Episode 21: Initiating Intimacy and Overcoming the Awkwardness

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5 Ways to Deepen Intimacy in Long-Term Relationships

How emotional bids, playful touch, attunement, and desire-forward communication can transform connection, intimacy, and sex in committed relationships.

Summary

Why does initiating intimacy sometimes feel more awkward the longer you’ve been together?

In this deeply practical and surprisingly playful episode, Emma Smith and Dr. Olivia Stelick unpack the psychology of “bids for connection” — the tiny moments that either strengthen emotional intimacy or quietly erode it over time. From emotional closeness and physical touch to flirtation, attunement, and desire-forward communication, this conversation offers actionable tools for couples who love each other deeply but feel stuck in patterns around sex, intimacy, and connection.

If you’ve ever wondered why long-term relationships can begin to feel more logistical than passionate — or why initiating intimacy can suddenly feel vulnerable, awkward, or high-stakes — this episode will help you understand why and show you how to reconnect.

Summary

In this episode of The Intimate Philosopher, Drs. Emma Smith and Alivia Stehlik explore the concept of bids for connection — a foundational relationship principle popularized by John Gottman and the The Gottman Institute.

Together, they discuss how couples unintentionally miss opportunities for emotional and physical closeness, particularly in long-term relationships where routines, parenting, stress, and performance anxiety can interfere with intimacy.

Emma and Olivia break down five major types of bids for connection:

  • Emotional connection bids
  • Physical touch bids
  • Playful and low-pressure bids
  • Attunement-based bids
  • Desire-forward bids

They also explore:

  • Why initiation of intimacy becomes awkward over time
  • The difference between “having sex with” versus “having sex on” your partner
  • How playfulness can reignite desire
  • Why attunement matters more than technique
  • How to reduce feelings of pressure, rejection, and obligation in relationships

This episode is full of practical relationship advice, real-life examples, and compassionate insights for couples who want to strengthen communication, deepen intimacy, and reconnect emotionally and physically.

In this episode, you’ll hear about:

  • Understanding Bids for Connection
    • What bids for connection actually are and why they matter so much in healthy relationships.
  • Emotional Closeness & Communication
    • How emotional bids create safety, intimacy, and openness before physical touch even begins.
  • Physical Touch Without Pressure
    • Why non-sexual touch matters and how couples can rediscover closeness outside the bedroom.
  • Playfulness, Flirting & Desire
    • How humor, teasing, curiosity, and playful energy help keep intimacy alive in long-term relationships.
  • Attunement & Emotional Safety
    • Why asking how your partner wants to be loved matters more than assuming you already know.
  • Desire-Forward Communication
    • How to express desire directly without making intimacy feel transactional or obligatory.

Memorable Quotes

Memorable Quotes

“You can turn towards, away, or shut down a bid.”

“Emotional bids open the door to closeness.”

“Physical touch is a bid for connection.”

“You can’t be invulnerable and be naked with somebody.”

“Sex should not feel like paying quarterly taxes.”


Chapters

00:00 Introduction to Relational Shift Sessions
04:57 Understanding Bids for Connection
13:14 Types of Bids for Connection
22:38 Playfulness in Intimacy
27:59 Attunement and Closeness
34:05 Desire Forward Bids
38:29 Closing Thoughts and Future Directions


Key Reflections:

  • Intimacy is rarely lost all at once — it often fades through missed moments of connection over time.
  • A “bid for connection” can be something as small as a joke, a lingering touch, a question, or a glance across the room.
  • Couples can become highly effective life partners while quietly losing emotional and erotic attunement.
  • Emotional connection and physical intimacy are deeply intertwined in long-term relationships.
  • Initiating intimacy often becomes more awkward over time because the emotional stakes become higher, not lower.
  • Playfulness is one of the most overlooked tools for sustaining desire in committed relationships.
  • Many people were never taught how to communicate what kind of touch, affection, or closeness they actually want.
  • Attunement matters more than perfect technique. Feeling emotionally received is often more important than “doing it right.”
  • Desire-forward communication works best when it exists alongside emotional safety, playfulness, and non-sexual connection.
  • Turning toward your partner’s bids for connection — even in small ways — helps create the foundation for trust, closeness, and intimacy.
  • Healthy intimacy is not about obligation or performance; it is about curiosity, responsiveness, vulnerability, and shared connection.
  • You cannot approach intimacy fully armored. Vulnerability is part of genuine closeness.

Why this converation matters:

Many couples assume intimacy problems begin in the bedroom. But more often, disconnection starts in the small everyday moments that go unnoticed — the sigh after a long day, the lingering touch in the kitchen, the joke that never gets answered, the quiet attempt to reach for closeness that gets missed or misunderstood.

Over time, these moments shape the emotional climate of a relationship.

In long-term partnerships, couples can become incredibly effective teammates — managing schedules, parenting, careers, logistics, and responsibilities — while quietly losing touch with playfulness, flirtation, curiosity, and desire. The result is often a relationship that looks functional on the outside but feels emotionally or physically disconnected underneath.

This conversation matters because it reframes intimacy not as a performance or technique problem, but as an attunement problem.

Drs. Emma Smith and Alivia Stehlik explore how bids for connection help couples rebuild emotional safety, increase responsiveness, and create more opportunities for intimacy in ways that feel authentic rather than pressured. Whether you’re navigating mismatched desire, awkward initiation patterns, emotional distance, or simply wanting to feel closer again, this episode offers practical and compassionate ways to reconnect.


The Receipts

If you love when things get EXTRA nerdy, this section of the show notes is for you!

The Gottman Institute

The Relationship Cure by John and Julie Gottman

💌 Stay Connected

If this episode resonated with you, share it with a friend, send it to a parent of sons, or DM your thoughts on Instagram at @theintimatephilosopherpodcast or @emmasmithphd.

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Use our form below!

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If you’ve heard me talk about the planner I actually use — it’s from Nine-to-Kind Therapist. It’s one of the few tools that helps me stay organized and grounded without feeling like another task to manage.
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Keywords: relationships, intimacy, communication, bids for connection, emotional closeness, physical touch, attunement, desire, long-term relationships, relationship advice, sex therapy, emotional intimacy, healthy relationships, couples communication, improving intimacy, Gottman bids for connection

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Episode 21: Initiating Intimacy and Overcoming the Awkwardness

Mastering Bids for Connection

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