Financial Feminist - 236. Is Capitalism Ruining My Sex Life? With Queer Sex Therapist Casey Tanner

Episode Date: June 2, 2025

Let’s talk about sex baby! If you've ever wondered why sex, pleasure, and intimacy often come with guilt—you're not alone. In this episode of Financial Feminist, I’m joined by Casey Tanner, AASE...CT certified sex therapist and author of the book “Feel It All: A Therapist's Guide to Reimagining Your Relationship with Sex.” We dive deep into how capitalism, purity culture, and gender norms are shaping not just your finances—but your sex life too. Yep––capitalism might be in your bedroom. Casey and I unpack how productivity obsession, religious trauma, and internalized shame creep into our most intimate moments. We explore how queerness, pleasure, money, and identity intersect—and how healing from societal conditioning around sex can help us build better relationships with ourselves and others. Whether you're partnered, solo, questioning, or just curious, this conversation will blow your mind and soothe your nervous system all at once. TW: Sexual assault , mention of suicide, eating disorders Casey’s links: Queer Sex Therapy’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/queersextherapy/  The Expansive Group’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theexpansivegroup/  Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/236-is-capitalism-ruining-my-sex-life-with-queer-sex-therapist-casey-tanner/ Looking for accountability, live coaching, and deeper financial education? Check out our exclusive community! Join the $100K Club: https://herfirst100k.com/100k-pod Our favorite travel and cash-back credit cards, plus other financial resources: https://herfirst100k.com/tools Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Special thanks to our sponsors: Squarespace Go to www.squarespace.com/FFPOD to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Rocket Money Stop wasting money on things you don’t use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to RocketMoney.com/FFPOD. Quince For your next trip, treat yourself to the luxe upgrades you deserve from Quince. Go to Quince.com/FFPOD for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Netsuite If your revenues are at least in the seven figures, download the free e-book Navigating Global Trade: 3 Insights for Leaders at NetSuite.com/FFPOD. Masterclass Get an additional 15% off any annual membership at Masterclass.com/FFPOD. Indeed Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com/FFPOD. ZocDoc Visit Zocdoc.com/FFPOD to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. ResortPass Visit Resortpass.com and use code FFPOD to get $20 off your first ResortPass experience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Oh great, another thing capitalism is ruining. We're talking about sex today and how that capitalism monster might be ruining that for you too. Our guest today is Casey Tanner, AAASECT certified sex therapist, author, and creator of Queer Sex Therapy. I could not have put words to my queerness growing up, but I think I equated that queerness to that badness. Like, the thing inside of me that was bad, that was my queerness.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Casey is a Gen Z and millennial thought leader in sexuality and it is their mission to inspire your sexual awakening through anti-oppressive queer sex education and mental health support. Coming out has set me on a path to becoming a person that I like more, a person that like is a better member of community, a more thoughtful person, a more loving person. Like only good things have come out of this.
Starting point is 00:00:48 In this episode today, we get into all of it, including religious trauma and the ways that dogma upbringings can affect the way we embrace our sexuality and pleasure, especially if you grew up in purity culture. Me too, girl. We also discuss ways in which this directly translates to how we embrace conversations around money, rest, and capitalism.
Starting point is 00:01:07 We don't flip a switch and become somebody totally different when we get naked with people. We bring all of that into the bedroom. We bring this obsession with productivity into the bedroom. We also dive into queerness, virginity, the double standard on women around their sexuality, and the idea about how we have sex might actually influence the way we live the entire rest of our lives too, and why this matters when it comes down to managing your money.
Starting point is 00:01:31 Casey is so incredibly insightful, and I think you're going to get so much from this episode. Let's get into it. But first, a word from our sponsors. You know that I know that we love saving you money on this show. So before we get into the rest of the episode, I want to give you all of the deals from our incredible sponsors
Starting point is 00:01:49 that allow us to do this show free for you. This episode of Financial Feminist is sponsored in part by Squarespace, Rocket Money, Quince, Indeed, Masterclass, NetSuite, and ResortPass. Build a beautiful website to get your message out into the world with Squarespace. Go to squarespace.com slash ffpod to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Treat yourself to everyday luxury at an affordable price with Quince. Go to quince.com slash FF pod for 365 day returns plus free shipping on your order. Don't lose your hard earned money to forgotten subscriptions.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to rocketmoney.com slash FF pod. Hiring Indeed is all you need. Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at indeed.com slash FFPOD. Download the CFO's guide to AI and machine learning at netsuite.com slash FFPOD. ResortPass, your savvy shortcut to everyday escape. If you're ready to upgrade your day, head to resortpass.com and use code FFPOD for $20 off your first booking. Any day is a great day to start learning something new. Get an additional 15% off any annual Masterclass membership at masterclass.com slash FFPOD. If you want a vacation without the
Starting point is 00:02:56 vacation price tag, you need ResortPass. I have used and loved ResortPass for years, including on my infamous friend Moons. I'm so excited they're sponsoring the show. They do this incredibly cool thing where they work with pools, spas, cabanas at top hotels and resorts. So you can come for the day, hang out, go to the all-inclusive resort in Mexico, go to that really nice spa somewhere,
Starting point is 00:03:21 but you don't have to pay the overnight price tag. They partnered with over 2,000 luxury hotels. There's no membership, no hassle, and passes start at just $25. You can book a day pass in under five minutes and turn an ordinary day into something unforgettable. With 13,000 five-star reviews, I am included in that five-star review,
Starting point is 00:03:41 we're here to make rest, celebration, and self-care easier than ever. Visit ResortPass.com and use code FFPOD to get $20 off your first ResortPass experience. Kasey, I'm so excited that you're here. Thank you for coming on. We had a fun little moment before the recording where we're just commiserating about life and what it means to be human. So I appreciate you being on the show. We like asking guests their first money memory. What is the first time that you remember thinking about money? My parents wanted to instill money management in me
Starting point is 00:04:33 from a very young age. And so probably by the time I was four or five, I probably had like a $4 a week allowance. And I remember the chart on the fridge wherein like 25% of that went to a nonprofit, 25% of that went to fun and, you know, 25% of $4 is $1. But at the time, you know, especially that was that was a big deal. Yeah, a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:05:00 That's the exciting part is do you do I remember? Oh, yeah, the first time seeing like $50. I was like, oh my God, this is so much money. And what does a four-year-old need $4 for? I don't know. I'm sure I found something. But that is a practice we hear from like parenting, finance experts that it's like, okay, you know,
Starting point is 00:05:19 a fourth to, you know, savings, a fourth to spend, a fourth to give, and then some people do like a fourth to invest, which is interesting. So yeah, if you split it in fourths or thirds, it's always great. I would love to ask you generally, give us the like two to three sentence overview of what you do and why it matters so much.
Starting point is 00:05:38 Yeah, so I am a queer sex therapist. I became a queer sex therapist right before the pandemic hit. So I feel like I've been a part of probably, at this point, hundreds of thousands of people's sexual awakenings, because so many of us had sexual and gender awakenings over the past five years. But I'm also the CEO of the expansive group. We are a gender and sex therapy practice, and we work with over 1,000 clients a year.
Starting point is 00:06:02 I think it probably doesn't even need to be said today in this administration why doing work with queer people is so important. My favorite quote from you, you say in your book, before I was a sex therapist, I was a client. Before that, I was an evangelical youth leader teaching kids that premarital sex, masturbation and queerness was to be avoided at all costs. So can you talk about your journey from there to where you are now? Totally, yes. I was raised evangelical, which involved, you know, going to Jesus camp,
Starting point is 00:06:34 being saved, being baptized more than once, and very much got the messaging that queerness is a sin, that sex before marriage is a sin. you know, most of us have been exposed to this in one way or another. I was raised Catholic, so I gotcha. Okay, totally right. Other side of the same coin. So when I went to college, and I went to college actually to become a pastor, so I went to an evangelical Christian school where I had to actually sign a document that said, you know, I wouldn't be gay or I'd be expelled. I was almost expelled because I did come out at that place. I actually started publicly dating somebody to the upset of many people on campus. And it led to a
Starting point is 00:07:12 sort of mental breakdown. I had no support. The campus had one therapist that was willing to even work with queer students. And so my girlfriend and I were seeing the same therapist, which is so deeply unethical. And coming out of that experience and coming into my queerness, I just felt like I never wanted anybody to feel that way ever again. And so if I could just be somebody one voice opening the door for people to be authentic and to have a place to go with that, then that's what I wanted to be. Can we dive more into specifically how your faith affected your journey, and especially at a psychological level? Because I think that the evangelical to queer pipeline is actually, the road is pretty deep, like it's well traveled. The road is pretty deep, like it's well traveled. Or even just like evangelical to, you know, no longer repressed.
Starting point is 00:08:08 We've had probably a dozen guests on this show at this point that have that same journey. So, can we talk about psychologically what was going on, especially when you realized, oh, I might be queer, I might not be straight. How does that affect my relationship with my identity and my religion up to this point? Totally. And I feel like I'm still on this journey today. But I think, you know, the core belief that it instilled in me that I continue to struggle with is you are intrinsically bad, right? There is something intrinsically bad or evil about you that nothing you do will be good enough to overcome that. You need something outside of yourself in order to overcome that. And that has
Starting point is 00:08:48 been the hardest thing to shake even ten years after going to school. And I think you know I could not have put words to my queerness growing up, but I think I equated that queerness to that badness. Like the thing inside of me that was bad that was my queerness. And so what has been so transformative over the last decade has been seeing how my queerness has become one of my favorite things about myself. Coming out has set me on a path
Starting point is 00:09:17 to becoming a person that I like more, a person that like is a better member of community, a more thoughtful person, a more loving person. Like only good things have come out of this. And so over time, it has chipped away at my struggle with that core belief. But I've been thinking about this a lot lately because when I was younger, when I was growing up evangelical, and I think a lot of people would say this, my experiences with God, when it was like me and God chatting, many of them felt real.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Many of them mattered. And there was a period of time where I could not figure out how to contend with that in my twenties. Like either you're real or you're not. But like if you're real and you're saying I'm bad, how do I believe in this? I think now like I don't identify as a Christian, I don't identify as religious, but I do believe those moments were real and I still have them today. And I just consider myself a spiritual person that is in touch with the universe and something bigger than myself.
Starting point is 00:10:10 Yeah, I feel like, again, with my personal experience too, I have very much changed my opinion on organized religion as someone who went to 18 years of Catholic school, went to church every single Sunday, sometimes multiple times a week. I think that there is almost two different relationships. There's the relationship you have with the church or the synagogue or the organized religion. And then, if you still are believing in a higher power or God or universe or whatever you want to call it, there is a separate relationship that you have with that higher power or God or universe, whatever you want to call it, there is a separate relationship that you have with that higher power or that spirituality. I was going to say, you know, and I think even then,
Starting point is 00:10:53 even if you've always had a relationship with a higher power, a lot of healing looks like understanding how much we projected onto that higher power based on that religion, right? And realizing like, actually the higher power I want to be in relationship isn't the one I was talking. There's a core there that maybe is similar, but there was a lot of projection. Yeah. As we transition into talking about sex, speaking of organized religion, but there are many real consequences to people socialized as women,
Starting point is 00:11:20 because whether you were religious or not, when we talk about sex sexuality, there's so much shame, there's so much judgment. So can we talk about some of the pitfalls of like purity movements on us, both individually and societally? Yeah, totally. I mean, first of all, purity culture is just implicitly racist, venerates whiteness and venerates the things associated with whiteness. From a ground level, it was created and perpetuated in order to create and sustain the idea of race. Beyond that, I mean, just the sense that it gave us
Starting point is 00:11:57 that we are dirty, that we should be ashamed by listening to our bodies, by following our desires and our pleasure. I think it both desexualized us and overly sexualized us at the same times. And certainly, depending on your identity, potentially one more than the other. And so I think a lot of us came into adulthood being really
Starting point is 00:12:23 adept at gaslighting ourselves around our desires. Maybe we notice a desire, but we're really good at talking ourselves out of it. And what that means is that a lot of us go into adulthood having pretty bad sex and not knowing how to ask for the sex that we want, or even if we do know not feeling permission to do so. And honestly, I think this is true of all genders
Starting point is 00:12:44 in various ways. Limitations were placed on all of us on the allowances that were made for the way that we show up during sex. Whether it's men feeling like they can't show up and be vulnerable, they can't cry during sex, whether it's genderqueer people not being able to show up and have their bodies named and called the ways that they deserve to be named and called, or women not feeling like it's okay for somebody to spend 20 minutes going down on them, right? We all have versions of that. Can we talk about the P word, the pleasure a little bit here? Because we've spoken with previous guests on this show about how pleasure, both sexual
Starting point is 00:13:21 and otherwise, is just demonized. And we think about the pleasure of eating for women, right, is always with a side of guilt and shame, of thinking about, okay, the calories in and the calories out. The pleasure of just enjoying rest is then demonized, right? Why aren't you doing more? Why aren't you being productive? You're putting yourself first, how dare you? And then of course, with sexual pleasure, right? So can we talk about just how much we've demonized pleasure in a capitalist society for women? Yeah. Well, I think what you're speaking to is that pleasure isn't just about sex, right? There's
Starting point is 00:14:03 pleasure to be had in many areas of life and that includes work. And I think that when we're talking about what capitalism wants for us, it is to pay attention to productivity and very often productivity is sort of at the opposite end of the spectrum of pleasure. Like productivity and pleasure often do not go hand in hand. And so it is no wonder that we're conditioned out of it. But yeah, if we were allowed to show up at our jobs and just pay attention to our bodies, we'd probably work more slowly.
Starting point is 00:14:34 We may actually get more done at the end of the day, but like we wouldn't show up in the way that we've been tasked to show up by capitalism. And yeah, this makes our way into our sex lives. Like no doubt we don't end our jobs at the end of the day and like flip a switch and become somebody totally different when we get naked with people. We bring all of that into the bedroom. We bring this obsession with productivity into the bedroom. And that's why as a culture, sexually, we are so obsessed with orgasms. We are
Starting point is 00:15:00 so obsessed with hard penises and ejaculating at exactly the right time, right? All of that is a sexual manifestation of productivity obsession. And it is through letting that go that I found in my work, people really start to experience real pleasure. I want to go back to something you said before we move on about the racism related to purity. I don't know if I've heard it put that way. I mean, racism is everywhere, obviously, and white supremacy and white culture. Can we talk specifically about the way it shows up
Starting point is 00:15:32 in purity culture specifically? Yeah, certainly. So one exercise from a research study that I actually write about in my book, and not one exercise, a researcher asks a group of women, all BIPOC women, to sort of close their eyes and write down, you know, when you think about a perfectly pure, sexually pure person, write about what it is that you see. And what this study found
Starting point is 00:15:58 is that the vast majority of these women wrote, a white woman, long blonde hair, white outfit, right? Like, and that really just speaks to, I think, the equating of purity and whiteness that all of us have been exposed to. And the implications of that are and have been, frankly, deathly, like extremely dangerous, right? When we venerate one group of people as pure and good and another group of people as bad, dirty, over sexualized, etc. We know how that plays out because it has played out. So does that start to resonate? I mean, that makes total sense. And that's where I figured we were going. Can we talk about virginity as a social construct? Because the first time I'd ever heard that phrase was about four years ago. And it blew my mind.
Starting point is 00:16:45 And I think if listeners have not considered this, Casey's about to blow your mind too. So can we talk about that? Speaking of purity, virginity is a social construct. Yeah. Right. I mean, when it ever comes to any social construct, we have to ask the question of who created this and for whose benefit. And the construct of virginity
Starting point is 00:17:05 which is the idea that you know that people with vulvas are born with intact vulvas and that on their wedding nights theoretically that those vulvas are no longer intact the hymen breaks they that that person has lost their virginity and of course this is for the benefit of people with penises. This is also for the benefit of capitalism, right? If we can like track who people belong to, right? Then we have more control over them. When in reality, you know, this idea that like the loss of virginity happens at the breaking of the hymen is
Starting point is 00:17:38 first of all insane because the hymen can break from putting in a tampon. The hymen can break from being a runner, right? Like it is not just a penis that can do that. So first of all, biologically, it doesn't even make sense. But then of course, this idea that we're born with something that we lose via sex, if you really play it out, there's just no basis for it. We are born with our bodies intact.
Starting point is 00:18:02 We die with our bodies intact. Like there is nothing that can happen to any of our tissue that makes us more or less broken. And yet it is sort of the main thing that we talk about in sex ed, growing up in the church. We become obsessed with it. It makes it very, very complicated for people who do choose to have sex before marriage and were raised in that way. Well, and I think the interesting thing too, you know, the way of course put on virginity is even, you know, it's still dramatic to this day, right? In some countries, you know, when considering, you know, who the men are going to marry, you know, a virgin bride, right, is still the pristine thing, right? And I'm putting pristine in massive air quotes here, right?
Starting point is 00:18:52 And then again, someone who has had sex or has even had their hymen torn via something other than sex or other than a penis is then, you know, dirty, right? Or is less worthy. Yeah, to your point, there's so much shame immediately with virginity and there's so much expectation. Oh my God, I remember the first time I had sex, there was so much expectation because it was just, it was so much pressure. Totally.
Starting point is 00:19:20 And that pressure gets extended even into, we find virginity making its way into even other concepts like body count, right? This idea that the number of people we've slept with, that's just an extension of the concept of virginity. Right. Or even, you know, typically men are very derogatory where, you know, it's like, oh, is she tight or not?
Starting point is 00:19:41 Right? Like that's one of those things too that gets discussed as like, you know, again, the body count in a negative way, right? Stereotypically, men are aiming for a higher body count, but they want, you know, they expect their female partners to have a minimal body count. So it's like, it's all of these things too. You're right with virginity getting extended into body count expectation of what sex looks, feels, sounds like. I didn't connect the dots until I think I was watching a movie maybe a week or two ago where they used the term loose woman.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And I'd always thought, oh, a loose woman was a woman who just like had a lot, kind of like a slutty woman. No, but that's actually, that phrasing was actually created in reference to the vagina. Yeah, and it just, my stomach dropped. I was like, there it is again. It's everywhere. It's everywhere. When we come back, we're talking about the connection
Starting point is 00:20:35 between our productivity and sex that might blow your mind a little bit. We'll be back. It is an interesting time to run a business. Tariffs and trade policies are dynamic, supply chains are squeezed, and cash flow is tighter than ever. And if your business can't adapt in real time, it's going to be very difficult. So you need total visibility from global shipments to tariff impacts to real time cash flow.
Starting point is 00:21:03 And that is NetSuite by Oracle, your AI-powered business management suite trusted by over 41,000 businesses. NetSuite is the number one cloud ERP for many reasons. It brings accounting, financial management, inventory HR into one suite. I was literally just at dinner last week, and the table next to us was talking about NetSuite and about how they use it for their business.
Starting point is 00:21:24 And I was like, oh, you and me both look at that. And I just love hearing about our sponsors in the wild and hearing other people use them too. It's one system, full control. You can tame the chaos with NetSuite. If your revenues are at least in the seven figures, download the free ebook, Navigating Global Trade, Three Insights for Leaders at netsuite.com slash ffpod. That's netsuite.com slash ffpod.
Starting point is 00:21:50 Because you're listening to this show, I know that self-development is a primary goal for you, right? You're listening to financial feminists, you're interested in being the best version of yourself, and that's why you should also look at masterclass. Masterclass is a fantastic way to better your life, whether it's learning how to be a better cook, a better leader, learning how to code, Masterclass has everything. With Masterclass, you can learn from the best to become your best. It is the only streaming platform where you can learn and grow with over 200 of the world's best. So instead of doom scrolling or wasting time on your phone, you can actually access all of Masterclass's insights
Starting point is 00:22:26 anytime, anywhere. So on your phone, computer, smart TV, or even in audio mode. So you can listen to it like it's another podcast for only 10 bucks a month billed annually. You can bring your dream home to life on any budget with Joanna Gaines, yes, queen of magnolia. You can improve your physical and mental wellbeing
Starting point is 00:22:44 with leading gut and brain health experts, or you can turn your passion into achievements with cultural icon, the Martha Stewart. And as I've mentioned on the show before, I am excited to do a cooking intensive in Italy. It's like becoming very real. I'm like looking at the dates, looking at getting signed up, and I am going to masterclass
Starting point is 00:23:02 to make sure my knife skills are up to par. Our listeners always get great discounts on Masterclass of at least 15% off any annual membership at Masterclass.com slash FF pod. See Masterclass's latest deal at least 15% off at Masterclass.com slash FF pod. Masterclass.com slash FF pod. Well, when you were mentioning productivity and sex, which I think is so interesting, and again, I want to talk about it more, it seems like you're connecting how we have sex, mirroring how we go through life. So do you think that's common in your clients? Like I know for me, I've had many conversations with my partner about how foreplay is what happens in our interactions the whole day.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Like that's the foreplay of a conversation about sex. It has nothing to do with like, I mean, it has something to do with, you know, the actual buildup when you're naked with somebody. But I'm like, no, foreplay isn't how you're treating me all day. Right. I like to say foreplay starts at the end of your last sexual experience, right? From there on out, everything is foreplay
Starting point is 00:24:09 for your next sexual experience, if that's what you want to think about it. Yes, it is true. There are some exceptions, which I'll speak to in a second. But I do find that generally the way that people relate to themselves is going to be the way that they would still relate to themselves when they're naked. And I do a lot of work with folks who have never had an orgasm before, who struggle to have an orgasm. And I see the metaphors sort of right themselves, right? Like
Starting point is 00:24:34 people who maybe have a really hard time letting themselves express their emotions might also have a hard time allowing themselves fully let go and work as them. People who have a hard time taking up space in a conversation are likely going to also have a hard time letting a partner focus on and enjoy their bodies and just be in that moment with their pleasure. What I will say is that on occasion, and this is not rare, there are people who show up in sex almost the opposite way that they show up in life
Starting point is 00:25:04 because, and I think this is traditionally, I've seen this more true of men because men often are socialized to think that like sex is an okay way to express desire, sex is an okay thing to want, emotions are not an okay thing to have, but sex is. So with men, I might actually see folks
Starting point is 00:25:24 that do struggle to take up emotional space, not struggle as much to express their sexual desires. And that's really unfortunate in every direction, right? Like ideally, we all feel permission in all of the ways. You can see the purity culture and gender dynamics, racial dynamics, sexual dynamics, all of those make their way in. Well, there's this quote in your book, while sex is not typically at the root of our distress, many of our anxieties dance on the stage of sexuality, which is such an incredible way to put that.
Starting point is 00:25:52 Can you dive into that more for us? Yeah, absolutely. So I'll talk about folks who are in a relationship for a second. So often what will happen is a relationship will come to me for couples therapy, and they come to me because I'm a sex therapist therapist and so they think that we're going to just work on sex. And what they discover is that actually most of our time together is not spent talking about sex. It's spent talking about all of the dynamics between them that are playing themselves out in that couple's sex lives, right? So more often than not, there's no issue going on with anyone's body.
Starting point is 00:26:26 The issue is what's happening when clothes are on. And often the issue isn't even what's happening when clothes are on with one another. The issue is like trauma from 25 years ago that that person has never gotten to fully process. So our childhood traumas, whether or not we've processed them, I think that they do make their way into the way that we have sex because sex is an attachment behavior. So if you're an anxiously attached person, that's going to show up in sex. If you have an attachment trauma, that's probably going to make its way into sex, which means that sex is really complicated, but or rather, and that sex can be a really, really beautiful place to do healing because when you heal around sex, you are healing other parts of yourself too.
Starting point is 00:27:09 Okay, so we're talking about thinking about productivity or even the ways capitalism seeps into our actual sex. But I think there are some times too when people can either feel more sexual or less sexual, depending on what's going on in their lives, of course, or like what their days look like. So can we talk a little bit about how our relationship with sex changes depending on the seasons in our life or like what's going on emotionally for us? Yes, absolutely. So depending on the way your personal desire shows up, and this is true for everyone, like we all exist on a spectrum of spontaneous desire
Starting point is 00:27:49 to responsive desire, meaning that some of us tend to be able to get more easily turned on like out of nowhere. You're like, I don't know, I just saw a tree. I'm hard. Like, okay, great, cool for you. A lot of people are like that. And then there are a lot of people
Starting point is 00:28:02 that are on the more responsive end of the spectrum who are like, you know what? it actually, I need a pretty specific situation to get me there. I need to have not had a super stressful day at work. I need the house to be cleaned. I need us to not be in conflict with one another. I need to be feeling good in my body. I need to have not just eaten dinner right. And we're all on that spectrum and certain scenes of life might might push us more towards the responsive end of the spectrum. If you're in a particularly stressful season for a lot of people that's also going to be a season when you're not potentially like super desirous. Now for for other people stress can actually lead to more sex so again it's super individualized
Starting point is 00:28:41 but one thing that I that I think is really important at home is that a lot of times, just because sexual desire is present, it doesn't mean that you have to act on it. And I know that sounds really obvious, but I'm gonna break it down in a way that I think is less obvious. There might be times where sex is on the table,
Starting point is 00:29:00 but you're actually more excited about reading a book, or you're actually more excited about going to the gym or you're more excited about taking a nap. And I think a lot of times, especially when we're in a relationship, especially when we're in a long-term relationship, there's this pressure that like, if I feel it, I got to pursue it. And sex can, text takes energy. I mean, once you get into your thirties and 40s, especially and beyond, it's like when you make a choice to have sex, like you're making a choice to expend energy to work your body in a particular way. And we're not always in the mood for that. So I just also want to say it's okay to choose to spend your energy on other things, even
Starting point is 00:29:37 if you are desiring sex. At what point does it feel like a problem if you don't want sex or you are not as sexual? Like, at what point, because I am an anxious person, it is very easy for me to interpret anything as a sign that something's bad. So, like, at what point should we be concerned? Yeah. Well, in my book, I tell a story about a couple, and really this is an amalgamation of many couples who came in and they were like, we're not having sex. We haven't had
Starting point is 00:30:10 sex in six months. And I'm asking them a lot of questions and getting to know their relationship. And they're like, we're great. We're like, we're in love. Like our lives generally look the way that we want, but we're not having the amount of sex that we want to have. And I looked at them and I was like, let me ask you something. If there was no outside pressure for your relationship to be sexual, do you think it would change the way that you're experiencing this quote unquote problem? And the answer for them was yes, we feel pressure to be a sexual relationship because we've been taught that a healthy relationship is a sexual one.
Starting point is 00:30:46 And for some people, sex absolutely does need to be part of a relationship in a regular way. For other people, six months, it's really not a big deal, except for the societal pressure makes it feel like a big deal. So part of my work is helping people and couples and relationships get in touch with, what are our actual relational values around sex? Like screw this idea that everyone should have sex once a week in order to be happy.
Starting point is 00:31:09 What is doable for us and what is doable for us right now? Did we just have a kid? Did you just get a promotion? Are you taking care of a sick parent? OK, our value of taking care of that kid, that parent may supersede our value of having regular sex right now. And that's a healthy choice for us. So I don't think it's ever a capital P problem when there is no sex. But what I work with is the distress that people feel when there's not sex and helping them figure out like,
Starting point is 00:31:37 okay, are we actually still in line with our values? Is this us responding to societal pressure? Or in a lot of cases, they say, you know, we do want to work together to figure out how to have more sex. And then we start that journey, but we do it from a place of, this is what you want for your erotic team. This is not something we're doing because of a should. When we talk about sex generally, it's very similar to money, right? It's extremely taboo. It is not really discussed. It is something that inherently, unfortunately, comes with a shit ton of shame. So do you see a relationship between how people feel about money and how they feel about sex?
Starting point is 00:32:13 Hmm. That's interesting. I think it actually may even be more difficult for people to talk about money than sex. It is statistically, actually. It is the hardest thing to talk about. I think it's the hardest thing to talk about. That is a good question. I bet you that depends really heavily on folks like cultural locations. Yeah. And family stories. Totally. I think that's going to be really dependent on cultural narratives, family narratives. I work with a lot of white clients,
Starting point is 00:32:45 and I think that there's a lot of encouragement to not talk about it because not talking about it is a protection of power around it. Yeah, I mean, I think the taboo is definitely there, both at a societal level and also at an individual level. I think, again, like I was saying, the shame is definitely there. And I think, you know, anytime a topic is taboo and is, you know, not discussed, if someone has the audacity to discuss it, they become the odd one out or they kind of become the light. And so that can be really hard, especially if you're trying to have sex with other people. If you're trying to manage money with other people, if you're trying to have sex with other people, right? Then you have to, if you're the one who's going to talk about it,
Starting point is 00:33:29 but the other person won't or the other people won't, then it becomes really, really difficult. Now that you say that, I will say one place where I really see the parallel is when I see the way that like Gen Z is learning and figuring out and frankly teaching the rest of us how to talk more openly about some of these things. And I think frankly, the disabled community really leads the way here because they have a lot of language around advocating for their needs and being able to like say when an accommodation is necessary. And I think that we are hopefully fingers crossed starting to see that bleed into the way that
Starting point is 00:34:04 we're talking about both sex and money. People feeling the freedom to be are, hopefully, fingers crossed, starting to see that bleed into the way that we're talking about both sex and money. People feeling the freedom to be like, hey, I actually can't go to the restaurant you suggested. I'm on a budget. Could we, as a group of friends, make a different choice that accommodates me? Or in sex, actually, this position
Starting point is 00:34:20 does aggravate my chronic back pain. And I know it feels great for you. Can we figure out a way to add a cushion so that I don't have to be in pain all day tomorrow? So I think this is you know, I think there's a parallel around around, yeah, freedom to be asking for accommodations across the board. So you mentioned in your book during a chapter about gender roles, how when you entered your first relationship, in which you made more money than your partner, you didn't feel empowered, you felt scared. So gender miseducation, as you put it, can condition us to believe that falsehoods left and right,
Starting point is 00:34:56 or believe in falsehoods left and right, that we need to be taken care of, we need to embody this person that is not empowered, but to be like, how do you navigate this relationship when you were making more money than your partner? How can we like unlearn those roles? Totally. I'm so grateful for that relationship and that dynamic that scared the shit out of me and then led to me having a much more empowered relationship with money. My partner was in grad school and we were together.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And so, you know, it didn't take much. But yeah, there was a big chunk of time where I was supporting both of us. And initially, I felt terrified. I'm like, nobody raised me to think I could do this by myself. Nobody raised me to think I could do this without a husband or even a single person, let alone as a partner taking care of a partner. And then I watched myself take care of us for over a year in that way. And my fear shifted into curiosity. I brought a lot of this to therapy. I brought a lot of this into my friendships.
Starting point is 00:36:00 And my friend group has gotten better at talking about money, I think. Or maybe they were really good at it and they've started helping me be better at it. But yeah, I think slowly it took watching myself walk the walk of it to believe that it was possible. And to this day, I frankly don't have a lot of women my age in my life who are financially supporting their partners. I know there are many, many, many out there. Just so happens that in my circle, that's not the case.
Starting point is 00:36:29 I'm no longer in that situation. But I imagine if it was, I would still feel a little lonely in it, and I would be craving community and craving the normalization of it for sure. deeper, how do we de gender sex? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Well, I think the thing is that sex isn't actually gendered, right? Like we have gendered it. So it has a lot to do with unlearning. Everything that we learned in fifth grade when they were like, girls, you go to this room, boys, you go to this room, there are different things you need to know, like all of that, right? Because actually, like, guys do need to know about periods. Women do need to know, like all of that, right? Because actually like guys do need to know about periods.
Starting point is 00:37:06 Women do need to know about condoms and also gender is binary. I would argue you have to be in both rooms. It would have been more useful for me. It would have been more useful for me actually to be in the other room. Like that would have been more useful for me. Totally. So I think it starts with maybe putting pen to paper
Starting point is 00:37:24 or getting with a therapist, getting with a friend and asking the question, how is it that you as an individual or you and your relationship gender sex? What are the unwritten gendered rules of sex for you? Is it about what role somebody plays in a particular sex position? That is often gendered. Is it about what noises you're allowed to make? That is often gendered. What you're allowed to wear or not wear? Who's responsible for the contraception? Right? Like all of these things are, are, are rules that all of us were taught very explicitly and then hammered home implicitly, but may just feel like Bible at this point. And so it does sort of take
Starting point is 00:37:59 writing them down to really hear yourself say things that you're like, wait, actually, why does it make sense that like the, the woman or the person who could get pregnant is responsible for contraception? What, like, where did that come from? Not very hard to answer that question. Uh, so yes, start with, start with the ways that you're gendering it. Go from there. Well, and I think even what you were talking about before of like, is anybody allowed to cry? And I love the sounds too, like who's allowed to make sounds? What kind of sounds are you making?
Starting point is 00:38:29 Like if your male partner makes a high pitched noise, like does that suddenly turn you off? Why? It's interesting to think about. The way we've gendered sex is the same way we've gendered money. And I love how Casey talks about untangling our beliefs around what sex and sexuality are supposed to look like. So if you're listening,
Starting point is 00:38:49 I wonder what ways you notice in your life how you maybe have assigned certain gender rules to how you manage or talk about your finances. Do you expect that a certain person handles the finances in a couple? Have you been taught that men are better with money? I know you have because society tells us. And if you'd like to share and you're listening on Spotify,
Starting point is 00:39:06 feel free to leave a comment and let us know. When we come back, we're answering some of the biggest sex and relationship questions. Stay tuned. A lot of people are shocked to know that her first inner K, financial feminist, it's not just me. In fact, we have a team of 17 people, I think, across not only the United States,
Starting point is 00:39:27 but across the world, an all-women team. And next time we need to hire, we're looking at Indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. You can stop struggling to get your job posting on other job sites, because Indeed Sponsored Jobs help you stand out and hire fast. And it makes a huge difference. According to Indeed data, sponsored jobs
Starting point is 00:39:45 posted directly on Indeed have 45% more applications than non-sponsored jobs. There are no monthly subscriptions, no long-term contracts, and you only pay for results. In fact, in the past minute I've been talking to you, 23 hires were made on Indeed according to Indeed data. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed.
Starting point is 00:40:06 And listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at indeed.com slash FFPOD. Just go to indeed.com slash FFPOD right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com slash FFPOD, terms and conditions apply. Hiring, Indeed is all you need.
Starting point is 00:40:26 I don't do well in the heat. Me and Seattle, we maybe get a couple 90 degree days and I am also going to Europe again this summer and I need clothes that are not gonna make me feel worse. And that's why I love everything summer that Quince has right now. They have a hundred percent European linen shorts and dresses from $30. Yes the linen for $30. They have luck swimwear, Italian leather platform sandals, and so much more. I love quince.
Starting point is 00:40:55 I've been wearing them ever since they started sponsoring the show. They work with top artisans and they cut out the middlemen so they give you the luxury without the markup. They also only work with factories that use safe, ethical and responsible manufacturing practices and premium fabrics and finishes. Give your summer closet an upgrade with Quince. Go to quince.com slash SF pod for free shipping on your order and three hundred and sixty five day returns. That's Q U I N C E dot com slash FF pod to get free shipping
Starting point is 00:41:24 and three hundred and sixty five day returns quince.com. So, when we're talking about sex, I have to ask you some of the biggest sex questions. So how do you have good sex with a new partner? Gosh, you ask a lot of questions, you listen, you talk a lot about sex, ideally before the clothes come off. You look at that person and you you you realize that they are they have a wealth of knowledge about what their body needs, and you don't have to guess. So stop guessing, start start asking and start telling, like, don't wait for them to ask you. You can also just tell them.
Starting point is 00:42:07 How do you have good sex with yourself? I think you give yourself the same attention that you would give a partner. So what this means is like, if your sex life with your partner involves lighting a candle, dimming the lights, going on a date, but your sex life with yourself involves like five minutes in the bathroom before work. Like, that is not an equal dynamic. Can you start giving yourself some of the things that you're willing to give a relationship? Yeah, that's really smart. How do you have good sex with someone who is a different gender identity than your previous partners? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:42:49 You know, I think whether they're different or the same, I think it's recognizing like this person's body is a totally different body. The language they use might be different language. The things that trigger them might be different. So I actually don't think it matters what the gender of the person is. Because even if you're having sex with a person with the same body parts, you know, they're going to want to be touched differently. So approach every partner as if, if they're like an entirely new terrain to be explored. Well, I want to double click on that. If you, I think a lot of people who, well, let me assume, if you are having sex with a woman for the first time, for example, and all you've done is date men, I imagine there might be some intimidation there on your part.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Sure. Sure. So maybe can we talk about that? Because I do agree, like every person's body is going to be different regardless of their genitalia, regardless of their needs, and you have to talk about them. But like, that might feel a new brand of intimidating. Of course. And it does. And it typically does. I would say if you are encountering body parts that you have not encountered before, this is an especially important time to have those conversations around how that person likes to be touched. And today we are so, so lucky at the resources that are available for us. So for example,
Starting point is 00:43:59 if you're somebody that like has never interacted with a vulva sexually except for maybe your own. There are places like omgs.com, I just did an entire course on Flows app where you can, they literally have an image of a vulva on the screen and you can use your finger and practice different techniques to touch a vulva. These things are out there. So you can practice before you, you know, you get in the room.
Starting point is 00:44:24 God, technology. I know, so good. What a treat. Okay, how do you have good sex with a long-term partner and maybe you're at the roommate phase? Totally. So there's so many beautiful, wonderful things about being in that long-term energy stage,
Starting point is 00:44:43 the roommate stage, there's a lot of comfort with one another, and if that's working for you-term energy stage, the roommate stage. There's a lot of comfort with one another. And if that's working for you, there's no need to intervene. But if there's pieces of that that aren't working, if there's distress because you're not having the kind of sex that you used to or the kind of sex that you want to, one thing that's majorly different from pre-roommate
Starting point is 00:44:59 stage to post-roommate stage is the amount of accessibility you have to one another naked and one another getting ready before dates. So think about it in the roommate stage, maybe you're like sharing the same mirror, you're getting ready at the same time, there's not that like really cute big reveal before the date that kind of turns you on, right?
Starting point is 00:45:18 That's a loss that you have in the roommate stage. From a nudity perspective, you know, maybe there's a lot of comfort now just like walking around the house naked or walking around the house in a way that you never would have in the early stages. Again, so many beautiful things about that. Nothing to be ashamed of about that. But I have at times tasked people in this situation with like, what if we tried for one month, you don't see each other naked unless you're initiating sex with each other. What happens to you when like your partner's body starts to like feel really exciting and rare again? Or what would it be like to, you know, get ready in different bathrooms? Or if you share a bathroom, get ready at different times and bring back that kind of big reveal. So I think it's taking away some of those comfortable things
Starting point is 00:46:02 to bring back some of the tension that really pulls desire out. The excitement. Yeah. Yeah. And then how do you have good sex with someone with a different sex drive than you? I think you start out with noticing any judgment you have about that other person's sex drive, because people with low desire, over time, there can tend to be resentment build that their partner always wants to have sex
Starting point is 00:46:28 with them is always wanting something right. That can turn into a judgment. They want too much and people with low desire, lower desire can also turn that judgment around on themselves. I'm not enough. I'm not giving enough. Same thing on the other side with folks who tend to have higher desire could be the sense that like, I'm wanting too much, I'm too much, or they can build resentment towards their partner. and to have higher desire could be the sense that like, I'm wanting too much, I'm too much, or they can build resentment towards their partner.
Starting point is 00:46:47 Why don't you ever give me what I need? Those are often the beliefs that people are walking into therapy holding that are really getting in the way of intimacy. And so I start out with being like, okay, think about a food that you both enjoy, but enjoy in different amounts. Maybe one of you is obsessed with cheeseburgers.
Starting point is 00:47:04 You could have a cheeseburger every night and you would be super happy. The other one is like, I love cheeseburgers, but like twice a month is great for me. You wouldn't sit there and judge each other and say like, well, why don't you like cheeseburgers as much as me? What, right? This is not something that needs to be judgment-laden, although it becomes that way because we are so afraid of being the one who is wrong. We want our partner to be the one that's wrong. So take that away and then I think get to know your partner's desire style. If they are somebody with more responsive desire and the context really matters, then you want to get really curious about what are the contexts that turn you
Starting point is 00:47:38 on, what are the contexts that turn you off, and then together you work on building more moments when the contexts are going to be right for desire. Totally. I think that makes a ton of sense. You posted on your Instagram, and I loved this, how we tend to put on a pedestal our romantic and our sexual partnerships over friendship and over our friends. And it just reminds me of this dominant narrative that we see online, this idea that as you get older, friendship stops being sharing your life and just starts becoming like brunch dates once every three months. It's just like talking about your life instead of actually living your life together. How did we get here as a society?
Starting point is 00:48:22 And what advice do you have for people who are feeling this dynamic of the romantic relationship as the pedestal? Totally. I mean, in America, we got here through colonization. Yeah, like if you think about the ways that indigenous people were living their lives, it was extraordinarily communally. And there weren't these two-person marriage property owning contracts the way that colonization has now imposed.
Starting point is 00:48:51 Why did colonization impose this? Again, for control, to track us. If we can track an immediate family, we can track the immediate family's finances, their property ownership. That was done very, very intentionally. And people are lonelier than they have ever been. So how do we shift this? I mean, I think I'm a sex therapist. So I'll talk
Starting point is 00:49:12 about this as it relates to sex. I think we see very commonly, you know, late teens, early 20s, we're sharing all about sex with our friends. Fast forward 10 years later, particularly if you're in a long-term relationship, particularly if you're in a long-term monogamous relationship, that starts to be like protected content, right? And like, of course, privacy is important. You want to negotiate those boundaries with partners, but there is something so beautiful that gets lost. It's knowledge sharing, it's shame decreasing, because we have been so taught to centralize those partnerships. No, that's so true. And it's like, it's easy to believe it's not as exciting, right? Because I remember when I was like actively dating, even taking like the sex off the table, it was like,
Starting point is 00:49:56 oh, my God, he's so hot. And we've been out for two dates. And it's really exciting and blah, blah, blah. Like, it's like, oh, how's your partner? He's he's good. He's having trouble at work. Like, that's the update, you know? It's just like it's the same person. It's also this idea that like if I'm dating around, I'm 24. It's totally fine if I had a horrible sex sexual experience last night that like was embarrassing that I want to talk about. If I'm 36 and I'm in a monogamous relationship and we had bad sex last night, there's a whole
Starting point is 00:50:26 other level of societal shame that we are taught around that. It becomes very hard to talk about. And that's so sad because everyone is having bad sex. Everyone has bad sex sometimes. It's so normal. Even with people we love and feel safe with. I mean, it's the same thing with money, right? It's like, it's easy to just be like, oh yeah, everything's great. And I've never overspent money on anything ever. Yep. Yep. We're not in a hard time right now.
Starting point is 00:50:50 Yep. Definitely not. We still like, I'm a financial expert. I still fuck up. And it's so helpful to hear, I think, especially from my friends when Tori fucks up, because it's like, oh God, you got, she's human. I'm human. I'm sure. After our sponsor break, we're wrapping up our conversation with Casey. We're going to talk about how to explore sexuality in a healthy way, and how to know if you need a sex therapist. Stay tuned. This podcast is brought to you by Squarespace. We've been partnering with Squarespace for years because they were the first investment we ever made in our business.
Starting point is 00:51:25 So whether you are a side hustle or a freelancer or a full-blown business owner, or even somebody who just needs like a portfolio website while you're job hunting, Squarespace is going to give you everything you need to claim your domain, showcase your offerings with a professional website, grow your brand, and get paid all in one place. Squarespace's cutting edge design tools allow anyone to build a bespoke website, even if you don't know how to code. It allows you to create a beautiful website that's super aesthetically pleasing, that works and operates really well without you having any coding knowledge at all. They also have email campaigns, so you have all the tools you need to engage clients, promote your services and grow your business all built in. Go to squarespace.com slash FF pod for a free trial
Starting point is 00:52:09 so you can check it out. And when you're ready to launch your website, use offer code FF pod to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. How does saving $740 a year sound on the stuff that you're already using? Does that sound good? I think all of us could use nearly $800 back in our pocket.
Starting point is 00:52:27 And that's what you're getting when you use Rocket Money. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that helps you find and cancel your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps lower your bills so you can grow your savings. Rocket Money's dashboard gives you a clear view of your expenses across all of your accounts, and they'll even try to negotiate lower bills for you. This is an incredible service for anyone who's financially struggling right now or trying to find more money in their pockets. They're going to automatically scan your bills to find opportunities to save.
Starting point is 00:52:57 And then you can ask Rocket Money to negotiate for you. They're going to deal with customer service so you don't have to. We talk about negotiating your bills a lot in the 100K club. We've talked about it on the show before and we have a tool that actually does it for you. No reason not to sign up for Rocket Money. Rocket Money has over 5 million users and has saved a total of 500 million in cancelled subscriptions saving members up to $740 a year when they use all of the app's premium features. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster with Rocket Money.
Starting point is 00:53:27 Go to rocketmoney.com slash FF pod today. That's rocketmoney.com slash FF pod, rocketmoney.com slash FF pod. How can you explore your sexuality in a healthy way? I think that you start with honestly closing your eyes. If you're listening and you're not driving, you can afford to close your eyes, maybe do it. Just taking a breath and just asking this question of like, is there anything that I've wanted that I've been
Starting point is 00:53:59 afraid to want or to ask for? I think that we have, what has been unhealthy or unhelpful is how detached we've gotten from our guts and from our bodies. And so I think exploration, if you can start on a somatic level and actually like bring something to mind
Starting point is 00:54:19 that you're not sure if you want or not, and then just breathe with it. See how your body responds to it. Our bodies can tell us what it is that we need and desire around sex and we rarely ever listen to them. So that'd be the place I'd start. How do we know if we need you? How do we know if we need sex therapy, sex coaching? How do we know? I think if you're if you're a human, if you're a person, you could benefit from it. I think if you're in a relationship, even if you're not in crisis, I think it's really great to have someone again on your erotic team so that if it ever does get challenging, you have somebody who knows you.
Starting point is 00:54:52 I think far too often I have people come to see me sort of at the last minute when it's become dire, but it's really wonderful when I get to build a relationship with a couple or a person or a relationship such that I get to move through the ebbs and flows with them before shit hits the fan. So I would mainly just say, if you can afford to do it, if it's accessible to you, don't wait. And in terms of accessibility, the expansive group, My Therapy Practice, we work with folks literally all over the world and through a queer-affirming lens, but it's not just for queer folks. We work with folks all over the world because there's a lot of states today, a lot of countries where this work just is not very accessible. How do we get more comfortable talking about sex?
Starting point is 00:55:37 So much of us feel the shame. We don't know how to have healthy conversations with sexual partners and with friends you were just talking about. What advice do you have for us to get more comfortable with not only our own pleasure, but also talking about it? I think like any fear, it's exposing yourself to the fear and seeing that you're going to survive it. So it's maybe going down the list of like, okay, who could I talk about sex with? And who on that list is the least scary? And what is the least scary sexual topic I could bring up? Let's start there. Let me show myself, I can do that.
Starting point is 00:56:08 Our relationship is gonna be fine. Probably even deeper at the end of it. If even that is too intimidating for you, I have assigned clients the homework of just like listening to sex podcasts because even just hearing people talk about sex unapologetically can shift our nervous system responses to the idea of sex being
Starting point is 00:56:25 in the room. No, that's so smart. I mean, it's what I like to think this podcast does for money. So yeah, it's very similar for sex. Thank you so much for your work. Thank you for your honesty and your expertise. Plug away my friend. Where can people find out more about you? Yes. Artie mentioned the expansive group. You can follow me at Queer Sex Therapy. You can follow the expansive group as well, both on TikTok and on Instagram. And I think those are the main spots.
Starting point is 00:56:53 Thank you so much for being here. Of course, thank you for having me. Thank you so much to Casey for joining us. You can check out her book, Feel It All, A Therapist's Guide to Reimagining Your Relationship with Sex, wherever you get your books, and you can follow them on Instagram at Queer Sex Therapy. Thank you for supporting Feminist Media. Thank you for supporting the show.
Starting point is 00:57:11 You can subscribe to the show. You can share it with your friends. You can share it on social media. It is the best way of supporting all of the incredible work we're doing at Financial Feminist. Thank you for being here as always. We hope to see you back here soon. Talk to you later. Thank you for being here as always. We hope to see you back here soon. Talk to you later. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast. For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests and episode show
Starting point is 00:57:35 notes, visit financialfeministpodcast.com. If you're confused about your personal finances and you're wondering where to start, go to herfirst100k.com slash quiz for a free personalized money plan. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap. Produced by Kristen Fields and Tamesha Grant. Research by Sarah Shortino. Audio and Video Engineering by Alyssa Midcalf. Marketing and Operations by Karina Patel and Amanda Lafue. Special thanks to our team at Her First 100k. Kaylin Sprenkel, Masha Bakhmageva, Sasha Bonar, Ray Wong, Elizabeth McCumber, Darrell Anne Ingman, Shelby Duclos, Megan Walker, and Jess Hawks. Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton,
Starting point is 00:58:15 photography by Sarah Wolf, and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100k community for supporting our show.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.