Sex With Emily - Why You're Addicted to Drama (And How It's Hurting You)
Episode Date: October 7, 2025EVERYONE who signs up wins a FREE WhisperVibe™ OR a FREE Rose toy with any Whisper™ order! https://www.bboutique.co/vibe/emilymorse-podcast Join the SmartSX Membership : https://sexwithemily.com/...smartsx Access exclusive sex coaching, live expert sessions, community building, and tools to enhance your pleasure and relationships with Dr. Emily Morse. List & Other Sex With Emily Guides: https://sexwithemily.com/guides/ Explore pleasure, deepen connections, and enhance intimacy using these Sex With Emily downloadable guides. SHOP WITH EMILY!: https://bit.ly/3rNSNcZ (free shipping on orders over $99) Want more? Visit the Sex With Emily Website: https://sexwithemily.com/ In this Sex with Emily episode, Dr. Emily's first guest in the new studio is psychologist Dr. Scott Lyons, author of Addicted to Drama: Healing Dependency on Crisis and Chaos in Yourself and Others. Dr. Lyons reveals how drama addiction isn't just obvious chaos—it's overscheduling, inability to tolerate stillness, and sabotaging intimacy when vulnerability feels threatening. He explains the biology: drama provides energy, numbs pain, and creates sensation that makes us feel alive. Listener questions address a 21-year-old spiraling after her boyfriend called an actress sexy, and a 30-year-old wanting kinkier sex but getting triggered. Dr. Lyons and Dr. Emily emphasize distinguishing sensation-seeking from authentic connection, coming back to the body when triggered, and recognizing how childhood patterns shape adult sexuality and relationships. Timestamps: 0:00 - Intro 3:32 - The Hidden Signs of Drama Addiction You Might Be Missing 9:24 - How Trauma Lives in Your Body and Shapes Your Behavior 13:36 - Why Drama Shows Up in Your Relationships and Sex Life 15:37 - Why Do I Feel Terrible When My Partner Comments on Other People? 27:35 - The Currency of Love: How Childhood Chaos Affects Adult Relationships 33:48 - I Want Freaky Sex But My Body Keeps Freezing Up 42:52 - Understanding Dissociation and Finding Your Way Back Home 50:00 - How Drama Addiction Blocks True Sexual Pleasure and Intimacy 52:32 - Five Quickie Questions with Dr. Scott Lyons
Transcript
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So many of us know that person who says, it's always something. Why can it just be more easy?
When we don't realize it can't be more easy because we can't allow it to be more easy.
It doesn't actually feel safe for it to be easy and quiet and still.
You're listening to Sex with Emily. I'm Dr. Emily, and I'm here to help you prioritize your pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex.
Today, Dr. Scott Lyons joins us as to talk about something that affects us all more than
we realize, being addicted to drama.
And if you're like me, you might be thinking, I don't do drama, I avoid it at all costs.
But Dr. Lyons shows us how some of us may be more attracted to chaos than we think,
and how that pattern can deeply impact our sex lives and relationships.
We're also answering your questions, from navigating jealousy when your partner comments
on other people to understanding why you want freaky sex, but your body keeps freezing up
when you try.
All right, everyone, enjoy this episode.
Dr. Scott Lyons, welcome to the show.
Dr. Emily, I'm so happy to be on the show.
We've been trying to do this for a while.
I'm very excited to talk to you.
Can I tell you how fun my week was?
Yeah.
So people would have constantly be asking, what are you doing this week?
And I would just answer, I'm having sex with Emily.
And it was my favorite thing to see their response on their faces.
And they're like, what do you mean?
I was like, yeah, I came here to have sex with Emily.
Or not have sex with Emily.
To do sex with Emily.
And they're like, and it was like, they're like, I'm really confused.
And I was like, it's okay.
So thank you for having the title so that I could make so many people's day.
It's confusing to people.
Probably, yeah.
Well, for me to say it.
Well, right, because you also don't have sex with women.
Women.
Yeah.
But it's been a while, like 40 years.
Oh my God.
That's so funny.
Well, I'm glad you're here.
And we have your book here.
We have my book here.
Your new book, Addicted Drama, Healing Dependency on Crisis and Chaos in Yourself and Others.
Congratulations on your book.
Thank you so much.
And we're going to call myself out here because I was like, oh, I'll read it.
But I'm not really, I stay clear of drama.
I don't like people in my life for dramatic.
I just, I'm not dramatic.
And then like you call me out the first few pages, it's like, oh, shit, I might be.
I might be.
And I know that addicted to drama, meaning like internally or.
the way I live my life.
So can you just talk about the whole concept behind the book
and being addicted to drama?
Yeah.
How does that come about?
It's a gentle call-out book.
Okay.
Yeah.
We talk about like there's a scale of being kind of dependent on drama.
And what's interesting is like I feel like we all know someone addicted to drama.
If we close their eyes and say, who in your life is kind of dependent on chaos,
it's totally addicted to crisis and a stress addict.
Like who do you know?
And almost everyone, yeah, right.
I have a lot of stress addict.
I have a lot of stress.
I over schedule.
I get overwhelmed.
That's it.
Yeah, we all know someone rarely, and thank you for acknowledging your own sort of dependency on stress.
It's rare that we will acknowledge our own reliance on drama.
And more so we'll be like, oh yeah, my mom, my sister-in-law, my brother, whomever.
But rarely do we go, that might be me.
And it's hard.
Like any addiction, we tend to not.
see our own relationship to it, our own causation of it.
Within addiction drama, and I'll just say drama is like the unnecessary turmoil in
our lives.
It's the exaggerated and intensified response that is not in par with the stimulus.
Like the response is bigger than stimulus.
We're making mountains under mole hills.
Something is off.
And what, you know, the symptoms look like is different on the inside than what an addiction
the drama looks like on the outside.
And so on the outside, you know, people are over-schedulgely themselves.
They're bulldozing other people.
They're oversensitive.
You know, that's something people will say to people who are, have a dependency on addiction
on drama.
Like, you're being so sensitive.
You know, they'll use exaggerated language.
Everything.
Always.
Never.
You know, that type of language that we might see with teenagers a lot.
They get bored.
when things are calm on the outside. We can see it on the outside. They get bored. Like all of a sudden,
there's stillness, there's ease, there's quietness. And all of a sudden, they're stirring shit up.
Yeah, they love to gossip. The way that they share what's happening in their lives is always what's
called with dramatic narrative. He said, then she said, then they said, as opposed to like,
that made me feel this way. They're stirring things up. They pull people into their crisis.
so they're never quite alone, but they're always alone.
They generalize a bad situation and make it their day, their life.
You know, like, someone cut me off while driving here,
and I could be like, oh, such a shitty day-to-day.
Or like my week's just awful because I'm taking that little experience
and spilling it over my perception of my entire day or week or life.
I feel like on the outside, they have terrible relationships.
right? It's like a roller coaster
in the relationships. It's like
fast beginnings, intense
endings, there's a lot
of jealousy, there's constant fights.
We know those people.
Yes, you do. It's so relatable.
What's crazy is on the inside,
it's totally different.
And I can say it from being on the
inside of it. You know, I straddle the fence
of being a psychologist and
working with people who have an
addiction drama and having had it myself.
And from the inside, it's
like the whole world feels like it's against you. All you can see is cues of danger in the world.
You're so prone to say like, oh, the world's not a safe place. And here are all the reasons why
that validate my perception of it. No one ever has my back. Everyone's out to get me. There's
always something. So many of us know that person who says, it's always something. Why can't it just
be more easy when we don't realize it can't be more easy because we can't allow it to be more
easy. It doesn't actually feel safe for it to be easy and quiet and still. If it does ever get
calm or it's easier or just sitting around, that actually doesn't feel okay. Yeah. There's actually
what's called a revving reflex or an activation reflex. We can use either word. And it simply means like
we're getting calmer, more still. And all of a sudden, there's an alarm that goes off that's
says, hey, if you're too calm or you're too still, you're going to miss the next potential
threat or trauma or danger. And so we have to get something. We have to start creating
stories or we have to involve ourselves in some type of crisis to rev ourself back up to be
aware, vigilant or more hypervigilant to our conditions so that we can stay, quote, unquote,
safe. So it's like the fight or flight response? Yeah, exactly. It gets like,
you know, gets oil or fuel poured onto it so that we can, quote, unquote, be aware of our
surroundings and stay safe enough. It's a total misunderstanding what safety is.
What do we do about that? Because I feel like we just, this is how our environments. Our ancestors
were searching for like saber-toothed tigers. And then we had to always be scanning the
environment for what's wrong, the negativity bias. Well, there are the people that are dramatic.
And we actually, those people are fun. Like, you might want to be sitting next to the dinner party,
right? For sure. They're a really good time. So entertaining.
The other one's like, this happened, and that happened.
And they're very, like, energetic.
And that's one way it manifests.
But then there's the people who always have, like you're saying,
the internal experience of what is wrong in the environment.
How do I keep myself safe?
So I just think, well, that's the human condition.
Part of what we can do is recognize, well, what does drama do for us?
Like, from an evolutionary biological perspective, what is it actually doing for us?
It does three things.
It gives us more energy.
It takes us out of a numbness.
or depressive experience, and gives, passes that threshold so that we can feel alive in the world.
And it is a natural pain reliever.
Stress is one of our most potent natural pain relievers.
It's an anesthetic.
It literally blocks the pain receptors so that we can be more, quote, unquote, pain free.
And that pain doesn't have to be like someone punching us in the face.
It can be the pervasive pain from the trauma restoring in our body.
So that's why we get addicted to stress, for example, our anxiety or worry because then
we're numbing, for example, our actual emotions that want to come up.
Yeah, we chase the drama to avoid our trauma.
That's right down the trauma that I'm always talking about.
Trauma's to buzzworth these days, which is why I love that you're here to kind of just
break it down because I think so people associate it with like the big T trauma, someone
died or someone had cancer or something really bad happened.
I got fired from a job in a really like public way.
Yeah.
But trauma, what is it?
And then how does it live in our bodies?
And why are we using it as a coping tool for the rest of our lives?
How do we not do that?
So trauma is not about the event.
Okay.
And this is where it gets confusing because often in like diagnostic statistical manual, the DSM, it's like, here are the certain events that equate to a trauma.
And that's bullshit.
Yeah.
Because trauma is not about the event.
It's in our body.
It's do we have the capacity to metabolize the experience?
and if not we're flooded.
And that's what happens in the trauma
is the flooding of our nervous system
and inability to break it down.
And so it just layers and stays there
as basically unprocessed energy.
It's like if you've ever had an impulse,
like the ball's coming at you,
like if you're playing baseball
and a ball's coming straight at you,
and you have an impulse, right?
It's like to catch it or to move out of the way.
And what happens in trauma
is that impulse gets locked in and frozen.
So all that energy that desire to adapt was too overwhelmed by the flooding.
And so not only are we flooded and frozen, but we have this energy, the fight or flight energy, the adaptive energy to respond that's also frozen.
So we have a freeze and we have an immense amount of energy that's moving in our body.
Okay.
That's both stuck.
Both of them are just stuck.
The frozenness is stuck and the energy that in the impulse never got to be moving.
So when I think about that, I think about everyone has childhood trauma, right? That's another thing.
Yep.
So an example might be if you grow up in a home that's really chaotic, right?
There was instability. Maybe your parents were divorced. Things happened. And so maybe you wanted to cry.
Maybe your parents said, don't stop crying or don't feel that. And then in that moment, your response, instead of like crying and having a parent, like the nice thing, big, mommy and daddy were yelling.
Sorry, come here, let me hold you and nurture you and feel your feelings.
But for most of us, I'd like to say our parents probably didn't do that.
We were alone in our rooms.
We didn't feel safe.
It stayed in our body, that sadness or that fear that we weren't safe because mommy dared yelling or whatever it is.
And so that has a physiological response that now it comes up 50 years, 40 years later, whatever, in our lifetime, because that energy still sits there.
Yeah, it's not going anywhere.
Right.
But it affects our entire system.
And it affects the way we think.
It affects the way we behave.
And it's like if the time, space, support, and permission are there to process an experience, we're usually good to go.
But often one or more of those things are missing.
And when it's missing, we don't get to process it and it just stays there.
It gets stuck in our body.
And we call that trauma.
Okay.
Would you say that's true that most people probably didn't have a caregiver?
Yeah.
that was able to show them how to walk the steps through feeling a traumatic emotion.
Yeah, we know that only 50 to 60 percent of people had some type of secure attachment,
which meant they had caregivers that had their resources and support to actually attend to them in a way
that allowed for a safety and a safety with connection and bonding and intimacy.
So that's why we all love attachment theory now, right?
Because it's like most of it, whenever you find someone who's securely attached?
I'm always like, we should like just study them under the microscope because it's so rare.
Well, yeah.
And what's funky is like even though I might have a secure attachment as a kid and I get
together in a relationship with someone addicted drama, that security can fade.
And I can become insecure.
I can take what's called an insecure stance.
And I can start to even take their kind of instability on in my own body, in my own self.
So just because we had a secure stance.
or a secure attachment when we are younger,
all it means is it's easier to get back there
if we get lost as an adult.
How does this trauma show up in how we show up in relationships
and do we pick?
Yeah.
So we know that we're looking for any adaptive survival strategy
to not be in the depth of pain of the trauma.
We couldn't process it then.
Our brains think we can't process it now.
And so we have all these adaptive strategies,
which might be like I drink
or I go have a lot of sex and I don't, you know, any way that we, thing that we can become
dependent on to help us sort of stay away from being in contact with the underlying pain.
So if dramas are jam to help us avoid the trauma, then it's definitely going to show up
in relationships through jealousy, fighting, crazy sex, you know, it's going to show up in
unnecessary fights it's going to show up and I mean we all know it where we're like what the
fuck is going on wait how did we get from here to here in zero to 60 like when that's happening
when we're asking that question in a relationship there's a bit of propensity of drama when
we're not able to track the logic of an experience like a reaction or an emotion we're in the field
of drama that's how we know we're like oh this is drama what would you do in those situations
Well, one is to normalize it.
When I'm like, when I have had partners or, you know, even patients that are like in the drama
around relationships, I go, oh, they're doing two major things.
One is they're protecting themselves.
So they were feeling too close.
The intimacy feels dangerous because if I, if they feel too intimate, they're going to feel
too vulnerable, too vulnerable to the next potential threat.
so they have the moments they get that activation reflex that alarm that goes off they're doing crazy
shit in the relationship they're getting jealous for no reason they're making stories up
they're just picking fights they're like picking on little behaviors to avoid the
intimacy that feels too threatening stay right where you are dr lyons and i will be right
back after a quick break
I would like to get in some questions.
So this is from Layla.
She's 21 in Illinois.
Hey, Dr. Emily, why do I feel so horrible when he says that Florence Pugh is fucking sexy while watching, don't worry, darling?
Like, I know she is.
Is it disrespectful or unkind to say it?
I feel so sad when you said it, but I didn't say anything because I don't want to give it power.
But it just makes me feel so bad.
It just makes you want to get a nosedop, stop eating, and totally redefine my wardrobe.
It makes you want to change everything about myself and then leave him so he can see how great I am
and how he should have been calling me sexy instead of her and that he lost his chance.
I know this is a toxic way to think, but we are in college and not technically boyfriend and girlfriend,
but we are exclusive and together.
Typical Gen Z shit.
I just don't know what to do and you have a very grounding way of giving advice.
I know I'm pretty and we have good sex, but this throws me for such a self-esteem loop.
So, Layla, thank you for your question.
And I just love how articulate, she was like, I know that my reaction to my boyfriend saying that Florence P was sexy, you know, is sending me into a tailspin.
I know I'm hot.
But now I've all of a sudden, probably, she probably felt unsafe.
Yep.
She was like, we're great.
I'm hot.
But now all of a sudden, that thing that he said triggered her.
So, Layla, thank you for your question.
And I know we don't know Layla.
But what, like, if you, she was sitting in her office, for example.
I think we all know Layla.
We all know Layla.
Because we all been Layla.
I've been Layla.
When I, when I caught.
My wife from watching porn at 25, I thought, we were having the best sex of our lives.
And then I thought, I don't have blonde hair and I don't have large breasts.
So clearly, he's five seconds from leaving me and our sex isn't what it once was.
And I took our whole relationship down in that moment.
Ooh, we went in the drama spiral.
Yeah. I do a drama spiral.
And Layla wants to get out of her spiral.
She actually has the awareness to, like, write in and be like, I know this is unhealthy.
What do I do?
Yeah.
So what would you do if she was saying?
through because I know I could be like, well, what was happening in her child?
Like, there's so many different ways to take this.
There's so many different ways.
What would we do?
With Layla, how did we help her?
Well, Layla, for us, awareness is the first sign of healing.
So I just wanted to, like, identify, you're on the path.
She's on the path.
Let's just identify that.
I wasn't on the path at 21.
No.
Like, hell no.
You're way ahead of where we were.
Yeah.
So that's amazing.
Second, it's great that you can recognize that a neutral statement doesn't feel neutral.
There's a disproportionate response to what is neutral.
So it's almost like he's handing you an apple and you're going into a realm of how you don't eat fruit salad.
Yeah?
That's a disproportionate response.
And how dare he bring me a salad?
How does that know that?
And it's like, I don't like fruit salad.
He doesn't know me.
He doesn't really love me because he doesn't know me.
He doesn't see me.
And you're spiraling.
name. So step back. Step back. And I'm going to keep using the metaphor in this way of going,
all right, there isn't a fruit salad here. There's just an apple. And I'm stepping back again.
Each time I've added a layer of drama, I have to step back and go, that's not actually here.
That's not what's here in this moment. So I keep going back and I say, how can I get back to his words and find more neutrality?
So start with the word Florence.
Can you find a little softness in your breath?
Can you squeeze a pillow when you have like an activation in your body, like that stress
response?
Do something physical and then come back and just see if you can ground and anchor in yourself.
So just start with the word Florence.
Okay.
You know?
So, and then can you say her full name?
And then can you get to the full sentence without jumping out of yourself?
Because that's really what's happening in this moment.
You're jumping out of the present moment.
You're jumping out of your own body.
And you're jumping into the drama well.
So step back, step back into yourself, feel your own, the weight of your body, the weight
of your breath, the movement of your breath, come back to yourself, step back from the well.
And then you're identifying more neutrality in the words and seeing if you can find that
neutrality in your body as well.
We have to do things to get back to our bodies again, because what we're saying is
this trauma from wherever she came from or this experience she had might have started
from whatever, but she's, Layla's probably doing other areas of her life too.
Yeah.
Not just in her relationship.
So the practice of, you know, my feet are on the floor.
I'm feeling the chair beneath me is the work.
Is the work.
So one of the things that happens, like I said, is in trauma is we jump out of our body.
We disassociate.
We disconnect.
We divorce from ourself.
We basically self-abandoned.
And what happens is we leave a void where we should be, where our present should be.
And in that void, we start to fill it with other things.
And that's what an addiction is.
We become dependent on the thing we fill the void of where we should be.
So let's just walk through being here.
So he said that to her.
She's sexy.
And her body probably froze.
She was probably holding hands with him, eating popcorn, watching Netflix.
Because that's what happens in a freeze.
And that then stirs more.
It triggers.
It's like one trigger triggers the next trigger.
So exactly.
So in that moment of her recognizing, she could have been like, okay, he said that thing.
Because he's going to say something else.
Yeah.
It's going to happen again.
It might have already happened since she wrote this email.
So the practice is the body wisdom, right?
Of being like, okay, I'm recognizing this pattern.
Yeah.
And I'm going to breathe.
Yeah.
And I'm going to stop and say, okay.
Like Florence might be objectively hot to people, but that wasn't about.
me, we have a great relationship and I'm safe.
Yes.
What else could she do?
Well, I think you actually just named it perfectly.
Brilliant, Emily.
Is once you come back to yourself, you can come back into relationship because exactly what
you were saying is in the freeze response in Layla's body, she disconnected the bridge
between her and her boyfriend or her and this guy and then is reacting to that.
So I might go, can I put a hand next to him?
What are the ways that I feel safe enough in connection with him?
How do I repair the bridge that I actually just cut off?
Take radical responsibility because what that sense of loss in the relationship is coming from your own trigger.
And often we then project it out and blame the other person.
Well, look at you.
This is so relatable.
But she's already like getting a nose job, leaving him, dating someone else, losing 25.
It's like, from one statement.
Yeah. When we can't stay in the present, we pull from the past and we jump into the future.
That's what trauma is, right? We can't be in the present.
We cannot be in the present. And that's also what happens radically with those addicted
drama. The bigness of their response is from the past and they're jumping into an anxious
future which they have no power over. So they're replicating the lack of agency, the lack of
control that started with the trauma itself.
That's such a great way of explaining it
because I think we all have been there, right?
Because most of our worry and suffering isn't real.
So we would say, yeah, practice some mindfulness activities
and then maybe she could also...
Girl, check what's under the hood.
Yeah.
What's under the hood in this moment of like going like,
do I feel unsafe?
Do I feel scared?
Do I feel vulnerable?
Because what is also happening in the extremeness
of the emotional response
is that it's overriding
what the true core emotional response is.
That's what happens in a drama swell, right?
We might be like, like, she's not,
like, clearly she's not demonstrating
a lot of anger or rage to her partner
like some people do,
but that type of rage is what's called
a secondary emotion.
It's like overriding or casting a cloud
over the primary core feeling
that we can't tolerate or be with
or we don't know how to be with.
And that's because we're feeling
like unsafe or not enough or not lovable or he's going to abandon her so she's like getting
ahead of it yeah or it's like if we're kids i don't know about your family but like sadness wasn't
really tolerable but anger was tolerable in my family so when i was sad that wasn't something that
was going to be held and witnessed so i would get angry and that would be seen and responded to when i'm
getting angry in that moment i never actually making contact with the underlined emotion i'm
never truly being present with myself or letting people see what's actually underneath the
hood. And I just keep spiraling. Would you say this? I'm obsessed with the emotion wheel.
I have them all over my house. I've got pillows. I've got coasters. I love the emotions wheel
because it's like I feel like, yeah, you identify like anger and sadness and then you go beneath
it. You're like, oh, I'm just really feeling threatened or I'm feeling vulnerable. I'm feeling not
enough. Which is really hard because I would also say if Layla's in this healthy, I mean,
she's not even technically boyfriend and girlfriend, but I guess the practice would be in a
healthy relationship to say, you know what, when you say those things and you comment on
other women, because I think that's relatable, even if your partner's liking someone on
Instagram, I feel threatened. I feel unsafe. And so maybe if we could not say those things
around me or like, this is how it makes you feel, that I often think that if we have the agency
over that and we can actually label it for our partners, because I always want to give people
people's partners, the benefits out. He doesn't want to piss you off. He wants to still
having sex with you when he's 21 years old in college. So I think if you say that you could say
that to him and to say this is how it makes me feel that our partners want to be good lovers to
us. They want to be good partners. But if we give them enough information, they would stop
doing it. But we don't have the information to even identify ourselves, let alone be able
to communicate it. So we just have about great communication and relationships. But that's why
I love the work you do. And that's why I think addicted dramas don't have well because you
could like identify and be like, oh, I don't want all this.
I actually really want connection.
But I need to put words around it.
It'd be able to explain it to somebody.
Yeah.
And we can recognize, okay, what are the unmet needs that have been present in my life?
What's, like, the most common ones?
Oh, I don't feel seen.
Oh, is that present in this moment?
So when we start to recognize, like, the things we often say to people,
or especially our partners, is like, I don't feel like you're hearing me.
I did that with a current partner.
It's like, let's each write down the things we've said to our partners in the past
that despite the partner, we have commonly said.
And we both looked at and we're like, shit.
I'll be like, I don't feel like you hear me.
I don't feel like you really understand what I'm saying.
And in that moment, mostly, it's because I'm not receiving the fact that they're actually saying something to me.
I'm not letting myself be validated.
And that would be your repeat in your relationships.
And then you'd like go back to your childhood and say, I never felt hurt at home.
Yeah, I never felt hurt at home.
And it wasn't.
safe enough for me to take things in because I constantly had to be on guard.
And so those two things coupled, I'm reenacting in my adult relationships, which we all do.
And so when we are in drama in our relationships, we're reenacting partly because, you know,
when you said like if you grew up in a chaotic home, like so many of us did, the being loud,
being intense is often the currency of love.
meaning that's the way you're going to be seen and heard
to rise above the decibel of chaos in your own household
and so that becomes in your brain wired
as the currency of how you get to be seen and heard.
What are some other examples?
Like it was on anger.
Like I think about my home, it wasn't anger.
Anger wasn't tolerated.
Sadness wasn't tolerated.
Yeah.
But I think we had, nothing was really tolerated.
Was it an emotional desert?
Yeah.
Oh, fuck.
There was no support.
there was no like talking about emotions there wasn't really it was kind of absence of parenting
which I think is also related to many people so that might be looked like my needs just don't matter
or no one cares about me or I have to do everything myself that would be mine like I yeah so for my
drama it's like I've do everything myself and I have to do a thing myself then I there's a lot to do
and then my schedule gets very like you know very busy and very overwhelming because I'm in charge
and if I'm if I don't do everything myself then life's going to fall apart yeah but then I'm very
busy.
Yeah.
Can I just point something out to those who are listening?
If you heard Emily's voice when she was describing the pattern, that's what it feels
like to be in the whirlwind of drama.
It's like, it's fast.
It's like chaotic.
It's groundless.
I love you.
No, I love it.
Yes.
I got excited.
And the excitement takes us and takes us out of our own body and our own control of
being in relation to what's happening.
And then we pull people in.
This is the crazy thing.
about also
like drama
those who have a
propensity for it
is we pull people in
as a way of relating
we don't trust
that they can come and meet us
because that wasn't available
when we were kids
or it wasn't safe enough
so if I pull you
into the ecosystem
of chaos and crisis
I feel less alone
which is so prevalent
at the base
of an addiction of drama
is that we feel isolated and alone
isolated alone from ourselves
and other people
We truly need it and crave connection.
Like, right, all the studies are like, this is what we need.
There's an epidemic of loneliness.
But that's like a crisis, right?
Because we actually need that to be healthy humans, but we push people away, but we want it.
Yeah.
So confusing.
It's the bind of drama.
It's that I want to be in relationship with you, Emily, but I also feel too, like, it's too scary.
It's too vulnerable.
It doesn't actually feel safe to be in deep vulnerable connection.
And so I am riding this tension.
and when I move in and out of it, what we get is that chaos.
Right.
It's a chaos incarnated.
Exactly.
Chaos is so interesting, too, and that came up for me in my therapy, is that there's
just a lot happening, and how do I manage all?
And she was like, well, Emily, you have to make, like, just say hello to the chaos, make
friends with your chaos, make peace with your chaos.
And it was just kind of annoying, to be honest.
Totally.
Because I was like, or how about this?
I feel like, well, it must serve you in some way.
People say it's like, it's annoying.
I'm like, how could my chaos serve me?
This is, I'm telling you that I'm in pain and comfort.
What I didn't understand was a connection, like, it serves me.
Because it was a pattern learned in childhood to keep me safe.
That's how it serves me.
But I kept thinking like, no, I really don't want this.
Take it away from me.
Yeah.
And it serves you again.
It gives you energy.
A stress response releases at literally is what its job is.
Our stress mechanism is to release energy.
Cascade, waterfall through a whole body.
And if we are exhausted, if we are repressed and,
depressed and our immune system is like depleted because of that where are we going to get our
energy source stress so to answer the question my therapist when I was 20 is like it must be serving
you in some way now I'm getting that it was giving me energy it was numbing me it was giving you
um sensation to rise out of the numbing okay but it also does numb right it pushes it represses
the underlying stuff down right because you're too busy in the chaos it's distracting
They give a sensation that rises above the threshold of numbness, so we feel alive, which means we feel valuable in the world.
It's the same way in which, I don't know, I know you meditate, you do breathboard.
Like I took a yoga class last night for the first time in a while, and I was an avid meditator.
But, you know, or whether we're in like a bathtub.
Whatever it is, the thing of like peace where we find ourselves starting to make lists or go into stories or thinking about our ex.
or getting into a fight with someone
when there hasn't even been that real situation
or whatever it is, we're thinking about work.
The thing that takes us out of the present moment,
that is a moment in which drama is happening.
Why are we disrupting our own peace?
Why are we challenging our own process
of stillness and ease in our life?
And when we can start to go, oh wait, I'm doing this,
then we can start to move towards healing.
It's so true that you start to get calm
When you start to meditate
So I saw people like, I could never meditate
I could never do it
It's because when you get quiet
It starts coming up
And our propensity is to like make the list
Think about create the drama
I remember the first time
I remember that I did this 10 day silent
I did have a positive thing
When I was like 25
I was my first time
But I remember sitting there
And you can't talk to anybody
You can't look at anyone in the eye
You can't do anything
Have you done one of these retreats
I think I heard you talk about
Yeah
And it was my first one of the first
experienced meditation because I'm extreme. I'm like, if I have to learn to meditate, I would jump
in. And I remember, I remember when I said that there was probably like 60 people. I was in Thailand
didn't know anybody. You couldn't talk to them beforehand. But I remember creating stories about
everybody the way they were breathing. They didn't like me. I didn't like them. I created so many
stories out of nothing. There was literally nothing to do when you meditate for 10 days. You literally
just have to breathe and sit. They provide you with your food. There's a place sleep. And then you
came out of it. I met everybody. I'm like, there are all these lovely people, but we create drama.
So that's like a very extreme way of saying that like we are constantly doing that all the time in the 80% of our lives.
We're creating stories that actually aren't true.
And so that's why all this mindfulness work is a practice and it's a muscle.
Yeah.
But the more you do it.
So if you stick with any of the thing that you choose, whether it's meditation or breathing or going for a walk without your phone, it's a muscle that you have to exercise it over time.
It does get easier to access that point.
But I'm going to say, I'm not perfect.
Like I'll be meditating.
I'm like, I'm making my list.
I'm doing things, but then you start to notice, how do we bring it back down again?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's the work.
Such a good example.
Out of nothing, you created narratives and stories about every single person.
Because we're not comfortable with ourselves, and it just takes a long time.
Let's get another question.
I think we got Lailie here.
I think she knows now probably that she's...
She's good.
She's on her way.
Okay, let's go to Aaron.
Aaron's 30 in Montana.
Okay, hey, Dr. Emily, I'm reaching out because my husband and I've recently experienced a surge in our sex life, and I don't want it to stop.
We've been together for 10 years.
I just love to hear that there's a surge after 10 years.
And you know it's because they're listening to your show and reading your book.
Just to be clear.
You get props to get props to do.
I love it.
Married for five years and we have two kids.
Our relationship is in through a lot, including family drama, moving past trauma on both sides, that affects our intimacy.
Despite this, we love each other deeply, believe we are soulmates.
Our sex life is currently vanilla with a little bit of spice, but I want to explore further
and try freakier things with my husband.
I want to show them how much I love and trust him and feel.
safe with him. However, past trauma sneaks enduring sex, making me feel scared and triggering me.
I hate having my head pulled or pushed and dirty talk and having my chin pulled or look at him
while he's standing. These are all triggers. I freak out immediately and almost stop what I'm doing
all together, but I want to push past these mental and physical barriers. I want to be spicier
with someone I love and trust. And I don't want to be scared when he pushes my head down or stumble
and sutter when I try to talk dirty him. Can you help me? So she's saying like, I want to do all the
things, but everything he's doing is triggering me and having these trouble responses. And I know that
you said, this is something that resinated me when we're trying to find addiction to drama,
that we seek intense activities to be in relation to our body sometimes. People sexually do that.
Yes. And that's why we seek these things, but she's just like intellectually wants it, but her body
isn't allowing her to. So what do we think is going on here? Yeah. Great example. Extreme sex
or extreme, like, sports is another way of avoiding what's actually here.
Is it?
Okay, so I've a question about that, though.
Like, we do extreme sports or extreme things to avoid it, which in some ways,
or people even like now, like, doing the hot plunge or the cold thing, it's like, that's
avoiding it.
But then how do we...
Come back?
You have to be willing to tolerate boredom.
And when I say boredom, I'm doing air quotes.
Because what is underneath the boredom is that actually the feelings, the things that are
haven't been processed.
Bortem is just like the numbing layer
between what's happened and stored in our body
and the things we do on top of it
to avoid the numbness
and what's underneath it.
So boredom equates the layer of numbness
that has been that protective layer
so we haven't had to feel what we've experienced.
And we don't like boredom.
We do not like, and that's also a withdrawal symptom.
For those who are addicted to drama,
is like they have that big high explosion typically
or they do the big experience, it's cathartic,
or they get that big fight with someone,
and then they feel a moment of relief,
which is just collapse actually,
and it's not true relief.
And then they start to get the itch.
Things feel a little dry, things feel a little boring.
Things feel like, hmm, I need a little something in my life.
And so they go seek, create, manifest, whatever, you know,
drama. It's free. Well, how come we like makeup sex is so great? Because I can tell you exactly
because I do it. Yeah, why is makeup sex great? Okay. So one thing is, oh, I feel closest to you after a big
fight. Partly it's because we aren't actually, typically makeup sex hasn't had a lot of deep repair
work to it. Yeah. Because sometimes it does. But often we have this big fight and we go into makeup sex.
And what that is is there's actually more distance between us, and that feels safer.
Wow, we've created this rift, and then we want them back.
Yes.
So I'm going to do a sex thing that's connective.
Yeah.
We do the thing, which is whatever it takes to create space and distance, so it is not to have deep vulnerability and intimacy.
And then that makes us feel, quote, unquote, safer.
And so the sex is great.
So interesting.
Yeah.
It's like, this is like what's called faulty neural.
our reception. Our cues of safety get miswired. And it's really challenging because it's like,
no, no, this is what feels safe. It's like, I'm doing these things. I'm like getting really jealous.
I'm throwing plates in the house. And then we have great makeup sex. And that feels so wonderful.
That's faulty. Okay. Wait. So this is why the people are keeping, they're like, oh, I'm in this
relationship that's really toxic. We break up. We get back together. We break up. He's cheated on me three
time she's done these things and it's because every time that happens it's this faulty
connection because we're coming back together coming back together again. It's what quote
unquote feels safe because it's not actually deep connection which if we have a secure
relationship with our caregiver often in the beginning then what is actually considered safe
is that vulnerability is that deep intimacy but if that wasn't available there was no time
space permission support resources for it then what becomes safe is
actually distance.
Everything's wrapped up in that.
That's what's familiar.
That's home.
Everything's wrapped up.
And we create stories.
We do behaviors that reinforce that to make sure we do it.
And then we don't even recognize that our behaviors are supporting these survival responses
or these faulty ideas of what safety is.
Would you say most of us to come through the body to release?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, repatterning safety takes a while because it's like, again, we're going to rely on
these other ideas of what safety is, even if it's throwing ourselves out of a plane.
constantly of that's what feels good.
That's what I feel most alive in the world.
That's when I feel most in connection with someone
is when I pulled them into my gossip or a fight.
You know, and we have to go, well, okay,
is that actually contributing to your well-being?
Or is it just the behavior that keeps you further away
from contact with yourself?
And again, the things you haven't processed.
Okay, so if we go back to Aaron,
so basically she's saying, like, I want to do this stuff,
and he by wants her too,
He's like, I'm down.
Let me spake you.
Let me pull your hair.
And she's like, I'm not there yet.
She's telling herself that she wants to, I freak your things.
But now I'm also thinking maybe that's not what she needs right now.
I think what she actually needs is more connection, intimacy, and feeling.
I think she's trying to jump to something that's actually what she's craving.
She's thinking, I'm going to put a Kiki hat.
And that's going to be the thing that's going to make her sex life spicy.
But it's really not.
She needs some more connection, healing and safety with him.
You're so good at this, Emily.
Fuck, you're so good at this.
I'm listening.
I was like, oh, tell me more, Emily.
So the sex life is good.
Yeah.
I'm scared it might not last.
Whoa.
And then what do I think I need to make sure it lasts as opposed to this is really significant
for us?
This is huge for us to feel bonded and connected in this way after 10 years.
And how can we mutually, in connection, say, how do we stay in this?
What is this like to be in connection?
What's coming up for us that's allowing this?
And then using those as the resources to maintain it as opposed to jumping ahead as you're saying and going, we've got to get into kinkier shit to keep it spicy to keep it real.
When it's like, I mean, like, yes, there's a lot of fun shit we can do out there.
But also, let's normalize vanilla.
Yeah?
Yeah.
I mean, ooh, you can just get deeper and deeper and deeper and deeper in relation.
with just vanilla.
We're getting bored because probably a lot of us are disassociating during sex
and we're going to the motions.
So boring sex is like, I get on top, you get out of the bottom, we make out for three
seconds, maybe.
Kissing goes in long-term relationships often.
Right?
As you know.
I love kissing.
I love kissing too.
Do you want to make out of me?
Yeah, exactly.
Yes.
But kissing does go.
It's funny because I was out way for 10 days.
My best friend in Michigan was like, did you guys make out when you got back?
I'm like, no.
We probably should have.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I forget that.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah.
So that I like, grab, like, we have to make out.
You do.
Because it's like, we forget, but why does it go?
I don't know.
It's really intimate.
It's really connected.
We've gotten to a pattern of connection means the old in and out penetration.
Interesting.
And so I think that we just, again, we go through the motions, right?
Because I think most of us aren't present during sex and we're disconnected.
So what I would say here, though, to Aaron is that it's probably really great because they feel
really connected right now.
And I would drill into what's actually going on now.
What are you guys feeling like?
Talk about that.
Talk about what's made it so great right now after 10 years.
There's a surge.
She said surge.
What is that surge about?
What's underneath it?
There's so much to unpack with that.
You don't need to bring in more stuff right now.
You don't need to be better at receiving dirty talk.
You don't need to better any of that.
Lean into what's working and then amplify that.
So well said.
And then let us know what that is.
Could we talk about disassociation for a minute?
Because I often throw that around like we disassociate during text, meaning we're not in the moment.
I think a lot of us can relate to the laundry list of things.
things we have to do. How am I looking in the moment? Am I doing the right thing? And the second
you're in any of those thoughts, you've left your body or we're fantasizing about something else.
So let's just talk about the concept of disassociation, how that might show up too in the bedroom.
How do you see it in life? Yeah. We are wired to protect ourselves. So let's start there.
We're evolutionary wired to protect ourselves, which means we'll disconnect from our own
sensations and feelings in our body as a way of preserving our survival. And that's disassociation.
We literally take a vacation from ourselves. And it's totally fine. The problem is when we can't
find our way back home. And that is where the challenge of dissociation lies. Is when we're
like, oh, we had to vacate because my parents were yelling at me, or there was this violent
experience, or I watched this thing on television that I couldn't take in and metabolize.
whatever it is, and we had that repeatedly,
or we didn't have an opportunity to have a secure base
or secure attachment.
We don't know where home is.
Or we don't know how to find our way home.
It's like a lost part of ourself floating outside of ourselves.
And that's what it feels like.
I spent most of my life seeing myself from outside my own body.
As a kid, I told my parents, I feel undimensional.
I didn't know.
I didn't know how to describe it.
I was like, I feel two-dimensional.
And I used to say to my parents,
I'm like, I feel like I'm a walking ghost.
I was just like that things could pass by me that I didn't know where I was.
Wow.
I mean, I did anything to feel alive, which is why I got, I was in the arts,
why I did any type of thing that stimulated a sense of feelings and sensation
that could rise above the threshold of numbness because it reaffirmed that I wasn't a walking
ghost for these brief moments.
I was being bullied pretty badly and I was bullied by.
teachers. I was bullied by students for different things. You know, like my sexuality, I had a lot
of learning disabilities. And so I was at in high school where the teachers were bullying me because
I would ask a lot of questions. And they didn't have what was in my IEP, my individual education
plan. So they thought I was fucking with them or whatever. They didn't understand why I would
write backwards. I'm like, didn't you go to school for being a teacher? Whatever. And
We had no tools back then.
And I was in so much pain, and I tried to communicate it, but I felt like no one was hearing
me going back to my pattern with my partners.
And so I set the stage, so to speak, of my suicide attempt.
I laid out pills.
I did, you know, cut myself to not deep enough.
And I had a note.
And I did it for what I call weaponized empathy.
I didn't believe anyone was able to connect with me on the things I was going through.
So I thought if I could create the conditions that would make them feel as shitty as I feel,
then they would truly understand.
And we do that with partners.
I was just going to say we do that with partners all the time.
We're like, I wish they could only feel.
I want them to feel what I'm feeling, what they did to me?
I want them to.
I think they never, right, what do you say to that?
Your partner's not going to feel that.
They're not going to get it.
It's such a creating drama too.
I remember this couple I saw, and this one part of the couple, she would bring up the past constantly in torment and, like, beat him down with the past situation.
And I said, what are you doing?
Like, what is your intention?
What do you want?
She was like, I want him to know how bad I feel.
And I said, what if you just said, I'm feeling hurt right now and see if he can stay with you?
And he did.
He's like, I really hear the pain that I wasn't part of.
And she launched right back into the past.
And I said, stop.
Stop.
Please stop.
He's offering a point of connection.
And what's actually happening here is it's intolerable for you to take it in.
And so you're going back to weaponize the empathy so that he'll be with you, but you're not actually letting him be with you.
I hear how intolerable it is.
I hear how painful and scary it is to find that bridge of connection.
But until we let you open the windows and let him into your house a little bit,
it's always going to feel like you have to attack in order to be on the same plane field.
Yeah, I think so many couples, I'm just going back to all the emails you give people,
like, she keeps bringing up the affair.
He keeps over and over again.
We get that question, all that weaponized empathy.
Yeah.
It's because it's like, oh, that hurt me so bad that I actually can't be with your apology.
I am still blockaded.
I am still in protection mode.
My walls are up.
So if I can cause you the pain so that I feel like we're on the same playing field,
but I actually can't be on the same plane field issue.
And then in those moments, though, when you allow her to stop, stop, then she feels it, right?
Then they have a genuine connection.
It was so beautiful.
Because so many couples are suffering because of these patterns.
It's like I think we all want to love and be loved and take it in.
But this is the stuff that's getting in the way.
I think everyone listening could probably find themselves in their relationship right now and their conflicts and realize it like it's really going to take this kind of work of like slowing down listening.
That's why it's so important to learn the skills of listening in a relationship and hearing and feeling together going to therapy.
Or there's even great relational coaches out there.
I see a couple now.
I don't do much couples' work.
I'll just say it.
And there's a good reason for that.
I really like working with individuals.
And I think I was like too, like in the past I was like, oh my gosh, I'm too enrapped in their drama.
Yeah.
And like, and not able to like, you know, help them unpack it enough.
And now I'm much better.
But a couple's therapist versus a couple's coach is different.
Often a couple's therapy will do like, we're going to slow this down.
We're really going to unpack the past and the triggers and the pieces where a coach
might just say, stop it.
This is what you're doing.
These are the practices I want you to do.
It's more direct.
And I have a lot of clients who are like, I love the directness.
I like that too, I think.
Sometimes we just like, I had enough therapy.
We don't unpack the past.
Like what do we need to do?
What are the tools?
It's like directed.
It's like, this is specifically we have to do.
Yeah. I had a client a patient the other day, be like, I need you to just tell me to stop doing this.
And I was like, okay.
You're like, that's easy enough. Stop doing it.
She's like, thank you. I just, what I need is an adult. And I was like, I get it.
The inner child who had the unmet needs is in the driver's seat. And what you're seeking in this moment is really a path back to you being the adult.
But in the moment, you need me to be the adult you wish you could be for yourself.
And who could say, stop it.
That's so powerful.
So before I just have to ask you this, how does addiction to drama block us from pleasure, specifically sexual pleasure?
That's a great question.
So sometimes we do big, rough sex because it's more sensational, right?
And so we might mistake that sensationalism for actually deep pleasure.
And that's what gets confused in addiction to drama is these heightened, excitable sensation.
it's not true intimacy.
It's not at all.
And so, but they can be like, yeah, oh, that was awesome because that was rough.
And I had a lot of like muscular sensations.
And like, it was like, you know, whatever the action is that creates a sensation.
They don't recognize, oh, they weren't actually there.
They were in the sensation seeking, not the connection bonding and intimacy.
So the rough sex, because that's, I think for some people,
Right, we want that, but then we're not really feeling.
So how do you have rough sex and feel?
Well, we build up to it.
Yeah.
It's like, I mean, like, you know, with my partner, we'll be having sex and I'll be like, pause, I just vacate it.
We need to like backtrack, step back and be like, okay, I need to reaffirm my sense of myself.
And then we can go from there.
We'll titrate it.
We'll try it again.
And that's the way we build up.
To the rough sex.
If rough sex is like your jam, cool.
Awesome.
Good for you.
But can you build up to the place where you can be here with it?
Even just stopping that process and just saying like it's rough and it's not enough in the moment.
So giving people permission to stop during sex and take ownership.
That's why aftercare for sex too is so important to like take moments after if you're having like a session and you're into other kinds of play.
But to come back to be like how do we connect again?
So that's where I feel like it's a healthy representative.
of intense sex.
And if that's intolerable, the intimacy after sex is intolerable, or you find you're like,
oh, got to go the bathroom or like you find yourself doing other things, busy work, so to
speak, that's a real clear sign that you overrided your sense of connection and bonding
with your partner or partners or yourself, even if you're masturbating, and went to the
sensationalism and actually haven't found your way back.
back home to yourself, to your partner, partners, et cetera.
Thank you for helping us all find our way back home.
It's home to our bodies, really.
This is the work.
Yeah.
Thank you so much for this conversation.
So I'm going to ask you the five quickie questions we ask all of our guests.
Cool.
Biggest turn on.
Good communication.
Biggest turn off.
Not responding in text.
What makes good sex?
Oh, my gosh.
I'm not overthinking it.
I'm just in it.
I'm embodying it first.
I would say like a sense of energetic, physical, spiritual lineup,
and I both feel myself and feel the ameshment simultaneously.
That's like, oh, yes.
Something you tell your younger self about sex and relationships.
It's okay not to feel shame.
What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex?
Oh, that it's a vehicle for connection.
Thank you so much.
Dr. Scott Lyons, where can people find you?
Tell us all the things that are going on.
How can they join you?
Yeah.
You can find me on my website, Dr. Scott Lyons.
That's DR. Scott Lyons.
I'm on social media.
I have a cool platform where you can take classes with me called the Emboddy Lab.
It's all about body-based therapies.
Can anyone take that?
Because I want to take it.
I was like, I want to go to the embodiment lab.
Yeah.
Come hanging out with us.
But this is the word we're talking about.
No, but people could go take the course online too.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
they're all online we have some in-person stuff coming up too but mostly it's online so you know we believe
in accessible education so you know whether it's doing a certificate or program on trauma or attachment
theory we believe you do not have to be a doctor or a therapist we recognize that like trauma is
in every profession wherever we go and we shall be more trauma-informed okay great we're going to link to that
too that's great and my book is addicted to drama healing the dependency on crisis
in chaos and yourself and others.
And I had a good time writing it
and I hope you have a good time reading it.
We will.
We will.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you, my love.
That's it for today's episode.
Thank you so much for listening to Sex with Emily.
And if you love the show,
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