TED Talks Daily - TED Talks Daily Book Club: Come Together | Emily Nagoski
Episode Date: July 28, 2024This is our second installment of the TED Talks Daily Summer Book Club series. Join Elise as she interviews TED speakers about their books and their ideas beyond the page.As a sex educator an...d author, Emily Nagoski is renowned for dismantling the sexual myths that surround us, and replacing them with healthy ideas, backed by science. And then…her own sex life fell apart. Her latest book, “Come Together, the Science (and Art!) of Creating Lasting Sexual Connections,” is Emily’s attempt to research her way out of her own sexual desert. The result is a book that delights with humor and insights for anyone looking to improve their own relationship to pleasure and intimacy.This interview was recorded live as part of the TED Membership program. TED Members are invited to attend our live recordings and participate in Q&As with authors. Next month: Jonathan Haidt. To join in on the fun, sign up at go.ted.com/membership.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
TED Audio Collective.
You're listening to TED Talks Daily.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
And I want to welcome you to the July installment of our Summer Book Club series, where we check
out new books that will spark your curiosity all summer long.
These reads are coming from our very own TED speaker community. Each
month we're having conversations with authors to dig deeper into their big ideas. These days,
sex advice is everywhere. You can't even go to the grocery store without being tempted by the
seven secrets to a great sex life and the 10 positions for a mind-blowing orgasm.
But what are these messages really teaching us? And how much of it is true?
Today, I'm talking to the sex educator, author, and TED speaker, Emily Nagoski. She recently
published a new book called Come Together, the science and art of creating lasting sexual
connections. And in the first few paragraphs, she basically takes a sledgehammer to the most
common sexual narratives that surround us. And then she carefully replaces them with ideas that are more healthy, human, and true.
We'll talk about her book, then we'll open it up to questions from our audience of TED members.
But first, a quick break to hear from our sponsors.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb?
It feels like the practical thing to do,
and with the extra income, I could save up for renovations
to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host.
AI keeping you up at night?
Wondering what it means for your business? Don't miss the latest season of Disruptors, Thank you. As they ask bold questions like, why is Canada lagging in AI adoption?
And how to catch up?
Don't get left behind.
Listen to Disruptors, the innovation era, and stay ahead of the game in this fast-changing world.
Follow Disruptors on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.
And now back to TED Talks Daily's Summer Book Club.
Emily, I'm so thrilled that you're here.
Thank you for writing such a thoughtful book and for being with us today.
I'm so excited to talk about this today.
As I just mentioned, the introduction to your book really blew all of our minds because in a matter of paragraphs, you tear down some of the most mainstream ideas around sexuality
that are all around us.
I kind of had to realize this for myself, like, oh, my goodness, I've just been thinking that this is just the way it is.
What are some of the ideas that need tearing down? And how did you begin to realize how wrong they
are? Well, the origin story of the book is that my first book, Come As You Are, I started writing
it just a couple of months after I got
married. And I was so stressed from writing about sex and thinking about sex and reading about sex
and learning about sex and talking about sex all the time that I lost all interest in actually
having any sex with my brand new husband. So I did what any good sex nerd does. I went to Google
Scholar and I looked at the
peer reviewed science on how couples sustain a strong sexual connection over the long term.
And honestly, what I found in the science contradicted the entire mainstream narrative
and like discourse about sex and long term relationships, because that discourse,
as I was hearing it at the time, was okay, so closeness is the enemy of the erotic. You need distance to keep the spark alive. Or closeness is the foundation of the erotic. You need intimacy to keep the spark alive. research, when you actually talk to people who sustain a strong sexual connection over the long
term, they don't talk about spark. Right. What they chase instead is pleasure. Say more about
that. Because it turns out the crazy thing is it is not dysfunctional not to want sex that you do
not like. Which when I say it out loud like that, you're like, well,
no kidding, Emily, of course. And yet the number one reason why couples seek sex therapy
is low desire, lack of spark. So when those couples can refocus on like, do we actually
like the sex we're having? What kind of sex is worth the time and energy that it takes not to watch parks and
recreation instead? Right. Is there a common thing that people who aren't wanting sex with their
partners don't want that has been a running thread? What have you found? So I asked a few
thousand people both in person and a lot of them online, like,
when you want sex, what is it that you want? Because it's not orgasm, right? 95% of people
can have an orgasm on their own. And if you can't, there's whole books and workshops about
specifically that. And the number one most common thing people say is connection. It is a unique and powerful way for us to experience connection. More important for others than for some people. People also talk about sharing pleasure, really specifically not just experiencing their own pleasure, but wanting to witness their partner's pleasure and allow their partner to witness their pleasure. There's
something really important about that for a lot of people. The third most common reason people
offer is feeling or being wanted. And no wonder. I mean, a lot of us grew up in a world where we're
taught that the sexual parts of ourselves are dirty, dangerous, and or disgusting. And so to have those parts of
ourselves be not merely acceptable, but desirable, longed for, of course, that's appealing. We want
a place in our lives where that part of ourselves is welcome. And the fourth most common reason is
something I called freedom, which really is about being able to close the door on all our
other responsibilities and obligations and identities and just vanish into this pleasurable
experience in the here and now, sharing in this moment, this pleasure that is unlike anything else
humans experience. And all of those things are a much better starting point for a conversation about sex in a long term relationship than just like, why don't we have sex more often?
When you want sex, what is it that you want?
And also, what is it that you don't want when you don't want sex?
Because usually it's not the thing people assume. Like we have
a story in our head about what it means when our partner says no to us. And it's usually wrong.
The number one most common thing people don't want is a sense of obligation
that they have to that they're required to. It's really important to understand an idea, and that's the accelerator
and the brakes system. It's one way that you use to kind of describe what people want and don't
want. So tell me about the accelerator and the brakes. How does it work? And how can people
identify some of their own accelerators and brakes? One of my favorite things in the world
to talk about. So this is the dual control model, a theory of how sex functions in the brain that was developed in the late 90s by
Eric Janssen and John Bancroft at the Kinsey Institute, who were my mentors, full disclosure,
I am a child of the dual control model. And it's a useful metaphor, but it's not just a metaphor,
it's a description of the actual mechanism in our brains and the way our brain responds to sex-related stimuli. So the accelerator
technically is the sexual excitation system, and it notices all the sex-related information
that gets input. So this is everything from our extraoceptive senses. That's everything we see,
hear, smell, touch, and taste, all of our internal body
sensations, and everything we think, believe, or imagine that our brain codes as sex-related.
So it receives that stimulation, and it sends the turn-on signal that many of us are familiar with.
Functions at a subconscious level, including right now, here we are talking about sex. So it's just a little bit
of sex-related stimulus. So a lot of people probably have just a little bit of activation
of their sexual accelerator. But if it's called the dual control model, and the first part of
it is the accelerator, that means the second part is the brakes, right? And this is the part of our
brains that notices all the good reasons not to
be turned on right now. And it's the same big long list. Everything we see, hear, smell, taste,
touch, everything we think, believe, or imagine, all of our internal body sensations that our brain codes as a potential threat. The sexual inhibitory system sends a turn off
signal. So the arousal process is a dual process of turning on the ons, yes, but also turning off
those offs. And it turns out when people are struggling with any domain of sexual functioning,
desire, arousal, pleasure, orgasm.
Sometimes it's because there's not enough stimulation to the accelerator.
Most of the time, it's because there's too much stimulation to the brakes. One of the main things
to remember is that people vary tremendously. So some things that activate the accelerator for
some people will be on other people's
this hits my brake list and vice versa.
And something I have always thought you write about really effectively is also breaking
down the myth that men are hornier than women, right?
It's just that our systems have more sensitive accelerators or more sensitive brakes or vice
versa.
Yeah, there's a lot of overlap.
We are more similar than we are
different. But right now, it looks like if there is a difference, it's that more women have really
sensitive brakes. And more men have really sensitive accelerators. But mostly we overlap a
lot. At one point, you write quite boldly for a book that, quote, the best sex advice
won't come from a book. It'll come from the way you use your knowledge of the accelerator and
brakes and of what you each want and like about sex and from the way you communicate with each
other about all of that. Why do you think people have such a hard time exploring their own wants
and needs sexually.
So there's only two ideas and come together that are so complicated that I needed two chapters for them. One of them is something called the emotional floor plan, which is some pretty
complex affective neuroscience. And the other is the gender binary. And I think that the scripts that are imposed on us literally from the day of our birth
have the most to do with the reasons why people struggle to find out who they truly are as a
sexual person. Because from even before the day you're born, you're being inculcated with messages about who you are supposed to be.
And that who you are supposed to be is not just like a responsibility. It is a moral obligation.
For example, if you're raised with the kind of genitals that on the day you're born, everybody goes, it's a boy, right?
One of the things that you're taught from that day on is that the only emotions you're really allowed to experience are angry, winning, and horny.
You are not really permitted to feel sad.
You're definitely not permitted to feel lonely.
The scripts for women, they go, it's a girl, and you're raised to be a human giver to be pretty
above all to be happy to be generous and attentive to the needs of others and so uh
if your partner asks if you want sex you have a moral obligation to be generous and meet their
needs and your pleasure we've been inculcated with the idea
that our pleasure doesn't matter, that really only men's pleasure matters, so that even when
you're in a relationship where there's not a man involved, you sort of get stuck in a binary
system of thinking, even when there's not a penis around. But I want to normalize why people don't know what
pleasure feels like. For a lot of us, it's because we learned to have sex in terms of what we do,
what behaviors we engage in. Maybe we got no sex education, but we did get exposure to porn. And so
we're just duplicating the behaviors that we saw. or we didn't know anything. And so we just went along with whatever our partner wanted to do.
So we never had an opportunity to even wonder what pleasure feels like in our bodies.
So of course, there's a lot of people who don't even know what pleasure feels like,
but you can begin to learn by exploring with curiosity and compassion for this body that has been walking through life all this time without being granted the gift of the pleasure that is the birthright of every human. important context is. And you write about this, about sexual context, relational context. Talk a
little bit about context and its crucial role. Yeah. Pleasure is nowhere near as straightforward
as we have been taught to believe it is, which is why you can be in like a loving, flirty, sexy,
playful, connected state of mind with a certain special someone,
and they touch you, they can tickle you even. Tickling is not everyone's favorite. It is some
people's favorite. But when you're in that state of mind, your brain receives that stimulation and
categorizes it as sex related, and it can feel erotic and lead to other things. But you take
that same certain special someone and you shift the emotional context so that you're like in the middle of an argument about money.
And your partner tries to tickle you.
How does that feel?
Right.
Not so great, right?
And it's the same sensation.
It's the same partner but because your brain state changed how your brain interpreted that
in sensation reversed that's the importance of context context is made of a variety of factors
one it's your own mental and physical well-being it's your partner characteristics it is your relationship characteristics. It is other life circumstances like money and stress and work and family and the white supremacist, heteropatriarchal, rabidly exploitative, late capitalist culture that we are embedded in and trying to navigate through like sludge every single day. And my favorite is ludic factors. So ludic comes
from the same root word as ludicrous, and it means to play. So the freedom that you feel in this
moment to be playful, to try different things and have there be nothing at stake, nothing to lose.
Play turns out to be kind of the magic secret to everything.
So if you think about like when it was easy for me to transition into a playful, sexy,
turned on state and what was going on, what was the context?
What was my well-being like?
What was happening with my partner?
What was happening in our relationship?
What was happening in our lives?
And how playful and connected and free did I feel
in times when it was really not easy for me to be interested in turning on.
So as a sex educator, do you encourage those of us who are trying to figure out what it is
that we like, what it is that we dislike, what our sexual contexts are, to actually do a little
bit of the homework? Oh, don't do a little bit of the homework. Do tons and tons of homework. Do all the homework. There is a Come As You Are workbook. There's not
a Come Together workbook yet. And read other books. Talk to other people. If you're not going
to talk to your partners, talk to your friends. Like, okay, so here's this idea, the dual control
model, the accelerator and the brakes. What hits your accelerator, what hits your brakes, and compare, because it's not that one of you is
doing it right, and the other one's doing it wrong. It's that people vary. And you can learn
from their story. Oh, I can see how that would work for you. That would not work for me. And I
started thinking about this, because people would tell me stories about what they figured out about their own accelerators and brakes.
I think the thing you quoted follows me talking about a woman who told me that she and her husband and three kids went every year on vacation in the Mediterranean.
Right.
European family.
Right.
I love this story.
And they would always rent this same Mediterranean house.
And the couple had great vacation sex. Vacation sex is absolutely a thing. It has to do with play and being able to shed your identities. But one year their usual house was not available. So they're like, that's fine. We'll just rent a different house. And you know what? In this different house,ocre vacation sex. Here's what they did so right. Instead of saying, what's wrong with me?
What's wrong with you? Is there something wrong with our relationship? They just went, what
happened? What changed? What was different? And they went through like what the factors were.
And what they realized together was that in this really old Mediterranean house,
this house was so old that the bed was built into the wall, which means there
was no squeaking, which means no distracting noise and less risk of waking up the kids and
being interrupted. That one little change was enough to make a difference between great vacation
sex and meh vacation sex. And I, as a sex educator educator could never be like, so here are the things to
bear in mind. Does this bed squeak? Everybody should build their beds into the wall.
People vary too much. Our circumstances are too different and our lives change too much
for there to be like a static list that I can offer. So you have to think about like your own life situations. So do you have any advice then to better sort of broach and get past the shame
and make talking about sex, especially with our partners, make it more comfortable?
Yeah. So the question really is, what is it that's stopping me? What are the barriers between me and that conversation? What is it I am us the same way again um we say something that we want and they're like and the other is we're
afraid we're gonna hurt our partner's feelings um all of us are really tender around sexuality
because again it's part of our moral obligation to be good at sex without ever asking any questions
about sex or learning anything about sex or talking ever to our partner at sex without ever asking any questions about sex or learning anything about sex
or talking ever to our partner about sex we're supposed to be like i don't know magically already
just just instantly download everything our partner wants and needs um this is the thing
about the conversation about sex is we want it to be an invitation to greater intimacy and greater eroticism. And we are so afraid that by having the conversation, we're going to ruin it.
So start out with a conversation about the conversation. I would love intense eroticism
in our sexual relationship. And I don't have any idea how to talk about it. And I'm really afraid
that I'm going to say something that will horrify you or that will hurt your feelings.
I'm really afraid that you might say something and I might act shocked, even though like I want to be as accepting as I can be.
Or you might say something that hurts my feelings.
And I want to make sure we know how to process that.
Can we talk about what it would take for us even to start the conversation?
What do couples or groups that you have worked with who do this well, what is the outcome for them?
Extraordinary communication leads to extraordinary sex.
Good communication leads to good sex.
Peggy Kleinplatz is the leader of the Optimal Sexual
Experiences group. She and Dana Maynard wrote a book called Magnificent Sex. So first of all,
she interviewed dozens of people who self-identify as having extraordinary sex lives.
And what do you suppose is the typical age at which the people she
interviewed had their first experience of extraordinary sex? I'm going to go with later
in life. Between 35 and 45? 55. 55. Yeah. When you talk to people, the people who have extraordinary
sex about how they got there
uh a big part of what they talk about is unlearning everything they ever thought they knew
about sex bodies shame love intimacy and oh gender and replaced it with what's genuinely true about
them you erase other people's opinions about who you're supposed to be as a sexual person and how
you're supposed to do sexuality.
And you work with what is genuinely true in the here and now.
We'll be right back with more of our conversation after a quick break to hear from our sponsors.
And now back to TED Talks Daily's Summer Book Club. Let's go back to something that we started out talking about, which is
that we need to dispel the notion of the spark and keeping a spark alive, that instead of centering
this notion of desire, we should actually be centering pleasure instead. What is the difference
between desire and pleasure? Thank you for asking that question.
They're completely different. The neuroscience is very clear on this. So wanting is when you feel
like there's a gap between you and this other thing that is desirable to you. It's like you
want to, woo, what's that? You want to go after it. It is longing for. It's actually a sign kind of that there's something wrong.
There's something missing.
There's a problem to fix.
Liking is savoring and enjoying what's actually happening in the present moment.
And often we think that pleasure is a consequence of successfully obtaining the thing you desired.
But it is 100% possible to enjoy something that you didn't first chase.
And people get confused because it is possible for desire to feel good, right?
Like there are some circumstances where desire is pleasurable,
like mostly circumstances where you feel pretty darn confident that you're going to be able to
get the thing that you want that can make desire feel pleasurable but desire can also feel awful
yeah if you feel like there is no way that you can get the thing that you want if you're chasing it
and failing and chasing and failing and chasing and
failing, it can wear away at your soul and lead not just to frustration, but rage and ultimately
despair. Desire can be agony. It sure can. So pleasure by definition always feels good.
Isn't it so much easier to center the thing that no matter what, 100% of the time is going to feel good for you and also feel good for whoever else is involved?
And then you get to share the thing that feels good and that just amplifies the feeling good.
When I was trying this, when I was trying to like put your body in the bed, let your skin touch your partner's skin.
And a lot of the times what happens is your body goes, oh, right. I really like this person. I really like this. This is a great idea. I am so glad we are doing this. That is often what happens
for a lot of people when they schedule it. They show up someone they really feel good about being
with, with a sexual connection that is
full of pleasure i would put my body in the bed let my skin touch my partner's skin and i would
cry and fall asleep oh which is not great and that's the point at which i went to google scholar
because i needed to figure out how i got from where I was stuck in the stress response in my brain. How did I travel out of that and into the lust space, the sexy, playful space where my brain could release all the other obligations that I have in my life and just enjoy this connection in this moment. The thing is, when I worked this out, truly, I mean, I'm reading like dense,
difficult neuroscience. And when I got to the end of it, I understood what was happening with us.
And I wrote it into a book. And now I have this manual that whenever anything goes wrong for me
and my partner in the future, I've got a book to like remind me how to get back to it.
And things are better now for us than they have ever been 13 years in.
And we're so glad that you did this work.
And I love that you're so nerdy because it is a service to the rest of us.
Okay, I'm going to build on that with our first member question, which is, how can I
improve my emotional intelligence when it comes
to uncomfortable topics? So this is part of doing the work. Yeah. So number one answer,
you're going to be like, you know, kidding therapy. Two, the two chapters on the emotional
floor plan are so important because they talk about the seven primary process emotions.
So knowing which emotional space you are in, whether it's fear or rage or panic grief, which is isolation, feeling trapped, or play or seeking, which is curiosity, or care or lust.
What emotional space are you in?
And how does that change the way you communicate, the way your brain state is, the way your body
feels, and the way your emotions move through your body? What gets you into any one of those
seven states? And what pulls you out of any of those states? When people are in
what I call the pleasure adverse spaces, which are fear, rage, and panic grief, people's ability
to communicate clearly falls apart. It just shatters. They can no longer hear their partner
and they get into a state of just repeating themselves over and over and over again without hearing what their partner is saying in response.
Shame is somewhere in the panic grief space.
The question to ask to find out if you're in the panic grief space is what help do I need?
Because shame is an emotion of I don't belong.
I'm not allowed to participate as a member of the human
collective. And what you need most, ironically, is connection. This shame part is so important.
And one of our questioners says that they finally don't have shame about sex, but they also don't know what they like.
So common.
Yeah.
How do they go about the journey regarding figuring out what they like?
So much fun exploration is ahead of you.
This is the fun part.
This is where you start setting aside time in your calendar
just for you. So let's say once a week you set aside, I don't know, half an hour for pleasure.
First of all, I recognize that if you filled in a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week calendar with
your typical events, it would probably be full-to-bursting.
So the first step is to figure out what you are willing to stop doing to create time and energy to explore what pleasure means to you.
There are three characteristics of couples who sustain a strong sexual connection over the long term.
The second characteristic is that they prioritize sex.
Prioritizing erotic pleasure means making it more important than something else.
So what you're going to do, you can absolutely use media.
You can read erotica.
You can watch preferably like feminist, fair trade, farm to table, ethical porn, which means porn you pay for, for sure.
And you can do it by connecting with your own body. I'm going to recommend when you first get
started, start with the periphery as far away from the core of your body as you can get.
Just touch your fingers to each other, touch your fingers to your toes if you can reach your toes.
If you lie down, you can probably get your foot up near the middle of your body so that you can feel your feet with your hands.
And just notice what those sensations are.
Our bodies are capable of experiencing so many different kinds of sensation.
And all of them are potentially pleasurable if you are in a calm, curious, playful state of mind. So you're going
to turn toward your body and whatever's happening with it with, hmm, what's this? Oh, that's an
interesting sensation. Do I like it when I pull at my knuckles? Does that feel like a good,
satisfying sensation? Or is that irritating and annoying and I don't like it? Try it four weeks
in a row because it might be different each time because the context will be
different because your mental state will be different uh gradually move toward the more
core up your legs and down your arms and make sure you include your scalp and god like your earlobes
people who've experienced uh spinal cord damage uh so they have no sensation below the waist
can learn to have orgasms just from having their earlobes stimulated. Wow. Turn with kindness and compassion towards your body, especially your
belly, the parts of yourself that you have a hardest time being kind toward. For me in high
school, it was actually my thighs. Turn with kindness and compassion toward those body parts
and hold them like they're the beautiful, iconic, glorious miracles that they are. And that's a starting place.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it
on Airbnb?
It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra income, I could save up for
renovations to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
Thank you to Emily Nagoski for joining us today. Her book, Come Together, The Science and Art of
Creating Lasting Sexual Connections is out now. If you want to hear more from Emily, you can follow
her on Instagram at enagoski or through her newsletter at emilynagoski.com. And a big shout out to our
TED member audience. Y'all were awesome. If you'd like to be part of our next book club event,
you can join at go.ted.com slash membership. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of
the TED Audio Collective. This episode of the Summer Book Club series was produced by Kim
Nader-Vein, Peter Sa and Daniela Balarezo. It was edited by
Alejandra Salazar. The TED Talks daily team includes Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman,
Brian Green, and Autumn Thompson. Additional support from Emma Taubner,
Will Hennessey, and Roxanne High Lash. I'm Elise Hu. Thanks for listening.
Looking for a fun challenge to share with your friends and family?
TED now has games designed to keep your mind sharp while having fun.
Visit TED.com slash games to explore the joy and wonder of TED Games. PRX