Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Sex? After Kids? Tell Me More, Esther Perel
Episode Date: February 7, 2023What happens when two become three, or four, or five? Who is responsible for the needs and wants of a couple when days are filled with playdates, pick-ups, and meal preps? Nights lack the erotic energ...y that couples need not only to survive but to thrive. This week, Dr. Becky consults with the renowned couples therapist, Esther Perel, to talk about what parents can do to rekindle their desires. Join Good Inside Membership: bit.ly/3HKYL3UFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterOrder Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books.For a full transcript of the episode go to goodinside.com/podcastFor more Esther Perel, head to estherperel.com or listen to her podcast Where Should We Begin. Stories are the building blocks of relationships and Esther Perel designed a game to bring out the storyteller in you. Get yours at https://game.estherperel.com Â
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If it's been a while, and you know what I mean, then this episode is for you.
Aroticism, touch, sex.
These things often feel impossibly far away in our partnership during the period of raising
young kids.
And who better to talk about these themes with than the pre-eminent expert on all things
relationship and intimacy, the one the only a stare-paral. Everything that family life flourishes on,
consistency and routine is often what kills the erotic. Eroticism thrives on this mystery, on the surprise,
on the unknown, and it's as if people have enough of that
coming just from their children.
And it's like eroticism thrives on everything
that family life defends against.
You don't want to miss this episode, and I mean it.
You don't want to miss this episode.
We'll be back right after this.
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Hi, Esther.
Hello, Becky.
I am so excited to have you on the podcast.
And when I told the members of our community that you were coming on,
people, I don't know, more sophisticated way of saying that they freaked out.
They just freaked out.
They're so excited. And I joined them in that feeling. So I'm just so happy that you're here.
It's a treat, really. So for anybody listening who is not familiar with you or your work,
tell us a little bit about who you are and the types of things you're interested in.
interested in. So I'm a couple's and family therapist. I was trained, particularly in working with families and with couples, and I've had a predilection for working with people from
multiple different cultural, racial and religious backgrounds. I spent many, many years actually
working with mixed families. Then I brought to that the subject of sexuality
because it was also a cultural lens of how we look
at sexuality in our relationships.
And I am the author of two books,
mating in captivity and the state of affairs.
I have two podcasts where should we begin and how is work,
which both feature anonymous, raw,
live, couples therapy sessions, one in the romantic sphere, one in the workplace, where I invite
you to come behind closed doors and see what really happens in the lives of couples behind closed
doors. But this is what you do with parents. You do something very
similar. You bring the parents out of their isolation, out of their shame, out of their,
you know, this is just happening to me thing. Why can everybody else have normal kids and
handle situations well? And you create a community for the challenges of parents who today,
like I try to create a global community for the challenges of parenthood today, like I try to create a global community
for the challenges of modern love.
And I love the overlap that we're entering into here,
because so many of the challenges in parenting
are the challenges of partnership, all parenting,
maybe especially while parenting, young kids.
And when I think about the questions
that come up the most from parents,
when I might say to them something like,
okay, I hear all the stuff going on with your kids,
all important, we'll get to it.
Let's kind of just put that to the side.
Tell me about what else is going on in your life.
Tell me the other things are going on in your home.
The state of the partnership is almost always
like the first thing to come out.
You know, some version of,
oh, there's so much conflict with my partner.
I hate my husband.
You know, we have different parenting styles.
I do everything.
I'm resentful.
You know, we're so disconnected.
We're fighting all the time.
Sex, oh, sex, oh my goodness.
And none of that.
That is so far from what's happening.
And the relationship between how someone feels in their
partnership and how their family system is functioning
and the behavior is their child is in a way,
therefore, displaying are also interrelated.
They're absolutely interrelated, but I will give you,
I will even push it a level above, is this?
This is the first time in the history of humankind
that the survival of the family depends on the happiness of the couple.
We used to get married, or that basically was the way to be in a committed relationship.
And that was that.
One time for life, and if you were stuck, today you can leave.
And so the only reason, there's no excommunication, there is women who have enough to take care
of themselves economically.
The only reason the family will stay together is because the couple is relatively content.
That means that if you're going to want to give everything to your children, you really want to make sure that one of the things you give them
is a relationship between two adults that is alive and driving.
Give everything to your children.
Let me open that door. What do you see?
Well, there is an unprecedented child centrality
that has almost reached an apex of folly at this point.
And it is living side by side with a high unprecedented rise of expectations of our romantic partnerships.
And these two are clashing on resources, time, money, attention, intimacy, connection, who's going to get it?
So just tell me this is right. I have higher expectations of partnership than we've ever had.
Yep. While I'm pouring more of my energy into my kids,
that's right. Then I ever have.
Yes, that's exactly.
And those are really hard to tell you.
Very simple terms.
Well, it's a pool.
For sure.
It's a pool.
So and at the same time, if you really want to give more to your children,
make sure to give more to the couple. Because otherwise comes a time when they won't be a couple
for the children. So, I want to jump into a specific, and I'm going to a little bit make this up,
but it's a myriad of so many people's stories. And I just hear their voices, right, hearing what you're saying.
Put more into my, into my partnership.
My partner is someone I feel very angry with right now.
My partner puts no energy into me or into the kids.
My partner comes home and thinks they can just waltz in and play with the kids and doesn't
think it's a big deal that I've been, you know, taking care of the family the whole day. How can I put more into my partnership? When I feel like I'm an old more by my partner.
Right, but that is one litany you just gave me now, which is you know I'm a couple's therapist. It's often a drop-off center
where somebody drops off another person to come and say to me, here, here's the problem.
Let me explain to you, I'm an expert on this problem, and then you can go and fix it.
And much of what you start to do when you work with a couple is basically you try to divide
accountability.
You know, what is it that you do, that you bring?
How is this?
What are you doing together that keeps this problem in place?
That's an ecological view. How is the couple
organized in such a way that you keep on being resentful and you partner keeps of being
missing in action? So the first thing is, you know, does your relationship matter to you?
That's the first question. Now you can say say I don't have anything left to give to this relationship and then it divides in a few different
Strains so we need to break your question in small pieces. I like your first question, right?
And I want to like allow the listeners to like sit with that as they're I don't know probably also
Driving or I don't know pick up line or doing something else.
That question really hit me. Does your relationship matter to you?
It's interesting how quickly it seems like someone to say, but this, but this, just to sit with
the question. Does it matter? Correct. If the answer is yes, allow that to be enough.
No, that's the second follow-up.
Then the follow-up is, and what is it that you do to express its importance?
Because when you take care of your little schmurfs, you are organizing activities.
You are making sure that there is novelty.
You go and make sure that they have new clothes,
no friends, no explorations, no discoveries.
You bring a tremendous amount of energy into that relationship.
And so there is plenty to talk about,
plenty to reflect upon, plenty of pictures to look at, etc.
Now tell me, how have you manifested, how have you shown to yourself, forget even to your partner, that your relationship matters? What have you done for that?
Typically, the kid has a play date every week and many of the couples of the kind that you've just described
have three dates a year. My birthday, you birthday in our anniversary and maybe we'll have sex on the anniversary just to
make sure that we can still prove we are a couple. So to speak. So does it matter
to you? And if so, what is it that you do that makes that importance visible. You know, it's so so simple what you're asking. And this is what
I was saying before we were recording, like you have this way of reframing things which
such simplicity, but they're so it's so provocative at the same time. Is there like a myth out
there or a fantasy like my partnership should work out in a way or without without this effort or why
is that so hard to put the energy into your partnership to say yeah I have to plan things too.
And I also just like with kids I say sorry I repair I reconnect I you know do fun things together, we play.
Why does that feel so unnatural in partnerships?
When I wrote mating in captivity, I tried to really understand what happens to this,
what I call the erotic energy, the creative energy that makes us feel alive, vibrant vital. That's what you call to play,
to roll on the floor, to love, to create, to tickle, to look at each other, to love,
together, etc. That's a rotic energy. You're not just talking about
exactly time. No, no, no. I'm talking about that creative outburst, that energy that makes
you feel alive. Everyone understands it with children.
And the way that I understood why it happens,
there's a few different things happening in the couple.
You know, first of all, when you have kids,
it's a revolution in the couple.
It completely shifts all the resources,
the time, the attention, the intimacy, the money.
It all shifts. Why?
Because when you are in a relationship, you negotiate continuously two polls.
You negotiate, you need for stability and predictability and reliability, and then you
also negotiate, you need for novelty and exploration and risk and change and movement, etc.
But when you have a child, you become stability. You become security,
so that the child can become adventure. The child itself is an adventure that you're
going on and that you are accompanying. And so you try to stabilize yourself. And as a
result, when people say, actually, if you ask me about sex, if people say sex in a couple,
you must be kidding. And I say, no, let's not talk about sex, is that people say sex in a couple, you must be kidding.
And I say, no, no, let's not talk about sex.
But let's talk about that erotic energy, playfulness,
imagination, aliveness, curiosity, engagement, et cetera.
It is alive and well, but it is eros redirected.
It all goes to the children.
With the idea that the adults will kind of survive
like a cactus,
that you don't even need to water, and on occasion you look at,
and it will give all its energy to the little ones,
and slowly it will begin to gasp.
And then one person says, what is going on here?
Where are we at? We haven't, you know, whatever.
We haven't gone hiking, we haven't been alone, we haven't gone on a date.
When is the last time we went dancing?
When is the last time we touched each other and looked at each other the way
that we are constantly adoring each other's kids?
And when is the last time that when you say, how are you?
I didn't answer how is Jimmy.
But actually, how are you? And not what you did and what
you got done and what is off the list, how are you? What's happening to this person right
here next to me, who is going through a lot of things? That is the loss that takes place.
Eros redirected. All that energy goes to the little ones. And then there's the
next tension, which is that everything that family life flourishes on, consistency and
routine is often what kills the erotic. Eroticism thrives on this mystery, on the surprise,
on the unknown, and it's as if people have enough of that coming just from their children.
And it's like eroticism thrives on everything
that family life defends against.
So those two poles, right?
You're saying once you have young kids,
like it's actually understandable
that you lean more into the stability and predictability.
To go to the side, like it's understandable.
No one's doing anything wrong.
And it used to be fine when we thought that family
life should be about family and that we didn't really
care if a couple was romantic and parents
least slept in separate beds the day after they were
done conceiving.
And all of that worked perfectly fine when we had
a different conception of the adult relationship.
And in this day and age, right, where we are overwhelmed with information.
I wonder also if that pull into the rigidity and the stability.
Right?
Parents these days, it's like,
this is how you have to do this with your baby.
And this is what you have to do.
There's so much rigidity, right?
And so much focus on, you know, the right way.
I feel like these days, there's even more of a poll, you know, toward that end.
Yes, because parenting and child-rearing practices have become very dogmatic in the West.
Highly dogmatic, with a sense of over-responsibility on the parents, on the responsibility on the institutions and the society.
So the parents are literally filtering through
all the unknowns and all the pressures and it's all on them.
And every small movement can make or break the future of their little ones
with a sense of complete overwhelm and panic.
Yeah.
So the system that is in place, when I see the system,
I say the culture at large, is really no longer saying,
child development is a natural process
that you go to certain stages,
and the role of the parent is to shepherd you through those stages.
No, today child development is an artificial creation on the part of the adults that are
taking care of these children and depending on how they respond to them, how they expose them, etc,
they're going to create this creature versus that creature. So we are in a phase where culture is
more important than nature. That changes, by the way. That changes every 10 years. Are we close?
I don't know, but I know that every time that we get hooked on a dogma when it comes to parenting,
10 years later, the truth of today is the joke of tomorrow.
100%. So we have to really be understood that these are not fundamentals.
You have three. You know that what works for one is very different from what works for
the other. And that what allows you to really flow is the fact that you can change because you see
who is the other kids. I always say that. That my kids each require me to lead with a different
part of me. Like they all require very weird things. That's extremely weird. And so that's
required me to do a lot of work to build certain certain
of those parts are more natural to lead with. That's right. And
others, you know, weren't, you know, so which is super important in when
people get into the I'm not a good parent. Of course, you seem to have been
perfectly fine for child number one and two or one and three or whatever.
And this one is more challenging
because they call something in you a part of your leadership that is more difficult.
Yes. But that is to do with the relationship and the fit between one temperament and another,
not your competence. 100%. I feel like it calls out one of the more underdeveloped parts of you.
Right?
about one of the more underdeveloped parts of you. Right?
Hey, so I want to let you in on something
that's kind of counterintuitive about parenting.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting
actually doesn't involve learning any new parenting strategies.
The most impactful way we can change our parenting
is by giving ourselves more resources so we can show up as sturdier,
so we can show up as calm amidst the inevitable chaos.
It's what our kids need from us more than anything else.
This is why I'm doing my mom rage workshop again. I'm doing it
again because it is one of my most popular ones to date. It's coming up July
19 but no worries if you can't make it live. It'll be available as a recording
for whenever you have the time. I promise it's really the best investment we
can make not only in ourselves but also in our kids. Can't wait to see you there at GoodInside.com.
So I'm going to push this back to you.
How did you manage this all?
When you were young kids, you're parenting, you're partnership, and the other thing that
I know we both care a lot about is to be playful or have any erotic energy in our partnership,
so many especially women have lost that in themselves, right?
Like the ability to create space for people.
I remember saying to my husband, there's a few things we're not going to do.
I do not want us to, when they wake up and just say, there's nothing here.
I've worked with the love couples.
I also understood that we are going to do
these things very differently and I'm going to leave every once in a while for a week and you're
going to manage perfectly fine. And if that happens then I should know that I need to trust you so
that when I'm next to you I don't need to constantly monitor you with the remote control.
constantly monitor you with the remote control. I made a lot of what I think and not particularly popular things in the American context. I didn't accompany my kids to their games every Saturday.
I thought that this is bizarre. So I had a way of setting things by bringing in a cultural
difference from as a European and from many other places where I've lived.
And I just knew that this is not the truth.
This is just one way that people do it here.
But people do other things completely different.
And this was true from sharing the bed
to letting cry to the bottle to the good, you know,
from the beginning, I read child-waring books
in French, in Flemish, in Hebrew, and in English.
And for everything that was I was told, this is how you should do it.
I then went to read and I saw that there is other cultures where they said the exact opposite.
And I thought, oh, well, then I can go for my own intuition.
Yeah.
If there isn't one truth, then I can figure out which one is the right that fits here.
And that was so
important to me. I always wanted to write an article about that very experience of what
it was like from zero to three to read child-rearing books from different cultural contexts. It really
gave me such permission, nothing that I was doing it wrong. Later, I, you know, we had our fights because I also came
from a model of, you know, I thought we're going to be equal. And no, we fell into traditional
gender roles and gender divisions that was just like, then this happened to me as well.
But what we did have is a shared desire to make sure that the relationship stays vibrant because
I had seen too many couples die on the vine and I was determined not to make that happen.
So we traveled alone from the moment they were very little, small little things but we gave
ourselves time away.
We continued to go and listen to live music because we liked that and it's an energizing thing or to go dancing every once in a while. I mean we continue to do
things that were not just in the identity of the parent. There was we were two
colleagues, we would go to conferences together, we would learn new things. So we
had new things entering into our system as well. I wanted to socialize, I understood that if you want
a rich social life, you invite people into your house. They come to you, then the kids are there,
they can meet these adults, they can develop relationships with them over decades, they're in
their late 20s now, they know these people since they're born. And they, you know, it became a kind of an extended family of sort. And I was deliberate
about a lot of these things. I have to say, I became a mission for me to arrive on the
other side and to feel like I'm so glad now we have a few more decades, hopefully alone
again, but not like, you know, I have nothing to say to this person.
Well, here's something I want to say to all the listeners because what I hear you saying
I was like, being deliberate, being intentional, and there's attention.
There's like a little bit of a fight for being able to maintain your relationship and being
able to have that vibrancy and that energy.
It doesn't just happen.
And I like you're insane.
You know how I say it.
You know, long term relationship, everything that's going to just happen already has.
It's extremely deliberate.
Yes.
It's deliberate to say, I'm going to put my hands on your hand,
even though it's more hairy than on the little silky skin of the baby,
because we need to stay connected.
It's deliberate to say, let's go out and not to dinner and sit across the table from
each other and finally talk about the kids, because now we have each other's ear.
It's deliberate to say, you know, we are going to take a night away and not feel guilty
about it, but actually think that this is extremely important to resource ourselves.
It's willful, it's deliberate, it's premeditated, I would even say.
And so is the physical connection.
Sometimes you have to just say, it feels good.
You know, it's deliberate sometimes to go to the gym.
Not every time you go to the gym, you just want to go there and you're running.
But somehow in your head, you know that you have rarely regretted afterwards.
So if the connection is good, it's deliberate to say, I want to invest in this, but it's equally
deliberate to tell your partner, thank you. This is important. You see, what feeds the system is the
acknowledgement of the effort too. So when you have little ones, I think it's very natural
in a family to have a role distribution.
You asked me before what's one of my important court routes. This would be one of them.
One parent, the frontline parent. This is true in same sex couples, no different. So it's not always gendered.
But there is a frontline parent. It's also the one that wakes up more easily that has a different sensory threshold. It's the one that maybe is not working for the moment or works with
more flexible hours and can attend more to the disruptions that children bring in the
lab. All of that, but everyone understands frontline parent. The frontline parent looks
at all the stuff, the domesticity, the chaos, the needs of the children, the child care, whatever, the doctors visit, you name it.
The other parent, you can blame them
and resent them for not doing what you do.
Or you can thank them for thinking about the stuff
that you can't think about because you're too involved.
So if you understand a role distribution,
is that what?
Like what? I'm just hearing someone hearing something like sitting on the couch watching TV
No, right like one person says shall we go for a hike?
Well, the other one is talking about what needs to be done.
Or shall we take a bike trip or shall we go at shall we call so and so and go out on set?
How can you think about it? Don't you see the freaking message?
You know, you only talk about play and having fun
Yes, because you don't and you need someone who reminds you in every couple
Over time where people say we were able to maintain it
There is always one of them who says the other person just didn't let it go
They made sure that we had a coffee or a breakfast. They made sure we had our
date night. They made sure we still physically connected. And even though I didn't feel
like it, it's because they didn't let up. So instead of fighting the difference, develop
a complementary to you around it. And I love the way you say and thank the other person
for holding that pole or that part.
And so one of the things you do the whole other is you turn things on their head and help
us all see things differently.
So I'm thinking about someone who recently wrote in this as a question for you, right?
So it was a woman married to a man and she said, you know, I do exactly on the frontline
parents, not what she said, but essentially on the frontline parent.
And I need my husband to do more with the kids.
I need him to come home from work earlier.
I need him to acknowledge the mental load I have.
And then at the end of the day,
he is basically trying to have sex with me.
Like, doesn't he understand that,
like, I can't have sex after feeling so alone
and so unsupported?
Well, like, help us see that a little bit differently and
and we'll be some steps. First of all, I've been that person just so it's not I can
think this way and I get but I also a force myself to think a different way.
And the first thing I would want you to think is that probably he feels just as
alone. Because first of all, quite often, if you think all he wants is sex, you're missing it.
All he wants is to connect with you to feel less alone, but it is also the case that for
men, intimacy, tenderness, connection, touch, affection are only allowed through the license
of the sexual language. Just pause in that for a second, because I think that's so important.
And when we divide, she wants intimacy,
she wants not to feel alone, he wants sex,
we're often off.
It is sometimes true, but it is often off.
Well, you're saying we probably want the same things.
We want the same thing.
And that doesn't mean your husband doesn't say,
that's true, sweetie.
I want vulnerability and intimacy.
That's not right.
That is not the language in which it will be spoken.
The woman has, you know,
every woman has received a licensed language that has helped me.
Every man has received a licensed language which is,
make love to me.
But we want the same thing. We don't want to be alone.
We don't want to feel disconnected.
We don't want to feel that we've become a function in the house.
That the other person barely sees us anymore.
That we're just a machine.
And that we're just on a task list all the time. So here's what I say to this woman.
Instead of you wanting him to help you, this may be all true, but it's not useful.
So I'm going to try to give you a different way to approach your guy and your predicament,
because if you continue as this, it's just going to be more of the same.
And I know where it goes.
I'm 40 years doing couples work.
I kind of know where it goes.
I see it.
I see you around the corner before you get there.
And that's why I say it like that.
It's really annoying because I'm going to make you say things that are not what you really
want to say. So I'm going to make you say things that are not what you really want to say.
So I'm twisting you.
This is, I know the moment, you know?
So if you went to your husband and instead of, I need you to do more with the kids, I miss you.
I miss us.
You know, it's like days go by and we barely talk, connect, check in with each other, it's
like, what the hell has happened?
And I would love to be able to think more about us.
I know you've been asking for that.
I know that you often reach out and I'm just called to you.
I know that I'm often resentful.
Of course I think I'm legitimately resentful, and
I think I'm right. That may be so, but that may not be wise. And I have a feeling that
I would be much more available to us. If when I ask you certain things, you could also
be more responsive to me. So you first acknowledge him. Then you take a ownership for what you
are not doing. And only then do you ask for more for what you want. That order of operations
really matters, right? Because as soon as we lead with you or not, or I need the defensiveness
that then we're against each other, right?
Yeah, you're in an adversarial situation, but it's not just that it is defensive, is that when you are in that dance,
you reinforce in the other the very position that you actually don't want.
Why would they want to do more when all you telling them is that they do nothing?
Tell them that you also want to feel closer to them.
If that's the case, which I hope it is, because if all you want is just a helper, then
your partner is picking up on something, which is why I ask you, does your relationship matter?
All right, if you're feeling like I'm feeling, you're left wanting so much more. There are so
many more questions I want to ask Asterra, and I'd love to absorb all of her wisdom. Well,
guess what? You don't have to wait too long.
Next week, Estera will be back,
answering the questions that came directly from you.
You don't want to miss it.
I'll see you next week.
Thanks for listening.
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so they feel empowered, confident, and connected.
I'm so excited to share good inside membership.
The first platform that brings together content and experts you trust with a global community of like valued parents. It's totally game-changing.
Good Inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jesse Baker and Eric Newsom at Magnificent Noise.
Our production staff includes Sabrina Farhi, Julia Nat and Kristen Muller.
Sabrina Farhi, Julianna and Kristen Muller. I would also like to thank Erica Belsky, Mary Panico, Ashley Valenzuela and the rest of the good inside team.
And one last thing before I let you go.
Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts and reminding ourselves.
Even as I struggle and even as I have a hard time on the outside,
I remain good inside.
So I have an idea.
You might be thinking,
ugh, so much of this episode resonates,
but it's such a hurdle to get over
to talk about these things with my partner.
Well, one of the things I know from working with couples is talking about tricky topics is much easier when you have a third. What do I mean a third? Instead of talking directly about a topic
to a partner that two of you talk about an episode you both listen to or an article you both
saw or a book you both read. So right now, consider sharing this episode with your partner
as a way to bridge the gap.
Maybe at a note like, hey, there were a lot of really interesting points
that made me think about things differently.
Thought you might be interested in this too.
Or take it a step further, and right?
I miss you. I'd love to reconnect.
Maybe we can both listen to this and talk about it together.