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One of the most common complaints I hear from the couples and partners I work with revolves around initiation in relationships. Often, the challenge centers on frequency. One partner wants the other to initiate more. The other partner then feels like they are constantly being nagged or pressured to do so.

Still others tell me that what they really want is to feel desired by their partner. Wanted. Lusted after. Meanwhile, their partner feels genuinely confused about how to make that happen. Add in communication breakdowns and poor sex education, and it is no wonder so many people feel stuck. We are simply not taught that initiation should be an invitation.

A delicate dance between people.

A shared language.

And something that extends far beyond the sexual, material, or physical.

I am not here today to outline the many ways you might initiate sex with your partner, though I will say the boob honk generally does not work for most people.

What many people overlook is that initiation does not begin and end in the bedroom. Initiation outside of sex has a profound impact on overall desire, intimacy, and relationship satisfaction, yet it is often underestimated or ignored altogether.

So what are the different styles of initiation?

Emotional Initiation

Sometimes initiating a heart to heart conversation can feel like jumpstarting a stalled vehicle. In the moment, it can seem easier to avoid unresolved conflict than to face it directly. Emotional initiation might look like sharing something vulnerable, asking how your partner is really feeling, expressing gratitude, initiating comfort during times of stress, or checking in about the state of the relationship.

Initiation in the emotional realm helps relieve the buildup of resentment, heartache, disconnection, or contempt. Expressing admiration, appreciation, and care requires effort, intentionality, and courage. It is a responsibility that both or all partners benefit from taking part in as equitably as possible.

Intellectual Initiation

Let’s be honest. Conversation can grow stale in long term relationships and friendships. Yet a meeting of the minds can be deeply intimate and bonding.

Intellectual initiation goes beyond asking how someone’s day was. It can include sharing an article or podcast, discussing future goals, playing a thoughtful game, watching and reflecting on a documentary, or engaging with a film that sparks curiosity or debate. There is often joy and connection in witnessing how someone lights up when they talk about what they love.

Take turns sharing interests and stories. Negotiate topics of interest. Learn something new together. These moments of intellectual engagement help sustain depth, novelty, and meaning in connection.

Domestic Initiation

Household labor and domestic responsibilities often carry invisible mental and emotional weight. When those responsibilities fall unevenly, they can quietly erode desire and connection.

Domestic initiation, sometimes referred to as choreplay, might look like offering to take on a task without being asked, initiating a cleaning or organizing session together, running errands your partner usually manages, or intentionally creating a calm and cozy evening at home. These gestures can create space for relaxation, shared ease, and emotional availability.

If domestic responsibilities consistently fall on one person’s shoulders, an intentional conversation about equity and shared care is essential.

Initiation as an Invitation

When it comes to physical or sexual intimacy, initiation works best when it is framed as an invitation rather than a demand. We are not always open to intimacy in a given moment, but we might be open after certain needs are met or conditions change.

This is where conversation matters. Ask your partner how they like closeness and connection to be initiated. What makes them feel desired? What shuts them down? For some people, desire is sparked by physical touch. For others, by words, acts of service, or thoughtful gestures.

When initiation creates pressure, obligation, or duty, it cuts us off from pleasure. When it becomes an invitation, it opens the door to possibility, agency, and connection.

Conclusion

Stress, emotional labor, predictability, and boredom are all common barriers to desire and closeness. Expanding our understanding of initiation beyond sex allows us to address these barriers more compassionately and effectively.

The next time initiation becomes a topic of discussion in your relationship, look beyond the physical. Consider the emotional, intellectual, and domestic as well. Much like intimacy itself, initiation exists on a spectrum. There are many ways to speak the language of care, consideration, and compassion.

Jamie Azar is former graduate of the Pleasure Psychology and Sexology Certification program, a sex, relationship, and intimacy coach, educator, writer, and mindfulness practitioner based in South Carolina. She offers 1-1 coaching with singles, couples, throuples + to co-create a safe, sex-positive, transformative, liberating, and empowering space that fosters personal and relational growth. She specializes in dismantling limiting beliefs, deconstructing, and destigmatizing harmful narrative constructs, to help clients reframe and redefine their understandings of selfhood, sex, sexuality, and relationships. To work with Jamie go here!