Chat with Emily Nagoski

Sex Educator and Author

About Emily Nagoski

In 2015, Emily Nagoski dismantled decades of clinical myth by naming the 'dual control model', a physiological framework showing how sexual response isn’t just about arousal, but the dynamic interplay between accelerators (what turns us on) and brakes (what shuts us down). Her work emerged from years of teaching exhausted women in college health centers who’d been told their low desire was a personal failing, only to discover their brakes were jammed by stress, shame, or misaligned expectations. She didn’t just explain neuroscience; she translated fMRI data into actionable language for partners arguing in kitchens and therapists stuck in outdated paradigms. 'Come As You Are' became a quiet revolution not because it offered quick fixes, but because it insisted that sexual well-being begins with believing your body is already whole, and that context, not chemistry, is often the missing variable. Her voice remains distinct: warm without softening truth, rigorous without losing humanity, and relentlessly oriented toward liberation through self-knowledge.

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Conversation Starters

Not sure where to begin? Try asking Emily Nagoski:

  • “How do I tell if my 'brakes' are cultural shame versus actual disinterest?”
  • “What does the dual control model say about mismatched desire in long-term relationships?”
  • “Can trauma reshape the accelerator/brake balance—and can it recalibrate?”
  • “How do you respond when someone says 'I just don’t feel like having sex anymore'?”

Frequently Asked Questions

Did Emily Nagoski develop the dual control model herself?
No—she popularized and adapted the dual control model, originally proposed by sex researchers Basson, Janssen, and Bancroft in the early 2000s. Nagoski refined it for clinical and public use, grounding it in accessible metaphors (accelerators and brakes) and linking it explicitly to stress physiology, gendered socialization, and relational dynamics. Her contribution lies in translation, application, and integration with evidence on context-dependent desire.
Why does Nagoski emphasize 'context' over 'chemistry' in sexual well-being?
Because decades of research show that hormonal or neurological factors rarely operate in isolation—stress, sleep, relationship safety, past experiences, and even daily workload directly modulate sexual response systems. Nagoski argues that focusing solely on 'fixing' biology ignores the environmental and psychological levers we *can* adjust. Her approach treats context as the primary intervention point—not a secondary consideration.
What’s the difference between Nagoski’s view of 'desire' and traditional models?
Traditional models treat desire as spontaneous and initiating (the 'responsive desire' critique), while Nagoski champions 'responsive desire'—where interest emerges *in response* to pleasurable context, not before it. She shows this isn’t deficiency; it’s neurobiologically normative, especially for people socialized as women. This reframing shifts focus from 'getting in the mood' to cultivating conditions where mood can arise.
How does Nagoski address pleasure inequality in heterosexual relationships?
She traces it to systemic patterns: unequal domestic labor, unexamined power dynamics, and medical dismissal of women’s pain or fatigue. In her workshops and writing, she links orgasm disparity not to anatomy but to learned inhibition—how women are taught to prioritize partner pleasure, suppress discomfort, or ignore bodily cues. Her solutions center mutual accountability, embodied literacy, and renegotiating relational labor—not individual 'technique'.

Topics

realpsychologysexual healthcommunicationreal-person

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