Infidelity, Intimacy and the Existential Reckoning: A Sex Therapist’s View
An existential sex therapist explores how infidelity, rather than just being a betrayal, often reveals deeper existential and relational issues, such as unmet desires, emotional disconnection and the fear of aloneness. Through sex therapy and couples therapy, partners can move beyond blame to explore the meaning behind the affair, confront uncomfortable truths, and reconnect emotionally and erotically. The goal isn’t to “fix” the relationship, but to face its reality with honesty. Infidelity, when explored deeply, can become a catalyst for transformation, either toward reconnection or conscious separation.
Emotional Connection: The Heart of Sex Therapy
Sexual concerns are often assumed to be technical problems, yet many reflect a deeper disconnection from emotional life and selfhood. When intimacy loses safety or resonance, desire often adapts by withdrawing or becoming effortful. From an existential sex therapy perspective, sex is less about performance and more about contact with oneself, making the real work a matter of emotional presence rather than technique.
When Our Insecurities Masquerade as Preferences
Many sexual preferences function less as expressions of desire and more as strategies that protect against rejection, exposure or emotional overwhelm. From an existential sex therapy perspective, these patterns help regulate closeness and identity rather than signaling dysfunction. The work lies in understanding what a preference protects, which allows desire to move with more choice and less fear.
When Clients Ask How to Stop Attracting Narcissists
Clients frequently ask how to stop attracting narcissists. From an existential perspective, the focus is less on labels and more on the relational patterns that allow narcissistic dynamics to persist. This work centers on boundaries as expressions of selfhood rather than strategies, inviting clients to face fear, reclaim agency and choose relationships grounded in reciprocity and authenticity.
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.