiana University for an MS in counseling and PhD in health behavior, completing a clinical internship at the Kinsey Institute, then went on to work at Smith College, where I taught a class called Women’s Sexuality.
"That first semester at Smith, I asked my students, as the last question on the final exam, 'What's one important thing you learned?' Half the students answered simply, 'I'm normal.' I decided that day to write Come As You Are, to share the science and sex positivity that helped my students know they're normal."
Emily Nagoski | Speaker | TED.com