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The truth about unwanted arousal

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    [This talk contains mature content
    Viewer discretion is advised]
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    My specialty, as a sex educator,
    is I bring the science.
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    But my first and most important job
    is that I stay neutral
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    when I talk about anything sex-related,
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    no embarrassment, no titillation,
    no judgment, no shame,
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    no matter where I am.
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    No matter what question you ask me.
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    At the end of a conference
    in a hotel lobby once,
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    I'm literally on my way out the door
    and a colleague chases me down.
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    "Emily, I just have
    a really quick question.
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    A friend of mine --
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    (Laughter)
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    wants to know if it's possible
    to get addicted to her vibrator."
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    The answer is no,
    but it is possible to get spoiled.
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    A different conference,
    this one in an outdoor tropical paradise,
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    I'm at the breakfast buffet,
    and a couple approaches me.
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    "Hi, Emily, we're sorry to interrupt you
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    but we just wanted to ask a quick question
    about premature ejaculation."
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    "Sure, let me tell you
    about the stop/start technique."
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    That is my life.
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    I stay neutral when
    other people might "squick."
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    Squick is an emotion
    that combines surprise
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    with embarrassment plus some disgust
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    and like, not knowing
    what to do with your hands.
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    So, it's a product.
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    The reason you experience it
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    is because you spent
    the first two decades of your life
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    learning that sex is a dangerous
    and disgusting source of everlasting shame
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    and if you're not really good at it,
    no one will ever love you.
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    (Laughter)
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    So you might squick,
    hearing me talk about sex
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    while you're sitting in a room
    full of strangers -- that is normal.
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    I invite you to breathe.
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    Feelings are tunnels.
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    We make our way through the darkness
    to get to the light at the end.
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    And I promise it's worth it.
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    Because I want to share with you
    today a piece of science
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    that has changed
    how I think about everything,
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    from the behavior of neurotransmitters
    in our emotional brain,
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    to the dynamics of our
    interpersonal relationships.
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    To our judicial system.
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    And it starts with our brain.
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    There's an area of your brain
    you've probably heard referred to
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    as the "reward center."
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    I think calling it the reward center
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    is a little bit like calling
    your face your nose.
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    That is one prominent feature,
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    but it ignores some other parts
    and will leave you really confused
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    if you're trying to understand
    how faces work.
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    It's actually three intertwined
    but separable systems.
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    The first system is liking.
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    Which is like reward,
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    so this is the opioid hotspots
    in your emotional brain.
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    It assesses hedonic impact --
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    "Does this stimulus feel good?
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    How good?
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    Does this stimulus feel bad?
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    How bad?"
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    If you drop sugar water
    on the tongue of a newborn infant,
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    the opioid-liking system
    sets off fireworks.
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    And then there's the wanting system.
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    Wanting is mediated
    by this vast dopaminergic network
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    in and beyond the emotional brain.
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    It motivates us to move toward
    or away from a stimulus.
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    Wanting is more like your toddler,
    following you around,
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    asking for another cookie.
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    So wanting and liking are related.
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    They are not identical.
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    And the third system is learning.
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    Learning is Pavlov's dogs.
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    You remember Pavlov?
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    He makes dogs salivate
    in response to a bell.
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    It's easy, you give a dog food,
    salivates automatically,
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    and you ring a bell.
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    Food, salivate, bell.
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    Food, bell, salivate.
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    Bell, salivate.
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    Does that salivation mean
    that the dog wants to eat the bell?
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    Does it mean that the dog
    finds the bell delicious?
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    No.
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    What Pavlov did
    was make the bell food-related.
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    When we see this separateness
    of wanting, liking and learning,
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    this is where we find
    an explanatory framework
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    for understanding what researchers call
    arousal nonconcordance.
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    Nonconcordance, very simply,
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    is when there is a lack
    of predictive relationship
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    between your physiological
    response, like salivation,
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    and your subjective experience
    of pleasure and desire.
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    That happens in every emotional
    and motivational system that we have,
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    including sex.
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    Research over the last 30 years
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    has found that genital
    blood flow can increase
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    in response to sex-related stimuli
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    even if those sex-related stimuli
    are not also associated
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    with the subjective experience
    of wanting and liking.
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    In fact, the predictive relationship
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    between genital response
    and subjective experience
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    is between 10 and 50 percent.
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    Which is an enormous range.
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    You just can't predict necessarily
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    how a person feels
    about that sex-related stimulus
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    just by looking
    at their genital blood flow.
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    When I explained this to my husband,
    he gave me the best possible example.
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    He was like,
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    "So, that could explain this one time,
    when I was in high school, I ...
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    I got an erection in response
    to the phrase 'doughnut hole.'"
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    (Laughter)
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    Did he want to have sex with the doughnut?
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    No.
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    He was a teenage boy
    flooded with testosterone,
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    which makes everything
    a little bit sex-related.
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    And it can go in both directions.
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    A person with a penis may struggle
    to get an erection one evening,
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    and then wake up the very next
    morning with an erection,
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    when it's nothing but a hassle.
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    I got a phone call from
    a 30-something friend, a woman,
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    she said, "So, my partner and I
    were in the middle of doing some things
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    and I was like, 'I want you right now.'
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    And he said, 'No, you're still dry,
    you're just being nice.'
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    And I was so ready.
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    So what's the matter, is it hormonal,
    should I talk to a doctor,
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    what's going on?"
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    Answer?
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    It's arousal nonconcordance.
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    If you're experiencing unwanted pain,
    talk to a medical provider.
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    Otherwise -- arousal nonconcordance.
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    Your genital behavior
    just doesn't necessarily predict
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    your subjective experience
    of liking and wanting.
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    Another friend, back in college,
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    told me about her first experiences
    of power play in a sexual relationship.
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    She told me that her partner tied her up
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    with her arms over her head like this,
    she's standing up and he positions her
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    so she's straddling a bar, presses up
    against her clitoris, like this.
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    So there's my friend, standing there,
    and the guy leaves.
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    It's a power play.
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    Leaves her alone.
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    So there's my friend, and she goes,
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    "I'm bored."
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    (Laughter)
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    And the guy comes back
    and she says, "I am bored."
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    And he looks at her
    and he looks at the bar
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    and he says, "Then why are you wet?"
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    Why was she wet?
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    Is it sex-related to have pressure
    directly against your clitoris?
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    Yeah.
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    Does that tell him whether
    she wants or likes what's happening?
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    Nope.
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    What does tell him whether
    she wants or likes what's happening?
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    She does!
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    She recognized and articulated
    what she wanted and liked.
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    All he had to do was listen to her words.
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    My friend on the phone --
    what's the solution?
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    You tell your partner,
    "Listen to your words."
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    Also, buy some lube.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Applause for lube, absolutely.
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    (Applause)
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    Everyone, everywhere.
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    But I want to tell you a darker
    listen-to-her-words story.
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    This one comes from a note
    that a student sent me
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    after I gave a lecture
    about arousal nonconcordance.
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    She was with a partner,
    a new partner, glad to be doing things,
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    and they reached a point
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    where that was as far
    as she was interested in going
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    and so she said no.
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    And the partner said, "No, you're wet,
    you're so ready, don't be shy."
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    Shy?
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    As if it hadn't taken all the courage
    and confidence she had
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    to say no to someone she liked.
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    Whose feelings she did not want to hurt.
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    But she said it again.
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    She said no.
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    Did he listen to her words?
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    In the age of Me Too
    and Time's Up, people ask me,
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    "How do I even know
    what my partner wants and likes?
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    Is all consent to be verbal
    and contractual now?"
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    There are times when consent is ambiguous
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    and we need a large-scale
    cultural conversation about that.
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    But can we make sure we're noticing
    how clear consent is
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    if we eliminate this myth?
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    In every example I've described so far,
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    one partner recognized and articulated
    what they wanted and liked:
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    "I want you right now."
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    "No."
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    And their partner told them
    they were wrong.
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    It's gaslighting.
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    Profound and degrading.
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    You say you feel one way,
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    but your body proves
    that you feel something else.
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    And we only do this around sexuality,
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    because arousal nonconcordance
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    happens with every emotional
    and motivational system we have.
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    If my mouth waters
    when I bite into a wormy apple,
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    does anybody say to me,
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    "You said no, but your body said yes?"
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    (Laughter)
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    And it's not only our partners
    who get it wrong.
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    The National Judicial Education Program
    published a document
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    called "Judges Tell: What I Wish
    I Had Known Before I Presided
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    in a Case of an Adult Victim
    of Sexual Assault."
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    Number 13:
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    On occasion, the victim, female or male,
    may experience a physical response,
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    but this is not a sexual response
    in the sense of desire or mutuality."
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    This brings me one step closer
    into the darkness,
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    and then I promise
    we will find our way into the light.
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    I'm thinking of a recent court case
    involving multiple instances
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    of non-consensual sexual contact.
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    Imagine you're on the jury
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    and you learn that the victim had orgasms.
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    Does it change how your gut
    responds to the case?
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    Let me remind you,
    orgasm is physiological;
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    it is a spontaneous,
    involuntary release of tension,
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    generated in response
    to sex-related stimuli.
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    But the perpetrator’s lawyer made sure
    the jury knew about those orgasms
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    because he thought the orgasms
    could be construed as consent.
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    I will also add that this was a child
    being abused by an adult in the family.
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    I invite you to breathe.
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    That kind of story can give a person
    all kind of feelings,
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    from rage to shame to confused arousal
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    because it is sex-related,
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    even though it is appalling.
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    But even though I know it's difficult
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    to sit with those feelings
    in a room full of strangers,
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    if we can find our way through
    all of the messy feelings,
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    I believe we will find our way
    to the light of compassion
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    for that child,
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    whose relationship
    with her body was damaged
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    by an adult whose job it was
    to protect it.
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    And we'll find hope
    that there was a trustworthy adult
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    who could say, "Genital response
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    just means it was a sex-related stimulus;
    doesn't mean it was wanted or liked,
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    certainly doesn't mean
    it was consented to.
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    (Applause)
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    That compassion and that hope
    are why I travel all over,
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    talking about this
    to anyone who will listen.
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    I can see it helping people,
    even as I say the words.
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    I invite you to say the words.
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    You don't have to say "clitoris"
    in front of 1000 strangers.
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    But do have one brave conversation.
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    Tell this to someone you know
    who has experienced sexual violence --
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    you definitely know someone.
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    In the US it's one in three women.
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    One in six men.
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    Almost half of transgender folks.
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    Say "Genital response means
    it's a sex-related stimulus.
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    It doesn't mean it was wanted or liked."
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    Say it to a judge you know
    or a lawyer you know,
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    or a cop or anyone who might sit
    on a jury in a sexual assault case.
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    Say "Some people think
    that your body doesn't respond
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    if you don't want
    or like what's happening,
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    if only that were true.
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    Instead, arousal nonconcordance.
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    Say this to the confused
    teenager in your life
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    who is just trying to figure out
    what, even, what?
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    Say, if you bite this moldy fruit
    and your mouth waters,
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    nobody would say to you,
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    "Well, you just don't want to admit
    how much you like it."
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    Same goes for down below,
    arousal nonconcordance.
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    Say it to your partner.
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    My genitals do not tell you
    what I want or like.
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    I do.
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    (Applause)
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    The roots of this myth are deep
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    and they are entangled with some
    very dark forces in our culture.
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    But with every brave conversation we have,
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    we make the world
    that little bit better, a little simpler
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    for the confused teenager.
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    A little easier for your friend
    on the phone, worried that she's broken.
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    A little easier and safer
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    for the survivors, one in three women.
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    One in six men.
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    Half of trans folks.
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    Me too.
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    So for every brave conversation you have,
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    thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause)
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    Helen Walters: Emily, come up here.
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    Thank you so much.
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    I know that you do this all the time,
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    and yet, still, I'm so grateful to you
    for having the courage
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    to come and talk about that on this stage.
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    It really took a lot
    and we're very grateful to you.
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    So thank you.
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    Emily Nagoski: I am grateful to be here.
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    HW: So in your regular day job,
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    I imagine, as you put
    at the top of the talk,
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    you get asked a lot of questions.
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    But what's the one question
    that you get asked all the time
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    that you can share with everyone here
    so you don't have to answer it 1000 times
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    throughout the rest of the week?
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    EN: The question I get asked most often
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    is actually the question underneath
    pretty much all the other questions,
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    so, can you get addicted to your vibrator,
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    please help me
    with my erectile dysfunction?
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    Underneath every question is actually
    the question, "Am I normal?"
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    To which my answer in my mind is,
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    what even is normal and why is that
    what you want your sexuality to be?
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    Why do we only want to be normal
    around sexuality?
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    Don't we want to be extraordinary?
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    Like, do you just want normal sex
    or do you want awesome sex in your life?
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    I think, though, there's a lot of fear
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    around being too different sexually.
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    When people are asking me,
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    "Is this thing I'm experiencing normal,"
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    what they're actually
    asking me is, "Do I belong?"
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    Do I belong in this relationship,
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    do I belong in this community of people,
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    do I belong on earth as a sexual person?
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    To which the answer is always
    a resounding yes.
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    The only barrier there is,
    the only limit there is, there are two:
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    one, if you're experiencing
    unwanted sexual pain,
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    talk to a medical provider.
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    And two: As along as everybody involved
    is free and glad to be there,
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    and free to leave whenever they want to,
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    you're allowed to do
    anything that you want to.
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    There is no script,
    there is no box you have to fit into,
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    you're allowed, as long as there is
    consent and no unwanted pain,
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    you're totally free to do
    whatever you want.
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    HW: Amazing. Thank you so much.
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    EN: Thank you.
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    HW: Thank you, you're incredible.
  • 15:02 - 15:03
    (Applause)
Title:
The truth about unwanted arousal
Speaker:
Emily Nagoski
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:16

English subtitles

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