The RISE to Intimacy Podcast

Why You Can Orgasm Alone But Not With Your Partner

24 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why You Can Orgasm Alone But Not With Your Partner

Descripción

You can orgasm just fine on your own. So why does it feel almost impossible with a partner in the room? If this is something you've quietly wrestled with, you're not the only one. Research shows about 58% of women find orgasm easier through masturbation than partnered sex, and the same pattern shows up for men. This has very little to do with your body's capability and almost everything to do with what's happening in your mind and your nervous system when someone else is in the sexual space with you. The moment another person enters the equation, your brain shifts gears. You go from being in your body to being in your head. You start monitoring, analyzing, bracing for the thing you're afraid of, and that internal noise drowns out the very signals your body needs to build arousal and reach orgasm. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I explain why your body can orgasm on its own but shut down the moment a partner enters the picture. I walk through the most common barriers I see in my practice, including performance pressure, body image, shame, and trauma, and share five research-backed strategies you can start using today. You'll learn what your body is asking for when orgasm feels out of reach, and what it actually needs to feel safe enough to let go.2:22 – The well-researched phenomenon that’s silently hijacking your arousal during sex with a partner 5:26 – The cycle that starts with one bad experience and can quietly reshape how you approach every sexual encounter that comes after it 8:39 – The most common barriers that prevent people from reaching orgasm with a partner 13:09 – Cycle-breaking strategy #1: Directed masturbation and how to translate those cues to your lover 15:22 – Strategy #2: Mindfulness intervention and what it actually looks like during sex 17:03 – Strategy #3: How to regulate your nervous system before and during sex so your body can prioritize pleasure, not survival 18:48 – Strategy #4: The Sensate Focus process that takes the "target" of orgasm off the table and treats a wide range of sexual difficulties 20:49 – Strategy #5: How to lean into your desire, attraction, and connection to your partner Mentioned In Why You Can Orgasm Alone But Not With Your Partner Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

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26 episodios

episode When One Partner Wants Sex and the Other Pulls Away artwork

When One Partner Wants Sex and the Other Pulls Away

When one partner wants sex and the other pulls away, it can start to feel like every attempt at closeness comes with a risk. If you’re the one initiating, you may feel rejected, unwanted, or unsure whether your partner desires you anymore. So eventually, you stop trying altogether, not because the desire is gone, but because the rejection has become too painful to keep risking. Underneath that pattern, both partners are usually trying to protect themselves. One person reaches for sex because it helps them feel connected and reassured, while the other starts experiencing that same initiation as pressure, expectation, or the possibility of disappointing their partner again. The more loaded sex becomes, the harder it is for either of you to feel safe enough to reach for each other in a way that actually lands. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I explain the dynamics behind the sexual pursue-withdraw cycle and how it impacts both partners’ nervous systems. I talk about why the same couple can be each other’s pursuer and withdrawer, why this pattern often outlasts the arguments it creates, and how the way you say no can be the difference between disappointment and rejection. I also share four strategies you can practice together to interrupt the cycle, rebuild safety around physical intimacy, and start feeling connected again. 2:32 – A brief disclaimer for the partner who withdraws from sex 3:37 – Why the dynamics behind the initiating partner and the withdrawing partner aren’t what they seem 5:54 – How your brain processes constant sexual rejection, and how partners can switch between the pursuer-withdrawer roles  7:37 – Why only addressing the emotional side of the relationship can sometimes make things worse 8:10 – How the nervous system's feeling of unsafety comes into play for both the pursuer and the withdrawer 10:38 – The effects of sexual satisfaction and dissatisfaction on couples, and the difference between a rejection that wounds vs. disappoints 11:45 – Why the absence of fighting about sex anymore might actually be a sign of trouble ahead 13:34 – How the emotional and sexual pursue-withdraw cycles feed each other in a way that worsens both over time 14:25 – Four strategies for rebuilding safety around physical connection without the weight of expectation or risk of rejection 22:05 – What actually creates the sexual pursuit-withdrawal cycle in relationships Mentioned In When One Partner Wants Sex and the Other Pulls Away How to Stop the Pursue-Withdraw Cycle Without Blame [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-stop-the-pursue-withdraw-cycle-without-blame] Why You Can Orgasm Alone But Not With Your Partner [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/can-orgasm-alone-but-not-with-partner] Fixing a Sexless Relationship Starts With Emotional Regulation [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/fixing-a-sexless-relationship-starts-with-emotional-regulation] RISE to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

Ayer24 min
episode Why Women Struggle With Desire and Knowing What They Want artwork

Why Women Struggle With Desire and Knowing What They Want

You love your partner and want sex to feel close, connected, and mutual, yet desire can still feel harder to access than you think it should. When they ask what you like, what turns you on, or what would help you feel more present in your body, you may not have a clear answer. That confusion can be painful for both of you, especially when your partner experiences your uncertainty as distance, disconnection, or rejection. Those moments make more sense when you look at how early the messages start. Long before you were in an adult relationship, you may have learned that your body was something to monitor, your desire was something to hide, and your sexuality belonged to someone else before it ever belonged to you. Those messages do not disappear just because you are with someone safe. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I explain why women’s desire can feel so hard to access and why knowing what you want sexually is not as simple as “just tell me what you like.” I trace how shame, fear, safety messaging, and social conditioning shape the way women relate to their bodies and desire. I also share what male partners need to understand, and where women can begin when they’re ready to start reclaiming their sexual desire. 3:37 – How school dress codes teach girls that their bodies are something to monitor, manage, and cover up 5:10 – Why religious messages about purity, temptation, and obedience can be so hard for women to unravel 7:42 – How sexual double standards teach girls to hide desire while boys are praised for expressing it 9:30 – Why family conversations about sex often teach girls fear before they ever learn about pleasure 12:49 – How being taught to stay accommodating and “not too much” follows women into the bedroom 14:15 – How the media, Me Too, and the backlash that followed shaped women’s relationship with sexual safety 17:54 – What reproductive control can do to a woman’s psychological relationship with her own body 21:02 – The question male partners can ask when they want to understand instead of pressure 22:02 – Three starting points for women ready to begin unlearning a lifetime of sexual conditioning Mentioned In Why Women Struggle With Desire and Knowing What They Want Rose McGowan “Hollywood Was Worse Than The Cult I Escaped” | We Need to Talk with Paul C. Brunson Podcast [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRBvUVNEBFk] Why You Can Orgasm Alone But Not With Your Partner [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/can-orgasm-alone-but-not-with-partner] RISE to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

30 de jun de 202626 min
episode How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment artwork

How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment

Ever tried to resolve conflict with your partner, only for the argument to end because one of you finally gave in? It might look like the conflict is resolved, maybe even like someone won, but the person who backed down is usually still hurting underneath it all. They’re tired of explaining themselves, tired of having the same fight on repeat, and tired of feeling like the only way to move forward is to check out. That kind of “resolution” doesn’t create real repair. It creates self-abandonment, and over time, that is exactly how resentment starts building in a relationship. Real conflict resolution has to make room for both people to feel heard, respected, and steady enough to reconnect, even when the issue itself does not have a clean solution. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I’m concluding this communication series by sharing how to resolve conflict with your partner without leaving one person feeling like they lost another fight. I walk through the difference between solvable problems and perpetual problems, how to work with each one, and why reconnection after hard conversations matters just as much as the resolution itself. 2:54 – Why not all conflicts in relationships can be resolved 4:09 – How to figure out whether you’re dealing with a solvable or unsolvable conflict 5:37 – Five steps to resolve solvable conflicts between you and your partner 11:09 – An example of how Dr. John and Julie Gottman learn to live with one perpetual difference between them  13:23 – How to move from gridlock to dialogue with your partner about the unresolvable issues 18:00 – One final step to tackle after you’ve reached a solution or a compromise 20:41 – Quick review of the communication framework covered in this series Mentioned In How to Resolve Conflict With Your Partner Without Resentment How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective [http://risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-validate-your-partner-without-losing-your-own-perspective] How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage [https://www.risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-pause-during-conflict] The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

23 de jun de 202624 min
episode How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage artwork

How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage

You’re in the middle of a heated argument with your partner, and suddenly you can’t think clearly. Maybe you go quiet and wait for it to be over. Maybe you say something you already know you’ll regret. When this happens, learning how to pause during conflict can be the difference between a hard conversation that gets repaired and a fight that keeps causing damage. When your nervous system becomes flooded, your body moves into fight or flight. Your capacity to listen, feel empathy, think clearly, and problem-solve drops, which means trying to push through the conversation usually makes things worse. The goal is not to avoid the conflict, but to step away with enough structure that both of you can come back when your bodies are actually capable of connection. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I walk you through the Pause Protocol, a structured process I use with my clients when conflict becomes too overwhelming to continue. I explain what physiological flooding is, why productive communication becomes impossible in that state, and how to pause, regulate, reconnect, and return to the conversation before more damage is done. 2:21 – What’s happening in your body when a conversation between you and your partner goes sideways 5:16 – Why pausing in the middle of the argument isn’t the counterproductive move it seems like on the surface 7:22 – What the pause protocol is and how to use it effectively (so things don’t get worse) 10:18 – Where most people go wrong with the protocol, and how long the pause should last 12:43 – How to check back in with each other once the pause period ends 15:01 – Why walking away doesn’t have to mean you’re leaving the issue unresolved, and a pattern worth paying attention to if it develops 17:33 – Three things that happen when you don’t take a time out during an argument with your partner 20:05 – A review of what you need to agree on as a couple before you need the pause protocol Mentioned In How to Pause During Conflict Before It Causes Damage How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective [http://risetointimacy.com/post/how-to-validate-your-partner-without-losing-your-own-perspective] The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

16 de jun de 202624 min
episode How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective artwork

How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective

Your partner may have told you they don't feel heard, even though you were right there listening to every word and even responding. Hearing someone and making them feel heard are two different things, and most of us were never taught how to validate our partner in a way that actually lands. When that gap becomes a pattern, the same fight keeps happening, just with different words. When resentment starts building, most couples rush to explain themselves or fix the problem, skipping two steps that have to come first, acknowledgment and validation. The reason both feel so hard comes down to what's happening in your brain, because the moment your partner shares how they feel, your brain interprets it as an attack and shuts down the exact skills you need to respond well. In this episode of The RISE to Intimacy Podcast, I'm starting a new series on communication with these two foundational steps. I explain why your brain interprets your partner's feelings as a personal attack, what acknowledgment and validation actually look like in practice, and how to use them even when you think your partner is completely wrong, including where they have limits and what to do when emotions get too high to keep talking. 4:33 – How the cycle of repetitive arguments usually begins 5:57 – Why jumping straight to defensiveness or problem-solving ends up backfiring 8:57 – Four common beliefs that keep couples from acknowledging or validating each other 13:55 – The difference between acknowledgment and validation, and why couples can often struggle with one and not the other 17:00 – What to do when you disagree with everything your partner says 19:05 – The difference between validation and invalidation (and a commonly used phrase that seems validating, but isn’t) 21:36 – What validation does NOT require you to do, and how to set a boundary while still validating your partner’s feelings Mentioned In How to Validate Your Partner Without Losing Your Own Perspective The Gottman Institute [https://www.gottman.com/] Relationship Reset Couples Program [https://www.risetointimacy.com/couples-therapy-program] Relationship Readiness Intensive [https://www.risetointimacy.com/individual-therapy-program] Rise to Intimacy Free 30-Minute Consult [https://www.risetointimacy.com/booking-calendar/consultation-with-valerie-15-mins] Leave a rating and review [http://ratethispodcast.com/rise]

9 de jun de 202623 min