Our failure to discuss pregnancy, sex, and pleasure contributes to a cycle of being uneducated about sex.Five years and one additional pregnancy later, I now understand that what I was picking up on was the lack of access to images of pregnant people as dynamic sexual agents. It’s a vacuum that intensifies depending on the marginalized identities one may hold. It felt like a natural conclusion after absorbing decades’ worth of pregnancy-negative jokes and bare-ass-minimum sex education. Our society often reduces pregnant people to vehicles and vessels – we exist to bring life and pleasure to others. The reality, despite a lack of discussion, is that an interest in pregnancy during sex isn’t a sign of failure. "We rarely see pregnant women in society being sexual or receiving sexual pleasure outside of a comedic sense,” says Dr. Lexx Brown-James, a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, author, and sex educator. She notes that society characterizes the changes
Trust Your Body
It might sound cliché, but the network of changes that occur during pregnancy requires leaning into oneself to make sense of a new normal and trusting what your body tells you. “The first thing I like to tell pregnant people is to trust your body. Your feelings of sexual desire are valid, and if you don't have sexual desire, that is okay, too,” she says.“I like to remind people that their bodies are phenomenal and capable of great pleasure that can be enhanced because of all of the blood flow around their genitals right now."For some, trusting the body requires giving oneself permission to experience sex and pleasure during pregnancy. For others, this means feeling comfortable and affirmed in the decision not to have sex while pregnant. It can also mean being comfortable riding the waves of interest and disinterest instead of trying to secure oneself in one position or the other.