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The Intimate Philosopher Podcast

The Intimate Philosopher Podcast

By: Emma J. Smith Ph.D.
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The Intimate Philosopher is the show for people who want more from the conversation about love, desire, and partnership than the current discourse offers. Hosted by Dr. Emma Smith — an existential-integrative sex therapist working in the tradition of philosopher-practitioners — the podcast treats intimacy as a philosophical problem rather than a behavioral one. Episodes alternate between solo deep-dives and conversations with clinicians, philosophers, sex educators, and cultural critics. For listeners who want depth that does not flinch.

Emma Smith, Ph.D.
Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Your Partner Isn't Responsible for Your Turn-On. Here's Who Is... with Deborah Kat
    Jun 3 2026

    There is a question most couples have never asked each other, despite years of sharing a bed. Not what do you want to do? That one gets asked. The harder question — the one Deborah Kat has been asking her clients for twenty years — is: how do you want to feel?

    The gap between those two questions is where most intimate disappointment lives.

    Deborah Kat brings over two decades of experience as a Pro Domme and certified Tantric educator. She is the host of the Better Sex Podcast and the creator of the Better Sex Skool community, and her argument is clinical before it is provocative: better sex makes better humans. In this conversation, she unpacks what the BDSM and kink world figured out about consent infrastructure long before the broader culture caught up, why tantra is better understood as a practice of connection than as sacred sex, and what the three pillars — empowerment, communication, and pleasure skills — actually look like when put to work in a long-term relationship.

    We get into the 10-minute game developed by Betty Martin, the question of whose pleasure is actually being centered at any given moment, and what happens when couples discover, after a decade together, that one of them has been doing something that does not feel good and neither of them ever found the words to say so.

    Deborah also names one of the most durable misconceptions she encounters: the belief that our partners are responsible for our turn-on. She makes the opposite case — that erotic energy begins in the self, is cultivated through embodied practice, and requires us to stop outsourcing our desire to the nearest available person. And she offers something concrete: find a place where you see your partner in their mastery. Doing the thing they are genuinely good at, absorbed in it, not performing for you. The separateness that arrives in that moment is not a threat to intimacy. It is what makes intimacy possible.

    One of the most grounding things either of us said in this episode: disappointment happens, awkwardness happens, and neither one means anything is wrong with the relationship, with you, or with your partner. It means you are practicing.

    Full Show Notes: The Intimate Philosopher Episode 24

    Support for the show provided by NinetoKind Planners and use code EMMA20 for 20% off.

    Send us a comment: Comment Form

    Get on the waitlist for the Masterclass and download your free gift: Masterclass Waitlist

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    51 mins
  • Ep. 23: Stop Assuming; Start Asking: How Curiosity and Love Maps Reignite Desire
    Jun 3 2026

    Curiosity is one of the most underrated forms of intimacy.

    In long-term relationships, couples often assume they already know each other — but intimacy quietly deteriorates the moment discovery stops. The challenge isn’t simply staying connected. It’s continuing to see one another as evolving, complex, and still partially unknowable.

    In this solo episode of The Intimate Philosopher, Dr. Emma Smith explores why curiosity is essential for emotional intimacy, erotic connection, and relational vitality in long-term love. Drawing from relationship psychology, sex therapy, and existential thought, she examines the subtle ways couples stop asking questions, stop noticing one another, and begin relating more through assumptions than presence.

    This conversation explores:

    • why curiosity is foundational to intimacy
    • how “bids for connection” shape relational trust
    • the role of love maps in maintaining emotional closeness
    • why desire requires ongoing discovery
    • how curiosity creates safety during sex and vulnerable conversations
    • practical questions couples can use to reconnect emotionally and erotically

    Dr. Smith also introduces a simple framework — Notice, Name, Nurture — to help couples become more attentive to the small moments that sustain connection over time.

    Because intimacy is not built through certainty. It’s built through continued attention.

    Sound Bites
    • “Intimacy requires ongoing attention.”
    • “Curiosity is essential during sex.”
    • “Ask questions, don’t assume in intimacy.”
    Chapters

    00:00 — Welcome Back to The Intimate Philosopher 02:44 — Contextualizing Relationships and Connection 05:08 — The Importance of Curiosity in Long-Term Love 11:28 — Understanding Love Maps and Ongoing Discovery 15:47 — Curiosity as an Act of Desire 20:13 — Bids for Connection: The Bridges We Build 23:06 — Recognizing Bids for Connection in Everyday Life 28:38 — Curiosity in Sexual Relationships 32:50 — Inviting Connection Through Questions 34:57 — The Three Ns: Notice, Name, Nurture 36:59 — Reflecting on Mystery and Connection

    Resources & References
    • The Relationship Cure by John Gottman
    • Follow the podcast on Instagram
    • The Intimate Philosopher Website
    Keywords

    relationships, emotional intimacy, curiosity in relationships, long-term love, desire in long-term relationships, couples communication, bids for connection, love maps, emotional connection, intimacy podcast, sex therapist podcast, relationship psychology, modern relationships

    Full Show Notes: The Intimate Philosopher Episode 23

    Support for the show provided by NinetoKind Planners and use code EMMA20 for 20% off.

    Send us a comment: Comment Form

    Get on the waitlist for the Masterclass and download your free gift: Masterclass Waitlist

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    37 mins
  • Ep. 22: The Hidden Autism in Your Relationship: Sex, Sensory Overload, and Late Diagnosis with Kory Andreas
    May 20 2026

    Could undiagnosed autism be silently shaping your relationship?

    Many couples assume their struggles are about poor communication, emotional distance, mismatched desire, or unresolved conflict.

    But sometimes what looks like rejection, shutdown, avoidance, or “not caring” may actually be autism, sensory overload, masking, demand avoidance, or nervous system overwhelm.

    In this deeply powerful conversation, Emma Smith sits down with therapist and neurodivergence expert Kory Andreas to explore how late-diagnosed autism impacts sex, intimacy, emotional connection, relationships, sensory processing, shame, and authenticity.

    Together, they unpack why autism is often missed—especially in women and high-maskers—and how couples can move from blame and misinterpretation toward curiosity, direct communication, and nervous system safety.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether your partner’s shutdown is overwhelm—not indifference—this episode may completely shift how you understand intimacy.

    In this episode:

    Late diagnosed autism in adults Autism in women and missed diagnosis Sensory overload and sex Neurodivergence and intimacy PDA traits and demand avoidance in adults Autism masking in relationships Nervous system regulation and emotional safety Why therapy often misses neurodivergent couples Direct communication and relational repair Unmasking and authentic connection

    This is a conversation about neurodivergent intimacy, autism in relationships, emotional safety, and building connection that honors nervous systems— not masking or pure performance.

    Listen now to redefine responsibility and reclaim your life with clarity, compassion, and intention.

    Full Show Notes https://theintimatephilosopher.com/Episode22

    Support for the show provided by NinetoKind Planners — use code EMMA20 for 20% off https://ninetokind.com/

    Send us a comment http://forms.gle/sS7z5AFH1DohJjAU6

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    50 mins
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