
Revolutionizing female sexuality, "Come As You Are" reveals why every woman's pleasure is unique as a fingerprint. This NYT bestseller dismantles myths, explains how stress impacts desire, and offers science-backed validation that's changed countless readers' lives. What's blocking your sexual wellbeing?
Emily Nagoski, Ph.D., is the New York Times bestselling author of Come As You Are: The Surprising New Science That Will Transform Your Sex Life and a pioneering sex educator and researcher. A trained health behaviorist with a counseling psychology master’s and Kinsey Institute credentials, she blends scientific rigor with accessible storytelling to dismantle myths about women’s sexuality.
Her work as a former Smith College wellness director and peer sex educator informs her focus on pleasure-centered frameworks like dual control theory and arousal non-concordance.
Nagoski co-authored Burnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle with her twin sister, Amelia, and penned the 2024 release Come Together: The Science (and Art!) of Creating Lasting Sexual Connections. Her TED Talks on sexual wellbeing have amassed millions of views, and she appeared in Netflix’s The Principles of Pleasure docuseries.
Recognized with Indiana University’s 2019 W.W. Patty Distinguished Alumni Award, she hosts a podcast and newsletter exploring intimacy science. Come As You Are has been translated into over 20 languages and adapted into a workbook, cementing its status as a modern classic in sexual health literature.
Come As You Are explores female sexuality through neuroscience and psychology, debunking myths about arousal, desire, and orgasm. Dr. Emily Nagoski introduces the Dual Control Model (accelerators and brakes) to explain sexual response and emphasizes how context, emotions, and culture shape intimacy. The book empowers readers to embrace their unique sexual “personality” and challenges outdated norms.
This book is essential for women seeking to understand their sexuality, partners aiming to improve intimacy, and educators/therapists addressing sexual health. It’s also valuable for anyone navigating body image issues, stress-related sexual challenges, or cultural shame around desire.
Yes—it’s a New York Times bestseller praised for blending rigorous science with compassionate storytelling. Awards include Goodreads’ Top 5 Science Books and Book Riot’s Best of 2015. Readers call it “transformative” for its sex-positive, inclusive approach.
The Dual Control Model frames sexual response as a balance between “accelerators” (stimuli that spark arousal) and “brakes” (inhibitors like stress or negative body image). Nagoski argues that individualized brake management—not just boosting accelerators—is key to fulfilling intimacy.
Arousal non-concordance refers to the disconnect between physical arousal (e.g., lubrication) and mental arousal. Nagoski clarifies this is normal, citing studies showing only 10% of women’s physiological responses align with subjective desire—a critical insight for reducing performance anxiety.
Nagoski critiques society’s “sex-negative” messaging that pathologizes women’s desires. She explains how myths like “spontaneous desire = normal” harm self-perception and provides tools to reframe sexuality within personal values rather than external expectations.
Stress acts as a primary “brake” by keeping the nervous system in fight-or-flight mode. The book offers evidence-based strategies to complete the “stress cycle” (e.g., physical activity, affection) before intimacy, enhancing emotional and sexual wellbeing.
Some readers find the scientific depth overwhelming, while others desire more LGBTQ+ inclusivity. A minority critique its heteronormative examples, though the 2023 revised edition expands gender-neutral language and updated research.
Nagoski asserts there’s no universal standard—variations in anatomy, desire timing (spontaneous vs. responsive), and arousal patterns are natural. The book includes self-assessment tools to help readers identify their unique “sexual fingerprint”.
This framework states: Sensitivity to Stimuli + Context = Sexual Response. It emphasizes that context (emotional safety, environment, etc.) often outweighs biological factors in shaping desire—a paradigm shift from traditional “drive-based” models.
Unlike prescriptive guides, it focuses on self-acceptance over performance. Peer-reviewed studies underpin its insights, distinguishing it from anecdotal approaches. The 2023 update adds mindfulness techniques and nonbinary inclusivity.
Yes—it provides communication tools to discuss brakes/accelerators with partners and reframe intimacy beyond orgasm-focused goals. Case studies show couples using its principles to resolve mismatched desire and deepen emotional connection.
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What if everything you thought you knew about women's sexuality was wrong?
All the same parts, organized in different ways.
Understanding our anatomy is the first step toward sexual confidence.
Some things even activate both simultaneously!
Context-both external circumstances and internal brain states-profoundly impacts sexual response.
Scomponi le idee chiave di Come As You Are in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Distilla Come As You Are in rapidi promemoria che evidenziano i principi chiave di franchezza, lavoro di squadra e resilienza creativa.

Vivi Come As You Are attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli la voce e co-crea spunti che risuonino davvero con te.

Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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Here's a startling truth: only 30% of women reliably orgasm from intercourse alone. If you're among the other 70%, you've probably wondered what's wrong with you. The answer? Absolutely nothing. For decades, science approached female sexuality as a slightly defective version of male sexuality, assuming women should experience spontaneous desire, that physical arousal should match mental interest, and that vaginal penetration should reliably produce orgasm. These assumptions weren't based on how women's bodies actually work-they were based on treating male sexuality as the default setting. This fundamental misunderstanding has left countless women feeling broken when they're actually completely normal. Understanding how your unique sexuality functions isn't about fixing yourself; it's about recognizing that you've been handed the wrong instruction manual. Cultural scripts act as "maps" of sexuality, often unreliable ones. When our actual experiences don't match these maps, we try to force our experiences to fit rather than updating our maps. When the map doesn't match the terrain, the map is wrong, not your body.