By Sandy Michael, Certified Clinical Sex Coach & Sexologist

If there’s one thing I hear again and again, it’s this:
“We can talk about bills, kids, stress… but we can’t talk about sex.”

And I get it. Sex is vulnerable. It’s intimate. It’s emotionally charged. Humans are walking histories of shame, silence, religious messaging, trauma, and “don’t talk about that” conditioning.

But here’s the truth:
If you can’t talk about sex, you can’t have the sex you actually want.

Communication isn’t just a “nice to have.” It is the foundation of sexual connection, satisfaction, and safety. When two people can speak honestly about desire, boundaries, fears, and pleasure, sex stops being something you “get through” and becomes something you create together.

This is your guide to finally talking about sex—without awkwardness, shutdown, or shame.


Why Talking About Sex Is So Hard

Let’s normalize this for a moment. Most people struggle with sexual communication because they were never taught how to do it. And often, they were taught the opposite.

Common barriers include:

If you see yourself in any of these, you are not alone. And you are not broken.


The Problem With Staying Silent

Avoiding sexual communication creates predictable problems:

Silence doesn’t protect relationships.
It slowly disconnects them.


How to Talk About Sex the Right Way

Now let’s talk solutions. This is where the real transformation happens.

These strategies are grounded in sexology, emotional intelligence, and years of coaching couples who were terrified to talk about intimacy—and learned how to do it beautifully.


1. Don’t Have Sexual Conversations During Sex

This is the number one mistake people make.
Talking during sex is great—dirty talk, feedback, connection—but big topics need neutral ground.

Not:
“Hey, while you’re down there, can we talk about our entire sex life?”
Save the real conversations for outside the bedroom. This keeps nervous systems calm and makes it easier to be honest.


2. Use the “Compliment–Request–Reassure” Framework

This is the gold standard. Simple, but powerful.

Step 1: Compliment
Start with something true and positive:
“I love when you touch me…”
“I really enjoy our intimacy…”
“I feel close to you when we’re sexual…”

Step 2: Request
Then clearly ask for what you want:
“…and I’d love to explore slower foreplay.”
“…and I want to tell you something that I think would make sex even better.”

Step 3: Reassure
Remind them that this is about connection, not criticism:
“I’m sharing this because I care about us.”
“This isn’t about you doing anything wrong—I want us both to have the best experience possible.”

This structure reduces defensiveness and increases openness.


3. Talk About Your Experience, Not Their Performance

Use “I” language instead of “you” statements.

Not:
“You never touch me in a way that turns me on.”

Try:
“I notice I get really turned on when we have slower build-up or more teasing.”

It’s honest, but not blaming.


4. Name Your Desires Clearly (Even If You’ve Never Said Them Out Loud)

Vagueness is the enemy of great sex.
If you don’t say what you want, your partner is left guessing—and guessing usually misses the mark.

Examples of clear desire statements:
“I love pressure on my inner thighs.”
“I want to explore more sensual, slow sex.”
“I love being kissed until I melt into it.”
“I want more eye contact and connection during intimacy.”
“I want rougher edges sometimes—hair pulling, deeper penetration, more intensity.”

Your desires are not burdens.
They’re invitations.


5. Talk About What Turns You On Outside of Technique

Turn-on is not just physical—it’s emotional, psychological, sensory, relational.

If you can articulate things like:

…your partner suddenly has a blueprint.


6. Ask Open-Ended Questions About Their Experience

Good sexual communication is not just about speaking—it’s about curiosity.

Questions that open the door:

Your partner’s pleasure matters.
Your curiosity is a gift.


7. Normalize That Desire Changes (For Both of You)

Desire is not static. It shifts with stress, hormones, emotional security, timing, exhaustion, seasons of life, and relationship dynamics.

Normalize conversations like:
“Our desire levels might not always match, and that’s okay.”
“Let’s talk about what we both need right now.”

Desire differences are not a problem.
Avoiding the conversation is.


8. Create a Ritual for Sexual Check-Ins

I recommend weekly or monthly check-ins with three simple questions:

  1. What felt really good lately?
  2. What’s one thing you want more of?
  3. Is there anything we should shift or try differently?

This keeps communication ongoing—not something you only address when things are falling apart.


9. Talk About Boundaries Without Apologizing

Boundaries are not rejection—they’re clarity.

Examples of healthy boundaries:
“I need slower build-up to feel safe.”
“I need aftercare when sex is intense.”

Boundaries create trust.
Trust creates better sex.


10. Be Honest About What You Don’t Know

It is completely okay to say:
“I don’t know how to talk about this yet, but I want to try.”
“I feel nervous, but this matters to me.”

Honesty is vulnerability.
Vulnerability is connection.
Connection is desire.


The Truth About Sexual Communication

Talking about sex does not ruin the mystery.
It builds intimacy, deepens trust, and increases pleasure.

The couples with the best sex lives are not the ones who “just click.”
They’re the ones who talk openly, explore courageously, and stay curious about each other.

If you need some more questions to help get the conversation going, email me at sandy@unmutedcoaching.com and request the 20+ Intimacy and Pleasure Questions infographic. It’s a fun and easy way to get the answers you are craving to have incredible sex!

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