We Need To Talk with Dr. Darcy Sterling

Darcy Sterling

For more than 25 years, Dr. Darcy Sterling has been helping people conquer their toughest relationship challenges. She is a New York City-based licensed therapist, the host of E! Network’s Famously Single, the former Global Ambassador to Tinder, and now she brings her no-nonsense advice to her new podcast, We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling. We Need To Talk is a dating and relationship podcast that will inspire and empower you with the tools and skills you need to love better so you can live better.

  1. 6 DAYS AGO

    I’m With Someone — So Why Do I Feel So Alone?

    Listener Subscription This episode is about the small moments when you decide not to say what you actually feel. The sentence you soften, the need you interrupt, the truth you edit to keep things smooth. And how, over time, those reasonable choices create distance inside a relationship that still technically works. Being partnered is often used as evidence that loneliness shouldn’t exist. In this episode, I talk about why that assumption keeps people stuck — and how loneliness can show up even inside a relationship that looks stable, consistent, and intact. I break down how emotional isolation is often created not by absence, but by a series of small, reasonable-seeming choices: staying agreeable instead of specific, staying regulated instead of exposed, and prioritizing stability over honesty. Over time, those choices quietly disconnect people from themselves and from each other. This episode looks at the difference between restraint and avoidance, why swallowing your truth can feel like maturity, and how loneliness often appears immediately after you choose not to say what actually mattered. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why loneliness can exist inside a relationship, not just outside of one. How prioritizing peace, stability, and being “reasonable” can slowly erode emotional presence. The moment where loneliness actually begins — and why it’s easy to miss. If you’ve ever felt alone while technically being with someone, this episode explains what’s happening underneath — and why that feeling isn’t random. Xxoo Darcy REFERENCES/RESOURCES www.alternativescounseling.com CREDITS “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani and Robyn Jaenchen.  DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   X:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube. Listener Subscription

    19 min
  2. 27 JAN

    You Understand Yourself. So Why Aren’t You Changing?

    Listener Subscription This episode is about why insight creates clarity but not change — and what actually has to happen for your brain to stop knowing better and start doing better. Most people can explain their patterns. They know their attachment style, their triggers, their history, and why they react the way they do. In this episode, I look at why all of that insight so often fails to produce real change — and why understanding yourself can feel productive while keeping you stuck. I break down the difference between insight and evidence, why the brain doesn’t update from awareness alone, and how real change actually happens: through doing something different first, and letting your nervous system learn from what follows. I’m joined by Emma McAdam, who has helped millions of people make sense of their emotional world, to talk about what happens after insight — the part where most people stop — and what it really takes to move from knowing better to doing better. We talk about why people repeat the same reactions even when they know they don’t work, how “later” becomes a way of never changing, and why the feeling people are waiting for doesn’t come from thinking — it comes from acting. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why insight and self-understanding don’t automatically lead to behavior change. How the brain actually updates through evidence created by new actions. What it takes to move from analyzing your patterns to doing something different in real time. If you’ve ever felt like you understand yourself but keep repeating the same reactions, the same conflicts, and the same outcomes, this episode explains what’s missing between knowing and changing. Xxoo Darcy REFERENCES/RESOURCES www.alternativescounseling.com www.therapyinanutshell.com CREDITS “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani and Robyn Jaenchen.    DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   X:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube.

    42 min
  3. 20 JAN

    What Happens To Us When Mental Health Goes Viral?

    Listener Subscription When mental-health language becomes content, it can start teaching us how to leave discomfort elegantly instead of how to stay long enough to actually change. Most of us assume that consuming mental health content is making us more emotionally intelligent. In this episode, I look at a different possibility: that the way platforms reward and distribute this content may be teaching us how to avoid discomfort more elegantly, not how to stay in it long enough to grow or repair. I break down how algorithms shape what kinds of emotional messages spread, why content that encourages exit and self-protection travels farther than content that asks for accountability, and what happens when therapy language becomes optimized for performance, shares, and watch time. I’m joined by Kati Morton, a licensed therapist and one of the largest mental health creators on YouTube, to talk about what happens not just to audiences, but to mental health itself, when therapeutic ideas become content at scale. We talk about how emotional vocabulary shifts from being a tool for repair to a tool for image management, why discomfort is increasingly framed as toxicity, and what that means for relationships, responsibility, and emotional development. In this episode, you’ll learn: How social media algorithms shape which mental health messages spread and which ones disappear. Why viral therapy content often teaches emotional exit instead of emotional endurance. What it means for relationships and accountability when therapeutic language becomes optimized for performance. If you consume a lot of mental health content and have ever wondered why it sometimes makes things feel easier but not actually better, this episode explains the tension underneath. Xxoo Darcy REFERENCES/RESOURCES www.alternativescounseling.com www.KatiMorton.com  Why Do I Keep Doing This?: Unlearn the Habits Keeping You Stuck and Unhappy CREDITS “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani and Robyn Jaenchen.    DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   X:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube.  Listener Subscription

    52 min
  4. 13 JAN

    Weaponized Healing: How Emotional Language Became the New Avoidance

    ⁠Listener Subscription Before sadness, guilt, or hurt can register, accountability lands—and therapy language rushes in to protect how we see ourselves instead of staying in the relationship. We like to think emotional language makes relationships safer. In this episode, I examine how words like boundaries, triggered, and protecting my peace are often used to avoid accountability without looking like avoidance. I break down how conflict quietly gets reframed from “what happened between us” to “how you made me feel by bringing this up,” how this shift changes the power dynamic in a relationship, and why it trains partners to stop telling the truth over time. This pattern doesn’t usually end relationships through big fights. It erodes them through silence, hesitation, and conversations that never happen — until distance becomes the default. This episode looks at what “staying” actually means in real conflict: not performing calm, not using language to exit, but remaining present long enough to hear impact instead of protecting your position. In this episode, you’ll learn: How emotional and therapy language can function as an avoidance strategy in conflict Why choosing “peace” over repair slowly drains intimacy from relationships What it practically means to stay in a hard conversation instead of exiting it If you’ve ever felt like your relationship is calm but distant, or like hard conversations keep disappearing instead of getting resolved, this episode explains the pattern underneath. Xxoo Darcy Listener Subscription REFERENCES/RESOURCES www.alternativescounseling.com CREDITS “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani and Robyn Jaenchen.    DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   X:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube.  Listener Subscription

    20 min
  5. 30/12/2025

    Breaking Boundaries: Stewart Winter Redefines Modern Love in Part 2 Questioning Monogamy

    Before we get into this, I want to name why this episode exists. A while back, I interviewed Molly Roden Winter about her book More. It became one of the most listened-to episodes of this show. Not because it was shocking—but because it challenged something people quietly assume they’re not allowed to question. While I was reading the book, I kept thinking about one thing: I want to hear this from the other side. This episode is that conversation. This is me talking with Stewart Winter, Molly’s husband, about what it’s actually like to live inside a relationship that refuses to default to the script. Not theoretically. Not philosophically. Practically. We talk about intensity. About choosing a partner who doesn’t make you comfortable—but makes you honest. About the difference between expanding a relationship and escaping one. And about how people use concepts like “open-mindedness” to avoid reckoning with their own limits. This isn’t an episode about monogamy versus non-monogamy. It’s about what happens when you stop outsourcing your choices to culture—and start owning the consequences of the life you build. Listen carefully. Because the real question underneath all of this isn’t what kind of relationship do you want. It’s whether you’re willing to tolerate the version of yourself that your relationship requires. A couple of months ago, I interviewed New York Times bestselling author, Molly Roden Winter. Her book, “More: A Memoir of Open Marriage” documents her journey as a Brooklyn Mom who ventures into the world of polyamory, as she opens her marriage.  My interview with her sparked such a buzz from listeners — more than any other episode of WNTT. It’s linked below if you haven’t listened.   I just re-read her book while I was on a vacation and I have to tell you, about every 50 pages I found myself taken aback by how well her husband Stewart navigated their experience. He was repeatedly in situations where there were five wrong ways of responding to things, and in my opinion, he consistently landed on the right one.  Was he lucky? Or has he actually been taught relationship skills?  Those were the answers I wanted, so I invited him to join me. Stewart Winter did not disappoint. CREDITS This episode of “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” was produced by Darcy Sterling. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani, Stephanie Sterling and Preston Smith. “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production.  Link to Molly’s book: More: A Memoir of Open Marriage   DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   Twitter:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube.

    1h 35m
  6. 23/12/2025

    Rethinking Monogamy: Why One Relationship Model Doesn’t Work for Everyone

    Before we get into today’s episode, I want to take a moment to reintroduce one of the most important conversations I’ve ever had on this show. This episode — Rethinking Monogamy — is the most downloaded episode of We Need to Talk. I recorded this early in the life of the podcast, and it still holds up because it doesn’t argue for or against monogamy. It looks closely at why so many people struggle inside the relationship model they’re told is the only legitimate option. Whether or not monogamy is right for you isn’t the point. The point is understanding why so many people stay in relationships that look right, but don’t actually feel right — and what it costs when we never question that gap. If this is your first time hearing it, you’re about to listen to a thoughtful, grounded conversation that’s just as relevant now as it was then. And if you’ve listened before, it’s worth hearing again with fresh ears. In the west, monogamy is our default relationship model. But, to be clear, monogamy is a social construct. It is not inherent to our biology.  That’s an important fact to keep in mind throughout today’s conversation with New York Times Best Selling author, Molly Roden Winter, whose recent book “More: A Memoir of Open Marriage,” documents her journey through non-monogamy.  In this episode, you’ll learn:  Why humans adopted monogamy as our dominant relationship construct (the answer is grim). The surprising response she got from her therapist about opening up her marriage.   Her advice on how to initiate a conversation with your partner about non-monogamy, should you be inclined.  Xxoo Darcy REFERENCES www.alternativescounseling.com https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/marriage-divorce.htm Kim, J. H., Tam, W. S., & Muennig, P. (2017). Sociodemographic Correlates of Sexlessness Among American Adults and Associations with Self-Reported Happiness Levels: Evidence from the U.S. General Social Survey. Archives of sexual behavior, 46(8), 2403–2415. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-017-0968-7 Lei, L., & South, S. J. (2021). Explaining the decline in young adult sexual activity in the United States. Journal of Marriage and Family, 83(1), 280-295. Solomon NG, Ophir AG. Editorial: What's Love Got to Do With It: The Evolution of Monogamy. Front Ecol Evol. 2020 Apr;8:110. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2020.00110. Epub 2020 Apr 28. PMID: 32782899; PMCID: PMC7416880. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/human-monogamy-has-deep-roots/ More: A Memoir of Open Marriage by Molly Roden Winter Substack: mollyrodenwinter.com CREDITS This episode of “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” was produced by Darcy Sterling, with editorial support from Vicki Vergolina. Editing and sound engineering by Bart Migal. Our theme music is by Trending Music. Special thanks to Amanda Cristiani, Stephanie Sterling and Preston Smith. “We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling” is a Sterling Standard Production.  DISCLAIMER Instagram:@drdarcysterling  Facebook:Dr.Darcy Sterling Tik Tok:@doctordarcysterling   X:@DrDarcySterling    YouTube:@DarcySterling    Threads:@drdarcysterling Watch this episode here on YouTube.

    1h 2m

About

For more than 25 years, Dr. Darcy Sterling has been helping people conquer their toughest relationship challenges. She is a New York City-based licensed therapist, the host of E! Network’s Famously Single, the former Global Ambassador to Tinder, and now she brings her no-nonsense advice to her new podcast, We Need To Talk With Dr. Darcy Sterling. We Need To Talk is a dating and relationship podcast that will inspire and empower you with the tools and skills you need to love better so you can live better.

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