Your hormone levels came back normal. Or something was slightly off, and you tried the creams, the supplements, the replacements.
Desire still hasn't returned. And now you're wondering if you'll ever find the right fix.
Here's what nobody is telling you: the hormone explanation is keeping you stuck.
📌 Learn about my proven 3-step process, ‘The Connection Code’ in this Free Intimacy Masterclass: https://lauren-wolff.com/register
I'm a Registered Psychotherapist and sex therapist. For over 10 years, I've helped more than 400 women understand why desire disappeared and how to bring it back.
This video breaks down why the hormone-first approach fails most women, what is actually driving missing desire, and where to focus your attention instead of chasing your next lab test.
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Why the hormone explanation is keeping you stuck
1:29 Why blaming hormones keeps you stuck (the thermometer analogy)
3:54 What is actually turning off desire: your nervous system
5:05 How to assess your nervous system state right now
5:27 The biggest blind spot in the hormone conversation: desire is relational
6:18 The one question that shows you where the real issue is
7:14 The three conditions that determine whether desire shows up
9:04 The shift from passive patient to active participant
❓ QUESTIONS ANSWERED
Q: Why don't I want sex even though my hormones are normal?
A: Women with perfect labs regularly report no desire, while women with suboptimal levels sometimes have robust desire. That tells you hormones are one input in a complex system, not the primary driver. Desire requires a regulated nervous system, emotional safety, and relational connection. Hormones can support desire when those conditions are right, but they cannot create it when conditions are wrong. (2:17)
Q: Can hormone treatment bring back lost desire?
A: Hormone treatment can play a supporting role, but for most women, it fails as a standalone solution because it does not address the actual cause. If your nervous system is in survival mode, or if intimacy feels disconnected or emotionally costly, no hormone level will override that. Optimizing hormones while ignoring conditions is solving the wrong problem. (1:51)
Q: What does the nervous system have to do with desire?
A: When you are chronically stressed, carrying the mental load, or running on depletion, your body shifts into survival mode. Survival mode is not interested in sex. It is interested in getting through the day. No amount of testosterone cream overrides a nervous system that feels unsafe or depleted. This is not a deficiency. It is a state your body is in because of the conditions of your life. (4:17)
Q: Why do I feel disconnected from my partner even though I still love them?
A: Desire does not happen in isolation. It happens in a relationship. If intimacy feels disconnected, emotionally labored, or pressured, desire will not return regardless of hormone levels. Love and desire are separate systems that run on different fuel. Feeling emotionally safe, connected, and like intimacy adds to your life rather than costs you something, matters far more than your estrogen levels. (5:27)
Q: How do I know if my nervous system is the problem with my desire?
A: Ask yourself on a scale of 1 to 10 how depleted or overwhelmed you feel on a daily basis. If it is above a six, your nervous system is likely suppressing desire regardless of hormones. Also ask: if my nervous system felt calm and my relationship felt deeply connected, would I be more interested in intimacy? If the answer is yes, you have your answer about where to focus. (8:20)
📱 RESOURCES
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