Esther Perel (born August 13, 1958) is a Belgian-American psychotherapist, known for her work on human relationships.[2]
Perel promoted the concept of "erotic intelligence" in her book Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence (2006), which has been translated into 24 languages.[3] After publishing the book, she became an international advisor on sex and relationships.[4] She has given two TED talks, hosts two podcasts, hosts a class with MasterClass,[5] runs a series of therapy training, supervision events,[6] and launched a card game.[7][8][9]
In 2016, Perel was added to Oprah Winfrey'sSupersoul 100 list of visionaries and influential leaders.[10]
Perel toured internationally with a live show called An Evening with Esther Perel: The Future of Relationships, Love and Desire.[11]
Perel grew up amongst Holocaust survivors in Antwerp, and later categorized them into two groups: "those who didn't die, and those who came back to life".[7]
When she tours in Europe, Perel gives talks in different languages, not only English.[15]
Career
Perel initially trained in psychodynamic psychotherapy before finding a professional home in family systems theory initially as a student in the Intensive Certificate Program in Couple and Family Therapy at the Family Institute of Cambridge, which is now taught at Therapy Training Boston. [16] She initially worked as a cross-cultural psychotherapist with couples and families. For 13 years she was a clinical instructor at the New York University School of Medicine.[17]
Perel has also worked as an actress (appearing in the 2017 film, Newness, as herself), and runs a clothing boutique in Antwerp.[14]
Ideas
Expectations
Perel argues that, due to trends such as the secularization of Western society, the rise of individualism, and the societal "mandate" for personal happiness, the expectations for romantic relationships are higher than ever:[18]
Never before have our expectations of marriage taken on such epic proportions. We still want everything the traditional family was meant to provide—security, children, property, and respectability—but now we also want our partner to love us, to desire us, to be interested in us. We should be best friends, trusted confidants, and passionate lovers to boot.[19]
Podcasts
Perel is the host of two podcasts: Where Should We Begin? and How's Work?
Where Should We Begin? brings the listeners inside Perel's therapist's office as she sees anonymous couples in search of insight on everything from infidelity to sexlessness to grief. The unique format combines live recordings of the therapy session, with Perel's reflections on what she heard, and what techniques she tried.[20][21]The New York Times writes: "it feels more like an unraveling mystery story than a relationship advice show."[22] The couples include both heterosexual and same-sex couples. The first episode aired on Audible in May 2017, and became publicly available on iTunes on October 9, 2017.[23] Three seasons have been released as of December 2019[update]. "Where Should We Begin?" received a 2018 Gracie Award.[24]
How's Work? is Perel's second podcast. It follows a format similar to the couples therapy session in "Where Should We Begin?", but this time the couple seeking Perel's advice are cofounders or colleagues, navigating the challenges that play out in work relationships.[25][26] HuffPost describes each episode as a "one-time therapy session between Perel and various co-founders, members of family businesses and partners with a thriving operation but deteriorating relations on the job."[27] As described in one review: "The podcast aims to shine light on the things that form us as individuals and how those things relate to life in the workplace. Because, honestly, a lot of people hold their careers and workplace relationships as dearly and tightly as they do their romantic relationships."[28] "How's Work?" was created by Gimlet Media, and was available exclusively on Spotify.[29] The show first aired in November 2019.[30] In March 2023, Bloomberg announced that "How's Work?" was acquired by Vox Media's Podcast Network.[31]
Publications
Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence, initially subtitled Reconciling the Erotic and the Domestic (2006, Harper, ISBN978-0060753634)
The State of Affairs: Rethinking Infidelity (2017, Harper, ISBN978-0062322586)
Recognition
In 2016, Perel was named to Oprah Winfrey's Supersoul 100 list of visionaries and influential leaders.[32]
In 2021, Perel was selected for the inaugural 2021 Forbes 50 Over 50; made up of entrepreneurs, leaders, scientists and creators who are over the age of 50.[33]
Personal life
Perel is Jewish, and says of it, "You can't know me without it."[12]
^ abPerel, Esther (February 2013). "The secret to desire in a long-term relationship". TEDSalon NY2013. Retrieved 24 December 2020. When I began to think about eroticism (...) I had to go back to the original definition of eroticism, the mystical definition (...) by looking actually at trauma, which is the other side. And I looked at it as looking at the community that I had grown up in, which was a community in Belgium, all Holocaust survivors, and in my community there were two groups: those who didn't die, and those who came back to life.
^Martin, Anna; Botero, Julia; Djossa, Christina; Goldberg, Reva; Lang, Emily; Poyant, Jen; Land, Davis; Ramirez, Daniel; McCusker, Pat (2024-04-10). "Esther Perel on What the Other Woman Knows". The New York Times. ISSN0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
^Perel, Esther (10 October 2017). The state of affairs : rethinking infidelity (First ed.). New York. ISBN978-0-06-232258-6. OCLC1005357589.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)