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Okay girlfriend, we're going there. We're talking about the thing nobody talks about when it comes to eating disorders: sex, intimacy, and what's happening (or NOT happening) in your bedroom.
If you've noticed your sex drive has disappeared, you're avoiding intimacy with your partner, you can't be present during sex because you're too busy worrying about what your body looks like, or your relationship is suffering and you don't know why - this episode is for you.
Host Lindsey Nichol gets incredibly vulnerable about her own experience with blocked intimacy during her eating disorder - how she was physically shut down, emotionally unavailable, and performing instead of experiencing. She shares the research-backed reasons why eating disorders completely sabotage intimacy (spoiler: your body is literally in survival mode), and gives you practical tools to address it.
This isn't just about emotional connection - we're talking about SEX. Physical intimacy. The bedroom. Your relationship with your spouse or partner. Because your eating disorder isn't just stealing your relationship with food and your body. It's stealing your relationship with your partner too.
In this episode, you'll learn:
This is real talk. This is vulnerable. This is the conversation we need to have. So grab your favorite Tarjay journal and let's get into it.
Content Note: This episode discusses sexual intimacy and eating disorders openly. Best listened to in a private space.
Lindsey's Vulnerable Truth
The Research Nobody Talks About
The Question We're Answering Why is intimacy blocked when you struggle with an eating disorder? And what can you actually DO about it?
What This Means:
The Truth You Need to Hear: This is not a personal failure. This is a SYMPTOM of your eating disorder.
Just like:
The Hope: Research shows that as women recover from eating disorders, sexual function, desire, and satisfaction improve SIGNIFICANTLY. Recovery doesn't just give you food freedom - it gives you intimacy freedom too.
If your relationship is suffering, recovery is the answer. Not just for food. Not just for your body. But for your relationship too.
Get honest with yourself. On a scale of 1-10, where is your intimacy RIGHT NOW?
Not where you think it should be. Not where it used to be. Where is it TODAY?
Ask yourself:
Get real about what's actually happening. You can't change what you won't acknowledge.
Stop blaming yourself. Stop thinking you're broken or wrong or failing.
This blocked intimacy is a SYMPTOM of your eating disorder.
Your body is depleted. Your hormones are disrupted. You're disconnected. You're consumed.
This isn't about:
This is about your eating disorder stealing one MORE thing from you.
Name it for what it is: An eating disorder symptom.
This is the scariest step, but it's the most important.
You have to talk to your spouse or partner about what's going on.
When to Have This Conversation:
What to Say (Script): "Hey, I need to talk to you about something that's been hard for me. I've been struggling with my relationship with food and my body, and it's affecting our intimacy. I want you to know it has nothing to do with you or how I feel about you. My body is depleted, my hormones are off, and I'm having a hard time being present. I'm working on it, but I need you to know what's going on."
You Don't Need:
You Just Need:
You don't have to fix everything overnight. Start somewhere small.
Ideas:
Just start. Somewhere. Anywhere.
You don't have to LOVE your body to be intimate.
But you do have to accept that your body is allowed to:
This is work:
The more you work on accepting your body (not loving it, just ACCEPTING it), the more available you'll be for intimacy.
If you want intimacy back in your relationship, you MUST prioritize recovery.
Because the eating disorder is the blocker.
What This Looks Like:
Recovery gives you:
✨ Your ED isn't just stealing food freedom - it's stealing intimacy too
✨ Blocked intimacy is a SYMPTOM, not a personal failure
✨ Your body is in survival mode - sex is not a priority when you're starving
✨ You can't experience pleasure in a body you're disconnected from
✨ Body shame follows you into the bedroom and paralyzes intimacy
✨ You're emotionally unavailable because the ED consumes all your bandwidth
✨ Control issues with food show up as control issues with intimacy
✨ Research shows recovery improves sexual function, desire, and satisfaction
✨ You need to talk to your partner - bring it into the light
✨ Start small: reconnect with non-sexual touch first
✨ Body acceptance (not love) opens the door to intimacy
✨ Recovery gives you your relationship back
Sexual Dysfunction & Eating Disorders:
Hormone Disruption:
Body Image During Sex:
Recovery Improves Everything:
About Your Intimacy:
About Your Body:
About Your Partner:
About Your Recovery:
This episode is essential listening if you:
The Script: "Hey, I need to talk to you about something that's been hard for me. I've been struggling with my relationship with food and my body, and it's affecting our intimacy. I want you to know it has nothing to do with you or how I feel about you. My body is depleted, my hormones are off, and I'm having a hard time being present. I'm working on it, but I need you to know what's going on."
Why This Works:
What Happens Next:
Your Libido Disappearing is NOT Your Fault: It's biology. Your body is in survival mode. Sex is not essential for survival. Your hormones are disrupted. This is a symptom.
You're Not Broken: Your body is responding exactly as it should to starvation and restriction. This is protective, not defective.
Your Partner Isn't the Problem: Even if you're attracted to them, your body can't prioritize sexual function right now. This isn't about attraction.
Shame is the Enemy: The shame you feel about your body during intimacy is what's blocking connection. The body itself isn't the problem - the shame is.
Recovery Restores Everything: This isn't permanent. As you nourish your body, your hormones will regulate. Your libido will return. Your ability to be present will come back. Intimacy can be restored.
You Deserve Intimacy: Even with an eating disorder, you deserve connection, pleasure, and intimacy. But you have to do the recovery work to get there.
Work with Lindsey One-on-One: If you're ready to prioritize your recovery - not just for food freedom, but for your relationship too - Lindsey offers personalized recovery coaching where you work through:
Your relationship deserves you showing up fully. Your partner deserves you being present. YOU deserve to experience intimacy without shame, anxiety, or the ED blocking it.
Recovery gives you that. And Lindsey is here to help you get there.
Option 1: The Recovery Collective Join Lindsey's group coaching program where you'll get:
Option 2: One-on-One Personalized Coaching work directly with Lindsey for:
Learn more about both options at www.herbestself.co
You don't have to navigate this alone. Let's walk through recovery together.
.
If this episode resonated with you—if you saw yourself in Lindsey's rejection story—please subscribe to Her Best Self wherever you listen to podcasts and leave a review. Your reviews help other women who are tired of perfectionism and people-pleasing find this show and realize they're not alone.
Share this episode with a friend who needs to hear the truth!
Lindsey Nichol is a former competitive figure skater turned God-led entrepreneur, boy mom, and digital CEO. She understands how core beliefs formed in childhood can create and maintain eating disorder patterns, and she's passionate about helping women identify and transform these beliefs to find lasting freedom.
If this episode helped you feel hopeful again and remember your worth isn't found in your body or on your plate, please share it with someone who needs to hear this message. Your support helps more women break the chains of limiting beliefs.
*While I am a certified health coach, anorexia survivor & eating disorder recovery coach, I do not intend the use of this message to serve as medical advice. Please refer to the disclaimer here in the show & be sure to contact a licensed clinical provider if you are struggling with an eating disorder.
By Lindsey Nichol - Certified Health Coach, Eating Disorder Recovery Coach, Food Freedom Coach, Eating Disorder Intuitive Therapy Certified5
9797 ratings
Okay girlfriend, we're going there. We're talking about the thing nobody talks about when it comes to eating disorders: sex, intimacy, and what's happening (or NOT happening) in your bedroom.
If you've noticed your sex drive has disappeared, you're avoiding intimacy with your partner, you can't be present during sex because you're too busy worrying about what your body looks like, or your relationship is suffering and you don't know why - this episode is for you.
Host Lindsey Nichol gets incredibly vulnerable about her own experience with blocked intimacy during her eating disorder - how she was physically shut down, emotionally unavailable, and performing instead of experiencing. She shares the research-backed reasons why eating disorders completely sabotage intimacy (spoiler: your body is literally in survival mode), and gives you practical tools to address it.
This isn't just about emotional connection - we're talking about SEX. Physical intimacy. The bedroom. Your relationship with your spouse or partner. Because your eating disorder isn't just stealing your relationship with food and your body. It's stealing your relationship with your partner too.
In this episode, you'll learn:
This is real talk. This is vulnerable. This is the conversation we need to have. So grab your favorite Tarjay journal and let's get into it.
Content Note: This episode discusses sexual intimacy and eating disorders openly. Best listened to in a private space.
Lindsey's Vulnerable Truth
The Research Nobody Talks About
The Question We're Answering Why is intimacy blocked when you struggle with an eating disorder? And what can you actually DO about it?
What This Means:
The Truth You Need to Hear: This is not a personal failure. This is a SYMPTOM of your eating disorder.
Just like:
The Hope: Research shows that as women recover from eating disorders, sexual function, desire, and satisfaction improve SIGNIFICANTLY. Recovery doesn't just give you food freedom - it gives you intimacy freedom too.
If your relationship is suffering, recovery is the answer. Not just for food. Not just for your body. But for your relationship too.
Get honest with yourself. On a scale of 1-10, where is your intimacy RIGHT NOW?
Not where you think it should be. Not where it used to be. Where is it TODAY?
Ask yourself:
Get real about what's actually happening. You can't change what you won't acknowledge.
Stop blaming yourself. Stop thinking you're broken or wrong or failing.
This blocked intimacy is a SYMPTOM of your eating disorder.
Your body is depleted. Your hormones are disrupted. You're disconnected. You're consumed.
This isn't about:
This is about your eating disorder stealing one MORE thing from you.
Name it for what it is: An eating disorder symptom.
This is the scariest step, but it's the most important.
You have to talk to your spouse or partner about what's going on.
When to Have This Conversation:
What to Say (Script): "Hey, I need to talk to you about something that's been hard for me. I've been struggling with my relationship with food and my body, and it's affecting our intimacy. I want you to know it has nothing to do with you or how I feel about you. My body is depleted, my hormones are off, and I'm having a hard time being present. I'm working on it, but I need you to know what's going on."
You Don't Need:
You Just Need:
You don't have to fix everything overnight. Start somewhere small.
Ideas:
Just start. Somewhere. Anywhere.
You don't have to LOVE your body to be intimate.
But you do have to accept that your body is allowed to:
This is work:
The more you work on accepting your body (not loving it, just ACCEPTING it), the more available you'll be for intimacy.
If you want intimacy back in your relationship, you MUST prioritize recovery.
Because the eating disorder is the blocker.
What This Looks Like:
Recovery gives you:
✨ Your ED isn't just stealing food freedom - it's stealing intimacy too
✨ Blocked intimacy is a SYMPTOM, not a personal failure
✨ Your body is in survival mode - sex is not a priority when you're starving
✨ You can't experience pleasure in a body you're disconnected from
✨ Body shame follows you into the bedroom and paralyzes intimacy
✨ You're emotionally unavailable because the ED consumes all your bandwidth
✨ Control issues with food show up as control issues with intimacy
✨ Research shows recovery improves sexual function, desire, and satisfaction
✨ You need to talk to your partner - bring it into the light
✨ Start small: reconnect with non-sexual touch first
✨ Body acceptance (not love) opens the door to intimacy
✨ Recovery gives you your relationship back
Sexual Dysfunction & Eating Disorders:
Hormone Disruption:
Body Image During Sex:
Recovery Improves Everything:
About Your Intimacy:
About Your Body:
About Your Partner:
About Your Recovery:
This episode is essential listening if you:
The Script: "Hey, I need to talk to you about something that's been hard for me. I've been struggling with my relationship with food and my body, and it's affecting our intimacy. I want you to know it has nothing to do with you or how I feel about you. My body is depleted, my hormones are off, and I'm having a hard time being present. I'm working on it, but I need you to know what's going on."
Why This Works:
What Happens Next:
Your Libido Disappearing is NOT Your Fault: It's biology. Your body is in survival mode. Sex is not essential for survival. Your hormones are disrupted. This is a symptom.
You're Not Broken: Your body is responding exactly as it should to starvation and restriction. This is protective, not defective.
Your Partner Isn't the Problem: Even if you're attracted to them, your body can't prioritize sexual function right now. This isn't about attraction.
Shame is the Enemy: The shame you feel about your body during intimacy is what's blocking connection. The body itself isn't the problem - the shame is.
Recovery Restores Everything: This isn't permanent. As you nourish your body, your hormones will regulate. Your libido will return. Your ability to be present will come back. Intimacy can be restored.
You Deserve Intimacy: Even with an eating disorder, you deserve connection, pleasure, and intimacy. But you have to do the recovery work to get there.
Work with Lindsey One-on-One: If you're ready to prioritize your recovery - not just for food freedom, but for your relationship too - Lindsey offers personalized recovery coaching where you work through:
Your relationship deserves you showing up fully. Your partner deserves you being present. YOU deserve to experience intimacy without shame, anxiety, or the ED blocking it.
Recovery gives you that. And Lindsey is here to help you get there.
Option 1: The Recovery Collective Join Lindsey's group coaching program where you'll get:
Option 2: One-on-One Personalized Coaching work directly with Lindsey for:
Learn more about both options at www.herbestself.co
You don't have to navigate this alone. Let's walk through recovery together.
.
If this episode resonated with you—if you saw yourself in Lindsey's rejection story—please subscribe to Her Best Self wherever you listen to podcasts and leave a review. Your reviews help other women who are tired of perfectionism and people-pleasing find this show and realize they're not alone.
Share this episode with a friend who needs to hear the truth!
Lindsey Nichol is a former competitive figure skater turned God-led entrepreneur, boy mom, and digital CEO. She understands how core beliefs formed in childhood can create and maintain eating disorder patterns, and she's passionate about helping women identify and transform these beliefs to find lasting freedom.
If this episode helped you feel hopeful again and remember your worth isn't found in your body or on your plate, please share it with someone who needs to hear this message. Your support helps more women break the chains of limiting beliefs.
*While I am a certified health coach, anorexia survivor & eating disorder recovery coach, I do not intend the use of this message to serve as medical advice. Please refer to the disclaimer here in the show & be sure to contact a licensed clinical provider if you are struggling with an eating disorder.

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