WEBVTT 00:00:35.448 --> 00:00:38.807 Hello and welcome to another episode of Gender Stories. 00:00:38.807 --> 00:00:43.807 I know I'm always thrilled and delighted, but that's because I get to talk to some really cool people. 00:00:43.807 --> 00:00:49.247 And today I have the pleasure of introducing a colleague, Dr. 00:00:49.247 --> 00:00:58.587 Dulcinea Alex Pitagora, who is a New York based psychotherapist and sex therapist who's also licensed in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Colorado. 00:00:58.688 --> 00:01:03.351 They have a brick and mortar private practice in New York City that includes individual. 00:01:03.351 --> 00:01:09.337 couples, multi-partner relationships, and poly leather family therapy, as well as supervision and mentorship. 00:01:09.337 --> 00:01:09.739 Dr. 00:01:09.739 --> 00:01:23.293 Pitagora is an out and proud member of the queer, trans, kink, and polyamory communities, and is equally proud to be a former sex worker, as well as an anti-racist, anti-oppression, anti-exploitation activist. 00:01:23.293 --> 00:01:23.692 Dr. 00:01:23.692 --> 00:01:26.995 Pitagora holds a Master of Arts in Psychology. 00:01:27.585 --> 00:01:44.268 from the New School of Social Research, a Master of Social Work from New York University, a Master of Education and a Doctor in Clinical Sexology from Widener University, and is an ASIC-certified sex therapist, sex therapist supervisor, and continuing education provider, along with their colleague, Dr. 00:01:44.268 --> 00:01:45.450 Julian Kahn. 00:01:45.450 --> 00:01:45.849 Dr. 00:01:45.849 --> 00:01:53.215 Pidagora teaches sexual health at New York University and has published articles and chapters in peer-reviewed journals and books. 00:01:53.451 --> 00:01:59.036 They have presented at conferences on the topics of alternative sexuality and gender diversity. 00:01:59.036 --> 00:01:59.456 Dr. 00:01:59.456 --> 00:02:11.207 Pitagora is the founder of manadanalternative.com, a nationwide alternative lifestyle affirmative provider listing, and was a co-founder and organizer of the All Sex NYC conference. 00:02:11.207 --> 00:02:15.841 You can find out more about their work at their website or follow them on social media. 00:02:15.841 --> 00:02:20.396 And all those links are going to be in the episode description as usual. 00:02:20.918 --> 00:02:21.829 Welcome, Dr. 00:02:21.829 --> 00:02:22.632 Dulcinea. 00:02:22.632 --> 00:02:25.930 I am so excited that we get to talk for gender stories. 00:02:25.930 --> 00:02:27.884 Thank you for making time for this. 00:02:27.930 --> 00:02:28.394 I love it. 00:02:28.394 --> 00:02:29.375 Thank you for having me. 00:02:29.375 --> 00:02:30.925 I was excited to be invited. 00:02:31.554 --> 00:02:32.663 My pleasure. 00:02:32.704 --> 00:02:37.596 One of the cool things about being a sex therapist is I got to meet so many wonderful colleagues. 00:02:37.596 --> 00:02:41.236 You're included during this work and I really love that. 00:02:41.236 --> 00:02:43.026 I also love the reading your bios. 00:02:43.026 --> 00:02:51.689 Like somebody else who loves education just like I do and wasn't that the linear path because my educational path wasn't very linear either. 00:02:51.689 --> 00:02:58.310 So I'm curious about what kind of drove you from master to master to masters. 00:02:58.310 --> 00:02:58.942 program. 00:02:58.942 --> 00:03:01.971 I'm kind of a little bit curious if you feel like sharing. 00:03:02.048 --> 00:03:05.459 it is very curious. 00:03:05.459 --> 00:03:06.880 It was not intentional. 00:03:06.880 --> 00:03:11.963 um I have a mountainous student loan debt to show for it. 00:03:11.963 --> 00:03:12.954 And that's fine. 00:03:12.954 --> 00:03:18.608 It's one of those things I'm just like, oh, well, you know, because I couldn't afford any of them. 00:03:18.608 --> 00:03:19.177 That was fine. 00:03:19.177 --> 00:03:20.889 I wanted to do those. 00:03:22.269 --> 00:03:29.973 I was an older student, so I had dropped out of undergrad and then finished it in my... 00:03:29.973 --> 00:03:36.074 late 30s, took a break, then went to grad school, was finally ready for grad school in my 40s. 00:03:36.074 --> 00:03:42.493 So I didn't even start all of those like post grad, you know, grad school until my till age 40 or around. 00:03:42.493 --> 00:03:43.774 I forget exactly. 00:03:43.774 --> 00:03:44.713 I'm in my 50s now. 00:03:44.713 --> 00:03:47.353 I'm about to be 55, which is blowing my mind. 00:03:47.353 --> 00:03:49.894 But anyway, that's great. 00:03:50.533 --> 00:03:50.913 I am. 00:03:50.913 --> 00:03:51.334 Yeah. 00:03:51.334 --> 00:03:55.374 So I started out in general psychology, which was an interest of mine. 00:03:55.374 --> 00:04:00.158 And the new school was I liked their branding. 00:04:00.158 --> 00:04:15.622 uh Academia is like, I have sort of this love hate relationship and the love part being like, I'm super interested in all these topics and I love their research and I love to read and I love learning about stuff. 00:04:15.622 --> 00:04:16.663 I like to write. 00:04:16.663 --> 00:04:21.735 uh So that makes it, that's the good part. 00:04:21.735 --> 00:04:25.766 And then the other part is the part I don't like, which is the. 00:04:26.826 --> 00:04:37.072 the accessibility part, the part where it's like actually institutions will say they're progressive and like, are they really? 00:04:37.072 --> 00:04:52.543 So I learned about that along the way, um especially given my areas of expertise, which I knew, especially being an older student or like an old, know, going back to school later and like, I'm ready to like train, do training for, to be a sex therapist. 00:04:52.543 --> 00:04:55.425 I knew exactly that I wanted to work in these populations. 00:04:55.425 --> 00:05:01.735 um And I found out who was gonna support that and who wasn't, you know, along the way. 00:05:01.735 --> 00:05:10.774 So I loved going, I loved the first master's very, it was really hard, very rigorous, which was awesome and really set me up well for the rest of it. 00:05:10.774 --> 00:05:22.542 And then I found like, oh, actually social work is the correct place for me to get my license for practicing just according to like what I learned about myself and the field and everything. 00:05:22.677 --> 00:05:28.317 and how long it would take me to start practicing and where I could do it and all of this. 00:05:28.317 --> 00:05:35.078 And so then I did that, but I still wanted to get a PhD, because initially I was like, I want to get a PhD. 00:05:35.078 --> 00:05:39.898 And I love to be very straightforward about things. 00:05:39.898 --> 00:05:48.198 And I will say that I knew that I was going to be out about, it's very important to me to be out about all of my different identities. 00:05:48.198 --> 00:05:50.944 Even if I don't go into detail about my personal life, I like to like. 00:05:50.944 --> 00:05:57.915 people that know my social location, who I am, and all the things that you read off of my email. 00:05:58.876 --> 00:06:12.000 And I don't come from any kind of very much upbringing that gave me the confidence to not have the internalized stigma from those things. 00:06:12.000 --> 00:06:15.161 And I think even if you do, we internalize that anyway. 00:06:15.161 --> 00:06:17.062 And so I'm like, well, you know what? 00:06:17.062 --> 00:06:17.639 like. 00:06:17.639 --> 00:06:23.973 school, like I'm gonna get as many letters as I can and that's gonna make me feel like somebody has to take me seriously. 00:06:23.973 --> 00:06:31.698 Like in hindsight, I know that that's not really, like you don't need PhD to be taken seriously except by some people you do. 00:06:32.365 --> 00:06:32.956 Exactly. 00:06:32.956 --> 00:06:35.711 It depends on the setting up 100%. 00:06:35.711 --> 00:06:39.814 And honestly, it does feel protective to me because of the kind of work I do. 00:06:39.814 --> 00:06:47.040 And like, I'm somewhat outspoken about this kind of work that I do and who I am and the people that I work with. 00:06:47.040 --> 00:06:51.242 so it does, I, you know, anyway, so I was always going to do that. 00:06:51.242 --> 00:06:55.947 And then I did the social work, started working and it was like, started my PhD. 00:06:55.947 --> 00:07:00.530 And the other third master's is just a gift with purchase that comes with your PhD. 00:07:00.552 --> 00:07:02.533 It's the master of education, which is great. 00:07:02.533 --> 00:07:11.074 Like it was specifically about how to teach about sexuality and about, you and that's worked out really well because I am doing super, that's really helpful for supervision. 00:07:11.074 --> 00:07:14.305 teach, you know, so all useful stuff. 00:07:14.305 --> 00:07:16.026 And would I do it again that way? 00:07:16.026 --> 00:07:16.586 I don't know. 00:07:16.586 --> 00:07:18.567 Like I don't, I don't actually do the revisionist. 00:07:18.567 --> 00:07:20.797 I try to not to do that with regrets or anything. 00:07:20.797 --> 00:07:22.117 I don't like that. 00:07:22.117 --> 00:07:23.021 It's fine. 00:07:23.021 --> 00:07:25.028 I will never pay these student loans off. 00:07:25.028 --> 00:07:27.069 I will definitely die first. 00:07:27.069 --> 00:07:30.670 And that's great because then they don't, you know, the banks aren't going to get out. 00:07:30.934 --> 00:07:35.674 So anyway, that's what I have to say about academia. 00:07:35.768 --> 00:07:36.548 Oh my God. 00:07:36.548 --> 00:07:38.948 I love, I actually love all of that. 00:07:38.948 --> 00:07:42.088 was like, oh my God, we could do the episode just talking about those things. 00:07:42.088 --> 00:07:47.508 mean, there are other things I would ask you about, but I saw it related to so much of what you said. 00:07:47.508 --> 00:07:49.028 The love hate with academia. 00:07:49.028 --> 00:07:58.528 was in academia for like 20 years because, know, um, I was not brought up, uh, you know, in an academic, in an environment where people had masters or PhD. 00:07:58.528 --> 00:08:05.648 mean, my parents got their first degree while I was like a teenager, you know, they went back to school to get their undergrad. 00:08:05.745 --> 00:08:11.456 Um, that because I was smart in air quotes and I put it in air quotes because what does that even mean? 00:08:11.456 --> 00:08:13.427 Like I was like effective in school. 00:08:13.427 --> 00:08:14.026 Exactly. 00:08:14.026 --> 00:08:15.569 I was effective at schooling. 00:08:15.569 --> 00:08:16.848 I would say somewhat. 00:08:16.848 --> 00:08:21.821 uh That's also an interesting story because it's like I wasn't, and then I was, if that makes sense. 00:08:21.821 --> 00:08:25.333 In middle school, people, teachers were like, you shouldn't even go to college. 00:08:25.333 --> 00:08:29.394 And then in high school, I just like flourished, you know, for lots of different reasons. 00:08:29.394 --> 00:08:48.857 But anyway, I really relate to the like love hate of academia, like things that I feel like things I really love is like the engagement with ideas and knowledge, but then the reality is that you're engaging with systems that are not really supportive of a lot of our social locations, positions, communities, and that's disheartening to say the least. 00:08:48.857 --> 00:08:52.497 honestly, their capitalism is their priority, not learning. 00:08:52.497 --> 00:08:55.038 I have to say that's people all learn. 00:08:55.237 --> 00:09:00.377 And sure, learning is really important, and particularly depending on who your professor is. 00:09:00.758 --> 00:09:03.957 anyway, we don't have to go off on that. 00:09:03.957 --> 00:09:09.077 But it's all the gatekeeping and all, well, they have to get their funding. 00:09:09.077 --> 00:09:18.228 we're seeing so much of that politically right now, too, which we may or may not want to We can talk about politics, we can talk about whatever we want. 00:09:18.228 --> 00:09:19.924 I mean, it's my podcast. 00:09:20.485 --> 00:09:21.085 We can. 00:09:21.085 --> 00:09:21.365 I love it. 00:09:21.365 --> 00:09:22.685 Yes, whatever you want. 00:09:22.685 --> 00:09:24.365 I'll talk about whatever you want. 00:09:26.065 --> 00:09:32.594 Like, I'm not gonna talk about beauty of this being a labor of love is that we get to talk about whatever we want. 00:09:32.594 --> 00:09:37.156 there's like, you know, it's not like I'm in a network of this, any oversight or anything. 00:09:37.156 --> 00:09:39.046 We get to talk about whatever we want. 00:09:39.046 --> 00:09:41.087 And then people either want to listen to it or not. 00:09:41.087 --> 00:09:44.361 That's up to them, but we get to share whatever we want. 00:09:44.361 --> 00:09:45.784 that is the beauty of it. 00:09:45.784 --> 00:09:50.453 Like, you can like look away or you can like be like, I don't want to hear it. 00:09:50.453 --> 00:09:52.237 You can just like not do that thing. 00:09:52.237 --> 00:09:55.000 You don't have to like, anyway. 00:09:55.639 --> 00:09:56.979 Oh, absolutely. 00:09:56.979 --> 00:09:59.359 We might, we might go back to that point. 00:09:59.359 --> 00:10:02.279 I also love, I didn't realize that we were so close in age. 00:10:02.279 --> 00:10:04.359 I turned 54 this year. 00:10:04.359 --> 00:10:07.179 I've actually found you're much younger than I am. 00:10:07.179 --> 00:10:08.679 It's just, it's just a good looks. 00:10:08.679 --> 00:10:09.879 can I say? 00:10:09.939 --> 00:10:14.500 Um, you know, it's like has trans people, it's hard to pinpoint us with age. 00:10:14.548 --> 00:10:16.092 I have the filter. 00:10:18.552 --> 00:10:24.353 I don't think it's just a filter, but I love that you said like, it's almost a surprise. 00:10:24.454 --> 00:10:38.418 I felt that in my body, like, because when I realized, I'm like, my God, I'm approaching my mid-50s as a queer person, as a trans person once I figured out my gender identity too, in a way where I words for it. 00:10:38.597 --> 00:10:45.620 In a way, does feel alien to be like in my mid-50s, especially being brought up in the 70s and 80s where like, you know. 00:10:46.295 --> 00:11:09.315 being gay, well, definitely a lot of ways, the coming of age during the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, I should say, because it's still going on in a lot of different ways, kind of just didn't really give me a vision for the future as in being an adult in my 50s or thinking about aging. 00:11:09.315 --> 00:11:15.413 And I don't know if you can relate to any of that or what was your feeling about like, oh, yeah, I'm almost 55 kind of thing. 00:11:15.413 --> 00:11:17.113 No, yeah, it's so weird. 00:11:17.113 --> 00:11:24.573 I mean, I'll say something very, very dark and honest is like I didn't expect to get this far. 00:11:24.573 --> 00:11:31.993 I didn't grow up in a way that indicated I would be able to last much past my 20s. 00:11:31.993 --> 00:11:34.573 But so like, yeah, great. 00:11:34.573 --> 00:11:38.533 And then of course, I happen to take hormones. 00:11:38.713 --> 00:11:45.269 And for people who do, sometimes you get an extra puberty, which I hear gives you like 15 more years. 00:11:45.269 --> 00:11:47.149 I don't know, that was what I heard. 00:11:47.149 --> 00:11:48.709 Anyway, I made that up. 00:11:52.549 --> 00:11:55.849 Extra puberty, extra 15 years, that's my math. 00:11:55.849 --> 00:11:59.669 not very, anyway, I didn't put it on the spreadsheet yet. 00:12:00.349 --> 00:12:02.549 So there's that. 00:12:03.429 --> 00:12:11.370 yeah, it's really interesting because feeling age is because of that, because of shifts in identity. 00:12:11.370 --> 00:12:20.625 then I've had so many different Like my current career, my current job has been the last 10, like 12 years, something like that. 00:12:20.625 --> 00:12:23.685 And I've had multiple other lives before that. 00:12:23.685 --> 00:12:26.445 And so it's just, it's really weird. 00:12:26.525 --> 00:12:28.846 Yeah, I'm going to be 55 and it feels really weird. 00:12:28.846 --> 00:12:30.205 And I mean, it feels good. 00:12:30.205 --> 00:12:36.265 feel like I'm lucky to like feel like pretty healthy and like, and all of that. 00:12:36.265 --> 00:12:53.962 But like, we're, we're kind of, I don't want to speak for you, but like, I feel like in our 50s, like a lot of trans folks start becoming elders in the community, which is like, I'll say another dark thing, why not? 00:12:53.962 --> 00:12:57.653 I love to be, I'm like, I'm secretly a goth. 00:12:57.653 --> 00:13:05.015 um But yeah, 50s, 60s, that is elder in the trans community. 00:13:05.015 --> 00:13:08.956 for a lot of, like, there's a lot of people that don't make it too much. 00:13:08.956 --> 00:13:11.168 Now there's certainly people much older than that. 00:13:11.168 --> 00:13:12.397 Like I'm very... 00:13:12.617 --> 00:13:18.401 happy to know em Kate Bornstein is so lovely. 00:13:18.401 --> 00:13:29.889 she is still like, when I see her, we have our elders, but it's And yeah, I'm so grateful. 00:13:29.889 --> 00:13:33.491 So it's interesting to think about that too. 00:13:33.491 --> 00:13:35.974 em I don't know. 00:13:35.974 --> 00:13:37.403 Anyway, that's what. 00:13:37.493 --> 00:13:39.594 No, I think that's really interesting. 00:13:39.594 --> 00:13:53.632 And I don't think any of those things are dark, but then maybe that's because I was brought up in Italy and especially very influenced in terms of Sicilian identity and culture from my grandma who brought me up in a lot of ways as my main kind of childcare provider. 00:13:53.873 --> 00:13:57.445 And it's like, yeah, we talk about life and death, right? 00:13:57.445 --> 00:14:01.577 And it's like, it doesn't feel as some topic that needs to be avoided. 00:14:01.577 --> 00:14:04.579 Like sometimes it can feel like in the so-called US. 00:14:05.504 --> 00:14:08.635 You can say whatever you want, like I said, and it doesn't bother me. 00:14:08.635 --> 00:14:09.915 And I need so relate too. 00:14:09.915 --> 00:14:18.684 Like I didn't think I'd be this old and I didn't think I would have the amazing life, quite frankly, that feel I have even though the world is burning. 00:14:18.684 --> 00:14:31.471 I have so much love in my life from my partners, from my kids, community, because growing up, at least for me in the seventies and eighties, it was like, if you're queer, you're like, you're alone and you're sad. 00:14:31.471 --> 00:14:34.955 And that has not been my experience at all. 00:14:34.955 --> 00:14:42.842 You know, and it is true that there is a side where you're seen as an elder so much earlier. 00:14:42.842 --> 00:14:46.475 Like I've had people started saying that was like a queer elder or trans elder. 00:14:46.475 --> 00:14:48.147 was like, I'm not ready for that. 00:14:48.147 --> 00:14:50.379 I would just like to be a full grown adult. 00:14:50.379 --> 00:14:55.473 Kind of just like we do have elders like Kate and other folks. 00:14:55.968 --> 00:14:56.930 really do. 00:14:56.930 --> 00:15:00.500 And then there are other days when I'm like, oh, I feel very elderly. 00:15:00.500 --> 00:15:04.301 I'm like, But I'm back. 00:15:04.548 --> 00:15:05.087 that's real. 00:15:05.087 --> 00:15:18.225 And also because to be honest, we're like, probably, I don't want to speak for you either, but probably both of us have buried a lot of people before their time in terms of, I've seen a lot of queer and trans folks in our communities die before their time. 00:15:18.225 --> 00:15:28.800 And at least I have, whether it's through systemic violence, whether it's through illness and the product of like, you know, systemic violence in a different way. 00:15:29.221 --> 00:15:38.887 And I don't know, I think that ages us too in some ways, you know, and But yeah, that could be an old conversation about trans aging. 00:15:38.887 --> 00:15:40.877 It's a thing for sure. 00:15:41.738 --> 00:15:45.079 That for today, it's like, oh, deep breath. 00:15:45.079 --> 00:15:48.348 like, I'm feeling that actually I'm going to slow myself down. 00:15:48.348 --> 00:15:50.101 I'm like, it's okay to feel that. 00:15:50.101 --> 00:16:01.317 And I think it is important to have those conversations about aging and what it feels like and how it's contextualized in terms of when we were being brought up, right? 00:16:01.317 --> 00:16:03.907 And the messages in dominant culture. 00:16:03.967 --> 00:16:11.639 Especially right now when we're seeing, I don't know about you, but I'm noticing a lot of messages coming back into dominant culture. 00:16:11.639 --> 00:16:21.652 They're very hostile and really depicting queer and trans communities in ways that do not line up with my experience to say the least. 00:16:21.652 --> 00:16:24.443 And in ways that I think are harmful to our youth. 00:16:24.443 --> 00:16:31.255 So I think it's really important to talk about how full our lives are and what it's like to be in our mid fifties. 00:16:31.870 --> 00:16:32.880 Yeah, absolutely. 00:16:32.880 --> 00:16:40.334 And I was just thinking, as you were talking about, you know, aging and community and everything. 00:16:40.334 --> 00:16:43.076 And it's like, well, you mentioned partners. 00:16:43.076 --> 00:16:49.600 I also have multiple partners and I think um like on purpose and that will be that way ongoing. 00:16:49.600 --> 00:16:57.729 um If they'll have me, you know, I think there's also something to. 00:16:58.442 --> 00:17:04.365 being in a multi-generational community, it's like, feel like in the trans community, it is that way. 00:17:04.365 --> 00:17:46.722 oftentimes, people around our age, um I'll speak for myself, I, again, I have people in my life that are younger and I feel like a lot of times, there's kind of the, people go the way of the normative sort of path and like, I'm doing something different and that almost like puts more of a variety of ages and typically younger ages than me um doing similar things like people in their 30s and 40s who are also non-monogamous, like also like in these like, you know, multiple communities. 00:17:46.722 --> 00:17:52.617 So I think that's just interesting to think about how that works. 00:17:52.919 --> 00:17:54.299 Oh, a hundred percent. 00:17:54.299 --> 00:18:01.419 Like I have several friends who are like 10 years, 20 years, actually one of my partners is 10 years younger than I am. 00:18:01.419 --> 00:18:13.919 And, you know, one of my nesting partners and then I have friends who are good 20 years, sometimes 25 years younger than me because I'm still involved in community organizing and a lot of people tend to kind of burn out. 00:18:13.919 --> 00:18:16.799 And so it was actually very sweet. 00:18:17.339 --> 00:18:31.817 try to have queer family dinner at our household and We're also an intergenerational household now because my daughter and her boyfriend moved in with us and I was like looking around the table and I was like, oh, I have friends who are actually closer in age to my kids age. 00:18:31.817 --> 00:18:48.759 And we are aware of our age difference in terms of our friendship, but there is something really beautiful in being able to be at a different place in life also where you can offer that kind of even just the stability of being able to host a queer family dinner with multiple people in our community. 00:18:48.759 --> 00:18:51.279 come together, give each other support. 00:18:52.180 --> 00:19:00.460 I don't know, it really felt like the web of interdependence and it just felt much closer to how it was brought up, right? 00:19:00.460 --> 00:19:10.039 Like being around the table during holidays and stuff and seeing two or three different generations of people sitting at the same table, right? 00:19:10.039 --> 00:19:16.500 Rather than all this like segregated by age kind of that I think a lot more mainstream folks might be used to. 00:19:16.500 --> 00:19:18.001 I don't know if I'm making sense. 00:19:18.001 --> 00:19:21.473 yeah, and also getting to sit around tables with people you actually want to. 00:19:21.473 --> 00:19:25.846 So again, but like, that's really nice. 00:19:25.846 --> 00:19:31.127 And then thinking about, um again, the fluctuations in. 00:19:32.508 --> 00:19:45.874 I'm thinking about fluctuations over time and like outness to like maybe around around the times when we were coming up or and especially before being out, like I, I really didn't have like. 00:19:45.874 --> 00:19:54.797 I think I maybe had ideas that people I was hanging out with were queer and people just weren't out, at least maybe that was regional, also where I was, I don't know. 00:19:54.956 --> 00:20:00.999 And just people weren't not out the way that they are now, which is awesome. 00:20:01.158 --> 00:20:03.019 And then I wonder, that gonna fluctuate? 00:20:03.019 --> 00:20:09.781 That's another reason to be in touch with folks that are a little bit younger too. 00:20:09.781 --> 00:20:14.345 uh they're out and like, you know what I mean? 00:20:14.345 --> 00:20:19.973 And then you can see each other if your closet is harder to find each other. 00:20:19.973 --> 00:20:23.313 And then I wonder if it's gonna go back that way a little bit. 00:20:23.313 --> 00:20:25.326 I don't know. 00:20:25.326 --> 00:20:28.849 I just don't, I wonder who knows. 00:20:29.322 --> 00:20:30.733 No, I mean, that's a good wondering. 00:20:30.733 --> 00:20:32.484 I've been thinking about that too. 00:20:32.484 --> 00:20:36.548 I mean, I love the rabbit holes we're going in, but stop me if you want to. 00:20:36.548 --> 00:20:38.720 But I think this is an important conversation. 00:20:38.720 --> 00:20:53.792 um One of the words I have is actually for younger folks not knowing, um like, how do we build webs of connection outside of some of the existing structures, like social media, for example, right? 00:20:53.792 --> 00:21:01.992 If we have to be more cautious or em for lots of different reasons, including our social positioning, right? 00:21:01.992 --> 00:21:06.736 And knowing that some of us in our community are gonna be higher risk than others, right? 00:21:06.736 --> 00:21:11.270 Because of how we're visualized or whether we're disabled or not, all of those different things. 00:21:11.270 --> 00:21:22.490 I think about like, oh, I remember days where, you know, all we had was like paper magazine and you had to go in person to the like the gay club and it was the gay club. 00:21:22.490 --> 00:21:25.943 It wasn't really the queer club or the gay cafe in London, which... 00:21:26.200 --> 00:21:35.740 rest in peace doesn't exist anymore, unfortunately, which was the first place that I gathered my courage in my 20s and walked in and I was like, oh, I'm doing it. 00:21:35.740 --> 00:21:40.619 After telling a few people I'm out in public in a gay space, right? 00:21:40.619 --> 00:21:44.619 And I think a lot of younger folks haven't had that experience. 00:21:44.619 --> 00:21:57.087 And I think that is really scary for a lot of them, not to know how to connect or how to exist outside of a more open know, way out in the open. 00:21:57.087 --> 00:22:04.091 Not to say that everybody can be out in the open, but I agree that there is a lot more visibility for, want to put a better word. 00:22:04.091 --> 00:22:15.065 Yeah, so many people have grown up with social media now and that's how they connect and which is beautiful for especially for people um who don't have access to in-person community. 00:22:15.065 --> 00:22:32.230 Maybe they live in a place where um it's not apparent where folks are or maybe like a smaller town and like maybe it's there, it's just really hard to find and so we get online and it's kind of like the diaspora meets, right? 00:22:33.536 --> 00:22:48.533 But yeah, if that's all you've known and that's how you make connections, then what happens when censorship is increasing and it is becoming more dangerous to be online for a lot of people? 00:22:48.575 --> 00:22:52.296 People are getting, lots of different things are happening. 00:22:52.436 --> 00:23:05.663 And so what happens if we, like I'm already like mostly not on, like I still have my social media, like people are welcome to follow me and, like, Honestly, don't expect a lot of content from me because I'm just not doing it anymore. 00:23:05.663 --> 00:23:08.124 I'm like, really not looking at it too much. 00:23:08.124 --> 00:23:16.556 I'm looking for messages sometimes, but it's not become a place that felt like it used to for me, that felt more like community. 00:23:16.556 --> 00:23:19.186 It's not feeling like that anymore. 00:23:19.201 --> 00:23:26.578 I do like to go on there sometimes and I'll see what friends are posting, things like that, but something has changed. 00:23:26.578 --> 00:23:29.829 so, yeah, I guess I am. 00:23:30.259 --> 00:23:58.682 I mean, nowadays, especially with everything going on now, I'm really focused on being uh like trying to talk to people with our voices, like you and I are talking, yes, we're on screens, but it's real time we're talking, especially in person, like, you know, with loved ones and friends and like thinking more about organizing in-person events, just getting together, people in community doing this more often locally. 00:23:58.682 --> 00:24:11.701 um micro locally, you know, how we can, so that we can talk to each other and tell each other what's feeling good, what do we need right now, you know, stuff like that. 00:24:11.701 --> 00:24:17.453 Not even to like receive it necessarily, just to know what it is and to have someone else hear it, you know. 00:24:18.164 --> 00:24:18.984 Absolutely. 00:24:18.984 --> 00:24:20.125 No, I love that. 00:24:20.125 --> 00:24:21.066 And that is so true. 00:24:21.066 --> 00:24:26.666 I've also been really drawn to like more local organizing, more like we need those third spaces. 00:24:26.666 --> 00:24:28.276 We need to connect with each other. 00:24:28.276 --> 00:24:41.270 I think it's so fascinating also that there is like this resurgence in, I mean, we've always had queer and trans zines, paper zines, but now it feels like there's another like resurgence of like this paper medium. 00:24:41.270 --> 00:24:43.780 And I was like, yes, like writing, right? 00:24:43.780 --> 00:24:46.271 The communicating with each other in this way. 00:24:46.912 --> 00:25:04.138 Anyway, you did mention the increased censorship and I think that's a good segue and one of the questions I wanted to ask you before we went into this beautiful side quest, which I love, and gender stories listeners or watchers for those of you watching YouTube are used to the Robbie Halls side quest. 00:25:04.138 --> 00:25:07.720 So this is not out of character for this podcast. 00:25:08.260 --> 00:25:13.522 But I am interested in what's it like for you to be so open about your identities. 00:25:13.522 --> 00:25:16.567 I love what you said that you're open about your social locations. 00:25:16.567 --> 00:25:18.107 Not necessarily the details. 00:25:18.107 --> 00:25:23.748 feel very similarly, unless I know people or details that I'm comfortable sharing in there. 00:25:23.748 --> 00:25:26.887 I know I have the consent of people in my family to share. 00:25:26.947 --> 00:25:37.427 But I'm interested in what it's like to be a sex therapist is already a little bit of sometimes a controversial role that not everybody understands in the world. 00:25:37.427 --> 00:25:44.501 And then on top of that, having those social locations of being openly trans and queer and kinky and polyamorous. 00:25:44.501 --> 00:25:50.484 What's the experience like for you generally, but maybe especially right now? 00:25:50.998 --> 00:26:12.077 Yeah, I mean, my my the way I have felt in my job has shifted a lot since I first started, because when I first started this job, I was transitioning out of sex work and which then gave me some freedom around how I wanted to express my gender and like be in my body. 00:26:12.077 --> 00:26:21.664 So when I first started, I was more on the hyper feminine spectrum because that's what served me really well in my previous job. 00:26:21.845 --> 00:26:42.322 And um honestly, in this field, you know, um field of like therapists and sex therapists, I think is pretty dominated by, let's say, conventionally attractive, like cis straight white women. 00:26:42.361 --> 00:26:45.269 And I looked a lot like that when I... 00:26:45.269 --> 00:26:48.149 first started and so that it felt a lot different. 00:26:48.149 --> 00:26:59.210 And I was stepping outside of the typical gaze and had this freedom to do what I wanted to with myself. 00:26:59.210 --> 00:27:07.269 And then, know, fast forward to now, like I was like, oh, okay, I didn't really have a plan and that's what happened and great. 00:27:07.269 --> 00:27:17.778 And so now I'm like, you know, my gender fluctuates, you know, daily, but I'm read a lot differently. 00:27:17.778 --> 00:27:21.817 And so I think that that's one thing that feels really different. 00:27:21.817 --> 00:27:31.518 I think my clients have different people approach me and it's great because I am like, yeah, I present the way I look, the way I look. 00:27:31.518 --> 00:27:39.617 And a lot of times, people professionally like clients or people in the world approach you based on what you look like. 00:27:39.617 --> 00:27:42.337 I mean, this is just the world we live in. 00:27:42.337 --> 00:27:53.151 Our eyes are like, give us so much information and nonverbal communication, you know, for um a lot of people, obviously not everybody. 00:27:53.211 --> 00:28:05.538 And so em that interface has changed, but I still talk a lot about being an expert in BDSM and um in non-monogamy. 00:28:05.538 --> 00:28:11.581 And so I get a lot of people coming to me from that, but I also get fewer people. 00:28:11.584 --> 00:28:35.941 Just in general, think that there's um particularly nowadays, I don't know, I think that there's messaging out in the world that makes people approach you with questions or uncertainty or maybe like, don't know, I've that a bit, which honestly, I'm a bit insulated in my community. 00:28:35.941 --> 00:28:40.834 have a really strong network, really strong community. 00:28:41.077 --> 00:28:46.217 Mostly in New York City, but also somewhat in other places. 00:28:46.217 --> 00:28:50.738 Like, look, you're in another place and there's different people in other places. 00:28:50.738 --> 00:28:57.857 So I am really lucky to have made these connections here. 00:28:59.278 --> 00:29:01.337 So, yeah, I don't know. 00:29:01.337 --> 00:29:04.097 It's a really weird feeling right now. 00:29:04.097 --> 00:29:07.837 I do feel, I feel good in my community. 00:29:07.837 --> 00:29:11.135 I feel good with this. 00:29:11.135 --> 00:29:14.988 this like the micro around me right now. 00:29:14.988 --> 00:29:23.586 um And I have to be really careful to like, you know, I wanna stay on top of everything that's going on. 00:29:23.586 --> 00:29:38.476 I look at the news every day, try to skip some days honestly, but I feel like responsible to kind of know what's going on um for people around me, for my clients, for my supervisees um and for myself. 00:29:38.476 --> 00:29:45.444 But I also have to be careful to not overwhelm myself because it's scary. 00:29:45.444 --> 00:29:47.426 It's scary to be alive right now. 00:29:47.426 --> 00:29:55.373 um To like worry about like what can happen, what will happen, what do need to do to protect myself further? 00:29:55.373 --> 00:29:56.894 Can I, you know? 00:29:58.039 --> 00:30:05.819 Oh, I so hear that because there are times where I'm like, oh, I'm too out or too public. 00:30:05.819 --> 00:30:23.183 It would be really easy, you know, like, and then I have to, I really set with those feelings, you know, really notice also the intergenerational pattern as somebody was brought up like in Italy where, you know, my grandma or my elementary school teacher would talk about, you know. 00:30:23.480 --> 00:30:29.380 living through World War II and fascism and what that looks like in the day to day, right? 00:30:29.380 --> 00:30:35.980 Like in school, work, like how do you get food during a war, all of that, but also the control and the fear. 00:30:35.980 --> 00:30:49.060 I really feel in the intergenerational fear and then going, okay, how do I wanna relate to this fear in this moment with my social locations and also the work that I do in the age I'm at? 00:30:49.060 --> 00:30:51.860 I wonder if I would have felt differently. 00:30:52.269 --> 00:30:55.311 you know, 20 years ago compared to now. 00:30:55.353 --> 00:31:00.259 And then I keep reminding myself like, oh, for some folks, this is how it's always been. 00:31:00.259 --> 00:31:05.404 It's always been dangerous or, you know, at least for a very long time, it's been dangerous to be themselves. 00:31:05.404 --> 00:31:09.578 And so that gives me some peace or settling. 00:31:09.578 --> 00:31:11.061 don't know what to call it. 00:31:11.753 --> 00:31:13.164 Yeah, I mean, and we're lucky. 00:31:13.164 --> 00:31:22.321 we're, you know, to, guess to feel the kind of fear from my positionality right now is a bit of a luxury. 00:31:22.321 --> 00:31:36.671 It's like, you know, I'm, I have, I'm used to feel like, you know, I did sex work for a very long time before changing careers, um whatever, like 12 years ago now or something. 00:31:36.831 --> 00:31:38.812 And, you know, for decades, literally. 00:31:38.812 --> 00:31:40.298 And there, and I know what that. 00:31:40.298 --> 00:32:07.965 feels like to feel sort of the hypervigilance around safety um and to be clear, not safety from clients or peers, but from the world at large and from, obviously from law enforcement and from other people who would, and yeah, so that, then like feeling like changing jobs and feel like, oh, like I can. 00:32:07.965 --> 00:32:12.327 speak more freely, but I was always out about it, but like you have to be careful. 00:32:12.327 --> 00:32:14.428 And now I can speak more freely. 00:32:14.428 --> 00:32:19.090 And there was this kind of relaxation and then it's like, I'm feeling the hypervigilance come back. 00:32:19.090 --> 00:32:20.201 And it's just interesting. 00:32:20.201 --> 00:32:29.404 But like, like you said, the fact that I feel these fluctuations is, is really, um I'm lucky. 00:32:29.404 --> 00:32:40.913 I'm lucky to have this privilege from, you know, this like, to be able to have this, this know, job to be able to have taken on all those student loans and like gotten into these schools. 00:32:40.913 --> 00:32:50.338 because I told them what they wanted to hear and, you know, presented in whatever way they wanted to get myself in, um that is all really lucky. 00:32:50.338 --> 00:32:57.842 um we've always had these kind of elements of oppression going on. 00:32:57.842 --> 00:33:03.155 And some people are like, yeah, it doesn't feel too much different now for lots of folks. 00:33:03.541 --> 00:33:04.801 than it always has. 00:33:04.801 --> 00:33:12.341 It's always like, how am I gonna make it till through today or the next five minutes or tomorrow or whatever. 00:33:12.341 --> 00:33:16.061 And so that really does give perspective. 00:33:16.061 --> 00:33:28.581 And it's really real that the trans community is obviously being targeted in a way that's different today than it has been in recent times. 00:33:28.581 --> 00:33:31.061 Although previously it also was targeted. 00:33:31.061 --> 00:33:38.316 So again, more fluctuations, but yeah, I obviously wish it wasn't going back in this way. 00:33:38.316 --> 00:33:41.657 um I don't think it's permanent. 00:33:41.657 --> 00:33:42.748 I don't think it can be. 00:33:42.748 --> 00:33:44.959 Like we're obviously not going anywhere. 00:33:44.999 --> 00:33:53.261 There's been these fluctuations for like ever and still like you can't like, well, we're gonna be here, you know. 00:33:53.907 --> 00:33:54.479 Exactly. 00:33:54.479 --> 00:34:03.676 And that's what I always read when I feel like, almost that pressure to despair or feel urgency. 00:34:03.676 --> 00:34:06.269 like, well, first of all, that's going to take some time. 00:34:06.269 --> 00:34:14.027 So it's like, yes, I feel the urgency and also know that we're in this, um, for quite some times, probably. 00:34:14.027 --> 00:34:18.992 But I also remember I'm like, Oh, this has been an issue for a long time, right? 00:34:18.992 --> 00:34:30.981 It's like, for Indigenous folks, this has been an issue from the beginning of colonization, like the violence towards to spirit folks, queer folks, Indigenous women and men folks in a different way. 00:34:30.981 --> 00:34:41.320 Like gender has always been something that I think systems of dominance have tried to like repress police control for lots of different reasons. 00:34:41.320 --> 00:34:42.832 And I think that... 00:34:42.946 --> 00:34:55.572 We're just seeing it kind of play louder and more openly, but it's not like those systems were not already geared up to perform gender violence and we're already performing gender violence. 00:34:55.572 --> 00:35:04.827 I think they're just doing it much more uh openly and that a lot more white folks are impacted than they have been in the past, if that makes sense. 00:35:05.948 --> 00:35:06.691 Yeah. 00:35:06.691 --> 00:35:22.031 you know, so you, when, when white people get impacted, then they, you know, there's this like affront and it's like, well, totally, but like, yeah, either the oppressors are more closeted or the marginalized people more closeted. 00:35:22.031 --> 00:35:24.190 It's like, I think, I don't know if, can you have both? 00:35:24.190 --> 00:35:24.974 don't know. 00:35:25.260 --> 00:35:26.371 I don't know, I hope so. 00:35:26.371 --> 00:35:33.836 I feel like at the same time there is this, I don't know if it's maybe the fact that we are more globally connected through the internet, right? 00:35:33.836 --> 00:35:45.657 That we can find a kind of solidarity across space, like literally like across time zones and geographical places and kind of come together in different ways. 00:35:45.657 --> 00:35:51.883 But it definitely feels like there is this desire to have a paradigm shift in some ways, right? 00:35:51.883 --> 00:35:52.923 Find kind of... 00:35:52.923 --> 00:35:55.693 uh new ways, right? 00:35:55.693 --> 00:36:03.959 Because I don't think we can ever go back another one or romanticize the past either, because I think that's another construct to romanticize the past. 00:36:03.959 --> 00:36:08.242 But I think that there is a desire to reconnect, right? 00:36:08.242 --> 00:36:15.177 Reconnect to belonging, to community, to figure out different ways of taking care of each other. 00:36:15.177 --> 00:36:29.533 Because many of us are realizing that maybe capitalism is not this like dream that uh a lot of people thought it to be and actually it's really driving us into an earthly grave most of the time for most of us. 00:36:29.533 --> 00:36:35.133 And so there's also, I don't know, I think I draw my hope from this like awakening. 00:36:35.513 --> 00:36:49.880 And it's interesting that the awakening seems very somatic, which is also interesting as a sex therapist, a lot more people, a lot more white folks, I should say, interested in like embodiment, in like being here. 00:36:49.880 --> 00:37:00.760 and being able to understand kind of what their body minds are doing, what their nervous system are doing so that there can be like a presence and a connection. 00:37:00.760 --> 00:37:04.442 I think those things kind of go hand in hand in some ways. 00:37:04.442 --> 00:37:14.913 And it's like when we started out talking about academia, like it makes me think of like, it's that's been an easy place for me to hide is in this like part of my brain. 00:37:14.913 --> 00:37:20.278 And so it actually took a long time for me to be able to get more into my body. 00:37:20.278 --> 00:37:24.912 know, was like um externalizing things in so many ways. 00:37:24.912 --> 00:37:29.206 And anyway, just thought of that coming back around to. 00:37:29.272 --> 00:37:41.099 Absolutely, there is such a dominance and celebration of the intellectualizing and prefrontal cortex in academia and we could talk about that for a long time. 00:37:41.099 --> 00:37:42.553 really seem to get us anywhere. 00:37:42.553 --> 00:37:44.207 mean, look at what's going on. 00:37:44.207 --> 00:37:46.421 That didn't really help, it? 00:37:46.421 --> 00:37:51.762 In fact, it's like, academia falls in line with these harmful practices. 00:37:52.042 --> 00:37:52.642 Exactly. 00:37:52.642 --> 00:37:57.286 I was like, I am not super shocked that a lot of systems are like complying in advance. 00:37:57.286 --> 00:37:59.428 And I'm like, yes, that's what systems do. 00:37:59.428 --> 00:38:04.182 They do comply in advance and they tend to like follow the status quo. 00:38:04.722 --> 00:38:05.643 Yeah. 00:38:05.943 --> 00:38:13.150 So I'm curious about what are you noticing in your clients or supervises in this moment? 00:38:13.150 --> 00:38:19.655 Maybe especially folks who are like younger than us, you know, where GenXers maybe like kind of. 00:38:19.655 --> 00:38:24.568 uh younger millennials or Gen Z years or even Gen office. 00:38:24.568 --> 00:38:30.493 think some of the Gen office are coming up to being adults or near adults at this point, which is terrifying. 00:38:30.493 --> 00:38:40.296 I thought, but what are you noticing in your life and your clients in your superbases in terms of how they're navigating this moment in time? 00:38:42.036 --> 00:38:51.854 I mean, so I have a lot in terms of clients that I see, have a really, I have a pretty diverse mix of folks that I see. 00:38:53.095 --> 00:39:00.651 The way that I do my practice is like a subsidy model where like I like, I charge a pretty high fee and then that helps too. 00:39:00.651 --> 00:39:03.864 And then I see people that can't pay or don't pay very much. 00:39:03.864 --> 00:39:06.546 And so that kind of like balances it out. 00:39:06.666 --> 00:39:11.860 And the result of that too, is that I, there's a lot of different kinds of people that I work with. 00:39:11.880 --> 00:39:20.184 And so honestly, there are some people that I work with that um aren't really noticing too much at all. 00:39:20.184 --> 00:39:33.499 yeah, in terms of changes right now, mean, typically people have oftentimes have an awareness and they, but they might not be, it might not be something that we talk about in therapy. 00:39:33.499 --> 00:39:35.519 They're talking about something else. 00:39:35.900 --> 00:39:45.134 And then folks who have been, the ones that are most struggling, it's kind like we were saying before, it's like also not a lot has changed for them. 00:39:45.134 --> 00:40:02.554 They're still like, they're still like seeing whether or not they can even get health insurance, like will they have a place to live, know, navigating violence from, you know, world around them. 00:40:02.634 --> 00:40:13.542 you know, so that is also, so it's honestly, it's kind of like the folks in, somewhere in between those that are voicing the most impact. 00:40:13.542 --> 00:40:15.102 It's kind like what we were saying before. 00:40:15.102 --> 00:40:19.262 It's like the privilege of noticing how fucked you are. 00:40:19.262 --> 00:40:21.842 Sorry, I forgot to ask if I'm allowed to say that. 00:40:24.022 --> 00:40:26.082 All right, so we won't have to edit that. 00:40:26.522 --> 00:40:30.461 yeah, it is interesting. 00:40:30.461 --> 00:40:38.162 It's the ones who been like, maybe they've been doing okay or like have been doing even better. 00:40:38.452 --> 00:40:49.776 And then there's this fear of doing worse or of being attacked more or losing something they only recently found, you know, stuff like that. 00:40:49.776 --> 00:40:53.412 So I think that's for clients, what I'm noticing. 00:40:53.592 --> 00:41:00.617 And also it's just like, sometimes so bizarre, like I will come in and I love my work. 00:41:00.617 --> 00:41:06.021 I feel so lucky to have figured out that I love this and can do it. 00:41:06.021 --> 00:41:08.461 Like I think I do a pretty good job. 00:41:10.039 --> 00:41:17.193 and also, you know, it, takes work to show up sometimes, like some days it's like, okay, I get to put my own stuff away. 00:41:17.193 --> 00:41:23.447 I get to not think about myself or anything that's going on except for this person in front of me, which is really wonderful. 00:41:23.447 --> 00:41:28.284 And also sometimes it's harder to do that than others because it's like, well, they're talking about it. 00:41:28.284 --> 00:41:43.418 And sometimes I'm like, like, okay, just like recalibrating to what is going on here can be challenging because of, you know, something I know that's going on in my community or, But that's our job and it's part of what I love about our job. 00:41:43.418 --> 00:41:48.018 um I love being able to like just not think about myself for a little while. 00:41:48.018 --> 00:41:49.089 Love that. 00:41:49.610 --> 00:41:52.081 It is a pretty great part of the job. 00:41:52.081 --> 00:41:53.062 agree. 00:41:53.640 --> 00:42:01.647 I think it is tricky though, when we share some identities with our clients, because we are impacted by kind of similar things. 00:42:01.647 --> 00:42:05.379 so, yeah, I don't know about you, there are days where I'm like, this is great. 00:42:05.379 --> 00:42:06.930 Like, we're just focusing on this. 00:42:06.930 --> 00:42:17.825 And then days where, I mean, the world is always present in the therapy room, but where it feels like the world takes center stage rather than being around us, if that makes sense. 00:42:17.825 --> 00:42:18.496 Yeah. 00:42:18.496 --> 00:42:34.230 Right, and it's in our job description to like hold the space, hold the frame, and which means like, you know, we can be having the same or similar feelings and it's like, but this is not the time for me to get into that right now. 00:42:34.230 --> 00:42:35.452 And that can be really tricky. 00:42:35.452 --> 00:42:37.664 Really tricky. 00:42:37.664 --> 00:42:44.930 And also sometimes the clients have told me or I've noticed, I think they feel like it's kind of weird. 00:42:44.948 --> 00:42:49.339 because it's like, what's, you're not like, you know, I'm really feeling this, I'm telling you about it. 00:42:49.339 --> 00:42:52.731 And I'm like, being supportive and also being honest. 00:42:52.731 --> 00:42:55.943 And I will not, I'm not pretending like it doesn't affect me. 00:42:55.943 --> 00:43:00.677 I'm say to people, I'm gonna be honest and depending on our relationship and what we're talking about. 00:43:00.677 --> 00:43:09.142 I'll say like, yeah, you know, I'm feeling similarly about this or this affected me in a similar way, but I'm not getting into, going into, is this not, that's not what it is. 00:43:09.142 --> 00:43:12.193 Like it's about you, it's about, not you, but like, you know, it's about my client. 00:43:12.193 --> 00:43:16.702 em You know, so that's sometimes weird too. 00:43:16.702 --> 00:43:20.345 it's particularly when clients know how much we do have in common. 00:43:22.326 --> 00:43:23.036 But it's good. 00:43:23.036 --> 00:43:26.568 I mean, I think it's, know, it's what it's, I'm glad to be doing it. 00:43:26.568 --> 00:43:30.269 um I'm really, even though sometimes it's hard. 00:43:30.570 --> 00:43:35.092 And then it's different with people that I work with, particularly with my supervisees. 00:43:35.092 --> 00:43:38.393 I feel so protective, like in a way, like I feel like... 00:43:38.393 --> 00:43:41.883 um And that also feels good. 00:43:41.883 --> 00:43:44.854 It feels good to have something to do like that, honestly. 00:43:44.854 --> 00:43:51.838 Like I want everybody that I work with to know that like, I am here for you to talk, tell me what you need. 00:43:51.838 --> 00:43:53.278 Like we're gonna figure things out. 00:43:53.278 --> 00:43:55.090 We're here in this space together. 00:43:55.090 --> 00:43:58.151 And um that feels really important. 00:43:58.151 --> 00:44:00.523 um And I enjoy doing that. 00:44:00.523 --> 00:44:07.827 And like, I'm just a little bit more vigilant, like keeping my eye out for what kind of support people need. 00:44:07.827 --> 00:44:10.118 And I think we're, you know, people are nervous. 00:44:10.624 --> 00:44:13.256 but particularly younger clinicians. 00:44:13.256 --> 00:44:21.704 Really, everybody I know in the trans clinicians are more or less kind of nervous about what's going on. 00:44:21.704 --> 00:44:29.320 In New York, it's a nice place to be, but there's really weird things going on here too politically. 00:44:29.320 --> 00:44:31.412 It's really hard to know. 00:44:31.532 --> 00:44:35.676 So just kind of like, what can we do for each other? 00:44:35.676 --> 00:44:38.597 um Trying to be open to that. 00:44:38.846 --> 00:44:41.821 navigating all the power dynamics within all that. 00:44:42.806 --> 00:44:59.103 Yeah, there's a lot of layers because I so relate like that protectiveness of younger clinicians, know, and not always necessarily age younger, but even professional identity development younger, you know, depending on when they're coming into the profession. 00:44:59.196 --> 00:45:08.917 you know, and even, yeah, I live in a trans refuge state and that doesn't mean that things are not happening here either, you know, in different ways. 00:45:08.917 --> 00:45:11.327 And it's just like... 00:45:11.640 --> 00:45:14.481 There's just so many things happening on so many different levels. 00:45:14.481 --> 00:45:19.685 And then I agree that one of our ethical duties is like to take care of ourselves and our feelings. 00:45:19.685 --> 00:45:25.498 So we don't bring them in like the therapy room in certain ways or the supervisor relationship in certain ways. 00:45:25.498 --> 00:45:31.471 And that's also work that I think often people don't think about in terms of therapeutic work. 00:45:31.471 --> 00:45:40.015 It's like that making sure we have time to process things that might have come up for us when we work with clients or with supervisees, right? 00:45:40.885 --> 00:45:45.480 you know, making sure that we give ourselves space to like, take care of ourselves. 00:45:45.480 --> 00:46:03.955 And that can be hard given that, you know, we all live in a moment in capitalism where cost of living is going up, but, you know, wages are not going up and all of that kind of complicated, like how do we not live in a way where we're constantly extracting from ourselves and exhausting ourselves. 00:46:04.035 --> 00:46:09.398 And at the same time, you know, showing up in all the ways we need to, it's a lot to juggle. 00:46:09.398 --> 00:46:10.570 It's quite a balance, yeah. 00:46:10.570 --> 00:46:14.385 And I'm always telling folks, like, when are you going to take time off? 00:46:14.385 --> 00:46:16.410 And then I, of course, have to take time off too. 00:46:16.410 --> 00:46:19.735 Otherwise, it's just like, yeah, you're saying that, but you're not really doing it. 00:46:19.735 --> 00:46:24.302 So I figure out when to do that, which, figuring that out. 00:46:24.441 --> 00:46:25.901 Oh my God, that is so real. 00:46:25.901 --> 00:46:38.861 And even I often joke that like being a sex therapist, I talk more about sex than actually engage in like pleasure or having time for, you know, for sex or connecting with community because I'm like, oh, there is just so much work. 00:46:38.861 --> 00:46:46.461 And then I have to remember, part of the work is also to take care of myself, make sure I stay connected to my communities and my relationships. 00:46:46.461 --> 00:46:49.561 But it can be so hard to become other focused. 00:46:49.561 --> 00:46:50.461 It's that balance. 00:46:50.461 --> 00:46:54.021 I don't know if you experienced that, but for me, it's always that balance. 00:46:54.231 --> 00:46:55.302 No, absolutely. 00:46:55.302 --> 00:47:05.661 Yeah, always looking for, um I mean, I do lean on hedonism a little bit in terms of like something, but I also love to work. 00:47:05.661 --> 00:47:14.669 So I tend to work a lot and I, it's, really feeling what you're saying in terms of like, yeah, like, you know, I do a lot of scheduling and things like that. 00:47:14.669 --> 00:47:33.458 And so, and I was, it just reminded me of a conversation I had with a colleague not too long ago because I'm trying to connect, like I said, one-on-one, one-on-one or multiple with community and say, how are we doing? 00:47:33.458 --> 00:47:34.658 What do we need? 00:47:34.658 --> 00:47:36.978 Is there anything we want to collaborate on? 00:47:38.738 --> 00:47:49.758 And it's like really, well, really the thing is that connection and pleasure and like, do we, how do we like, we need to, we need, that's so important. 00:47:50.379 --> 00:47:51.476 Absolutely. 00:47:51.476 --> 00:47:56.144 all the time, but it's easier to forget right now because there can be so much despair and darkness. 00:47:56.144 --> 00:48:00.934 And so it's even more important to focus on that pleasure. 00:48:01.368 --> 00:48:02.428 I so agree. 00:48:02.428 --> 00:48:11.932 I feel really lucky to have been brought up by a parent who had his own issues in many other ways, but he was a labor union organizer. 00:48:11.932 --> 00:48:17.335 And so even just that message of like, we need community, we need each other. 00:48:17.708 --> 00:48:20.486 And the whole concept of bread and roses, right? 00:48:20.486 --> 00:48:27.259 That it's not just about making enough to take care of your family and put food on the table, but we also need rest. 00:48:27.259 --> 00:48:29.323 We also need beauty. 00:48:29.323 --> 00:48:30.173 in our life, right? 00:48:30.173 --> 00:48:37.958 Whatever that is, whether it's having the time to make a nice meal, enjoying the flowers outside, connecting with people, right? 00:48:37.958 --> 00:48:41.807 It's like, you know, the labor movement was always very clear. 00:48:41.807 --> 00:48:48.125 It's not just about bread, but it's about rest and it's about, you know, the pleasure in life, right? 00:48:48.125 --> 00:48:54.294 And I think it can be easy in this moment to feel like pleasure is not a priority. 00:48:54.294 --> 00:49:04.639 And I'm wondering if you're finding that even in your clinical work that people are finding other things are more urgent, but the pleasure is what feeds us to them do the harder work, I think. 00:49:04.662 --> 00:49:05.442 No, absolutely. 00:49:05.442 --> 00:49:08.842 It's an investment in sustainability to do other work. 00:49:08.842 --> 00:49:12.742 And I really get worried and I am definitely vocal about it. 00:49:12.742 --> 00:49:26.981 When I hear people feeling like something I've heard clients talk about feeling guilty for needing a moment or needing to rest even to just to stop doing with not even pleasure, but just like to or slow down. 00:49:26.981 --> 00:49:28.922 And it's like, but there's always more to do. 00:49:28.922 --> 00:49:29.702 I'm like, yeah, guess what? 00:49:29.702 --> 00:49:31.262 There's always going to be more to do. 00:49:31.262 --> 00:49:34.666 Like you, you can't do it by your like, none of us can do it. 00:49:34.666 --> 00:49:47.550 There's always more we can do, and also we're not going to be able to keep doing it if we don't take a minute and remind ourselves of the reasons why we enjoy being alive. 00:49:47.550 --> 00:49:51.294 Hopefully, find those things. 00:49:51.294 --> 00:49:55.888 If it's hard to find, do some work in finding those things. 00:49:56.440 --> 00:49:57.461 I so agree. 00:49:57.461 --> 00:49:58.260 Yeah. 00:49:58.260 --> 00:50:00.103 I feel like that's part of that. 00:50:00.103 --> 00:50:20.077 I two thoughts at once, but one, as you were talking, I was thinking about one of my queer elders, Donald Engstrom-Rees, who's a semi-elder as well, uh said something that was really impactful a few years ago during a meeting was that balance is not meant to be within the individual, but within community. 00:50:20.077 --> 00:50:28.483 And I've been thinking about that a lot, that like when you talked about collaboration, I was really feeling that I was like, yes, we need to do things more collectively. 00:50:28.483 --> 00:50:34.405 But a lot of us are not used to being in the shared power consensus decision making, right? 00:50:34.405 --> 00:50:36.533 More collaborative community spaces. 00:50:36.533 --> 00:50:48.830 So I think a lot of people are like practicing that and practicing kind of building community, especially folks who have kind of lost their skill through, you know, assimilating into whiteness and all that good stuff. 00:50:48.830 --> 00:51:00.516 um But then this other piece about like, You know, we don't even give ourselves just the rest that we need, let alone pleasure or embodiment. 00:51:00.516 --> 00:51:03.708 And being a sex therapist, sometimes people think it's just about sex. 00:51:03.708 --> 00:51:09.402 But for me, when I say sex, it's really about embodiment and aliveness, right? 00:51:09.402 --> 00:51:20.148 It's about being able to like look aside and look at the trees and just really feel that connection right with the trees around me, um you know, or really. 00:51:20.242 --> 00:51:38.560 feel the water like when I shower or when I drink it and really just feel that relationality and that sense of aliveness, like how lucky are we to be alive and to have breath, you know, before we return to being part of the ecosystem in a different way, right? 00:51:38.560 --> 00:51:46.807 And I think sometimes people think that sex therapy is just like relationship issues or like the type of relationships we have. 00:51:46.807 --> 00:51:48.248 or the type of sex we have. 00:51:48.248 --> 00:51:50.668 But I don't know how you approach sex therapy. 00:51:50.668 --> 00:51:56.146 But I think especially from a queer perspective, it like it's so much more expansive than that. 00:51:56.146 --> 00:52:07.925 Yeah, it's always, at least the way I practice, it's so rarely about the body part functioning or even desire. 00:52:07.925 --> 00:52:13.840 A lot of the times it's about what's getting in the way of that and it's all this other stuff going on. 00:52:13.840 --> 00:52:19.484 in order to, yeah, there's these steps about how do you stay embodied? 00:52:19.484 --> 00:52:20.905 How do you notice your environment? 00:52:20.905 --> 00:52:22.766 How do you appreciate that? 00:52:23.592 --> 00:52:33.135 instead of fighting with these extra or assuming, I have to perform in this particular way because that's what, yeah, so it's very much like. 00:52:34.065 --> 00:52:47.338 And I think that's the beauty of being like a queer trans kinky polyamorous provider is also that I don't want to speak for you, but I feel like we know what it's like to go off script, off normative script, right? 00:52:47.338 --> 00:52:53.490 And a lot of our clients are struggling with being their authentic selves and going off script sometimes. 00:52:53.490 --> 00:52:58.565 And I think we have a gift to give no matter what the positionalities of client is, right? 00:52:58.565 --> 00:53:05.454 I actually love working with cis straight couples and and relationships, which I also, it's weird, but so much of it is gender work. 00:53:05.454 --> 00:53:23.311 I always joke that working with cis straight couple is 90 % gender work in terms of like how those expectations of normative binary gender show up in uh their dynamic and how when they can like break those open, like they can find so much more expansiveness. 00:53:23.311 --> 00:53:30.134 So I don't know, I always feel like that we have so many gifts to give to like cisheteromononormative world. 00:53:30.264 --> 00:53:34.184 But I think they're also afraid of it sometimes. 00:53:34.184 --> 00:53:34.784 Maybe. 00:53:34.784 --> 00:53:35.432 I don't know. 00:53:35.432 --> 00:53:46.182 It's fair think because one of the things that I say is things are gonna get a little awkward and I feel fine with that. 00:53:46.182 --> 00:53:47.869 I don't mind at all. 00:53:47.869 --> 00:54:05.012 you've ever, I mean any kinky person should understand things are gonna feel awkward or be funny or be weird or any of these identities we're talking about, um there are these like... 00:54:05.012 --> 00:54:06.073 moments like that. 00:54:06.073 --> 00:54:18.522 And I think the fear, particularly from maybe people who aren't so much in the marginalized groups, is there is a fear of awkwardness or of not performing correctly. 00:54:18.522 --> 00:54:20.373 And I think that's where it is. 00:54:20.373 --> 00:54:23.094 It's like, oh, it's okay. 00:54:23.315 --> 00:54:32.841 You kind of have to be okay with fucking up now and again and then looking at it and saying, oh, that's useful that that happened. 00:54:33.472 --> 00:54:36.325 But if you're so worried, like that's where people get so stuck. 00:54:36.325 --> 00:54:55.384 And I do think we have, by virtue of having to like figure out these things about ourselves and like these interpersonal things and relationship and like identity things and all that, there are so many awkward moments that you kind of really have to embrace in order to keep, in order to like, you know, do it, forward. 00:54:55.384 --> 00:54:55.923 Exactly. 00:54:55.923 --> 00:54:57.144 And it's so worth it. 00:54:57.144 --> 00:55:06.864 I wonder if there's like one thing that you wish you could like either help folks understand or do differently. 00:55:07.524 --> 00:55:17.903 You know, I know in my own practice, especially because I often have worked really with folks for a lot, for a long time with folks who experienced trauma or have experienced trauma. 00:55:17.903 --> 00:55:24.988 I always say if I could give one thing to all my clients would be like self-compassion is such a useful tool, right? 00:55:24.988 --> 00:55:30.449 Um, and when you were talking about the awkwardness, I was like, that's where self-compassion can really come in. 00:55:30.630 --> 00:55:30.850 yeah. 00:55:30.850 --> 00:55:31.590 What that, wow. 00:55:31.590 --> 00:55:36.327 That didn't go as I expected, or I didn't react as I expected and what can I learn from it? 00:55:36.327 --> 00:55:38.152 I'm not going to be gentle to myself. 00:55:38.152 --> 00:55:51.015 And, and I wonder if you have like one or two things that you're like, I wish I could just like wave a magic wand, you know, and like, to that the world or my clients understand this or can do this differently. 00:55:51.015 --> 00:55:52.426 I know it's a really big question. 00:55:52.426 --> 00:55:58.854 was like, No pressure, just a simple question thrown at you without any warning. 00:56:01.285 --> 00:56:06.173 No, I mean, you know, there's always, I don't know about no warning, but. 00:56:08.084 --> 00:56:13.257 I don't really have the thing ready, like the thing to say ready. 00:56:13.657 --> 00:56:17.119 So let me stumble through it since, and just like walk the walk. 00:56:17.119 --> 00:56:22.182 If I say I'm happy to be awkward, then I have to show you that I can be awkward. 00:56:22.353 --> 00:56:27.061 Well, and to be fair, I think I sprang this question on you like five minutes before we started recording. 00:56:27.061 --> 00:56:29.184 So I would say that's no warning. 00:56:32.307 --> 00:56:37.001 Yeah, think that, well, I think a lot of people hold themselves to a different standard than they hold other. 00:56:37.001 --> 00:56:43.437 And I'm always asking people like this way that you're being so hard on yourself right now, like, would you do that to this person that you love? 00:56:43.437 --> 00:56:44.538 Like, what would you say to them? 00:56:44.538 --> 00:56:46.750 Like, that's not how you would treat them. 00:56:46.750 --> 00:56:51.464 Can you at least treat yourself as well as somebody that you really love, you know? 00:56:51.464 --> 00:56:53.846 em Which means you have to really... 00:56:53.846 --> 00:56:56.086 maybe love yourself, figure out a way to do that. 00:56:56.086 --> 00:56:58.986 It's kind of similar to what you're saying about the self-compassion. 00:56:58.986 --> 00:57:00.826 I think that's really it. 00:57:00.826 --> 00:57:02.926 Can we go easy on ourselves? 00:57:05.546 --> 00:57:08.786 And also, that doesn't mean we're letting ourselves off the hook all the time. 00:57:08.786 --> 00:57:09.646 That's not what that means. 00:57:09.646 --> 00:57:10.506 It's the opposite. 00:57:10.506 --> 00:57:13.586 It's like looking at the hook and being like, okay, that's fine. 00:57:13.586 --> 00:57:16.146 What can I take from this? 00:57:16.146 --> 00:57:17.746 What can I leave behind? 00:57:18.146 --> 00:57:20.346 It's like, this is all part of it. 00:57:20.346 --> 00:57:21.358 It's all part of. 00:57:23.806 --> 00:57:25.498 if that was even coherent. 00:57:25.504 --> 00:57:26.845 It's totally coherent. 00:57:26.845 --> 00:57:33.771 love that piece of like, you um know, having a relationship with that hook. 00:57:33.771 --> 00:57:34.402 right? 00:57:34.402 --> 00:57:36.744 What do I want to hold myself accountable for? 00:57:36.744 --> 00:57:38.696 What can I be a bit more gentle? 00:57:38.696 --> 00:57:48.184 How would I approach this with somebody else often say similar things to my clients too of like, I bet that you wouldn't say this to somebody you cared about. 00:57:48.184 --> 00:57:52.356 mean, sometimes I'm like, you wouldn't say this to a stranger on the street, but you say it. 00:57:52.356 --> 00:57:54.596 And I mean, And I know because I've done it. 00:57:54.596 --> 00:57:59.416 are things I say to myself about myself that I wouldn't say to like a stranger on the street. 00:57:59.416 --> 00:58:02.816 And I have to remind myself, okay, Alex, what's going on right now? 00:58:02.816 --> 00:58:07.856 Like you wouldn't not say this to anybody or you would not treat anybody this way. 00:58:07.856 --> 00:58:11.916 So why do you feel like it's okay to treat yourself that way? 00:58:12.536 --> 00:58:21.815 But I think that a lot of it, I mean, some of it is trauma, but I think some of it is also the systemic trauma that like in a way under capitalism, I think. 00:58:21.815 --> 00:58:23.576 And I'm just thinking about this as we talk. 00:58:23.576 --> 00:58:25.887 I don't know if I'm going to be coherent either. 00:58:25.887 --> 00:58:31.369 the way, we're so used to modify ourselves in service to capitalism, right? 00:58:31.369 --> 00:58:41.733 We're like a body mind that we need to extract from ourselves to produce, produce, produce, to take care of ourselves, take care of our families, our communities, our loved ones, right? 00:58:41.733 --> 00:58:50.556 And so it can be easy to almost look at ourselves as like ah a tool to use rather than... 00:58:51.192 --> 00:58:55.512 somebody living being that we are in deep relationship with. 00:58:55.512 --> 00:58:57.807 I don't know if I'm making sense, but yeah. 00:58:59.288 --> 00:59:00.423 I was just thinking about that. 00:59:00.423 --> 00:59:04.266 was like, it's not just personal trauma, don't think. 00:59:05.347 --> 00:59:07.338 I guess that's the magic wand, right? 00:59:07.338 --> 00:59:20.925 Like, so if I waved a magic wand and then there was no capitalism, there would be no need to like produce, like to worry how many hours are working, like, how are people seeing me? 00:59:20.925 --> 00:59:28.859 Are they going to want to like, you know, invest in X, Y, you know, I mean, what a different world it would be. 00:59:28.859 --> 00:59:30.383 I'm of that book that I read. 00:59:30.383 --> 00:59:42.850 Have you heard of the the oral histories of New York where it talks about I have no idea if something like that is possible, I love science fiction, I'm always reading. 00:59:42.850 --> 00:59:44.831 And that is more like speculative fiction, I think. 00:59:44.831 --> 00:59:56.564 I don't know, But it was really fun to kind of get my brain in a different place, you know, and to think about, oh, we would just do... 00:59:56.564 --> 00:59:58.075 And it's like with mental health. 00:59:58.075 --> 01:00:10.692 There was a character in the book that was um on the schizophrenia spectrum and could could work, like had an important, like had valuable work to provide for community and did it when they could. 01:00:10.692 --> 01:00:15.024 And when they couldn't, they needed other people to hang out with them and be safe. 01:00:15.024 --> 01:00:16.885 it was all fine. 01:00:16.885 --> 01:00:18.125 It all worked out. 01:00:18.125 --> 01:00:19.966 Anyway, I love that story. 01:00:20.377 --> 01:00:21.257 That's beautiful. 01:00:21.257 --> 01:00:22.017 I love that. 01:00:22.017 --> 01:00:25.336 I'm also a big fan of science fiction and speculative fiction. 01:00:25.336 --> 01:00:37.657 And I've interviewed several authors, trans authors especially on the podcast where we talked exactly about this, like how important it is to be able to imagine a different future. 01:00:37.877 --> 01:00:43.356 I remember with Red Fern, one of the folks I interviewed, we talked a lot about ambitopia as well. 01:00:43.356 --> 01:00:45.717 So not dystopia, not utopia. 01:00:45.717 --> 01:00:49.557 What's it like to create like an ambitopic world where it's like... 01:00:49.557 --> 01:00:56.352 You know, it's kind of, it's a mixed bag, which is much more realistic in terms of messy humanity, right? 01:00:56.352 --> 01:01:05.297 But there's something to be sad about being able to imagine a different future so that we can, uh, act towards it, right? 01:01:05.877 --> 01:01:14.862 there is just something about, I don't know, for me, the hope that speculative fiction and science fiction can bring in terms of things can be different. 01:01:14.943 --> 01:01:17.964 Like this has not existed forever. 01:01:17.994 --> 01:01:26.981 and it probably will not exist forever because the only certainty is change, which is why I love Octavia Butler so much, of course, you know, because... 01:01:27.711 --> 01:01:36.553 Yeah, and so that's important about playing and playing is that generative creativity that helps us to imagine something else as possible. 01:01:36.906 --> 01:01:37.446 Exactly. 01:01:37.446 --> 01:02:01.710 And I feel like a lot of the work sometimes a sex therapist is to encourage our clients to like play more, not just with sex, but we're like gender identities, expressions, sexuality, relationships, what happens if we don't hold them so tightly, you know, within this like tiny, tiny boxes that kind of colonialism and patriarchy and capitalism wants us to put this things in. 01:02:01.710 --> 01:02:10.092 And maybe that's why sexuality and gender are things that systems of dominance and oppression always try to control, right? 01:02:10.092 --> 01:02:11.362 Cause that's the danger. 01:02:11.362 --> 01:02:14.603 What if we realized that we don't have to live this way? 01:02:15.524 --> 01:02:16.584 Shocker. 01:02:20.144 --> 01:02:21.035 No, exactly. 01:02:21.035 --> 01:02:22.625 Which I love. 01:02:22.756 --> 01:02:23.076 my God. 01:02:23.076 --> 01:02:29.187 feel like I could have this conversation forever, but I to be respectful both of your time and the listener's time. 01:02:29.288 --> 01:02:33.149 So I'm going to ask you two, easy question. 01:02:33.149 --> 01:02:38.971 One is like, How do you kind of nourish yourself at the moment and find trans joy? 01:02:38.971 --> 01:02:43.492 Because I've been asking that to all my trans interviewees because why not? 01:02:43.492 --> 01:02:49.034 I think that trans joy is resistance in a world that wants us miserable or not existing. 01:02:49.034 --> 01:02:56.566 uh So yeah, how are you like nurturing your wellbeing and connecting with pleasure and joy? 01:02:56.693 --> 01:02:57.974 Yeah. 01:02:57.974 --> 01:03:01.714 I mean, kind of like what we were already talking about, I'm really paying attention. 01:03:01.714 --> 01:03:06.634 I'm trying to pay attention to what my body wants and my brain is part of my body. 01:03:06.794 --> 01:03:13.234 but like, I reminded myself last night that I haven't painted my nails in a couple of weeks. 01:03:13.234 --> 01:03:18.014 And like, I really needed to, particularly after getting off of, saw some news and I'm like, oh, you know what? 01:03:18.014 --> 01:03:20.114 I'm going to paint my nails now. 01:03:20.314 --> 01:03:24.734 And sometimes I like change my body hair situation entirely. 01:03:24.734 --> 01:03:44.802 And that's, you know, just like, freshen things up or like change something and like but listening to what I what what my body wants and needs and like I am a social person and like being around people that I like being around people that I feel good around and so I always I'm always trying to do that. 01:03:45.302 --> 01:03:58.370 I'm also a big science fiction nerd as I already mentioned I read a lot I watch a lot of films and so I'm like you know looking for for those kinds of Yeah, getting my head in a different place. 01:03:58.730 --> 01:04:00.530 So, I would say. 01:04:00.802 --> 01:04:01.753 That's great. 01:04:01.753 --> 01:04:02.893 love that. 01:04:03.053 --> 01:04:03.463 Yeah. 01:04:03.463 --> 01:04:05.825 I love watching movies and TV series. 01:04:05.825 --> 01:04:08.016 I'm like a big popular culture nerd. 01:04:08.016 --> 01:04:10.336 oh So many conversations. 01:04:10.336 --> 01:04:23.324 And the last question I will ask, I always ask at the end of the podcast is, was there anything else that we didn't talk about that you were like, I thought we were going to talk about this or I wish we went more into that or anything like that. 01:04:23.551 --> 01:04:26.914 remember that you asked that, but no, I don't. 01:04:26.914 --> 01:04:33.858 I really like to come into the conversation just in the moment and not having anything. 01:04:33.939 --> 01:04:38.382 But I think we got to, I think I was just saying things as they came up. 01:04:41.378 --> 01:04:57.743 Yeah, I'm just more having a feeling like right now, hear about you and about people that are gonna be listening to this and feeling, yeah, it's like I'm wanting to feel this feeling of connection. 01:04:57.823 --> 01:04:59.583 We are all out here together. 01:04:59.583 --> 01:05:04.664 I don't know, I just wanna, I just suddenly, as you asked me that question, that's what I was feeling. 01:05:04.664 --> 01:05:06.925 So it's not so much a thought, but more of a feeling here. 01:05:06.925 --> 01:05:09.586 Like we're together, we're connected. 01:05:09.760 --> 01:05:10.880 Feels nice. 01:05:11.320 --> 01:05:15.823 when you said that, they really invited me to feel that in my body too. 01:05:15.823 --> 01:05:18.495 And it was so beautiful because this is why I do it. 01:05:18.495 --> 01:05:27.152 mean, and listeners know this, sometimes my episodes are a little sporadic, like there's been a few months I hate us from the last episode. 01:05:27.152 --> 01:05:31.695 And then I was like, yeah, know, capitalism is so demanding and I'm disabled. 01:05:31.695 --> 01:05:33.518 And then I do interviews like this. 01:05:33.518 --> 01:05:36.398 And I'm like, when you said that, was like, that's right. 01:05:36.398 --> 01:05:38.814 This is why I do this because I get... 01:05:38.814 --> 01:05:48.068 it at the same time and I hope that other people are going to be feeling that too and like, so I'm just going to ask people to check in with themselves right I love that. 01:05:48.068 --> 01:05:49.340 I love that invitation. 01:05:49.340 --> 01:05:57.248 So dear listeners or watchers, take a minute to check in with yourself and see how you feel after listening or watching this conversation. 01:05:57.248 --> 01:06:11.086 I I feel awesome and I feel so grateful for your time and your wisdom and insight and your work in the world, like who you are in the world and everything you bring to our field and to our communities. 01:06:11.086 --> 01:06:12.257 I'm just really grateful. 01:06:12.257 --> 01:06:13.365 So thank you. 01:06:13.365 --> 01:06:14.986 Likewise, Alex, thank you so much. 01:06:14.986 --> 01:06:16.086 Thank you for having me. 01:06:16.086 --> 01:06:17.925 Love talking to you. 01:06:18.310 --> 01:06:26.459 And Dear Gender Stories listeners, until next time, I hope you find ways to slow down and listen to your body as Dr. 01:06:26.459 --> 01:06:34.789 Pitagora has reminded us of and that you find moments of sweet connection and embodiment. 01:06:34.789 --> 01:06:36.450 And until next time.