When Focus Costs You Friends
When you commit to a goal that requires depth and focus, some relationships naturally fall away. Many acquaintances are bonded by shared routines or avoidance rather than genuine intimacy and when your priorities shift, those bonds lose their foundation. From an existential perspective this is not failure or selfishness but differentiation. You are choosing authorship over comfort and that choice changes who can walk alongside you. The loneliness that often follows is not emptiness but space for more aligned and meaningful connections to form. Losing people in this season is not a sign that something is wrong. It is often evidence that you are becoming.
When Spontaneous Sex Is Not a Requirement for Desire
Planned sex is often viewed as less authentic than spontaneous sex, yet recent research with parents suggests that intentional intimacy can increase desire, frequency and satisfaction without adding pressure. Cultural beliefs about spontaneity shape how couples interpret their erotic lives, sometimes limiting connection when daily demands make spontaneity unrealistic. From an existential sex therapy perspective, planning can reflect agency and authorship rather than deficiency, allowing intimacy to emerge through choice rather than chance.
Fate, Sex and the Shadow: An Existential Sex Therapist’s Reflection on Jung, Stoicism and the Unconscious
This essay, written from the perspective of an existential sex therapist, explores Carl Jung’s idea that the unconscious shapes our lives until we become aware of it, often mistaking repetitive relational and sexual patterns as "fate." By integrating Jungian psychology, existentialism and Stoicism, the essay encourages readers to examine their inner world, take responsibility for their choices and approach intimacy with intention rather than compulsion. True freedom in love and sexuality begins when we make the unconscious conscious and choose awareness over autopilot.
The Façade of Control: An Existential Sex Therapist's Reflection
Many attempts to control sexuality reflect efforts to manage fear, shame or vulnerability rather than desire itself. While control can create a sense of safety, it often reduces spontaneity and emotional presence, which diminishes erotic vitality. From an existential sex therapy perspective, the work is not to eliminate control but to understand what it protects, making room for a more engaged and truthful relationship with intimacy.
Letting Yourself Be Loved: An Existential Sex Therapist’s Reflection on Vulnerability
Allowing someone to love you can feel like standing at the edge of a cliff: expansive, beautiful and frightening. The fear is not a defect. It reflects the risks embedded in intimacy. To receive love is to be seen, and being seen awakens the parts of us that are most uncertain about being revealed.
You Don’t Need to Know the Why to Choose Differently
People often seek insight into why they repeat certain patterns in intimacy or relationships, yet understanding alone rarely produces change. From an existential sex therapy perspective, transformation begins when a person notices the pattern as it occurs and discovers the capacity to choose a different response. Insight opens awareness, but agency emerges in the pause between stimulus and action, where meaning and responsibility reside.