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Sex That Works
Through the process of writing her new book, Wendy Strgar found a deeper knowledge of her herself.


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Whether in writing or sex, finding your voice is important.


The closer we come to living in our own erotic truth, the more our relationship to the rest of our life opens up as well.”
"The real vulnerability is not from taking off our clothes together, but in baring our hearts to one another…" ~ Wendy Strgar, "Sex that Works"

This week marks the official launch of my new book, "Sex that Works: An Intimate Guide to Awakening Your Erotic Life." I have often said that if we could only fix one problem in our life and it was sex—we would by default, fix all of the others.  What most people don’t realize is that the shame and pain that inhibit their sexual freedom and capacity for intimate pleasure also blocks their ability to feel a wide range of other emotions.  The closer we come to living in our own erotic truth, the more our relationship to the rest of our life opens up as well.

The truth is that our soul is a twin flame of our erotic identity, in many ways the most essential aspect of our being, whether we live through it or not.  After we eat, drink and sleep, the next layer of our reality is our sexuality.  Writing "Sex that Works" was a project that lasted five years but began inside of this weekly column. Those of you who have been following my discoveries and epiphanies in the newsletter would sometimes post, e-mail or even from time to time, seek me out at my traveling love booth. Your stories of courage and intimate renewal inspired me to keep exploring and sharing the vulnerable spaces in my own erotic journey.  Thank you.

One thing I know for sure is that no great accomplishment is ever achieved alone.  That goes for building businesses,  growing families and writing books. I was blessed to work closely with two incredibly gifted writers who helped shape "Sex that Works" into the accessible and thought provoking work that it is. In the process I learned a few lessons that have shaped not only the book, but how I have come to approach my life.  I share them here, not only to inspire you to buy the book, but to re-think the treasure you may well be missing in your intimate life.

Tell the Deepest Story

As a blogger, I have adapted my writing to the easy "one page essay." It is a form that lends itself to selective sharing, which in part helps the reader digest but also has served to build solid boundaries around how much I divulged. When I started writing this book in earnest, Brian (one of my amazing editors) asked me if instead of picking a new topic, what if I just went back to those single pages and told the deeper story—the parts that I had left out for the sake of time and space.  This diving deep, telling stories that I had never shared before, was unnerving. It still gives me pause when upon reading the book, journalists exclaim at the vulnerability I shared.

Though it has made me courageous and as a result more confident about what I know to be true.  Not holding back is what I ask the readers of "Sex that Works" to do—and the most convincing argument is the way I demonstrate it with my own life.  It is through sharing our deepest stories that we not only make meaning of our life, but we give other people the tools to do this for themselves.

Letting Go of the Words

It is one of the great ironies that writing a book would provoke me to let go of my attachment to my own words. It turns out that really well written books rely much less on a specific voice (that I  had long believed was conveyed by my choice of language), but by how concise and clear the writing is so that the ideas can be illuminated.  Evelyn (my other amazing editor) and I would sometimes go back and forth a half dozen times before I could let go enough to see the clarity in the words she offered. They were actually reflecting my ideas better than the many ways I kept re-writing, trying to capture a voice. Letting go of my words in favor of the clarity of ideas reminded me of how often our words get in our own way.  Feeling heard is not nearly so much about what we are trying to say as much as it is listening for what can be heard.

Feeling Everything

The introduction of Sex that Works is called learning to feel and even though I have been writing about this topic for years,  putting myself out there in "Sex that Works" in such a deeply vulnerable way has opened my eyes to not only how much richer our lives are through feeling but also how much more daring.

Brian told me once that if you write a real book, one that not only your friends read, you will get all kinds of reactions—not always nice ones.  And more importantly, that once you publish a work it isn’t really yours anymore… you have turned it over to the collective consciousness.  Feeling the truth of that now pretty much includes all the feelings I could have imagined and more.

Wendy Strgar, founder and CEO of Good Clean Love, is a loveologist who writes and lectures on Making Love Sustainable, a green philosophy of relationships which teaches the importance of valuing the renewable resources of love, intimacy and family. In her new book, "Love that Works: A Guide to Enduring Intimacy," she tackles the challenging issues of sustaining relationships and healthy intimacy with an authentic and disarming style and simple yet innovative advice. It has been called "the essential guide for relationships." The book is available on ebook. Wendy has been married for over 30 years to her husband, a psychiatrist, in the beautiful Pacific Northwest, and has four children.


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Over 1 million couples turn to Hitched for expert marital advice every year. Sign up now for our newsletter & get exclusive weekly content that will entertain, educate and inspire your marriage.



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