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What is being 'turned on' supposed to feel like?
According to all of the messaging around us,
it's this simple, automatic thing
that you should just get,
especially when you're young.
But sexual desire is really anything but simple.
And yeah, we're talking about sex,
but before ya'll go getting frisky in the comments,
sexual desire is an aspect
of physical and mental health.
There's lots of very legitimate science around it,
but it's treated as taboo
or inappropriate, and that leaves a whole bunch
of really important issues lurking in the dark.
-Sexual desire is the want
for some sort of sexual interaction
with someone or yourself, because
desire in and of itself
is not fully understood.
It is often referred back to food.
So with food,
you can have a desire for something.
But there is no arousal
for it, meaning that,
yeah, I really want some cake, but your mouth didn't water.
Right?
So the arousal portion is more
of the physical response to the desire.
-So basically, someone can want to have sex,
but they may not be physically aroused.
And the reverse is also true.
Someone can be physically aroused but have no mental
or emotional desire to engage in sexual activity.
This mismatch is called
arousal non-concordance.
And studies show that women are more likely to experience it than men are.
And to understand more about issues like this, it's really important
that we untangle physical arousal
from sexual desire.
In fact, there are actually
two different kinds of desire.
-So desire is actually split into the two.
It's the spontaneous desire
as well as the response desire.
-Spontaneous desire is where the thought or feeling
'I'd like to have sex' just sort of pops into your head
out of the blue. And response of desire
is where you may not really be in the mood,
but after a little warm up
like kissing, touching, or flirting,
you do start to want to have sex.
-One of the biggest misconceptions about desire
is that it should be spontaneous only.
-This misconception feeds into common stereotypes
we see all around us, like men
having out of control sexual appetites or women
as having little innate desire.
-Stop it! I have a headache!
-But that's far from the truth.
And anyone, regardless of sex or gender,
can experience spontaneous
or responsive desire.
-Spontaneous desire actually doesn't happen
as often as people think it does.
Most people's desire tends to be responsive, though
you can certainly have both and people
have them in different measures.
-Responsive desire was only acknowledged
and defined around 20 years ago, and lots of the world's
messaging about sex doesn't really
talk about responsive desire.
And when they do, it's not really in a positive way.
Many people report experiencing
low desire, but could at least some of this be
because they're actually experiencing responsive desire
in a world that has only taught us
about spontaneous desire?
Really, it all comes down to brain stuff.
That's not me saying it's all in your head.
There is actual neuroscience.
Essentially, we've all got
brakes and accelerators.
The sexual excitation
system is your accelerator.
Your brain perceives something
as a positive sexual stimulus and ignites
this cascade of neurotransmitters and hormones
that can turn into physical arousal.
The sexual inhibition system is the brake.
This is stuff that stops
those positive responses in their tracks.
So stuff that gives you the ick.
This can be something your brain
consciously or subconsciously perceives
as a threat, like a fight with your partner
or the potential of a sexually transmitted infection.
And research has shown that these two systems work together
in what's called the dual control model.
-So when the S.E.S.
excitement is higher than the inhibitions,
you're probably more in the space to actually have sex.
When it is reversed,
you're less likely to have sex.
-Some people might have more
sensitive brakes or faster accelerators,
and you can really be any combination of the two.
That's totally normal. And our brains don't exist in a vacuum.
They're affected by everything around and in us.
Things like medications, past experiences,
physical and mental health,
body image, relationship status,
trauma, our personal history with sex,
and of course,
the ever-present societal messaging
about what sex, what kind you have,
who you have it with and when or how often you have it.
What that says about you as a person.
-Basically, everything impacts sexual desire,
and that is part of the reason why it has been difficult
for any professional,
like on the medical side
or on the mental health side
to be able to quickly pinpoint exactly
why Hypo Sexual Desire Disorder comes to fruition.
-People who feel, for whatever
reason that they have low sexual desire
might feel that they're broken or sick,
which obviously can impact quality of life
and make relationships and sex more difficult.
It also creates the opportunity
for wellness and pharmaceutical companies
to sell drugs and supplements that claim
to fix it.
But in some cases,
it might be that you are normal
and it's our perception of what's normal
that's the problem we should fix.
Because until the early 2000s,
most research into the dual control
model had only been done in men.
This data was then used to form
scientific and medical norms
of sexual desire and response
that were just applied to everyone else.
And that means that the norm is going to be off
base for at least some of us.
-I wish that people knew that
sexual desire is entirely changeable
as it changes throughout your entire lifespan.
But it also changes with context.
So sexual desire is not written in stone.
It's going to be about what you do in your daily life
to sort of feed back into it.
-Now I want to make it really clear here that we're not talking
about physiological sexual
dysfunction in this episode.
If you're experiencing pain with sex
or extreme emotional distress, if you're dealing with something
like vaginismus or hormone fluctuations
as a result of pregnancy or menopause,
these things can absolutely impact your desire.
And it's really important that you speak to your OB-GYN
or your primary care doctor about it.
But the bottom line
is that when it comes to pretty much anything in the health
field, you are unique
and this includes sex.
So what's normal is going to be unique to you
because there's no one normal
that can be applied to everyone.
So take the time to figure out
what revs your engine.
Get in touch with your own desire,
explore, talk about it
and find the contexts that work for you.
Thank you all so much for watching Seeker's Body Language.
If you have another topic like this, you want us to cover in this series,
let us know in the comments, and I'll see you next time.
Thanks so much
for watching Seeker's body language.
I hope you enjoyed this video and I'll see you next time.