If you’ve ever wondered, “Why don’t I want sex like I used to?” or “Why does intimacy feel like pressure instead of connection?”—you’re not alone. And more importantly, you’re not broken. In this first installment of a 3-part series on sex and intimacy, we’re exploring the science of desire through the lens of Emily Nagoski and applying it to real relationships, real stress, and real emotional experiences. This is about moving away from performance-based sex and toward connection, safety, and authentic pleasure. Pleasure is the measure—not orgasm. According to Emily Nagoski, the goal of sex isn’t orgasm—it’s whether you liked the experience. In this podcast episode of All Things Love and Intimacy with Katie Ziskind learn why playfulness is the missing ingredient in your sex life.
“Instead of asking, ‘Did we have sex?’
What if couples asked, ‘Did we experience pleasure, play, fun, and connection?’”

The Science of Sexual Desire: Accelerators & Brakes
One of the most helpful frameworks for understanding libido is the idea that your brain has two systems:
- Accelerators: What turns you on
- Brakes: What turns you off
Desire isn’t just about increasing stimulation—it’s about understanding what’s inhibiting it.
For many women, the issue isn’t a lack of desire. It’s that the brakes are activated.

What Activates the Sexual Brakes?
Your nervous system is constantly scanning for safety. When it senses stress, pressure, criticism, or disconnection, it prioritizes protection over sexual pleasure.
Common “brakes” include:
- Chronic stress and burnout
- Mental load (thinking about kids, work, responsibilities)
- Emotional disconnection or unresolved conflict
- Feeling criticized, unseen, or unappreciated
- Pressure to perform or “get in the mood”
- Body image concerns or self-consciousness
These aren’t personal flaws—they are nervous system responses.
You can’t access pleasure when your body doesn’t feel safe. In this episode of All Things Love and Intimacy with Katie Ziskind, you can learn about sexual accelerators and brakes.
⚠️ Emotional brakes
- Feeling criticized, judged, or “not enough”
- Unresolved conflict or resentment
- Feeling like sex is an obligation
👉 Podcast line:
“Resentment is one of the strongest inhibitors of desire.”
😵💫 Mental load brakes (HUGE for women)
- Thinking about:
- Kids
- Work deadlines
- Household tasks
- Feeling like she has to manage everything
👉 “If her brain is still running the to-do list, her body can’t fully open to pleasure.”
😬 Performance & pressure brakes
- “We haven’t had sex in a while…” (pressure cue)
- Partner initiating only when they want sex
- Feeling responsible for partner’s orgasm
👉 “Pressure activates the brakes—even if the intention is connection.”
🧊 Body image & self-consciousness
- Worrying about how her body looks
- Not feeling attractive or comfortable
- Comparing herself to unrealistic standards
😣 Trauma & safety brakes
- History of sexual trauma
- Feeling emotionally unsafe or unseen
- Lack of control or choice
👉 “The body will not prioritize pleasure if it doesn’t feel safe.”

What Turns the Accelerators On?
In this episode of All Things Love and Intimacy with Katie Ziskind, you can learn about sexual accelerators. Instead of asking, “How do I increase my sex drive?” a more helpful question is:
“What helps my body feel safe, connected, and open?”
Sexual accelerators often include:
- Emotional safety and secure attachment
- Feeling desired, chosen, and valued
- Playfulness, curiosity, and lightness
- Slowing down and removing pressure
- Non-goal-oriented touch and connection
- Being present in your body (not stuck in your thoughts)
Foreplay isn’t just physical—it’s how you’re treated all day.
Pleasure grows in play, not performance
Eroticism thrives in curiosity, not pressure
Sex is not a goal-oriented activity—it’s a context for connection
💛 Emotional & relational sexual accelerators
- Feeling chosen, seen, appreciated, and desired, not just available
- Partner says: “I’ve been thinking about you all day” (specific, intentional desire)
- Being listened to emotionally without being fixed
- Repair after conflict (“I see how I hurt you”)
👉 “Feeling emotionally safe is one of the most powerful aphrodisiacs for women.”
🧠 Mental accelerators
- Anticipation (a flirty text earlier in the day)
- Space to get into her body (no rushing)
- Freedom from pressure to perform
👉 “Turn-on often starts in the mind long before the body.”
🌿 Environmental accelerators
- Clean, calm space (not overstimulating or chaotic)
- Privacy (no kids knocking, no interruptions)
- Sensory comfort (lighting, temperature, soft textures)
💫 Body-based accelerators
- Slow, non-demand touch (not goal-oriented)
- Touch that feels curious, not entitled
- Time to build arousal gradually
👉 “Sexual pleasure grows when there’s no rush to get anywhere.”

😄 EXAMPLES OF FUN + SILLINESS (female-centered, pressure-free)
1. The “This Feels Good / This Doesn’t” Game
- One partner touches (non-sexual or sensual)
- The other gives playful, low-stakes feedback:
- “Ooo wait, slower… that’s nice”
- “Nope, that feels like a mosquito attack” 😄
👉 Why it works:
- Removes pressure to “get it right”
- Builds body awareness + communication
2. The “Stay in Curiosity” Rule
- You’re not allowed to escalate anything
- Just explore:
- Different types of touch
- Temperature (warm/cool hands)
- Pace
👉 Podcast line:
“Curiosity turns the accelerators on—performance slams the brakes.”
3. Laughing During Intimacy (YES—this matters)
- Someone loses balance
- A weird noise happens
- You bump heads
👉 Instead of shutting down:
- Laugh together
- Stay connected
👉 This is HUGE for women:
- Laughter = nervous system safety
- Safety = more access to pleasure
4. “Sensual, Not Sexual” Nights
- No expectation of intercourse
- Focus on:
- Massage
- Skin-to-skin contact
- Eye contact
- Breathing together
👉 Why this matters:
- Removes the “where is this going?” pressure
- Which is one of the biggest brakes for women
5. Playful Constraints (this is underrated and VERY effective)
- “We can only use our hands tonight”
- “We can’t rush”
- “We stay above the shoulders”
👉 Counterintuitive truth:
Limits actually increase creativity and play
6. The “Goofiness Reset”
If things feel tense:
- Make a silly face
- Use a ridiculous voice
- Say something intentionally awkward
👉 Example:
“Well… this is my very serious sensual moment” (in a dramatic tone)
👉 Why it works:
- Breaks performance anxiety
- Brings both people back into connection over perfection
7. Music + Movement
- Put on music
- Move together slowly (even awkwardly)
- No “right way” to do it
👉 This helps women:
- Drop out of their head
- Into their body

Why Female Sexual Desire Is Often Misunderstood
Many women don’t experience spontaneous desire. Instead, desire often shows up after sexual arousal begins—a concept known as responsive desire.
This means:
- You may not start in the mood
- But you can become interested once you feel safe, connected, and engaged
This is normal. It’s not dysfunction—it’s biology.
The Role of Pressure in Killing Desire
One of the most common patterns I see in couples therapy is this:
The more pressure there is to have sex, the less desire there is to engage in it.
Pressure activates the brakes.
Play turns them off.
When intimacy becomes a task, obligation, or performance, the body resists. When it becomes a space for curiosity, connection, and exploration, desire has room to grow.
A New Definition of Intimacy
Instead of measuring intimacy by frequency, orgasm, or intercourse, consider this:
Did you feel connected?
And, did you feel safe?
Did you experience pleasure—without pressure?
Sex is not something to achieve. It’s something to experience.

Low desire is often not about broken sexuality—it’s about overactive brakes.
For many women, arousal is less about adding stimulation and more about removing inhibition.
The body will not prioritize pleasure if it doesn’t feel safe.
Emotional safety, reduced stress, and feeling wanted—not used—are central to female pleasure.
Foreplay starts in how you treat each other all day.
You can’t out-touch a stressed nervous system.
Desire doesn’t grow in pressure—it grows in safety.
The biggest sex organ is the brain—and it’s always scanning for safety or threat.
How This Shows Up in Relationships
In couples, these dynamics often overlap with attachment patterns:
- Anxious partners may unintentionally create pressure (activating brakes)
- Avoidant partners may struggle with emotional closeness (reducing accelerators)
- Trauma histories can make the brake system more sensitive
Understanding these patterns helps couples shift from blame to awareness—and from disconnection to collaboration.

A Trauma-Informed, Attachment-Based Approach to Intimacy
At Wisdom Within Counseling, the work of Katie Ziskind integrates attachment theory, trauma healing, and somatic awareness to help individuals and couples reconnect with their bodies and each other.
This holistic, sex positive counseling approach focuses on:
- Nervous system regulation
- Emotional attunement
- Inner child healing
- Communication and repair
- Creating safety before expecting desire
At Wisdom Within Counseling, Katie Ziskind specializes in supporting survivors of sexual trauma with a deeply trauma-informed, attachment-based approach that prioritizes safety, consent, and nervous system regulation.
She understands that experiences of sexual trauma can profoundly impact desire, boundaries, trust, and the ability to feel present in the body. In therapy, Katie helps clients gently reconnect with themselves, process past experiences at their own pace, and rebuild a sense of agency and empowerment in both their emotional and sexual lives.
Katie Ziskind also works with individuals healing from religious trauma and the lasting effects of purity culture, which can create shame, fear, and confusion around sexuality and intimacy.
Many clients come to therapy feeling disconnected from their bodies or uncertain about what healthy, pleasurable intimacy looks like. Through compassionate, nonjudgmental support, she helps clients deconstruct harmful beliefs and replace them with values rooted in self-trust, autonomy, and authentic expression.
For those navigating the impacts of purity culture, Katie Ziskind provides sex-positive education that reframes sexuality as a natural, healthy, and relational experience rather than something tied to guilt or obligation.
She helps clients explore their own desires, boundaries, and comfort levels without pressure, creating space for curiosity and self-discovery. This work is essential for individuals and couples who want to build a more integrated and empowered relationship with intimacy.
As well, Katie Ziskind frequently supports couples who are repairing their relationship after mistrust, including emotional disconnection, broken trust, or sexual betrayal.
She guides partners through structured conversations that foster accountability, empathy, and emotional repair, helping them move from blame and defensiveness into understanding and reconnection. This process lays the foundation for rebuilding both emotional and physical intimacy.
In relationships where sexual rejection has created hurt or distance, Katie Ziskind helps both partners understand the deeper dynamics at play.
Rather than framing one partner as “withholding” or the other as “needy,” she explores how nervous system responses, attachment patterns, and past experiences contribute to cycles of rejection and pursuit. This reframing reduces shame and opens the door to more compassionate communication.

Katie Ziskind also works with couples experiencing sexual standoffs, where both partners feel stuck, disconnected, or unsure how to move forward.
These dynamics often involve unspoken fears, unmet needs, and a buildup of resentment. Through guided therapy, she helps couples break these patterns by fostering emotional safety, encouraging vulnerability, and introducing new ways of connecting that feel collaborative rather than pressured.
High-conflict fights about sex are another area of focus in Katie Ziskind’s work.
She helps couples slow down reactive patterns and understand the underlying emotions driving these conflicts, such as fear of rejection, inadequacy, or abandonment. By addressing the emotional roots rather than just the surface arguments, couples can begin to shift from conflict into connection.
A key component of Katie Ziskind’s approach is sex-positive education, which empowers couples with accurate, shame-free information about desire, arousal, and intimacy.
She integrates concepts such as responsive desire, emotional safety, and the importance of context, helping couples understand that differences in libido are common and workable when approached with empathy and curiosity.
Katie Ziskind also incorporates somatic and mindfulness-based practices to help clients reconnect with their bodies after trauma or disconnection. These practices support nervous system regulation, increase body awareness, and create a foundation for experiencing pleasure in a way that feels safe and grounded. This body-based work is especially important for survivors of sexual trauma and those healing from shame-based conditioning.
Through Wisdom Within Counseling, Katie Ziskind offers a compassionate, inclusive, and affirming space for individuals and couples to heal from sexual trauma, rebuild trust, and rediscover intimacy.
Her work emphasizes that pleasure, connection, and desire are not things to force, but experiences that naturally emerge when safety, trust, and emotional attunement are present.
When couples learn to reduce stress, communicate openly, and bring in playfulness, intimacy becomes something they want—not something they feel pressured to do.
You can’t access pleasure when you feel evaluated.
Play is the opposite of pressure—and pressure kills desire.
Silliness is not a distraction from intimacy—it’s a doorway into it.
The more goal-oriented sex becomes, the less pleasurable it often is for women.
Pleasure expands in environments where nothing is required.

Listen to the Full Episode
🎧 All Things Love and Intimacy — Episode 139:
Sexual Accelerators & Brakes: The Real Science of Female Desire & What Actually Turns Women On
This episode is perfect if you’re:
- Struggling with low libido
- Navigating mismatched desire in a relationship
- Healing from trauma or emotional disconnection
- Wanting a deeper, more connected sex life

In closing, this entire conversation around play, pleasure, and removing pressure from intimacy reflects the heart of the clinical work and advanced training of Katie Ziskind.
Her approach is rooted in attachment-based therapy, trauma-informed care, and nervous system regulation, helping individuals and couples understand that intimacy is not a performance—it’s an experience shaped by safety, emotional connection, and the body’s sense of trust. Katie Ziskind is a certified sex therapy informed professional (CSTIP).
With specialized training in emotionally focused therapy (EFT), inner child healing, and somatic and mindfulness-based modalities, she supports clients in identifying how past wounds, attachment patterns, and unresolved trauma show up in their sex lives as pressure, shutdown, or disconnection.
Katie Ziskind’s work also integrates psychoeducation around desire, including concepts popularized by Emily Nagoski, such as accelerators and brakes, responsive desire, and the importance of context in shaping arousal.
Rather than focusing on techniques or outcomes like intercourse or orgasm, her clinical lens prioritizes emotional safety, curiosity, and playful connection as the foundation for sustainable intimacy. She helps couples move out of cycles of anxiety, avoidance, and performance pressure, and into experiences of attunement, mutual pleasure, and authentic expression.
Through her trainings and clinical expertise, Katie guides clients in reconnecting with their bodies, increasing emotional responsiveness, and creating space for intimacy that feels collaborative rather than obligatory. Her work highlights that when couples learn to reduce stress, communicate openly, and embrace play and silliness, they naturally access deeper levels of desire and connection. Ultimately, her approach reframes sex not as something to achieve, but as something to experience—where pleasure, presence, and emotional closeness become the true measures of a fulfilling intimate life.
In this episode of All Things Love and Intimacy, we explore how to create deeper connection, pleasure, and emotional safety in your sex life by shifting away from performance-based intimacy and into play, curiosity, and nervous system regulation.
Drawing on the groundbreaking work of Emily Nagoski, this episode breaks down the science of desire, including the concepts of sexual “accelerators and brakes,” responsive desire, and why context matters more than technique when it comes to female-centered pleasure.
If you’ve ever wondered why your libido feels low, why you don’t spontaneously crave sex, or why intimacy can sometimes feel like pressure instead of connection, this episode offers a compassionate and research-backed perspective. You’ll learn how stress, emotional disconnection, mental load, and unresolved conflict can activate the brain’s “brakes,” shutting down arousal, while safety, playfulness, and emotional attunement activate the “accelerators” that allow pleasure to emerge naturally.
This episode also focuses on how to bring more fun, silliness, and ease into your intimate life. Instead of focusing on penetration or performance, we explore how playful touch, laughter, curiosity, and non-goal-oriented connection can help couples reconnect physically and emotionally.
You’ll hear examples of how to create “pressure-free” intimacy, why laughter and lightness are essential for nervous system safety, and how shifting into a mindset of exploration can transform your relationship with sex.

Hosted by Katie Ziskind, a licensed marriage and family therapist specializing in attachment-based therapy, trauma healing, and couples counseling, this episode integrates clinical insight with real-life application.
Katie Ziskind’s approach emphasizes emotional safety, secure attachment, and somatic awareness, helping individuals and couples move out of cycles of anxiety, avoidance, and disconnection, and into deeper intimacy and trust.
Whether you’re navigating mismatched libidos, healing from relationship trauma, rebuilding intimacy after conflict, or simply wanting to feel more connected in your body and relationship, this episode offers practical tools and a powerful reframe: you are not broken.
Your nervous system is responding to your environment. When you create safety, reduce pressure, and invite play, pleasure becomes more accessible.
This episode is especially helpful for couples experiencing communication challenges, emotional distance, or stress-related intimacy struggles, as well as individuals interested in personal growth, self-awareness, and improving their sex life in a holistic, emotionally connected way. Topics include responsive desire, emotional intimacy, female libido, relationship communication, trauma-informed sex therapy, nervous system regulation, and mindful connection.
If you’re ready to move away from obligation and toward authentic, connected, and playful intimacy, this episode will give you the language, tools, and confidence to begin.
If you don’t like sex, you are not broken.
Your body is responding exactly as it was designed to. Katie Ziskind helps you develop sexual confidence, learn to orgasm, and speak up about what brings you pleasure as a female and vulva owner.
When you create safety, reduce pressure, and invite play, pleasure becomes more accessible—and intimacy becomes something that feels natural, connected, and deeply fulfilling.
If this resonates with you, leave a five star review, sharing this post, or reaching out for support. You don’t have to navigate this alone.
Work with Katie Ziskind, Certified Sex Therapy Informed Professional
Katie Ziskind is a licensed marriage and family therapist offering therapy services across multiple states, including Texas, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida. Her multi-state licensure allows her to support individuals and couples with relationship therapy, trauma-informed care, and intimacy-focused counseling, both in-person and through secure telehealth sessions. This broad accessibility makes it easier for clients to receive consistent, high-quality care regardless of their location.

As a licensed marriage and family therapist in Texas, Katie Ziskind provides specialized couples counseling for high-conflict relationships, attachment issues, and emotional disconnection.
Her work focuses on helping partners rebuild trust, improve communication, and develop deeper emotional intimacy using evidence-based approaches like emotionally focused therapy (EFT) and somatic techniques.
In New Jersey, Katie Ziskind offers therapy services that center on anxiety, depression, trauma recovery, and relationship challenges.
Her holistic and attachment-based approach supports individuals and couples in understanding how early life experiences and attachment patterns influence current relationships, helping clients move toward secure and fulfilling connections.
As a licensed therapist in Connecticut, Katie Ziskind brings years of clinical expertise in marriage counseling, sex focused therapy, and inner child healing.
She works with couples navigating infidelity, intimacy struggles, and communication breakdowns, offering tools to repair emotional wounds and create a stronger, more connected partnership.
In Florida, at Wisdom Within Counseling, Katie Ziskind provides both in-person therapy in Melbourne, Florida and telehealth counseling services.
Her Florida clients benefit from a warm, relational, and trauma-informed approach that integrates nervous system regulation, mindfulness, and emotional attunement to foster healing and growth. She offers animal therapy with her friendly cats and dogs, art, creative painting, yoga nidra, somatic yoga therapy, and walk and talk therapy.
Marriage Therapy Intensives and Retreats For Improving Your Sex Life
Katie Ziskind also offers marriage therapy intensives, which are extended, focused sessions designed to help couples make meaningful progress in a shorter period of time. These intensives are ideal for couples experiencing high levels of conflict, disconnection, or crisis, and provide a structured space for deep emotional work and breakthrough moments.
In addition to intensives, Katie Ziskind facilitates couples retreats that combine therapeutic support with immersive, restorative experiences. These retreats are designed to help couples step away from daily stressors and reconnect in a supportive environment, focusing on communication, intimacy, and rebuilding trust.
Her telehealth therapy services make it possible for clients in Texas, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Florida to access relationship counseling from the comfort of their own homes. Online therapy sessions are secure, convenient, and effective, allowing clients to maintain consistency in their healing journey without the need for travel.

Katie Ziskind’s approach to marriage and family therapy is deeply rooted in attachment theory, inner child work, trauma-informed care, and emotional connection.
She specializes in helping couples move out of reactive patterns and into a more secure, responsive, and connected dynamic, improving both emotional and physical intimacy.
Through Wisdom Within Counseling, Katie Ziskind provides a comprehensive range of services, including couples therapy, marriage intensives, relationship retreats, and online counseling. Her multi-state licensure and flexible service options make her a trusted resource for individuals and couples seeking expert support in love, intimacy, and long-term relationship healing.


