“Your bedroom environment can impact desire more than people realize,” says Cindy Ramos, a therapist at the Gender & Sexuality Therapy Center in New York. Lighting, textures, colors, comforts, and clutter (or lack thereof) play a role in how your body and mind respond in the space, which ultimately impacts how accessible intimacy feels to you, she explains.
We’re not saying a new duvet cover will fix your sexual struggles. Libido is influenced by a constellation of factors, including lifestyle habits, relationship happiness, hormonal changes, medications, and mental well-being, says Rachel Wright, LMFT, a New York–based licensed psychotherapist and host of The Wright Conversations podcast. But while bedroom decor is rarely the sole cause of low libido, “it can either support intimacy or subtly work against it,” says Ramos.
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More from G&STC Therapist Cindy Ramos on this subject:
On low mood, fatigue, and environment affecting libido:
Low mood and chronic fatigue often reduce libido because the brain prioritizes stress over pleasure. Environment matters more than people realize lighting, color, clutter, and comfort all affect the nervous system. For some people, adding warmth, softness, or color to a bedroom can help them reconnect with desire and playfulness.
On how to tell whether the issue is the bedroom or something deeper:
Bedroom decor is rarely the sole cause of low libido, but it can either support intimacy or subtly work against it. If someone feels tense, distracted, or emotionally disconnected in their space, the environment may be one factor alongside stress, hormones, relationship dynamics, sleep, or mental health.
On menopause, self-worth, and redesigning a bedroom:
Redesigning a bedroom can become an act of reclaiming comfort, agency, and pleasure. Many spend years prioritizing everyone else’s needs, so intentionally creating a space that feels nurturing or sensual can reinforce the message ‘I deserve care and pleasure too.’
On practical ways to shift or tips the emotional tone of a bedroom:
Small sensory changes can make a meaningful difference, softer lighting, comfortable bedding, calming scents, music, warmer colors, or reducing clutter. The goal isn’t perfection, it’s creating a space that helps you feel relaxed, present, and connected to yourself.
More from G&STC Director Jesse Kahn on this subject:
For some people, a calm and uncluttered environment supports arousal by lowering the ambient stress that competes with desire. When the rest of our lives may feel chaotic, a bedroom that feels calm and disconnected from that chaos can help the nervous system calm and allow you to be more present. But, there isn’t one style or decor that is universal for everyone, and what feels calm and uncluttered might have different colors or styles.
Start with what your senses respond to as there’s no universally erotic aesthetic. For many it can be the option for low soft lighting, having your toys and what you use for pleasure nearby, and removing stressors that shift your focus away from pleasure and towards obligation and responsibility.
For anyone navigating midlife changes, the question is often less about what to fix and more about what you want, what supports your desires, and what it would take to build a life and a space that reflects that.
