Woman Evolve with Sarah Jakes Roberts - Permission to Feel w/ Brittany Broaddus-Smith
Episode Date: June 4, 2025Let’s talk about sex, baby! Skrrt! We know, some of y’all already clutching your pearls like, “Out loud?” Yep. Out loud and in the light. It's time to pull up in your big girl pants because SJ...R linked up with Brittany Broaddus-Smith to talk sex, faith, healing, and all the stuff purity culture told us to keep hush-hush. They’re flipping the script on shame and breaking down what it really means to know your body, and own it. What if you don’t want it at all? What if you want it too much? What if God’s not mad...just waiting on you to stop hiding? From figuring out what feels good to healing from what never should’ve happened, this convo is full of truth, wisdom, and zero shame. If all you ever heard was “don’t do it,” but never got the why, this is your reroute. Press play, sis. It’s time.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's not enough to want to stop cussing because it's inappropriate, because it makes other people uncomfortable.
You need a conviction. We don't want to buy cleaning your mouth out of a soap, but we may need someone to remind you every now and then, like, this ain't who you say you want to be.
For women of faith, our sexual script is that sex is dirty, sex is not what we talk about, but also when you get home, act like you know.
Ignore, ignore, ignore it all the way up until your honeymoon
and then swing from the chandelier.
What's up family?
It's your girl, SJR, back at it on the ones and twos.
What it be like?
What's going on in your world?
I am currently probably sleep.
If I see myself in the future and I see myself sleep, let me tell you why I'm probably sleep. I see myself in the future and I see myself sleep.
Let me tell you why I'm probably sleep.
Because on the day that this airs, I would have returned from Ghana.
We are taking a trip to experience the country and to just learn more about the culture.
I'm excited about, well, excited.
That feels like a wrong, that doesn't feel appropriate,
but we're going to go see the slave castles.
And beyond that, just experience more about what's happening on the economic side, the
creative side, the artistic side.
My husband's speaking a couple of places, but I am literally just going to experience
it and we are able to take our youngest daughters.
So I'm hopeful that I will be able to share with you
a few things about my experience and my time there.
So I look forward to unpacking that with you.
Since we last spoke, I have...
Oh, my goodness, my husband had his conference,
his leadership conference.
I think I told you all about that
and how it was going to be my first time really speaking
as a leader.
It was funny, per-use as I am at the end of the school year, my school year, the kids
school year, succession, business, transitions, and et cetera, I was pretty tired.
My husband was like, do you want me to interview you instead of you speaking?
I was like, do you want me to interview you instead of you speaking? But I was like, no, there's some things that I feel like the Lord has just put in my spirit
about leadership that I wanted to share with those who were going to be there.
And we had a really great talk.
My husband has a podcast, it's called The Called Leaders Podcast by Torrey Roberts.
And he actually put up my session.
So if you want to check that out, you can.
I'm going to give you a few cliff notes though.
Part of the reason why I struggled with speaking
as a leader is because I really don't consider myself
a leader ever since my ministry started.
It was kind of like, listen, you know,
I'm trying to get to the same Jesus you're trying to get to.
I'm trying to be transformed in maybe a different way, but in the same way that you're trying
to be transformed.
And I would rather invite you into this journey than to come off as someone who knows any
and everything.
And I feel like much of my life has been me sharing what the Lord is teaching me about
different things.
And I don't necessarily feel like a leader in the way that I have come to define it as it relates to, you know, motivating
and guiding people towards any specific direction.
And as I was like talking to the Lord about this, because I obviously, I guess I am a
leader as well.
So like, Lord, what do we do with this heart posture that I have?
And for me, I think it comes down to servant leadership, where I really do feel like I am serving a
vision that God has given me, and my job is to lead the vision.
As a part of leading the vision, there are people connected to it.
I am leading people, but I am primarily leading a vision. And so with conference, with themes,
with even the culture of our team environment
for our team at Walmany Vol,
it's like I have to have a vision.
And so I unpacked that and I feel like it was helpful.
So if you're like me and maybe you're a little demure,
a little shy, a little like,
I'm just one of the girls I'd rather be in the background.
I don't feel like I can really lead.
I want to challenge you in the way that the Lord has challenged me to think about leading
from a heart posture of leading a vision.
Lord, give me a vision that I can lead my life with a vision of who I am to be.
The first thing that happened to me when I was leaving out of my toxic relationship,
it's not necessarily that I, you know,
just had the strength to walk away.
I came to a point where I started envisioning
who I could be on the other side of that relationship,
which is a word because so often we spend time thinking
about like putting creativity and imagination
towards how an unhealthy relationship can become healthy.
But there's something to be said about putting energy and creativity into what can health
look like for me outside of this relationship.
Instead of me putting all of my hopes and dreams into this relationship, give me a vision,
Lord, for what a healed whole version of myself can look like.
And when I began to do that, then that was a vision that I could lead.
And so whenever I am feeling like I am without direction or that I don't necessarily know
what my next move is going to be, I don't ask God to make me do something, make me be
productive, give me passion, give me passion.
I ask God for a vision because if God gives me a vision, the vision is going to have life
in it.
The vision is going to have excitement and passion and strategy and creativity and innovation
and people connected to the vision.
And so if you are a leader and you're just leading people without a vision, I would challenge
that.
I think you got to have a vision for those people.
The Lord, when God was creating the heavens and earth, he had a vision.
When he created man, he had a vision.
This is the vision.
This is how I see you and this is what I want you to step into.
And I'm not sure that any of us can lead our lives, lead our children, lead our businesses,
lead our ministries, lead our creativity without a vision.
So that's a little snippet, but the full thing is on the Called Leaders podcast hosted by
Terray Roberts.
And I hope you will check it out.
Let's get into this week's Mind Your Business question.
Hi, pastor Sarah Jix-Rowdy.
My name is Dr. Roots.
And although I'm a professional and I'm a godly woman, I preach, I do all of that.
One thing I can't get over is using profanity when I'm frustrated.
Every time I've done everything, with the money in
the jar, I've done it all. I just I need to get closer. I've fasted, I prayed.
It don't matter. It's a minute later. I'm on the road and here I go.
Bleep, bleep, bleep. I don't know. This is one thing that I need to try to
overcome and it seems so difficult and I'm starting to feel bad because my husband
continuously calling me out. Do you ever say this? Do you ever say that? But trust
like call him back and I'm gonna be happy and call him out when he makes mistakes.
But I really want to overcome this. This is just something I want to be tabby and call him out when he makes mistakes. But I really want to overcome this.
This is just something I want to be one of those girls who make my sister, she never curses.
In fact, if you say bad words, you stop listening. She doesn't hear nothing.
Specialism is hurt and the conversation is over. I don't want to be that sensitive, but I need
to get to the point where I'm not using any type of insanity in my communication.
Even to myself, even when alone.
So maybe you could pray for me.
Thank you, God bless.
Or maybe you have some ways, other things that I could use that I haven't thought of.
Thank you, God bless.
I love the keep-it-real nature of what's happening here. things that I could use and haven't thought of. Thank you, Kathy.
I love the keep it real nature of what's happening here. I love that you, you know, you went on and told it like it is because we need more people telling it like it is.
Thank you so much for your honesty and your transparency. I believe that this is something
that many people can relate to whether they want to admit it or not. And so I would like to offer you a few perspectives for you to just consider.
First of all, I want to say it's not enough to want to stop cussing because it's inappropriate,
because it's frowned upon, because other people it makes other people uncomfortable.
You need a conviction from God about the type of language and vocabulary you should be using,
about the types of reactions you should be having, and moments of frustration.
I personally believe that cussing is a habit or it is an organic reaction, a reflex that
has become a part of our nature.
If you get to a point where you're really like, and it sounds like you are,
I am really, really frustrated
that this is something that I cannot break off of my life.
I would challenge you to invite the Holy Spirit
to really give you a conviction about it,
a heart conviction about it.
And in those moments where you find yourself,
Lord, it just came on out my mouth
to just take a minute and be like, God, I'm sorry. And I apologize. I repent, help me, Lord, it just came on out my mouth to just take a minute and be like, God,
I'm sorry.
And I apologize.
I repent.
Help me, Lord.
Allow me to have more access to your power to make space for your power to function in
my life so that I can break this off of me.
I would like to offer you a few scriptures as you were in pursuit of how to break cursing
off of your life.
I also want to say this though, to keep it a book.
When we are talking about cursing in the Bible,
they're not talking about the language that we use.
So there are a lot of scriptures that speak to cursing,
but they are not in context of like the words that we know in
the English language that have become synonymous with cussing.
However, there is a scripture that I think may speak to what you are experiencing, and
it is in Colossians chapter 3 verse 8, and it says,
But now you yourselves are to put off all these things, anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy,
filthy language out of your mouth.
It could be said that the language,
though it is not necessarily cursing
in the way that the Bible speaks about cursing,
it is certainly a case to be made
for it being filthy or inappropriate language.
Having said that, I do think that it can be a part of our reaction.
If we're angry, we're frustrated, we're upset, maybe instead of attacking the cussing, maybe
we consider what are some ways that I need to cope in these moments of frustration and
anger to make it less about the symptom that cussing is and more about the trigger that
produces the cursing in the first place.
What's happening in my world when I lose control of my language? What's happening in my world when
I lose sight of who I want to be and how I want to show up? Am I tired? Is it a certain friend
group? Is it something that's happening at my job? Is there certain people who just press this button
inside of me and maybe while I'm trying to get my language together, I need to stay out of
environments that can trigger that response.
What would a healthier response be?
I don't want to have to cut you out.
So I may need to stop talking to you all together.
I don't want to have to cut you out.
So maybe I need to be vulnerable instead of being passive aggressive.
Maybe instead of being aggressive, I need to take a minute and figure out what it would
look like to have some open, honest communication.
There's something to be said about accountability. I'm personally not a fan, I'll be honest,
though I need it. Like if I'm on a diet and I tell you that I'm on a diet, I don't need you
food policing me, but I might also need you food policing me. If this is something that the Lord
has really laid on your heart is something that needs to change, there is nothing wrong with having
a little accountability to help you stay on the straight and narrow, you know.
We don't want nobody cleaning your mouth out with soap,
but we may need someone to remind you every now and then,
like, this ain't who you say you want to be.
So take that into the Lord in prayer, consider it,
let it simmer, let it marinate,
and hopefully it will help you on your journey.
You know, speaking of cussing slash cursing being different and how many people are of
the belief that cussing may be inappropriate, but it is not actually a sin.
I think there are a few things that we have deemed as inappropriate in our, I think really
religious mindsets and mentality that have kept us from having the types of
conversations that really bring about healing and transparency and health in a way that
fosters healthy relationships and healthy connection with others and I think an improvement
in our self-esteem.
When we don't know how to deal with something in religious context, most of the time we
just vilify it because we don't have solutions.
And when we don't have solutions, it's easier to be like, well, let's condemn it until we
can figure out how to deal with it.
I truly believe that sex is one of the, I should put a disclaimer on this episode.
I'm going to go back and record a disclaimer. for the disclosure, that sex is one of those things
that it is taboo in our faith spaces
because we do not want to give anyone license
to have risky sexual behavior.
And yet when people are married,
they can't even have healthy sexual behavior. And yet when people are married, they can't even have healthy sexual behavior because
it has been vilified and condemned so much that when it's actually time to engage in
its beauty and its pleasure, we have difficulty.
And so here at woman evolve, we're going to have a tough, tough, is it going to be tough
conversation.
I will say the flip side of that, and obviously I didn't have that story where I waited till
marriage and then struggled to, you know, why is there something wrong with me?
Because all of the things that I did not struggle to, I'm trying to figure out what...
Is this part of being uncomfortable
with having conversations about sex?
I did not struggle with rewiring my mind
because it had been vilified
as much as I struggled with rewiring my mind
because it had been commonized, which is not
a word, but here we are.
I think that because I very much grew up in a culture where the language and imagery was
explicit and hypersexual, that I think I had to really work to get to a space of honor and sacredness as
it related to sex in that way.
All of us are learning in some way and if we're not, we need to be teaching so that
the rest of us can learn.
I am about to have a conversation that I believe is going to be helpful for you as you navigate your own sexual identity,
whether it is in the context of marriage or you're trying to rewire your brain from the
culture or you're just trying to understand and make some choices about what healthy sexual
behavior looks like for you.
I believe that this podcast is going to lay a brick in that foundation.
If you are struggling in general with this subject matter, I think that you've got to
really gauge whether or not this is a conversation that you should listen to.
I will say that it is more informative than it is directive or descriptive and so hopefully that helps you
in making your choice.
If at any moment you feel uncomfortable,
you're like, ooh, it's not for me,
definitely log off and no judgment here.
I'm looking forward to hearing your feedback though.
I definitely want to know what you think
about this conversation.
So with that being said, let's talk about sex, baby.
Let's talk about, Why you know that song?
See, that's what I'm talking about, rewiring.
Now which one of y'all remember that Salt and Pepper song?
That talk.
The first time I had a conversation with my mother about sex, I was in the car.
Oh my goodness.
We had seen the Nutty Professor and the Nutty Professor, there's a part in the movie where
they talk about having relations and my mother goes, do you guys know in the movie nutty professor when
they talk about having relations?
We were like, and she goes, do you know what that means?
And we were like, no.
And she goes, that's what it means when you're going to have a baby.
And we were like, okay, I'm pretty sure we didn't know and we were confused after that.
Obviously I figured it out.
But yeah, we got to become more comfortable having these conversations in our own way.
Not every way is going to fit for you, but I think we have to be more comfortable with
saying the words, hearing the words, having these conversations with women, as women,
with our partners, with our children, so that we are able to advocate for healthy behaviors, boundaries.
We're able to more accurately navigate our total identity because we're not keeping some
things hidden or thinking that some things are off limits as it relates to the Lord giving
us wisdom, honestly,
on how to share our body.
So anyways, I've got with us a licensed social worker, Christian sexologist, yes, you heard
it, international speaker and founder of the intimacy firm, Brittany Broaddus Smith.
If you've ever struggled with the intersection of faith and sexuality, if you've wrestled
with shame or just need a safe space to explore intimacy
in a healthier way, press that play button, sis, because we're about to get spicy.
Thank you so much for joining me on the podcast.
I'm so excited to have this conversation.
Excited too.
Thank you for having me.
I'm ready to go wherever you ready to go.
Let's go.
The question is, where am I ready to go? I find this go. Let's go. The question is where am I
ready to go? I find this is my problem. I grew up, I was born in 88, grew up in you
know the 90s early 2000s and during that time everything from purity culture to
music was like lady in the streets freaking sheets okay and I think that it
has made conversations about intimacy
about sexuality whether it's you know, healthy and in the context of
um, you know healthy relationships and marriage or it's just something that
You know, we're doing casually it still just makes it very taboo for women to be having these conversations
and so I love
that we're going to frame it with the integration of faith and you know
Christianity and womanhood and sexuality but it's still is you know I
still feel like I'm about to get a whooping like I'm about to get kicked out
like like I'm gonna be kicked out my house talk about having grown folks
conversation and I'm grown I got kids
Okay, been married and divorced and married again and yet it still feels very taboo
What do you think that is? What has been ingrained into us as women that makes?
Conversations like these feel like we're breaking rules. That's exactly what you said. We have been
That's exactly what you said. We have been socialized and literally steeped in this idea that this conversation is not for us. For women in general, then you add in women of color,
there's no black folks, don't talk about stuff like this, and then you add in women of faith,
and now that's even more erasure from such a necessary conversation. So then when you become a mother, a wife,
in all the things where you are now having the license
to come and go as you please,
you can't seem to shake all the other things
that have been so deeply ingrained.
That's what's called your sexual script, right?
And for women of faith, our sexual script is that
sex is dirty, sex is not to be talked about, we keep
it in secret, we keep it in the dark, we whisper about it, but also when you get home, act
like you know, and act and right right, or ignore it all the way up until your honeymoon.
And then swing from the chandelier, turn it on, then swing from, I mean, exactly, exactly.
And then we get the messages of what you won't do another one will and this idea
that your sexual prowess is necessary investment in keeping your partner or your husband faithful.
And that is alongside men who get a different type of purity message, right? Because that's
what we're talking about women, we get the purity message to keep us pure and chaste and keep us a viable candidate for marriage
leading up to, and then you get, then you get allowed to get, you know, filthy with
joy, right? But men, their purity message is to keep them faithful in their
marriage. And their expectations during their singleness is that it's just going
to happen in boys will be boys and that kind of thing So that kind of dichotomy keeps us in this whirlwind of what am I supposed to do?
But we are still folks are still having you know, the set
And but the thing is that people aren't happy about it like it's not really good sex because
We are not giving ourselves permission to enjoy it because of
everything that you just said.
Okay, so some would argue that the reason why we receive these sexual scripts is because
if we let on to how enjoyable, how fun, how pleasurable intimacy can be, we will not be able to keep them from having casual
sex and just being outside 24-7 and not preserving it for the sanctity of marriage.
And so we have to make it bad.
We have to make it taboo because that is how we preserve it for marriage.
What is your response to that philosophy? That fear has never been a good teacher of anything.
And in the church as well as in everyday society,
like I work a lot in the education system,
as statistics show that comprehensive sex education,
those who receive it are more likely to delay
select sexual initiation.
It is when curiosity doesn't have that safe place to land
that folks go out and try to find it on their own. And when we think about it, sex is one of the few
things that we do that to like, let's make it bad, let's make it negative, let's cast a negative
light on it to keep folks from doing it. We don't do that with dessert. We don't do that with money.
We don't do that with any of those things. But that with money. We don't do that with any of those things.
But the reality of it is when we do that, while that may scare folks away from doing
it in safe ways, while it scares folks away from having conversations about it with trusted
individuals, especially our young people with trusted adults, it doesn't actually stop the
sex from happening.
And folks are more likely to take more risks.
Folks are more likely to do things
that don't necessarily align with their values
because they feel like they have no other way.
It's like that cookie in the cookie jar kind of syndrome.
And I feel like if we are to establish sex
as the gift that we get to do,
that God created and set aside for an appointed time, just like all the
other things that we discuss and relates to his promises and things like that, then folks will
begin to honor and respect the culture of sex and work on developing a relationship with sex
that is healthy before a sexual relationship. And as I said to your question, fear has never been successful in teaching us anything.
That's a really interesting perspective.
When I kind of like look at it from different angles and from my own experience, I was a
teenage mother.
I got pregnant at 14.
No, I got pregnant at 13.
I had my baby at 14.
Sex was a very taboo.
I grew up in the height of purity culture and so the idea
of it being I guess bad. I think the message that I received about sex early
on was less about like it's bad and more you're going to be bad. You're going to
be nasty. But what's wild is like on the other side culture was celebrating this idea of you being bad, you being nasty.
And so they were they had competing messages for me as it relates to sex. When I think about my relationship with like I
Was in my 20s. I think when I first smoked weed, this is so random, but trust me I'm going somewhere.
that first most week this is so random but trust me I'm going somewhere but I was very not afraid but very cautious when it came to like messing with other
substances because I just felt like I knew too much about it to play with it
and I think there is perhaps something to be said and each person learns
things differently about having so much knowledge about the impact
that something can have on your emotional state, the effect that it can have on your
body, that you are able to make a more responsible decision about how you want to engage with
some, any particular thing because of the knowledge you possess.
And so I do think that it would make sense that the more comprehensive education that people have about sex not just biologically but emotionally
relationally like the more that we unpack it the more we are empowering
them to make responsible choices instead of just saying don't touch that and then
just trusting that they want I This is, my daughter is 15
and we are having conversations about sex
and not that she is engaging,
but just she's a teenager,
she's in school with boys and sex is on the table.
And so it's interesting trying to have conversations
that I didn't have and I often wonder like,
what's too much, what's
not enough. I don't want them educating her about what's healthy in sexual
relationships and I don't want to be silent and so walking this out though I
have never experienced it is making like clutch my pearls. It's interesting
because I believe God spared me from this experience because of the work that I was eventually going to do
While growing up very much pinacoso very much black church very much with southern grandparents. I didn't really get
Much of the like hang-ups as it relates to sex and sexuality though. I was aware of it
But I did get the silence part as you told me didn't talk about when you know, I didn't I tried my hardest, right?
But I did not hold on to guys. I changed it in until marriage
The day I asked her it all went down
I mean my mom went to the hair store and she just looked at me at the register said
You missed
That was the extent
That was the extent of our sex talk because I I told her I wasn't coming home the night before.
Imagine, good and wrong in college.
I told her, I told her I wasn't coming home that night and she put two and two together.
And that was the extent of our talk.
So then you fast forward, I'm raising two boys as a sexuality educator,
as someone who despises what goes on in this this house stays in this house kind of
Mindset because of the harm that that can cause so, you know our number one rule in this house
No secrets and no lies. So we talk about a lot of things and then I'm their mom
so they hear me teaching they see all of my
Models and things like that. And so trying to find that as you said that that middle ground
So what's too much, what's
not enough. And, you know, my son wants to take my ball of a puppet to school with him
for sure, no baby, Veronica can't go to school with you. Because I don't want to have to
get into it with nobody's mama. Right. And so, and folks are often concerned with the
language that my boys use, we've been using medically accurate body part terms.
We don't do the nicknames and all of that.
We've been doing that from the beginning,
but it has been quite an experience
that I often sit back and like, my mom,
never, we never had the conversation,
but I also know there was a whole lot of stuff
I would not have gotten myself into
had I had somewhere for this conversation to have.
Even if I didn't necessarily have questions, right, to your point about helping folks
make better decisions or equip them to make better decisions, even just normalizing that these
questions are okay. But some of our young people aren't really motivated to do things or even
adults. I don't even really want to do it.
I just want to talk about it.
I heard about it.
And when there's no space in values aligning spaces
like churches or whatever, my only outlet
or my only source of information is the streets.
And they don't know what they're talking about.
That's why I told my, you ask questions to your friends,
y'all talk about stuff in school.
Cool, but bring it back here first and vet it through me first so that we can make sure that
We're on the we're on the same page, but it but it's tough being what you never had
And yeah, can you tell me what are you noticing as some of the?
breakthroughs and Women's health women's confidence as you're doing this work with them?
Yeah, so the primary thing, as some folks may know, I spent a lot of time talking about body parts a lot of time with my
vulva puppet and things like that. Because I think that that's where we start like finding or helping women develop
I think that that's where we start like finding or helping women develop agency and ownership
Over their bodies by even being able to use medically accurate terms use a hand mirror to take a look at their role I recommend that you know once a month and with everyone some every cycle go ahead. Just take a hand mirror
Make sure everybody's okay down there
And just things like that
to empower women that your body is
yours to be able to
Develop your voice as it relates to pleasure in a bedroom in that beyond the bedroom in the hospital
Thank you know the medical field they don't really pay as much man
Sometimes it's though those things just seeing how well they connect. So I worked
with a client who was trying to, you know, get back on track with abstinence. And she
found herself just saying yes to things just for companionship purposes that she didn't
really agree with. And as we navigated building her sexual confidence and sexuality more than
just sexual behavior,
she was willing to get back into ministry and start singing again, because they're all connected.
Wherever you go, my mom used to say, wherever you go, there you are, right?
So this idea that our sexual self can be set on a shelf to be picked up and laid down is what keeps us fractured.
So that breakthrough is a really a reconciliation of who we are as women
of faith, as sexual beings, as who God created us, where and when you are able to blend those
together or reconcile those back together, that's when stewardship can happen. You're able to
steward your desires, able to steward your decision making, ever to steward your, you know, even your
the company you keep
and all of that. Because I think as, as we pursue sanctification, that's really the heart of it is,
how do we steward the things that we have access to that are said, are meant to be set aside for
appropriate time? Bodies going to do what bodies do, right? You're going, you're going to get horny.
It's just, it's, you know, what's's gonna happen, right? But what you do with those sensations
Right how you are feeding those sensations in the moments where you're not feeling that right is what's going to determine
How again your relationship with sex and that's single and married alike because we still have to manage and steward our desires
Even married because the biggest lie told is when you get married,
you're going to have sex all day long, every single day,
whenever you want.
And so the way you steward that single
is the way you're going to steward and marry.
If you struggle with fornication single,
you're going to struggle Mary.
It's just going to be called something different.
And so I think that that's the breakthrough,
that reconciliation of self and sexual self seeing that is one
Created being seeing that person as whole seeing that person as a part of the gas or all that he had made is that it was
very very good all seeing all of that knowing all of that learning all those parts and
Walking in that agency has been the the biggest breakthrough before all the
Where you put this where does this work? How do I do this better? I?
Can you know I can say these words and these length this body parts without blushing right that that that's the biggest thing
That's where we need to start. Yeah
What
Permission does a woman need to give herself in order to allow that integration to take place?
Oh, that's so good. I just had this conversation with Dr. Candace Hargan.
She wrote a book called Good Sex that actually just came out last week.
And we were talking about the two baseline permission is cure for curiosity and courage. Right. You want to give yourself permission to be curious and challenge yourself to be
courageous in areas where you are unfamiliar.
And so being curious about your body for so much of us, so many of us, excuse me,
we are just told what to do from birth.
We're told where we can go when if you were raised like I was, you want to sit
at that table and you're going to clean that plate out.
You're not getting up until it's done.
So now, even though I'm full, because my plate is not empty, I have this here.
So I'm early on, we teach people to stop listening to their bodies, to listen to other people.
So we unintentionally, sometimes intentionally give permission over to other people to tell
us what we think and feel, even down to what the sensations of our body.
So giving yourself permission to be curious allows you to ask questions, allows you to
push back when something doesn't make sense, allows you to, as I said, just take a look
at your body part.
There's some people I've talked to who really believe looking at your evolve, moving things around,
make sure, see what we see that that was thin
and that was likened to self pleasure.
And it's like, don't you go to the doctor?
The doctor do similar things.
Are you having sexual relations with the doctor
when they do it?
And when you break it, then not's a bit like facetious,
but like, do we see how ridiculous this has gotten?
People are so afraid of the skin that they're in.
So curiosity, that permission to be curious
allows for that.
Even curious about scripture.
Like we understand, we've been held this thought that,
you know, sex is between husband and wife until marriage
There's certain things we don't do adultery is this, you know beast. Yeah, all of the all the things that's just explicit
but then there are some things that
We have to decide where the letter of the word is missing
The spirit of the word is there and that's where give yourself permission to ask questions of your faiths
Be like what does this mean? How what how does that, you know, Mary got married at 12, 13.
I'm 40 and Mary, menopause is knocking on the door.
And he's like, what do I do with this?
That, that carry out.
And then the courage is to try new things,
explore the infection, particularly in Mary's, in Mary's, like, get,
step outside of the cookie cutter that you've been given of what a good, godly woman is.
Now there are standards, right? You know, we, we serve, we serve the good God and we
serve things we don't do in holiness, right? But there is, we don't do that in holiness,
but there's a question, the courage is to explore whether this is a thing that God expects
of us or this is a thing that my pastor and my grandmother and all these other people
have handed down that I just picked up at home.
Okay.
I already know that there's going to be plenty of questions and you touched on self pleasure.
This is an email that I get quite a bit.
Women who feel like they're addicted can't stop.
What do you think about and and I will say this.
What will I say?
Come on.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
We're in there.
What will I say? I will say that I think that there is not
one universal response to this question,
and that every person's situation, motivation,
circumstance, coping mechanism is completely different.
So I don't know.
I can't say that I understand each and every person's
reason and intent behind asking the question. I lean a little bit towards it. If you're asking
the question, there's probably something worth digging into that may suggest that it's too much,
too far, not rooted in the right reasons, that there's probably something there worth exploring.
But I just want to add that framework because I don't want to put you in a position where you're answering a question that
has to fit every single circumstance. But I am curious to your response to someone
who says like is this a sin? Am I doing it too much? Am I addicted? What are some
of the markers that we need to look for?
I knew I was going to try to go around if I knew we was gonna
Well, she's here let me write and you know what's great I don't even get to tip tip tip
dance Around it because I did what am I like if I release the episode is that I stopped fascinating the lost and gained 35
Pounds so I told the world my business
and lost and gained 35 pounds. So I done told the world my business,
I told the world my business.
But I did that because of this question,
because it's also a question I get all the time.
And so the way that I have received it through study
and just the whole spirit is the act itself,
while there is no scripture that says,
thou shall not masturbate, right?
We have to look at motive. I do not
believe that masturbation or self-pleasure serves God's heart for single Christians,
particularly in their, while they are abstaining, because then it makes you dependent on you.
Most people use self-pleasure as a way to navigate abstinence. And if we are, if anything that he's expecting of us,
we are dependent on him to complete.
And we should seek him for the strength to be able to do.
So if I say, that's all right,
I can hold on for another year,
because I can, you know, DJ Clue when I feel like it,
then who am I dependent on, right?
And so I think that we then put ourselves
in the position of
deity when we do that.
Additionally, while it may not say thou shalt not masturbate, it does speak very clearly about lust.
It does speak very clearly about coveting other folks, you know, spouses. It does speak very clearly about idolatry.
And so when I shared my testimony, that's where, that's when I got the greatest revelation, because
I decided I wasn't going to do this anymore.
I'm done.
But when I had really big feelings, I did not turn to God for help.
I turned to the kitchen.
And then when I couldn't call nobody, I went everywhere else.
And he said, God said to me clearly that he said, when is it going to be my turn?
And I was like, hold on, lower your voice, sir.
But the sin of it all is that I decided that my urges were going to control my decision
making.
So when I had a difficult conversation with my co-parent, or if I felt lonely, or whatever was going
on, if I was stressed on a job, I reached for whatever I reached for to make myself
feel good.
And that was where the sin was in the idolatry of my urges.
I was worshiping at the altar of my emotions and not depending on Him to complete what
He asked me to do, to not depending on him to allow myself to be weak so that his strength can be made perfect.
So that's what I feel about it for single folks.
For married folks, I know scientifically, that's the work that I do, bridging the gap
between the science and the scripture, is that self-pleasure can help folks in differing marital situations.
If you have erectile dysfunction, mutual self-pleasure can help alongside with it.
If we have folks who are deployed, truck drivers away for long periods of time, that can be
moments where you all are doing this together when the motivation is to serve the good of the unit then this is part of you all
Exploring and expanding what happens in your marriage bid now if we get again to motive and we get to the place where we sneak in and
One partner don't know you got a drawer full of fun and don't nobody know about it
And you wait until you check away seeing everybody sleep you turn it on the the sink real loud
So can't nobody here all that now there's a different conversation
So then now you're being dishonest and that's where it's in it
I think there's anywhere where you're hiding anywhere where it becomes self-serving
Then that's when it becomes the problem because I believe God created states
for mutuality that anything that becomes self-serving
is when it becomes sinful. But there could be mutual self-pleasure that everybody is aware of,
everybody's on board with, nobody's having any problems with that serves the good of the unit
that I think that that's what I teach from my perspective. I know folks, as you say, who all out categorically disagree.
But that's where for single folks, it's not, don't go lay that down.
It's difficult as it may be.
Don't put that down.
Married folks, be intentional about how you use it to you know bring joy into your bedroom to keep your keep
your bedroom enemy through I think that's an excellent answer and I'm I'm
sure that you've done a lot of work and studying to make sure that you look at
every scenario when answering the question and it shows so thank you for
for your wisdom and intentionality and answering it
Because I do think that bigger than to your point the behavior is
You know, who are you depending on?
What is it? What bridge is it getting you over and is that the ultimate plan in cadence?
That's going to lead you to you know, whatever's most fulfilling and what ultimately makes you more like Jesus. I have a question though
So that's the one side of the coin. There's another side of the coin where a woman has no desire at all
Maybe she stressed maybe life is life thing and she cannot remember the last time that she even felt that like
Va Va Va Vroom like she is not there
What would you say to a woman who's having a difficult time
even connecting to that part of herself?
I would start with, first, I mean, in all cases,
I always start with making sure
there's not anything medical going on.
Like if there's like medications
that could sometimes like Zet, libido,
and that kind of thing, if it's medical,
we gotta address that first. But if it's medical we got to address that first
But if it's just like, you know life is life in then we go with you know
Time to take a journey down memory lane when and I know it's been a while
But when was the last time you felt like this one was the last time you were sitting on a bed and you you know
Yeah, I was a walk pass and you was like
Mm-hmm. I need that and
What and what was happening around that time?
What was it happening around that time? What has changed in your life or your
circumstances that, um, that was, that's present now or what they're not
present now that was then and vice versa. And look at how do we get back to that?
And in some instances
that there is no getting back, right?
And they're like, so I don't really like the language
of like mommy's getting their sexy back
after having children
because you're not the same woman anymore.
You're completely different.
And I don't want you looking back to what used to be
as opposed to embracing how sexy and wonderful you are
right now and what the future could look like and so if there is
Something that we need to let go of we kind of navigate
That and then we get into the meat of it where where unfortunately most of the lies
It do you not like sex or you not like the sex that you're having and then this
Come on in here
And then this husband come on away come on in here
What's what are we is it is it too much of a wham-bam? Thank you, ma'am. Are we not allowing your body to
Function as it was designed to function like our with a sexual response cycle, right? We're about 15 to 20 sometimes 30 minutes behind arousal before uh before men, right?
And sometimes, you know, they mean well,
but husbands, they ready to jump the gun sometime.
And because it takes nothing for them to, you know,
stand at attention, they're ready to go, right?
And so sometimes that's the part of it,
is just like they don't feel themselves
as a part of this moment.
There's no ownership in the sexual culture.
And so I when I work my clients, I get all in their business.
Let's start from the beginning.
Is it's the morning time?
What is happening moment by moment right before we get to till we start?
Right. So we start, right? And most times I find a disconnect in the lead up,
which is why the desire is missing
because a lot of women feel like
it's just getting ready to be more of the same.
And especially when you've been married a long time,
you can almost like script what is getting ready to move
and get to the place where you just started moaning and he didn't even hit that move yet because you're already kind of ahead of the
game because you're already and then there's those moments where women are like it's called
spectatoring where you're almost like out of your body like narrating what's happened
especially post baby like you know is it is it hanging low like you know is everybody looking
like is that right in my position so we're kind of like we're not in the moment and can't deal
and so all of those feelings that we know are going to come is like man i don't even feel like
i don't even feel like doing this so i would encourage um that woman to really be intentional
about assessing
What's different? I what cuz I've never met a woman maybe you bet, you know, we both born in easiest So you ain't been around longer me, but you've seen you
Right. Have you ever met a woman who actively avoid the orgasm?
Like just running from the hill
Okay, you don't make every excuse in the world not to get right
Okay, and so if there's good and if they feel welcome
They feel supported and they still love and hear this and they feel like this touch is more than just for sexual
More than just for sexual more than just for sexual more than just for sexual
right? Because a lot of
times the touching and the kind words
and all of that only happens
what you're trying to get
right? But if they feel
equity and they feel joy and they
feel like they're being loved on and appreciated
then that's some woman
who's going to run towards her bed
right? So if we're avoiding the bedroom the bedroom and boarding what happens in the bedroom living room bathroom, whatever you went through
Something is missing and maybe interpersonal right and maybe personal because it could be as much as like I know a couple
God bless his heart
The way he initiated or made it clear that he was ready, you know to have some fun that night
He would just come and just pat her on the chest
She'd be watching the dishes doing whatever he just come like
You're coming upstairs
And and she complied because again, that's what you know, that's what good women of god do right?
They're they're dutiful in there. They do their wifey duties, right?
She complied but she hated it because she it felt like this disrespectful and disregarding and he thought he was being cute and fun and
Placid and so that's why I like to walk through the steps to see how we got here and it's simple tweak in the way
He initiated
Help them along with the fact that he would be ready to go to bed
And then he would just go upstairs shower in bed
But as a mom when it's time to go to bed, you know, you got to turn the house off
You have to make sure everybody knows everybody got a shower or the lunch is paid
We got to read 14 books, you know all like and then you got to make sure ain't no boo-boos
It's all boo-boo make sure ain't no monsters in the closet like all the things it's 15 step
Was 15 steps to his two
And then by the time she got upstairs she had nothing left and then as a woman who was
Responsive desire versus spontaneous cuz those are two different ones like some people are spontaneous is Tuesday you smell good
Let's go right and then response desire is like my mind is not on that
I'm only 57 other things but in response to some type of stimuli my mind get it my mind is into it and
then my body
Right and and yeah, we needed to
Shift the approach and shift his support of her leading up to it
shift the approach and shift his support of her leading up to it
Then reduce the amount of times that she was saying no, so she wasn't saying no to the organ
she was saying no to all the work that it would take to get to get there and she was saying no to the
Negative approach or to feel feeling disregarded in his approach to initiation So I don't know if that is and I feel like that's like one of those no it did
I feel like that's one of the the learning dynamics and a marriage especially as a marriage changes
That I'm not sure that we spend as much time talking about we're always like happily ever after but sometimes happily is moving
So you have to figure out what does happy look like now and what changes
Have been produced in our marriage in the last six months last five years last ten years
That makes it not the same rhythm that we once had but I love that
There's always an opportunity to readjust and still prioritize
Experiencing one another and having pleasurable experiences with one another no matter what changes have taken place.
This reminds me of a conversation that I actually just read this book about a
sexual abuse survivor
trying to reengage in healthy relationships. And I'm wondering what advice do you give those who have
experienced abuse, have experienced trauma and is now trying to have
a healthy relationship with sex that isn't a trigger for difficult experiences that they possess.
Yeah, the first thing, the first step that I worked through with women who've experienced
that and it's so unfortunate that's so that's a part of so many of our stories.
It's so disheartening.
But it's to recognize that what happened was not sex.
And so being able to delineate between what happened to you
and the gift of sex that you have been gifted
and you get to do in your marriage are two different things and even though unfortunately
It's the same behavior and things like that
That wasn't because you weren't in control because you didn't have gift consent because you were assaulted or harmed in any way shape or form
That wasn't sex. That's not this and a lot of people just struggle to see the difference between the two.
And growing to the place where you see sex as something that you get to do,
and not something that you have to do.
And then we go from there to be very vocal.
Folks who have traumatic experiences
have to carry the weight of having to be more vocal
about their boundaries and their limitations
and also the work of
Discovering what that looks like, right? Because you have to know if for example, whatever you're non-negotiable
so let's say for example, I had a
a couple who's
She experienced some sexual assault and oral sex was involved. but oral sex was a complete non-negotiable
For her
But she did not tell him that
during their courting dating
Engagement phase he did not find that out until the wedding night
and though he
was looking forward
to to that and it was a And and in her head, she couldn't process
why he would want her to do something.
So degrading and this, that, and the third,
but she wasn't very, she wasn't upfront
or she hadn't really shared with him
because of her own battle with that trauma,
how much that truly meant to them.
So your first, outside of delineating between the two,
trauma therapy is crucial for helping to disengage those triggers and becoming vocal about taking
ownership in that sexual relationship where you are not necessarily dictating, but being clear about where you are willing for this
to go, but also being open to if there's something that's off the table for you, talking with
your partner, your spouse, like, what does this do for you?
And how can we compromise to get a similar experience or a similar outlet or whatever
that doesn't leave me crying
as not in, you know, after it's all said and done.
And in the same way, working with the partner,
because having being a partner,
being a spouse to someone who's experienced sexual trauma,
it's also a difficult walk to walk
because you don't want to intentionally be triggering,
but you're walking alongside them
as they're doing that work
is necessary, but also just confirming just to reiterate anybody who's even watching this that
has had that experience that pleasure is your right as well. Despite what's happened to you,
we're not going to further let the enemy rob you of the gift that God gave you. That was that was evil. That was not that
this is something completely different. You still have the opportunity to create
something beautiful and life-giving that is ten times as good as that was bad.
Yeah, that's a good word. Okay, I've asked you before we go if womanhood had a soundtrack
What's one song that would have to be on yours and why?
Uh, oh is that bad
I'm not going to go through the first one. I thought I turned left.
Hold on, hold on.
I need you to hold up a sign.
And I need to know what it is.
And you've done it now.
You have to tell me.
I'll just say this.
I have been called the child of Shirley Caesar and Cardi B.
That is what I've been.
Oh, jeez.
I've been called.
And they came together, had a little person somehow it never
Okay, okay, so i'm understanding i'm understanding
A soundtrack that's such a good question. Um
You know
Beauty is her name. Let's go with it
Beauty beauty is beauty is her name. I think that uh, the work of womanhood specifically
black womanhood
Has has put put a dim over
What what it what it really means to embrace?
full womanhood this idea this fighting over fighting over 50-50 and soft life
and this and masculine and refeminist,
like it's just become a mess.
And so just to rest in the beauty of being a woman
that God created and just all the things that come with it
is beauty, beauty is her name.
That will go with it.
That was so safe.
That was so beautiful.
I love that.
I'd say when we press, when we unrecord, I'd say.
Period.
Well, thank you.
Thank you for having these tough conversations with us
and for making it less taboo for us to talk about our bodies,
our pleasure, and
what they look like in the context of healthy relationships.
I'm grateful.
Thank you for your time.
Thank you.
Brittany, I remember you tagging me and things on social media, me reaching out, sliding
into your DMs and asking you to come to HeyU.
You were a crowd favorite then, and it's very clear why.
Thank you so much for your transparency, for your authenticity, for having these open and honest
conversations that haven't always been broached. I really feel it is necessary for us to really
take into consideration the fullness of womanhood and to determine what our unique journey and path
is going to look like.
I'm really glad that we got the chance to connect one-on-one because of the incredible work you're
doing. Women have found the freedom to break myths, heal wounds, and embrace the fullness of
who they are through both science and scripture. So thank you so much for helping us explore such a crucial conversation. Now, Holy Spirit, we are asking for your wisdom, your guidance, your direction.
Please teach us about the fullness of who we are and how we are to show up in the world.
Not just in one particular aspect of our identity, but Lord, give us a vision for the fullness of who we are.
And may that vision be your vision.
We want to align our lives with your truth and so God I'm praying for everyone who has listened
throughout this podcast whether they have been challenged in the area of their language,
challenged to leave a toxic relationship or maybe they just don't have a vision in an area where
they have been entrusted to lead.
God, I'm praying that you would open their spiritual eyes.
God, I am thinking of that scripture in Ephesians,
that the eyes of their understanding would be enlightened,
that they would know your will, your ways,
the perfect will of God in your spirit with more clarity.
God, grant this as I know you already wanna do,
and give us the capacity and sensitivity to respond in a way that reflects our desire to become
closer and closer to you. In Jesus name I pray, amen.
Evolve.