Table of contents
1. What happens to the body when you have endometriosis?
2. How can endometriosis impact your sex life?
3. Are there any medical coping strategies for when endometriosis impacts your sex life?
4. Are there any natural coping strategies for when endometriosis impacts your sex life?
Illustrated by Ralitza Nikolova
Poppy is 28; and she was diagnosed with endometriosis over 10 years ago. “When I started having sex, it was very painful,” she tells me. “I found this embarrassing and although I had been with my boyfriend for a year, we were both young and it was hard for me to discuss how I was feeling with him: that I was struggling to have sex which is something that is enjoyed by the rest of the world. It was extremely alienating.”
Sadly, Poppy’s experience is far from rare. Endometriosis impacts around 1 in 10 women and AFAB individuals; and painful sex is one of the major symptoms. It’s a cruel (or, rather, even crueller) symptom, too. Excruciating pain can be bad enough; but, as Poppy described, pain during sex (also known as dyspareunia) can impact your mental wellbeing as well. It can be isolating, embarrassing and traumatic in equal measure; and, as a consequence, endometriosis can leave both your physical and mental health in tatters.
But all doesn’t have to be lost. Here at Daye, we’ve partnered with Emjoy to explore how to navigate a healthy, satisfying sex life if you suffer from endometriosis; but first things first…
What happens to the body when you have endometriosis?
More and more people are gaining an understanding of this common and debilitating illness; but it’s still frequently misunderstood, and so it’s always worth getting a refresher.
“[Endometriosis is a] chronic inflammatory condition in which endometrial tissue (tissue that forms the lining of the uterus) is present outside of the uterus (most commonly in the pelvis, including the ovaries and the lining of the abdominal cavity),” says Dr. Natalia C. Llarena, MD, FACOG, Board Certified Reproductive Endocrinologist at HRC Fertility.
Millennial doctor Dr. Tanaya Cuterus expands further. “When you get your periods, all of this tissue that is not inside your uterus also bleeds, and because this blood cannot leave the body any more, people face severe pain and other related issues,” she says. Dr. Tanaya describes these issues – or symptoms – as including:
- “Pain while defecating”;
- “Pain during penetration”;
- “Pain during sex”.
Dr. Llarena adds that other endometriosis symptoms include “chronic pelvic pain and infertility”.

How can endometriosis impact your sex life?
Kristina S. Brown, Ph.D., LMFT, is a Professor and Chair of the Couple and Family Therapy Department at Adler University. “We know that infertility and pain impact our mental, emotional, and physical experiences of intimacy and sex,” she explains. “Infertility causes complications, shifting the meaning of intercourse to pressured procreation, and pain (or stomach issues) can shut us down from wanting to or being able to be intimate. These can both impact a person’s sex life.
“Pain with intercourse specifically impacts the experience of sex and intimacy,” Dr. Brown continues. “The most common is pain with penetrative intercourse, including pain from friction as well as ‘poking’ tender spots that cause pain.”
This excruciating pain – and subsequent loss of intimacy – can impact relationships, too; which, in turn, can further impact a person’s sex life (otherwise known as a vicious cycle). “When people suffering from endometriosis do have sex, the pain from penetration is so severe that people might want to just stop having sex altogether,” says Dr. Tanaya. “The avoidance of sex due to the severe pain might lead to relationship problems, [as well as] lots of issues with [your] sex life like feelings of frustration [and] doubting one’s self worth.”
Dr. Brown agrees. “A single painful [sexual] interaction can cause anxiety,” she says. “As a result, this anxiety can cause higher experiences of pain or an avoidance of pain. [Therefore,] pain in sex can pull partners apart as they begin to avoid sex and intimacy for fear that it may lead to sex and the resulting pain due to endo[metriosis].