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Yes, relationships can be challenging
and they don’t have to be dull, distant, or sexless over time. Valentine’s season tends to bring this up. Not always in obvious ways. Sometimes it just highlights where we’ve been managing instead of connecting. Most couples don’t stop loving each other. They stop feeling safe enough to stay open. So they pull back. They react instead of speak. And the relationship slowly starts running on fear instead of connection. Fear doesn’t soften through insight alone. It changes when the nervous system experiences safety — and that happens when we practice new skills and habits together. That’s what the Power of Pleasure Summit is about (Feb 11–12, 2026). Real, practical tools for working with desire, fear, shame, and long-term intimacy, without self-blame or performance. I’ll be teaching Keeping the Spark Alive on Wednesday, Feb 11 at 1:45pm PT, sharing one simple shift to help couples move out of fear and back into connection. If this resonates, I’d love to have you there https://www.sexreimagined.com/a/2148204064/BDGmZtFa
Yes, relationships can be challenging
Keeping the Spark Alive at the Power of Pleasure Summi
If you’re in a relationship where the love is there but the pleasure feels quieter, this conversation is for you. I’m teaching Keeping the Spark Alive at the Power of Pleasure Summit — a free, 2-day online event (Feb 11–12) about intimacy, desire, and the Power of Pleasure Join us https://www.sexreimagined.com/a/2148204064/BDGmZtFa
Keeping the Spark Alive at the Power of Pleasure Summi
Mission 1 · Start Here Relationships Are a Practice
One of the central ideas in my work is this: Relationships aren’t something you figure out once.They’re something you practice over time. Most of us were taught to treat love and sex like talent.If it’s right, it should be easy.If it’s hard, something must be wrong. That story creates a lot of unnecessary shame. What I see again and again is that relationships move through seasons. There are seasons of closeness and seasons of distance.Seasons of desire and seasons of exhaustion.Seasons where connection feels effortless — and seasons where what used to work simply doesn’t. Nothing has gone wrong.The season has changed. Each season asks for different skills. I see this clearly in my own relationship.I’ve been going to Pilates three times a week with my partner for the past two years, and today I can move my body and feel sensations I simply didn’t have the context for when I started. It didn’t just change my body. It shifted my relationship to my partner. We became a team — holding each other up, holding each other accountable, and sharing each other’s company without distraction. Not because we figured it out.Because we practiced, consistently, over time. Relationships work the same way. The tools that help you fall in love aren’t the same ones that help you stay connected through stress, parenting, illness, aging, grief, or growth. This work is organized around three core pillars.Not as rules or stages, but as practices you return to — again and again — as your relationship and your life evolve. These pillars will show up here as levels you move through. You don’t pass them. You revisit them when the season shifts. Small step:What season does my relationship feel like it’s in right now? No fixing. No pressure.Just noticing. Tomorrow, we begin with Level 1 — Empowerment.
Mission 1 · Start Here Relationships Are a Practice
Mission Three Communication
If empowerment is learning to hear yourself, communication is learning how what’s inside you comes out and how it lands. Communication isn’t just what you say. It’s how you ask, how you respond, and how you negotiate together to find what works for all of you. When communication is off, we often hurt the people we care about most. One common way this happens is when we’re communicating with charge. Emotions like fear, anger, hurt, or urgency are driving the moment, so words come out sharper, faster, or heavier than we intend. Before we focus on what to say, we start by learning how to work with that charge. This is one of the most important skills to learn. It’s about slowing yourself just enough to feel what’s underneath a reaction before it comes out sideways. There’s often an awkward learning curve here. Things can feel clumsy at first. That’s normal. You’re not doing it wrong. You’re practicing. The best time to plan or practice is when there is no charge. Your mission, should you choose to take it Make a short list or grab a post-it and write down a few things that help you take the charge off. Journaling Moving your body Going for a walk Talking to someone safe Taking a shower Napping Whatever actually works for you. Then, the next time you feel charged, practice doing one of those things before you say or send anything. Tomorrow we are going to talk about pleasure skills (it may not be what you think so stay tuned)
Mission Four ~ Pleasure Skills
The third foundational pillar in my work is Pleasure Skills. Most people don’t struggle with pleasure because they’re broken or disconnected. They struggle because they spend so much time in their heads that it’s hard to stay present in their bodies. One of the keys to pleasure is confidence . And confidence is built through competence. Competence grows through experience. With touch, that means touching and being touched enough to learn what you’re feeling. Paying attention to sensation. Noticing what feels good, what feels neutral, and what doesn’t. Letting yourself be a little awkward. Trying things that don’t land. Staying curious instead of judging yourself. Over time, your hands learn.Your body learns.Your confidence grows because you’re familiar, not because you’re perfect. That’s how competence is built through repetition, attention, and willingness and that’s what makes pleasure feel easier and more natural. Instead of thinking of pleasure skills as things you have to master, think of them as gifts. Gifts you give your partner. Gifts you give the relationship. Gifts you often enjoy giving. When pleasure skills are experienced this way, they stop feeling like work or pressure and start feeling like expression. Something you offer because it feels good to offer it. They’re not about tricks or techniques.They’re about attention, pacing, curiosity, and presence. Your mission, should you choose to take it Make a short list of three gifts you have to give. These aren’t achievements or credentials.They’re the qualities and capacities you bring into connection. Things like your presence, your warmth, your steadiness, your curiosity, your humor, your attentiveness, your touch, your care. Let yourself name them without minimizing. Once you’ve made your list, choose one gift you want to work with more intentionally. If you tend to overthink or be hard on yourself, notice that this isn’t about fixing anything. You’re not choosing a gift because it’s lacking. You’re choosing it because it’s already there and you want to give it more space.
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