The change that changes the sexual and working relationship
When asked what trend is really exciting her right now, Erin doesn’t point to a buzzword or viral concept. It points to something quieter – and far more impressive.
He sees more couples questioning assumptions they’ve never considered:
Why do we assume that couples have to share a bedroom?
What if separate bedrooms supported better sleep, desire or connection?
Why do we assume that intimacy has to follow a certain order?
This change is not about being unconventional for its own sake. It’s about deconstructing inherited scripts and rebuilding relationships in ways that fit real people, real bodies, and real lives.
Erin describes it by asking, often for the first time:
How do we really want to do this?
Scenarios we didn’t know we were following
One of the most powerful insights Erin brings to the discussion is that many couples don’t realize they’re following a script at all.
Cultural narratives quietly tell us:
how sex should be
how desire should work
whose pleasure matters more
what is a “normal” relationship
These scenarios are so embedded that people often experience anxiety without knowing why. They feel that something is not working – but they assume these is the problem.
Erin’s work focuses on helping clients recognize that the problem is often not a malfunction, but misaligned with a script that never suited them in the first place.
The problem with penis-centered sex
When Erin is asked to name a key idea about sexual health—something that really moves the needle—she doesn’t hesitate.
A significant portion of her practice involves cisgender, heterosexual couples, and within this, she sees a consistent pattern:
Penises have become the star of the show.
This penis-centric sex model creates a tight, linear frame:
arousal builds towards penetration
penetration leads to ejaculation
ejaculation marks the end
This structure puts enormous pressure on everyone involved and is usually ignored female sexual pleasure.
For men, it can create performance anxiety and fear of ‘failure’.
For women, it can quietly erase their experience entirely.
And when bodies change—due to trauma, disability, illness, pain, aging, or stress—this model breaks down.
“What if sex doesn’t happen when it’s over?”
Erin shares a question she regularly asks her female clients—often more than once a week:
“So… what if the sex doesn’t happen when it’s over?”
The answer is often silence.
Not because the question is confusing — but because it challenges something that has been treated as inevitable.
Many women have never been asked to consider:
This question alone can open up a profound change in sexual action.
Sex no longer becomes a one-way journey to a single destination. It becomes flexible, curious and responsive.
Movement beyond duty, pressure and linear sex
Penis-centric sexuality doesn’t just limit pleasure—it often turns sex into a duty.
When sex is framed around a single goal, people begin to feel pressure:
pressure to perform
pressure to finish
pressure to conform
Erin describes how this creates what she calls a “boring linear pressure field”—a dynamic where obligation replaces curiosity and connection.
Conversely, when couples allow sex to be non-linear:
the pressure decreases
communication increases
pleasure is differentiated
intimacy expands
Sex can be stopped, continued, changed or ended based on mutual readiness—not a predetermined endpoint.
Flexibility is the key to better sex
A key theme in Erin’s work is flexibility— in bodies, desire and relationships.
When couples break away from rigid scripts, they gain:
This flexibility is especially important for clients navigating trauma, chronic illness, pain, or disability—areas that Erin has deep experience working with.
Rigid sexual expectations often fail the very people who need the most care.
Rewriting the rules beyond the bedroom
Importantly, Erin doesn’t limit this discussion to just sex.
He sees the same script – follows:
For some couples, two bedrooms can reduce resentment and increase desire.
For others, redefining everyday intimacy can restore connection.
The common thread is choice.
When couples intentionally design their relationship instead of inheriting it, they often feel more empowered—and more connected.
What does this mean for sexual health professionals?
For sex therapistscounselors and coaches, Erin’s ideas have significant implications:
Challenging sexual scripts should be part of clinical work
Penis-centric sex models often hurt everyone involved
Sexual activity requires curiosity, not compliance
Flexibility is essential for inclusive, trauma-informed care;
Enjoyment should not be limited to performance or endpoints
Professionals who help clients rewrite scripts don’t create chaos – they create space.
Summary: Erin Musick on sexual scenarios and pleasure
Sex therapist and psychologist Erin Musick explains that a major shift in sexual health and relationship work is rewriting inherited scripts around sex, intimacy and relationships. It highlights the problems of penis-centered sexuality, which creates performance pressure and limits pleasure, particularly in heterosexual couples. Erin encourages flexibility, curiosity and sexual agency, including challenging the norm that sex ends when the male partner does. By deconstructing outdated scripts and allowing couples to define what works best for them, sexual experiences can become more inclusive, fulfilling and connected.
Final Takeaway
Sex doesn’t have to follow a script.
Relationships don’t have to look a certain way.
And the pleasure doesn’t have to end when someone else decides to.
Erin Musick’s work reminds us that sexual health improves when we stop asking, “Is this normal?” and start asking, “Does this work for us?”
When flexibility replaces pressure and curiosity replaces duty, sex becomes not just more enjoyable—but more human.
Sometimes the most radical thing a couple can do is rewrite the rules.
