Couples Therapy for Desire Discrepancy based in St Petersburg, Florida
Karli Kucko, LPC, CST
AASECT Certified Sex Therapist
Restoring Intimacy and Understanding Between Partners
When partners experience different levels of desire, it can feel confusing, isolating, or even painful. At Karli K Counseling, therapy offers a compassionate space to explore those differences without blame. Together, we look at the emotional and relational patterns that shape intimacy, rebuild trust, and strengthen a connection that feels safe, balanced, and fulfilling for both partners.
Helping Couples Reignite Intimacy When Desire Doesn’t Match
“Why don’t I feel turned on anymore?”
“Do I even have a libido, or did it just disappear?”
“I want to feel more sexually confident, but I don’t know where to start.”
If you’re feeling distant from your own desire, unsure how to express your needs, or burdened by shame or past experiences that affect your relationship with sex, you’re not alone. As an intimacy therapist in St Petersburg, my work centers on helping people understand these experiences with compassion, reminding you that nothing about your story is broken or beyond healing.
Can Karli K Counseling Help When Desire Feels Out of Sync?
Yes. Couples therapy for desire discrepancy is one of the most common and meaningful parts of my work. Relationships can be a source of deep fulfillment, but they can also bring up patterns and emotions that are hard to navigate on your own. My goal is to help partners understand the dynamics shaping their intimacy, learn to communicate without shame or blame, and rebuild a sense of safety and connection that feels right for both people.
Understanding Desire Discrepancy
Differences in sexual desire are part of many relationships and can be influenced by emotional connection, stress, life changes, trauma, hormones, or how each person experiences pleasure. For some, desire fades under pressure or routine; for others, it may feel unpredictable or challenging to access. None of this means your relationship is broken; it means there’s something deeper worth understanding.
In therapy, we look beyond the surface of “who wants sex more” to explore how each partner experiences closeness, safety, and desire. This awareness helps couples shift from frustration to empathy, creating a foundation for healing and renewed intimacy.
When to Consider Couples Therapy
Couples therapy isn’t only for relationships in crisis; it can also be a space for growth, reflection, and rebuilding connection. Many partners begin therapy when they realize communication has stalled, intimacy feels different, or conflict seems more complex to resolve on their own.
Some common reasons couples choose to begin therapy include:
Feeling Stuck or Disconnected
When the relationship feels heavy or repetitive, therapy can help you both step out of old patterns and find new ways to understand each other.Navigating Sexual or Intimacy Concerns
Changes in desire, arousal, or physical closeness can be difficult to talk about. Couples therapy offers a supportive environment to explore these differences with compassion and curiosity.Preparing for Commitment or Major Life Changes
Some couples come to therapy before marriage, after moving in together, or during a transition, such as parenthood or career changes. Building emotional tools early helps relationships stay grounded through stress and change.Rebuilding After Conflict or Betrayal
For partners who feel distance after repeated arguments, or after trust has been broken, therapy offers a way to repair safety and rediscover what drew you to each other.Strengthening Family or Co-Parenting Relationships
When parenting or family stress starts to affect your partnership, therapy can help you reconnect as a team and create a sense of calm and stability at home.
Whatever brings you to therapy, the goal is the same: to help you both feel heard, respected, and emotionally safe as you work toward a more connected and fulfilling relationship.
Can We Work On Sexual Concerns During Couples Therapy?
Yes. Many couples find that sexual concerns naturally come up in therapy, and they’re welcome here. Intimacy, emotional, physical, and sexual, is an important part of how partners connect and feel secure with each other. As an AASECT Certified Sex Therapist based in St. Petersburg, Florida, I often work with couples who want to understand their erotic connection better, heal from past experiences, or rediscover pleasure and closeness together.
Some areas we can explore may include:
Desire discrepancies or mismatched libidos
Healing from sexual trauma or shame
Learning to talk openly about sexual needs and boundaries
Exploring kink, BDSM, or fantasy with safety and consent
Navigating sex after childbirth or body changes
Addressing pain during sex or other sexual dysfunctions
Managing performance anxiety or fear of rejection
Rebuilding intimacy after betrayal or infidelity
Understanding alternative relationship structures (polyamory, ethical non-monogamy)
Every topic is approached with care, respect, and collaboration. Therapy is not about judgment; it’s about helping you and your partner understand your experiences, find shared language for intimacy, and build a sexual connection that feels authentic and safe for both of you.
Understanding What Shapes Desire
Many people believe desire should come naturally, but the truth is that emotional, physical, and relational factors influence arousal. In therapy, we often explore a framework called the Dual Control Model of Sexual Response, which describes how each of us has both a sexual accelerator (things that turn us on) and a brake (things that turn us off).
Learning your own accelerators and brakes and understanding your partner’s can change how you approach intimacy. When couples can talk openly about what supports desire and what hinders it, they often rediscover a sense of connection, confidence, and playfulness.
For some, accelerators include emotional closeness, fantasy, or touch that feels safe and affectionate. Brakes might consist of stress, conflict, pain, or fear of rejection. In couples therapy, we look at these dynamics together to help you create a sexual and emotional environment where both partners can feel relaxed, desired, and connected.
Addressing Desire Discrepancy Together
When partners experience different levels of desire, it can bring up feelings of frustration, sadness, or insecurity. These moments are more common than many people realize, and they don’t mean something is wrong with you or your relationship. Sometimes the cause is physical, like medication side effects or hormonal changes. Other times, it’s emotional, such as stress, resentment, or a lack of emotional closeness.
Part of therapy involves learning to communicate about these experiences without shame or blame. We may explore intentional ways to reconnect, such as planning time for intimacy, rebuilding trust through small gestures, or finding new ways to share pleasure and comfort.
These conversations help both partners feel seen and valued again, reducing pressure and allowing desire to grow naturally. When handled with compassion and curiosity, working through desire differences often leads to deeper intimacy, emotional healing, and a renewed sense of closeness.
How I Help
In therapy, we gently explore the emotional, physical, and relational experiences that influence desire. My approach is warm, inclusive, and rooted in safety, creating space for both partners to feel understood and supported. Each session is tailored to your unique relationship, helping you move toward clarity, comfort, and a more connected intimate life.
Together, we’ll:
Gently uncover the emotions and insecurities that may be shaping desire.
Strengthen communication skills that create trust and emotional safety.
Explore ways to reconnect physically without pressure or expectation.
Rebuild emotional intimacy that naturally supports desire.
Therapy is a collaborative process. Your goals guide our work, and my role is to provide steady, compassionate support as you and your partner move toward closeness, confidence, and fulfillment in your relationship.
Common Questions
1. Is mismatched desire normal?
Yes, it’s common and nothing to be ashamed of. Desire fluctuates over time for many reasons.
2. Will therapy make us have more sex?
Therapy helps you understand and navigate desire differences, which often leads to more satisfying intimacy, but it’s about connection, not just frequency.
3. What if one partner doesn’t want therapy?
I can help you explore your concerns individually and find the best way forward for you and your relationship.
4. How Do We Get Started with Couples Therapy?
If you and your partner are curious about working together, the first step is scheduling a free 15-minute video consultation. During this call, we’ll briefly discuss your goals, answer any questions you may have, and ensure the support I offer is the right fit for both of us.
This consultation is a chance to connect, get a sense of how therapy feels, and begin building comfort and trust before your first session. From there, we can schedule ongoing sessions at a pace that works best for your relationship.