Introduction
Letâs Talk Good Girls and Great Sex
This book is about one simple thing: how good girls and great sex can go together.
To some of you, that idea is exciting. I remember counting down the days until my wedding, and it wasnât because I looked forward to putting on my wedding dress. It was because I looked forward to taking it off! To others of you, the idea of good girls and great sex going together seems off-putting. You find the whole âgood girlsâ talk a throwback to a bygone era when womenâs worth was measured in their virginity. For so long, the idea of being a âgood girlâ has been used to scare women into following rules out of a sense of shame or guilt. If youâre a âgood girl,â youâre better than the âbad ones.â The definition of what makes someone a good or a bad girl has been limited to sexâwhether weâve done it or not, or even whether we like it or not! Some traditions think itâs bad for women to like sex; some think itâs bad for women not to. We women are in a tough spot!
What if that tough spot is not of Godâs making? What if God meant it when he called Adam and Eve, buck naked and not ashamed, âgoodâ (Genesis 1:31)? And what if that pronouncement of good still echoes through the ages?
Okay . . . but what if you donât share Godâs enthusiasm? What if you canât quite pronounce yourself âgoodâ because of shame about your sexual past? After all, great sex and guilt donât go together. Theyâre like balloons and porcupines, hairy arms and Band-Aids, orange juice and toothpaste. Start sex with guilt and shame, and youâll struggle to enjoy the wonder of being together. Those damning messages make you feel like youâve tainted your marriage before it even began. (Thatâs a lie, sister, and weâll take it apart.)
Maybe youâre staring down at that diamond on your left hand, knowing youâll soon be wed, but youâre not sure youâre ready to embrace your sexual side. Maybe youâve spent your whole life trying not to get too excited and not think about sex. Or maybe youâve even been abused or harassed and the sexual side of marriage seems ugly and even threatening, like itâs a huge cloud you canât see through.
Then there are those of you who have already walked down the aisle, and the idea of good girls = great sex feels like a huge rip-off. You did everything right, and you were promised youâd reap amazing sexual rewards, yet you still canât figure out what all the fuss is about. (I hear you. That was me too. Iâve got you covered.)
Or perhaps you feel like your âgood girlâ status is a lie because youâre keeping a secret. You want to experience a great sex life with your husband, but you struggle with porn or erotica. You find yourself fantasizing about strange scenarios or about strange men.
Or maybe youâre a little confused and embarrassed. Youâre married, but you know thereâs something more. And youâre afraid youâll spend your whole life missing it.
What if, before any of us can figure out the âgreat sexâ part of the equation, we need to figure out that âgood girlâ part? Sex is a rich, deep experience between two people that is the pinnacle of intimacy, love, and pleasure. Great sex, then, starts with you, not only your body parts. Youâre the main part of the equation. And thatâs why our definition of a âgood girl,â which has been so focused on our pasts, has put us off track.
Great Sex Doesnât Require You to Be Something Youâre Not
My husband was bullied in school. He was a smart and sweet kid (which is probably why heâs a smart and sweet man), and kids used to hassle him to copy his homework. He went on from public school to excel in med school, and he returned to his hometown as a pediatrician. Early in his career, when he walked into the delivery room, the prospective dad took one look at him and turned pale. âPlease donât hurt my baby,â he said. For there, before Keith, was the bully who had taken a swing at him fifteen years earlier. Now the tables were turned.
Keith had mercy on both the baby and the dad, and the day ended happily. But while Keith once felt like a weakling, that didnât mean he was a weakling. He had brains, he had motivation, and he had God to help him make it through med school (and an awesome wife who paid the bills). He may not have realized all his assets during his public-school days, but he was better off than the bully who acted so tough.
Thatâs what itâs often like with great sex. Our image of great sex and the reality of great sex are often two different things. You donât need to be someone other than who you are to have great sex. The more you are free to be yourself, confident in who God made you to be, the better sex will be. No pretense. No mask. Just you. The prototypical sexually happy woman likely looks less like a stiletto-sporting, club-hopping supermodel and more like that middle-aged secretary who lives down the street, puttering around in her garden, packing an extra twenty-five pounds. Gravity may have taken its toll, but sheâs the one whoâs the tiger in the bedroom. Sheâs the one having fun because she has the secret to sexual success: sheâs been married to the same man for the last twenty-two years, and theyâre totally and utterly committed to each other.
Great sex isnât something that exists outside of you that you just âgetâ one day, like âgettingâ roses on your anniversary when the delivery van arrives, or suddenly âgettingâ algebra, when everything clicks. Sex isnât a thing, and it isnât a concept. Itâs an intimate experience between two people choosing to celebrate each other.
Embracing Your Sexual Side Doesnât Have to Be Gross
Our cultureâs view of great sex seems like something thatâs in the gutter rather than something thatâs in the clouds. Instead of viewing sex as the celebration of intimacy that a couple experiences together, we tend to view it as something crass. What is âsexyâ is often defined in narrow termsâand it usually has nothing to do with intimacy or marriage. Itâs a woman with a certain body type, oversized confidence, and a repertoire of sexual tricks. But to have great sex, you donât have to be a pinup model, a porn star, or a woman with a ton of sexual experience. You can be you, bringing everything you are to the bedroom. Sexual confidence is far less about feeling like you understand sex and far more about feeling confident in who you are, individually and as a couple.
Sexual confidence is far less about feeling like you understand sex and far more about feeling confident in who you are, individually and as a couple.
Our culture celebrates sex as instinctâwe have a drive that needs to be met. TV shows feature women on the prowl, interested in the next sexual conquest. Women are portrayed as sex obsessed in pretty much the same way we think fourteen-year-old boys are. I donât understand why this âsex as instinctâ is supposed to be so marvelous, though. After all, animals operate on instinct too. Their goals in lifeâinasmuch as theyâre able to make goalsâare simply to have their physical needs met. And by and large, they instinctively know how to do that.
People, on the other hand, have to be taught what to do. Then, even when we are taught, we have the capacity to refuse. We can act in ways diametrically opposed to our well-being. We can be stupid. We can be selfish. Yet we can also be noble, something most animals, except for a few dogs, arenât able to be. Thatâs what makes us human: we have a choice. And because of that, we have the capacity to be good and to choose to do whatâs right. In other words, people arenât simply animals. Weâre higher than that. To think that operating solely on animal instinct is progressive is exactly backward. Itâs regressive.
And thatâs why good girls can have great sex. We donât try to be less than God made us to be, and we donât try to be anything other than what God made us to be. We embrace who we areâand share it passionately!
What If You Donât Feel like a âGood Girlâ?
If you donât feel like a âgood girl,â please hear me on this: Jesus is pleased with you. No matter what you struggle with, once youâve accepted Jesusâs sacrifice for all the ugly stuff in your life, now when God looks at you, he doesnât see what youâre ashamed of. He doesnât see the drunken parties or the groping in the back seat of someoneâs car. He doesnât see your quest for the next guy to make you feel alive. He certainly doesnât see you through the lens of what someone stole from you or how someone used you. When God looks at you, he sees Jesusâs love, sacrifice, and compassion for the pain youâve been through. He sees you as a good girl who has embraced the truly Good One who understands your wounds and bandages them up.
A good girl, then, is not someone who has done everything right or who has never had anything bad happen to her. On the contrary, a good girl is someone who knows and follows a good Godâa God who sees her, not her past. A good girl is someone who understands that sex is good because God made it good and that her body is good because God made it good. When God created the world, he pronounced it good. When he created people, he pronounced his creation very good.
God thinks that sex is part of the goodness of enjoying each other. Great sex isnât just about X-rated sex. The best sex and the hottest sex is often between two married people who are able to let go and be naked and not ashamed (Genesis 2:25).
That is good news! You can be a âgood girlâ even if you struggle with sexual problems, are haunted by your past, or are simply trying to get over a deep-seated fear that sex is dirty. Being a good girl is not based on what you do; itâs based on whose you are. Or, as I like to say, your goodness is not based on what you do with your body but on what Jesus did with his.
Maybe this idea of great sex doesnât make sense to you. You have no interest in being a good girl, youâre happy the way you are, and you think this emphasis on sex with one person for life is a way of ensuring everyone feels guilty and no one has any fun. Will you hear me out? I think youâre missing out on the amazing aphrodisiac that comes from true intimacyâan intimacy you were designed for.
Your goodness is not based on what you do with your body but on what Jesus did with his.
I want you to experience that closeness because I want your marriage to thrive. In fact, Iâve always been passionate about healthy families. While most little girls daydream about their wedding, I wasnât nearly as focused on lace and satin. I tended to dream about being happily married with three or five or seventeen children. I didnât want the romance; I wanted stability.
I was raised by a single mom after my dad left. Growing up, I found so much hope in Godâs promises and ideals for what family and love should look like, and I wanted that for myself. In university I did postgraduate work in sociology, focusing on the family specifically, to verify that Godâs design for marriage really was the best. When I was still young, I married a man equally devoted to God and to having an awesome family.
And even though our marriage had a rocky startâas youâll hear about in this bookâI never doubted my marriage because I knew my husband was awesome, I knew my husband was not the kind of person who would walk out like my dad did, and I wanted to do my part to see our relationship thrive. When my children were small and a window opened up for me to write for parenting magazines, I jumped through it. Within a few years, I was writing books on parenting, sex, and marriage, trying to share my own passion for families getting healthy. And over the last few years, my husband has joined me as we speak at marriage conferences.
What I learned in writing and speaking was that the more I understood what God intended for sex, the better sex was. Great sex is something you discover as you embrace yourself, embrace your spouse, and embrace who you are together. Thatâs when things become explosive!
So welcome to your journey of sexual discovery. Whether youâre married, engaged, or thinking about getting married; experienced or naive; abused and wounded or anxious but excited, God has a path for you that leads to deep connection relationally, spiritually, and physically. In what follows, I hope to help you find it.