Host

Welcome back to Just Breathe.

Host

I am so happy you are here and really, really excited to bring you another great interview.

Host

I know I always say that, but honestly, I feel so lucky that I get to interview so many really, really interesting human beings and I always get just excited to bring them to you.

Host

So today's guest is going to talk about a topic that I know that we are all curious about and all have questions about and perhaps don't always know how to ask these questions or who to ask these questions of.

Host

So I am thrilled, thrilled, thrilled to bring you Court Vox, who provides personal guidance and expertise in the unique and often ignored areas of sexual he is a trained sex and intimacy consultant, surrogate partner, intern and sacred intimate founder of his practice, the Body Vox.

Host

He brings professional opportunities for his clients to learn about and embrace their bodies and those of others.

Host

Sex, the thing that the world is now acknowledging as so important for our general wellness, our mental health, and indeed our lives in general, is on the agenda.

Host

While much progress has been made, it is still too often a taboo subject.

Host

Court serves as the counselor of our times, breaking down the walls of shame and anxiety around intimacy and sex.

Host

Traditional forms of therapy are done through talk.

Host

The work of a somatic sex educator is to further this work via touch and body based experiences and comfortable judgment free and safe environments.

Host

Body acceptance, exploration of sensation and desires and learning how to ask for you want or what you want.

Host

Boundary setting and intimacy work are some of the many reasons clients seek this form of therapy.

Host

Fox is a sex educator experienced working with clients of all sexualities and genders.

Host

He continues to collaborate with fellow sex educator Pamela Madsen for workshops around the country and without further ado, I am absolutely delighted to bring you Court Fox.

Heather Hester

Welcome to Just Breathe Parenting your LGBTQ the podcast transforming the conversation around loving and raising an LGBTQ child.

Heather Hester

My name is Heather Hester and I am so grateful you are here.

Heather Hester

I want you to take a deep breath and know that for the time we are together, you are in the safety of the Just Breathe nest.

Heather Hester

Whether today's show is an amazing guest or me sharing stories, resources, strategies, or lessons I've learned along our journey, I want you to feel like we're just hanging out at a coffee shop having a cozy chat.

Heather Hester

Most of all, I want you to remember that wherever you are on this journey right now, in this moment in time, you are not alone.

Co-Host

Welcome back to Just Breathe.

Co-Host

I am so happy you all are here with us today.

Co-Host

I am really excited to welcome Court Vox here today with us on the show this is a conversation I've been really excited to have and I've been looking forward to this interview and I think all of you are really going to enjoy this.

Co-Host

So buckle your seatbelts, get a piece of paper, start taking notes because there's good stuff.

Co-Host

So I'm just going to start right out of the box.

Co-Host

Why sex?

Co-Host

Why did you choose this as your topic and what made you want to hone in on this?

Court Vox

Well, I didn't choose sex as my topic.

Court Vox

I chose sex and intimacy as my career path.

Court Vox

So why did I choose this?

Court Vox

You know, I ask myself that question sometimes because it's not a, it's not a, it's not an easy business to navigate.

Court Vox

I joke sometimes, like, why didn't I choose to be a breathwork specialist or, or a yoga practitioner?

Court Vox

I could have walked in the world so much easier.

Court Vox

There's still so much shame and stigma around, around sex.

Court Vox

And it comes out in kind of divisive ways.

Court Vox

In running my business, more of the things that are in the back end of how I'm treated by institutions of banking and things like that, the social media, marketing, advertising, those are all things that are very challenging for me to do so.

Court Vox

But that is probably for another podcast.

Co-Host

Yes, those are the things you don't think about, right?

Court Vox

Yeah.

Court Vox

But why did, why did I choose this field?

Court Vox

I, I really feel like I was called to this field.

Court Vox

It wasn't something that I, I chose quickly.

Court Vox

I probably spent the majority of my 30s really kind of easing into this.

Court Vox

I have always been very sexual and very erotic.

Court Vox

I remember my first kind of sexual experience at the age of four with my friend who was also four.

Court Vox

And I remember being very active sexually in terms of like self pleasuring.

Court Vox

And my, my mother was very open about self pleasuring.

Court Vox

She just asked that we go to our room and do it in a private space.

Court Vox

But it was never shamed, it was never talked about in a way that was like, don't do that.

Court Vox

There was always books in my house around sex and, you know, where babies come from and how it happens.

Court Vox

And it was always a discussion.

Court Vox

And I think the way that I view my body and my sexuality is in great, you know, I owe great respect to my mother for that.

Court Vox

But to kind of move on.

Court Vox

You know, I came out when I was 19, when I came to LA, I went to UCLA and you know, my 20s, I feel like I was in a relationship for the majority of the time, time.

Court Vox

And I didn't really get to explore my sexuality as much as I did in my 30s and in my 30s, you know, it was sort of this progression into kind of an exploration of self and then kind of noticing that I had a capacity to meet a lot of different people and a lot of different body types and enjoy that and also help people kind of move past some of the things that they were kind of shameful about or didn't want to talk about, including like desires and even just being with somebody.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

So I feel like I was called to it.

Court Vox

I.

Court Vox

I studied shibari rope bondage.

Court Vox

I started studying shabari rope on it.

Court Vox

I'm still a student that.

Court Vox

And I was in like a group class and I needed a practice partner.

Court Vox

And one of the women in the class said, I will be your.

Court Vox

Your practice body.

Court Vox

And she just happened to be a psychotherapist that dealt with the nervous system.

Court Vox

And I said, you know, I really would like to get out of the career that I'm in now, which was corporate.

Court Vox

And she said, what do you want to do?

Court Vox

And I said, I think I want to be a sex therapist, but not one that talks to people.

Court Vox

One that like helps people figure things out through their body and body based exercises and experiences.

Court Vox

And I said, I don't think it exists.

Court Vox

And she said, have you heard of sexological bodywork?

Court Vox

And so that kind of sent me on a path where I studied for two, two and a half years.

Court Vox

I also became a surrogate partner during that time and studied other things.

Court Vox

And then, you know, as soon as I kind of graduated, I left corporate and then I joined a company called Back to the Body, which runs sensual retreats for women around the world.

Court Vox

And I've kind of never stopped.

Court Vox

So that's, that's sort of how I came.

Court Vox

That's the long story.

Co-Host

That's good.

Co-Host

No, I think it's hard to be.

Co-Host

Hard to tell that in a short way.

Co-Host

I think that was.

Co-Host

It's something that, you know, people want to know and I think people are afraid to ask.

Co-Host

Right to your point.

Co-Host

Any talking about sex can be.

Co-Host

A lot of people are very embarrassed to do so and ask the questions they really want to ask.

Co-Host

So that's why I was like, this is.

Co-Host

I want that to be this space today.

Co-Host

What are the questions that people would want to ask you but might be afraid to ask you or be embarrassed to know you talk about?

Co-Host

You use the word somatic.

Co-Host

And I would love if you could define that and talk about what that means, because I think that's just a word that we're not very familiar with and we don't use on a daily basis?

Court Vox

Yeah, thank you for asking.

Court Vox

Somatic means of the body so unlike a traditional coach or therapist that just works with talking talk therapy, for the most part, my work really facilitates learning through body based exercises, experiential learning and touch.

Court Vox

You know, so there's a couple different kind of veins of somatics, but it's getting back to our bodies, getting back to noticing.

Court Vox

Noticing the wisdom that we carry within ourselves and our culture and our society has pushed us so far from that knowing that it's almost like we have to relearn, relearn the wisdom of our own bodies and listen.

Court Vox

And so my work is really centered around that as much as it is connecting with sexuality and eros.

Co-Host

And you do this in typically a group setting or is this something that you do kind of one on one or couple on one?

Co-Host

How is this work done?

Co-Host

What is.

Co-Host

How would one engage with you in this process?

Court Vox

Yeah, I work with all bodies and teachings.

Court Vox

I run group workshops and retreats for queer men.

Court Vox

And like I said, I work for a company called Back to the Body that runs retreat for predominantly CIS het women.

Court Vox

And I also work with couples, queer couples and straight couples.

Court Vox

I work with women, but I work with women differently than I work with men privately.

Court Vox

I also do private immersion with clients, mostly with queer men.

Court Vox

When I work with straight women, I work with a female practitioner or therapist as a third party to help guide and to help triage with the client.

Court Vox

And we work as a team in that way.

Co-Host

Okay, that's really cool.

Co-Host

I'm just kind of going out of order of how.

Co-Host

But I'm so intrigued by this because I'll get around to the other things.

Co-Host

But this is so fascinating to me and kind of on the same subject, like most of I just thinking about, you know, a lot of my friends, a lot of, you know, people, women especially my age, were not.

Co-Host

We didn't ever talk about this growing up.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

Like, we weren't raised typically in homes where sex was ever talked about.

Co-Host

And if it was, it was very much in a shameful way.

Co-Host

Like that's shameful or that's not to be discussed or just, I don't know, I'm just wondering your words of wisdom for, you know, what do you kind of initially say to women as they come from this type of background, really to help them kind of get out of it?

Co-Host

Because a lot of that's like headspace, right?

Co-Host

So to get out of their heads and move into kind of relearning their body.

Court Vox

So I'm Going to name that.

Court Vox

When I speak around women's sexuality and health and wellness, I.

Court Vox

I feel a level of cringiness in myself.

Court Vox

And I want to name that because I certainly don't want to tell women as a masculine identifying body, I don't want to tell women how to be.

Court Vox

So I just want to name that.

Court Vox

That women's bodies are your bodies.

Court Vox

Right?

Court Vox

And I think that's.

Court Vox

That's the most important thing to identify is bodily autonomy.

Court Vox

And so much of the experience of women is that their bodies are not their own and that they are witnessed and seen through the lens of the masculine, through the lens of men.

Court Vox

And how women are supposed to present, how they're supposed to behave is for the masculine, is for men, right?

Court Vox

And so when you can sort of untangle that, the question becomes, who am I and how do I connect to my body for my pleasure, for myself, how do I want to present for me that feels erotic and sexy and turn on for me, not for the lens in which I'm being seen.

Court Vox

And I think that's something that straight women have in common with queer men, is the difference with queer and gay men is that gay men are the lens and we are the seen through the lens.

Court Vox

Does that make sense?

Co-Host

Ah, yes, it does.

Court Vox

Which is another sort of layer.

Court Vox

But it's sort of like we preen and groom and present and walk and talk and exercise and eat and do all these things so that we can sort of be accepted and fit into a cultural narrative of acceptance from the masculine.

Co-Host

Right?

Co-Host

And specifically, yes, which is so interesting because I'm really seeing that now with my son, as he's 22, almost 23, and just over the past few years, how that's, you know, kind of shifted and, and really kind of tapping into that.

Co-Host

So it's interesting to me, and I think, okay, you know, the quiet voice says, okay, is there something I could be wisdom that I could be sharing with him to perhaps, you know, just kind of spark another thought?

Co-Host

Like, here's another way of thinking of this, right?

Co-Host

Because as you and I know, you don't ever tell your kids anything because they will do the opposite, right?

Court Vox

You know, that's always kind.

Court Vox

That has always been my approach with my son, who's now 19, around discussion around drugs and discussion around sex, is that I've always presented it as choices, right?

Court Vox

So, you know, these are the choices that are going to come your way.

Court Vox

And in choosing to have sex, you're also choosing to open your body and open your spirit to someone.

Court Vox

And I Guess you know, my invitation to him was always to look inside yourself and notice if you're ready for that, are you emotionally ready for this connection to happen?

Court Vox

And if the answer is no, maybe, you know, it's not the time.

Court Vox

And I think, you know, from what I know, he did wait until he felt he was ready and he was with a girlfriend that he'd been with for a year.

Court Vox

And it was a beautiful experience, right?

Court Vox

Same thing around drugs of, look, you can choose to do all these drugs, and in choosing that, you.

Court Vox

You may also be choosing a life of addiction.

Court Vox

You may be choosing a life of poor health, right?

Court Vox

These are all the things that kind of come with that.

Court Vox

It's not speaking, you know, it's just a language nuance of, you know, speaking about things as choices rather than repercussions.

Court Vox

Because as you said, you tell a child not to do something and they want to do it, right?

Court Vox

And so as parents, if we can simply present the information of this is a choice.

Court Vox

And with those choices, you are also choosing this.

Court Vox

And same thing with sex, of, you know, if you are choosing to have sex as a young person, you are choosing this emotional experience, this physical experience.

Court Vox

And also, you know, you are choosing, you know, if you're choosing not to use a condom, you are choosing to open yourself up to pregnancy at a young age.

Court Vox

Is that something that you want to choose?

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

Or do you want to wear a condom?

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

And Also all the STDs and STIs that come with that, too.

Court Vox

Those are like.

Court Vox

Those are important conversations.

Co-Host

Well, they are.

Co-Host

They are.

Co-Host

And I think that that's something.

Co-Host

I mean, you and I kind of twofold here.

Co-Host

You and I touched on this before we started recording.

Co-Host

But the things that, you know, we wish we would have known or wish we would have, you know, back when we started parenting, right?

Co-Host

So that we perhaps could have started, you know, I know for myself specifically, started these conversations so much earlier in a way that they were conversations and not a.

Co-Host

Well, just don't do that because it's scary or don't do that because you could die, right?

Co-Host

Because that's so not effective at all.

Co-Host

And all it does is close them down and freak you out.

Co-Host

So I think that, you know, this is such a helpful conversation in being able to really just open up and just.

Co-Host

Even if it is uncomfortable.

Co-Host

Uncomfortable for you to know, these kind of conversations are so much easier because we all know what the choices are, right?

Co-Host

So we can have this conversation.

Co-Host

And here are all of your choices.

Co-Host

Do you have questions about Any of them.

Co-Host

Do you want to know more information about any of them?

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

And I think kind of to part two of this, which is, you know, you and I were laughing.

Co-Host

So you are a queer man parenting a heterosexual boy.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

And I'm mom parenting gay kids.

Co-Host

So how do we do this?

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

And how.

Co-Host

When we don't really know what we're talking about specifically.

Co-Host

And so having, as we have these discussions around choices, and we really want to offer this, like, here's the information you specifically need to know that's going to be helpful for you.

Co-Host

Like, had I known six years ago how to help Connor, like, navigate being a gay, you know, at that point, a gay young man and moving into, you know, through college and into young adulthood, Holy cow, would that have been like a million times better?

Co-Host

But I didn't know what I didn't know, and I didn't know how to find it.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

So what kind of wisdom do you have to share around that?

Co-Host

Because I imagine it's a lot.

Court Vox

Around finding it or how to forgive yourself.

Co-Host

That might be a whole nother conversation.

Co-Host

I'm getting that.

Co-Host

But, yeah, finding it.

Co-Host

Yeah.

Court Vox

So interestingly enough, my son's also named Connor.

Co-Host

Greatest name.

Court Vox

Yeah.

Court Vox

Good name.

Court Vox

You know, before I go into that, I want to say, you know, having the discussion around sex, we often go to.

Court Vox

And even I just did it, we go to this place of talking about all the risks involved.

Court Vox

And what we don't talk about is all the, like, great things.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

Of how powerful pleasure can be in mood stabilization and connecting with friends and connecting with lovers, and it's just not the person that you've had sex with.

Court Vox

Like, you're running all these endorphins and dopamine signals that come from these pleasure signals inside us.

Court Vox

These are ours.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

And that translates into everything and every interaction we have.

Court Vox

And so noticing that those sexual and erotic connections that we have really are beautiful.

Court Vox

And if we can have that conversation, that pleasure is healing, pleasure is valuable.

Court Vox

That's counterculture.

Court Vox

That's a counterculture conversation.

Court Vox

And to start having that early on, I think is really important.

Co-Host

Absolutely.

Co-Host

I mean, just.

Co-Host

Yeah, go ahead.

Court Vox

The thing I also want to talk about again is, you know, with children is bodily autonomy.

Court Vox

And, you know, I remember as a child, my mother would sort of pass me off to relatives or friends to give them hugs and kisses, and it was sort of this, like, you know, she just to hear her talk about it, she just loved me so much that she wanted to other people to love me as much as she did.

Court Vox

And to share that.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

And I look back on that and I also remember times when I didn't want to do that.

Court Vox

And the conversation was not, it's okay, you don't have to.

Court Vox

It was, come on, it's Uncle Joe or it's Uncle Mary or, you know, whatever it is, you know, they're happy to see you.

Court Vox

Give them a hug, give him a kiss.

Court Vox

And like, that actually sends the signal to your child that they're not in control of their body.

Court Vox

And so to say, you know, it's totally fine if you don't want to be affectionate these people, thank you for trusting yourself.

Court Vox

That is a different conversation.

Court Vox

And it's the conversation that I think really needs to be fostered with our children.

Court Vox

Now also, just talking about bodies of.

Court Vox

As your children's bodies change, you know, commenting on how they're gaining weight or losing weight or they're too thin or they're too big or they're eating too much or they're not eating enough.

Court Vox

And like, it's just a lot, right?

Court Vox

It's a lot to hear from people at school.

Court Vox

It's a lot to hear from teachers and to hear from media and then to also be hearing it from your parents.

Court Vox

It's just something that we have to stop doing of it is the neg, the kind of inconspicuous body talk and even, you know, and this is something I look back on, you know, as a, as a gay man of dealing with my own kind of body dysmorphia issues and doing it in front of my son, of, oh my gosh, I need to go back to the gym.

Court Vox

I need to lose five pounds, I need to run.

Court Vox

Ugh, I feel so fat.

Court Vox

All these things, they're just, they just don't send the best messages of body acceptance and body sort of friendliness with your body.

Co-Host

Yes.

Co-Host

It's so true.

Co-Host

And it's such something that's so ingrained in us that we don't realize what we're doing.

Co-Host

And it's such a cycle breaker moment to be able to be aware of that and to be aware of your wording.

Co-Host

It's something that we've been doing in our house.

Co-Host

I love that you brought that up because it, you know, something that all of my kids are very sensitive and aware of.

Co-Host

And so we've had many conversations around this.

Co-Host

And I am 100% guilty of saying, oh my gosh, I don't like the way I look or I feel overweight or, you know, all the things you kind of just Named I need to get back to the gym.

Co-Host

I, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

And learning to shift that and say, I want to.

Co-Host

I want to feel healthier.

Co-Host

So I personally am going to shift the way I'm eating or I'm going to do this because this makes me feel better.

Co-Host

You know, what, what are the things that you like?

Co-Host

And I have, you know, these big conversations around, like, you know, what, what they like, like, what makes them feel good.

Co-Host

And.

Co-Host

But it's definitely a rerouting of the narrative.

Co-Host

Right?

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

Because we all.

Co-Host

That's kind of, again, like, that was very, I think, generational and something.

Co-Host

A generational cycle that we have to break so that our kids can go forward with a much healthier view of eating, working out, and loving, which all will come to loving their bodies.

Court Vox

You know, the word integration is often talked about.

Court Vox

You know, it's like, we do this work and we integrate.

Court Vox

Like, what does integration mean?

Court Vox

And integration is sort of like when we have this felt sense of something in our body and then we have also language to talk about it and language to speak about it.

Court Vox

And maybe a different way that sort of aligns with this rerouting of our nervous system and rerouting of narratives that are really deeply part of our lineage and our ancestors, of our mothers and our fathers and our grandparents.

Court Vox

These messages that have been cultivated, they've been being cultivated for many, many years.

Court Vox

And so to change them involves an integration of the learning in a way that is a somatic and also from like a language perspective and also sharing with others.

Court Vox

Like, how do we share this information with each other?

Court Vox

Of, hey, like, I hear you speaking to yourself in such a.

Court Vox

An interesting way.

Court Vox

Are you aware.

Court Vox

Are you aware of how you're speaking to yourself?

Court Vox

It's affecting me too, you know, and again, that's another language of.

Court Vox

Of stop talking to yourself so negatively as opposed to, hey, are you aware of how you're speaking about your body right now?

Court Vox

No, how am I speaking about my body?

Court Vox

Well, you just said that you're fat and you need to, like, run for 12 miles.

Co-Host

Oh, God.

Court Vox

Then you're like, oh, God, Wow.

Court Vox

Did I say that?

Court Vox

Well, that's not really kind, is it?

Court Vox

You know, it's allowing people to come to their own conclusion rather than shaming them for the shameful feeling they're already having.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

Like piling on.

Co-Host

Oh, my God.

Court Vox

Yeah.

Co-Host

Well, it's such a great pattern interrupt.

Co-Host

I mean, to be able to, like, moment and like, stop it.

Co-Host

Like, stop the thought and become aware of it and Think, okay, You know, help not only yourself, but someone else.

Co-Host

Think, okay, how could, how can I look at this differently?

Co-Host

How can I approach this differently so that, you know, I'm taking care of me and just taking care of me, not in a better way, just doing it.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

I think that's such a big thing.

Court Vox

Yeah, that's.

Court Vox

I mean, that was something we kind of talked about before we started is this idea that, you know, as parents we tend to put so much focus outward, focus on our children and their success and their happiness and their joy and there's, you know, how they're behaving and things that we oftentimes we lose sight of the work that we need to do ourselves.

Court Vox

And just in sort of the reframe and the reorientation of our own connection to our bodies and our own sexuality and our own eroticism and our own life force energy.

Court Vox

By way of embodying those things, we are teaching our children, right?

Court Vox

Not by telling them, but by doing as.

Court Vox

By setting as an example.

Court Vox

So self care and self advancement and self growth is a, is a really big part of being a parent.

Co-Host

It is, I think it shifts the relationship So.

Co-Host

I mean, 180 degrees.

Co-Host

Mm, definitely with, I mean, with yourself 100%, but with your child, because they, even if you aren't saying anything out loud, they see the shifting, right.

Co-Host

They're.

Co-Host

They're constantly taking note.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

Of your actions, of your behaviors, of your words.

Co-Host

So it is powerful.

Co-Host

It's really powerful.

Co-Host

I'm in the.

Co-Host

Just like this made this pop into my head.

Co-Host

And when we were talking about this earlier too, I'm in the middle of writing a book and I'm working with my editor right now.

Co-Host

And a lot of this book is the personal work that as a parent you need to do in order to be the best support for your child, in order to support them in their coming out process and as they navigate.

Co-Host

And I initially was getting a lot of pushback.

Co-Host

You know, people just want to know what to do for their kids.

Co-Host

They don't want to know this other stuff.

Co-Host

And I was like, well, unfortunately, I mean, yes, I get that, but this other stuff has to be done, right?

Co-Host

So I'm not, I'm not wavering on this being in there because this is important.

Co-Host

And this is such an important.

Co-Host

This was such an important, like, incredibly valuable lesson that I learned that I didn't know that I was allowed to do.

Co-Host

Like, that was mind blowing to me that I was allowed to take care of myself.

Co-Host

I can't be the only One that thinks that.

Co-Host

Right?

Co-Host

Yeah.

Court Vox

And in doing that, you know, you also give permission to other people to do the same.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

As a parent and a mother and as a father, you know, to, to really insist on your own advancement and your own growth and able to share that with other people.

Court Vox

It's like, huh, I get.

Court Vox

I could, I could be doing the same thing.

Court Vox

That's available for me too, you know, if you're open to it.

Court Vox

I'd love to talk about this article that's written by a colleague of mine named Kai Chang Tom around gender.

Co-Host

Yes, I would love that.

Co-Host

Yes, please.

Court Vox

So just in a nutshell, the article really is about evolution.

Court Vox

And she talks about how gender binary, how we think about it is really about.

Court Vox

It's much easier for us to think masculine, feminine.

Court Vox

And if a child is going from being born in a masculine body to being transitioning into a feminine, more feminine body, easier for us to understand, wrap our heads around.

Court Vox

But when the sort of trajectory of this human is evolutionary, we have a much harder time dealing with that because it's not black or white.

Court Vox

And what they're talking about is sort of that gender can be.

Court Vox

And the invitation to look at gender as an evolution and that, you know, even if I'm looking at myself and who I am of looking about who I was in my teens and my twenties, really identifying more in my feminine, my feminine energy, and then, you know, in my 30s, really stepping more into what I felt as a more masculine energy and I'm still sort of in there and then also now kind of wanting to reconnect with feminine energy.

Court Vox

And so this noticing this evolution of gender in myself and also how that pertains to my sexuality and that your sexuality is evolutionary just like your body is evolutionary, we're all going to continue to change.

Court Vox

That is the one fact I can name will continue to change.

Court Vox

And if we can create space for our evolution, if we can create space for the possibility that your child's gender will shift and evolve, it alleviates so much pressure on everyone's part of, you know, this discussion.

Court Vox

If my child does transition or my child does name themselves as non binary in this moment, that maybe later they could change their mind.

Court Vox

And that's actually okay.

Court Vox

It's okay.

Court Vox

Because you know what, it's their body.

Co-Host

Exactly right.

Co-Host

I mean, and how is that affecting anybody else, really?

Court Vox

Yeah, it's.

Court Vox

It's really how it affects other people is that it leaves people in their own discomfort and really that's their work, not the other person's.

Co-Host

Correct.

Co-Host

Correct.

Court Vox

So you know, I just.

Court Vox

Yeah, go ahead.

Co-Host

No, no, no.

Co-Host

I was just thinking that I, I love that.

Co-Host

I would love to actually read this article, but I, I love that she was talking about the feminine and masculine energy, which I don't think a lot of people realize that we all have both.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

And that's.

Co-Host

And so to what degree that you are kind of.

Co-Host

I don't feel.

Co-Host

I always kind of picture it like I, you know, you're kind of.

Co-Host

You tap into both of them.

Co-Host

I, you know, and we're all.

Co-Host

It's on a spectrum.

Co-Host

There's the word I was looking for.

Co-Host

And I wonder if you could talk about that a little bit.

Court Vox

Yeah.

Court Vox

I mean, what she actually is proposing is slightly different, which is that what, what we're able to see and feel as a culture is the binary masculine, feminine.

Court Vox

And we all have both.

Court Vox

But really what gender has the possibility of being is more like galaxy or like all the colors in the coloring box.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

And when you ask somebody who's sort of like exploring non binary ness, like how it feels in their body, it's sort of like it's not one or the other.

Court Vox

Which is again much easier for us to understand because we've been so convinced, conditioned in binary, black, white, negative, positive.

Court Vox

Right.

Court Vox

Masculine, feminine, that it's harder for us to grasp that, oh, my gender expression or my sexual expression looks like all the colors in the coloring box, not just the two at the opposite poles.

Co-Host

I love that.

Co-Host

That's such a great visual because people can wrap their heads around that.

Court Vox

Yeah.

Court Vox

And it's, you know, you kind of, you can understand like how for people who are not kind of inhabiting that space, how that feel feels maybe overwhelming and confusing, but if we're able to reframe it in more of a positive outlook of looking at it, like possibility of this actually is not confusing.

Court Vox

What this offers is so much range and so much possibility of who I, who I'm allowed to be and who I can be and how I present and how I move, how I speak, how I love it just creates more possibility.

Co-Host

Well, it also encourages one to really be so aware and do that work.

Co-Host

To continually be just very in touch and connected to who they are.

Co-Host

Right.

Co-Host

What.

Co-Host

What does that mean to them?

Co-Host

And so, and so, you know, kind of learning, relearning how to go internally to see who you are and not looking for that out here by checking a bunch of boxes.

Court Vox

Yeah.

Court Vox

And again, the sort of what's possible and I'll speak from an eye space and also what's Possible.

Court Vox

What has been or become possible for so many of my clients in exploring their erotic potential and their erotic body and erotic desires is that, you know, what we're able to do when we are exploring in those spaces is really explore the depths of who we are as beings.

Court Vox

Because what I've noticed is that when we're in psychotherapy, which I think is really valuable, we're up here, we're in our heads and when we're speaking from a heart place, we're speaking from our chest up.

Court Vox

Right?

Court Vox

You know, I've worked with dancers and yogis and I've worked with so many different types of people, but you would think these dancers and these yogis and these, you know, breath work practitioners, they're really connected to their sexuality, but they've really focused on a belly up approach, right?

Court Vox

Where they're, they're not counting their genitals as part of their, their body and they're not speaking to them as if they're part of a, part of the plan or part of, part of the party.

Court Vox

And so to start to include your genitals, to include your sex as part of the conversation is really important.

Court Vox

And it's also daunting for some people, for many of us, because it just has not been right, has not been permissioned, has not been allowed.

Court Vox

And there's so much wrapped up in that conversation.

Co-Host

Yes.

Co-Host

Oh my goodness, yes.

Court Vox

Overwhelming you.

Co-Host

I'm like 100 questions right now and I'm like, okay, I'll be quiet.

Co-Host

That's the question, the best way to put it.

Co-Host

I'm like soaking this all in.

Co-Host

I'm like, oh my gosh, I'm actually having like epiphany moments and questions all at the same time.

Co-Host

I'm just fascinated and I know that people listening are going to be fascinated on how, you know, how do we do this work as adults, as, you know, parents A and then B, kind of circling back to, you know, obviously the earlier we can start talking with our kids about sex and about just their bodies and their whole bodies and, you know, all of these things that we've talked about today, the better.

Co-Host

But how do, how do we do this?

Co-Host

How do we, how do they find you?

Court Vox

How do people find me?

Court Vox

Yes, how do they find you?

Court Vox

Just reach and pull it down.

Court Vox

No, you can find me on thebodyvox.com also courtvox on Instagram.

Court Vox

The bodyvox on Instagram.

Co-Host

Okay, well, I will be posting that in the show notes for sure.

Co-Host

But let's say, you know, there's a Group of people that are like, yes, this is work I would like to do, I need to do.

Co-Host

Is this something that women would come as just a single person or do they come as a couple?

Co-Host

Or how does that work with your retreats?

Court Vox

So the women's retreats that I work back to the body, they're, they're for individual women.

Court Vox

And next year we have so many offerings.

Court Vox

We have some programs that are sort of entry level and then we have programs that are a little more advanced.

Court Vox

And so there's sort of something for everyone.

Court Vox

And that's backtothebody.org?

Co-Host

Okay.

Court Vox

And then, you know, to work with me privately, I work for three days minimum in immersion.

Court Vox

I work with men and women.

Court Vox

And like I said, when I work with women, I work in a triad model.

Court Vox

So with another female bodied practitioner or therapist to kind of triage with the client.

Co-Host

Sure, sure.

Co-Host

Oh, that's very cool.

Co-Host

Okay, thank you, thank you, thank you so very much.

Co-Host

Kind of my final question, and this is my big question that I ask everyone who comes on is, and you can kind of choose, it's one of two questions.

Co-Host

What are your words of wisdom that you would share either with a kid coming out right now or a parent who has a child coming out right now?

Court Vox

You know, I'm going to speak to the kid coming out.

Court Vox

I think what I'm going to say might be counterintuitive to what you might think I would say, which is check in with your surroundings, check in with where you live, who you are living with, and understand before you come out whether it's safe enough.

Court Vox

I think people's safety, children's safety is important.

Court Vox

And there are organizations like the Trevor Project that have hotlines for you to call and that can be done on your own.

Court Vox

You don't have to share that with anybody if you need support.

Court Vox

But yeah, just noticing if you're in Florida, when you're in a really conservative school and you have conservative parents and you fear for your life and coming out, that's a tricky one.

Court Vox

I'm not going to tell somebody to come out in a container that's not supportive or that is not safe.

Court Vox

First and foremost, understand that you are safe and that you will be held.

Court Vox

And then beyond that, if the answer is yes, I feel like I will be held safely in my body here to either do it how it feels right for you.

Court Vox

I think we've come to this place in America where coming out is sort of, okay, everybody, let's sit down.

Court Vox

Let's have this deep conversation And I'm going to tell you that I'm coming out, but to speak with some of my European friends and partners.

Court Vox

They're coming out.

Court Vox

Story was not.

Court Vox

They didn't sit their parents down.

Court Vox

They didn't do that.

Court Vox

They said, I'm going out with my boyfriend.

Court Vox

I'm meeting Joel again.

Court Vox

I'm going to this queer party.

Court Vox

It was more of like, I'm living my life this way.

Court Vox

And so I wonder if there's sort of.

Court Vox

Obviously, there's a cultural difference with the United States and some of the other countries like Sweden and Belgium and that are a little more advanced, in my opinion.

Co-Host

Absolutely.

Court Vox

And also, I don't know that it has to be so cut and dry always, but everybody has their own way.

Co-Host

Of doing it, right?

Co-Host

Well, I think that's.

Co-Host

There's.

Co-Host

There's no wrong way of doing.

Co-Host

But to say, I love that you touched on the safety piece first, because that is.

Co-Host

I could not agree with you more.

Co-Host

And, you know, I think it's also, gosh, that is the goal, right?

Co-Host

That someday in America, that is the way that it's no different.

Co-Host

My boyfriend is coming over, My girlfriend's coming over, my girlfriend are coming over.

Co-Host

I mean, you know that it is not a shocking moment or any of what's going on right now.

Co-Host

So that is.

Co-Host

That is the work.

Co-Host

That is the work.

Co-Host

So thank you so much for being here today.

Court Vox

Yeah, thanks for having me.

Co-Host

A fantastic conversation.

Co-Host

Before we end, is there anything else that you'd like to share?

Court Vox

I don't think so.

Court Vox

I.

Court Vox

I think I've.

Court Vox

I've shared it all.

Co-Host

I think you have.

Co-Host

We didn't.

Co-Host

We shared a lot.

Co-Host

You shared a lot.

Co-Host

Thank you.

Co-Host

This was really fascinating and wonderful.

Co-Host

So I appreciate you being here.

Court Vox

Thanks for having me on.

Heather Hester

Thanks so much for joining me today.

Heather Hester

If you enjoyed today's episode, I would be so grateful.

Heather Hester

For a rating or a review.

Heather Hester

Click on the link in the show notes or go to my website, chrysalismama.com to stay up to date on my latest resources, as well as to learn how you can work with me.

Heather Hester

Please share this podcast with anyone who needs to know that they are not alone.

Heather Hester

And remember to just breathe until next.

Co-Host

Sa.