When Desire Changes
This entry synthesizes insights from 137 articles in the Library
"Desire is not a fixed quantity you either have or lack. It's a living thing—responsive to context, to safety, to how at home you feel in your body."
— Christine Mason
The Myth of Constant Desire
Somewhere along the way, many of us absorbed the idea that desire should be constant—that a healthy libido means wanting sex frequently, spontaneously, without prompting or preparation. That if you don’t feel that pull, something is wrong with you.
This myth causes tremendous suffering. It leads women to pathologize their own experience, to feel broken when they’re simply human.
The truth is that desire fluctuates. It responds to life circumstances, hormonal shifts, stress, relationship dynamics, and the state of your nervous system. This is not a flaw to be fixed. It’s how desire actually works.
Spontaneous vs. Responsive Desire
Sex researcher Emily Nagoski’s work has helped many women understand a crucial distinction: the difference between spontaneous and responsive desire.
Spontaneous desire is what we typically see depicted—desire that appears out of nowhere, unbidden, as an urge seeking expression. Some people experience this regularly. Many don’t.
Responsive desire emerges in response to stimulation, context, and connection. It doesn’t precede arousal; it follows it. You may not feel desire until you’re already being touched, already in an intimate context, already feeling safe and connected.
Both are normal. Neither is better. But if you’ve been waiting for spontaneous desire to appear before initiating intimacy, you may be waiting for something that isn’t how your desire works.
What Hormones Actually Do
Estrogen and testosterone both influence desire—but not as simply as “more hormones = more libido.”
Estrogen affects the health of vaginal tissue, natural lubrication, and sensitivity. When estrogen drops during perimenopause and menopause, physical changes can make sex less comfortable, which naturally dampens desire. It’s hard to want something that hurts.
Testosterone is often called the “desire hormone,” and it does play a role. But the relationship is complex. Some women with low testosterone have robust libidos; some with normal levels feel little desire.
What matters more than any single hormone is the overall context: physical comfort, emotional safety, stress levels, relationship satisfaction, and how you feel about your own body.
The Context of Your Life
Desire doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s deeply sensitive to:
Stress and exhaustion: When your nervous system is in survival mode, it deprioritizes reproduction. This is biology, not failure. You can’t easily access desire when you’re depleted.
Relationship dynamics: Resentment, disconnection, feeling unseen or criticized—these erode desire over time. The state of your relationship is the state of your libido.
Body image: How you feel in your body affects how available you are for pleasure. Shame and self-consciousness create barriers to desire.
Life stage: New parenthood, caregiving, career intensity, grief—all of these draw on the same energy that desire requires. There may be seasons where less is available for sexuality.
When Physical Changes Affect Desire
During perimenopause and menopause, physical changes in the vulva and vagina can directly affect desire:
- Vaginal dryness makes penetration uncomfortable or painful
- Tissue thinning increases sensitivity (not always in a good way)
- Decreased blood flow can reduce arousal response
- Changes in orgasm intensity or ease
When sex becomes painful or unsatisfying, it makes sense that you’d want it less. Addressing the physical—with moisture, lubrication, hormone therapy, or pelvic floor work—often helps desire return.
Working with Changed Desire
Rather than trying to force desire to be what it once was, consider working with what’s actually present.
Expand your definition: If “desire” means only wanting penetrative sex, you’re working with a narrow definition. What about wanting closeness? Sensual touch? Orgasm on your own terms? Desire has many expressions.
Start with the body: If you wait for mental desire, it may not come. But if you begin with physical touch—massage, stroking, warmth—desire often follows. Give it something to respond to.
Address the barriers: What’s actually in the way? Physical discomfort? Exhaustion? Resentment? Each of these has its own path forward.
Communicate: Your partner can’t know what’s happening unless you tell them. Many couples suffer in silence, each making assumptions about what the other’s experience means.
Desire as a Signal
Changed desire is information. It may be telling you:
- Your body needs support through this transition
- Your relationship needs attention
- Your stress levels are unsustainable
- Your sense of yourself is shifting and needs integration
Rather than fighting the change, listen to what it might be pointing toward.
Go Deeper
These are the original writings this entry draws from:
What Supports This
Physical expressions of this philosophy