• “The power position in art is the place of indecision” ft. Laurie Stone and Richard Toon
    Dec 19 2025

    Laurie Stone and Richard Toon—writers, artists, and married partners—join Laura Federico to explore desire as a creative force and the relationship between vulnerability and art-making. They discuss why desiring is more pleasurable than being desired, the etymology of desire as "wishing for what the stars would bring," and how writers must create space for readers without needing anything from them. The conversation moves through the dangers of self-expression versus art-making, the role of embarrassment and failure in honest writing, and how gender constricts experience. They reveal the surprising emotional dividend of their recent marriage after years together, and why looking bad on the page is essential to good art.

    ***

    Laura Federico

    The Cycle Book

    Laurie's Substack

    Richard's Substack

    Their Vows Column

    ***

    03:17 — Is it better to desire or to be desired?

    03:35 — Richard on being a desirous person all his life

    04:01 — The etymology of desire: "to wish for what the stars would bring"

    06:41 — "Desire fulfilled is desire destroyed"

    08:00 — How Substack closes the loop of reciprocal desire

    09:40 — Teaching readers how to read you over time

    12:10 — The narrator can't need anything from the reader

    16:02 — Writing as "coming and going rather than beginning and ending"

    16:43 — When readers misidentify the project

    18:07 — "Welcome to our generation"—on constriction in younger writers

    19:18 — The human condition: "the little naked ape trying to make sense of it"

    21:19 — Art-making as more like making shoes than self-expression

    23:40 — "Looking bad is the best thing in the world for art"

    28:26 — How Laurie proposed

    29:27 — The marriage dividend

    ***

    Our music, Hit Her Up, is written by Nakisso Peralta and performed by Chillers.

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    30 mins
  • We're all really mysterious to ourselves ft. Ling Ling Huang
    Dec 11 2025

    Grammy Award-winning violinist and acclaimed author Ling Ling Huang joins host Laura Federico to explore the tangled relationship between envy, desire, and creative life. From unwanted projections as a child prodigy to discovering her bisexuality later in life, Ling Ling discusses how she moved from being passively desired to actively desiring—and why that shift changed everything.

    They dive into the intersection of envy and love in female friendships, betrayal as a creative catalyst, the torture and liberation of jealousy, and what happens when you finally achieve the thing you've been choking on bitterness to reach. Plus: AI as confessional, pregnancy mysteries, Luddite parenting, why friction makes music (and relationships) worth experiencing, and how showing up—even when it hurts—might be the most radical act of all.

    ***

    Laura Federico

    The Cycle Book

    Ling Ling Huang

    Natural Beauty

    Immaculate Conception

    ***

    04:13 — Welcome to Ling Ling Huang

    04:45 — The central question: Is it better to desire or to be desired?

    06:12 — Traveling alone as a young violinist and inappropriate adult attention

    07:17 — The active versus passive nature of desire

    08:10 — The torture of envy as a human experience

    09:14 — Competitive music conservatory culture and coded critique

    10:24 — When her best friend cheated with her boyfriend

    11:45 — The continuation of love after betrayal and stepping back as an observer

    13:01 — Showing up even when it's painful

    15:25 — Writing as a "baby writer" and wanting everyone to talk about envy

    16:44 — "Choking on the bitterness"

    19:05 — Debut anxiety, goalposts, and comparing yourself to other authors

    21:00 — The mystery of our bodies, especially in pregnancy

    27:23 — Using ChatGPT as a confessional space

    29:12 — What happens when human relationships have more friction?

    ***

    Our music, Hit Her Up, is written by Nakisso Peralta and performed by Chillers.

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    32 mins
  • You can have it ft. Rachelle Toarmino and Aidan Ryan
    Dec 2 2025

    Aidan Ryan and Rachelle Toarmino—two award-winning writers who are also married—join Laura Federico to explore desire, ambition, and creative partnership. They discuss the ecstatic "adrenaline rush" of making art, the relationship between absence and wanting, and how they navigate power dynamics in both their work and relationship. From Rachelle's viral poem "You up?" to Aidan's examination of his aunt and uncle's art world journey, they reveal how desire evolves from abstract wanting to deep connection, why intimacy matters more than fame, and what it means to think through writing as two people building a life together.

    ***

    Laura Federico

    The Cycle Book

    Rachelle Toarmino

    Hell Yeah

    You up?

    Aidan Ryan

    I Am Here You Are Not I Love You

    ***

    TIMESTAMPS

    05:14 — Is it better to desire or to be desired?

    06:23 — Desire as the engine of creative work

    07:51 — The relationship between absence and desire

    08:53 — Desire vs. ambition in the life of an artist

    10:00 — Aidan's early encounters with publishing and fame

    12:32 — The discomfort of being desired and misinterpreted

    13:24 — Rachelle on rejecting careerist poetry tracks

    14:56 — "I want to be read because I want to be felt and understood"

    16:59 — What ecstasy feels like when writing a poem

    18:21 — How Aidan and Rachelle met

    21:41 — "Our understanding of our desires improves as we age"

    22:06 — What changes as the relationship evolves

    23:46 — The intimacy of direct address in Rachelle's poetry

    25:15 — Finding the out-loud voice of new poems

    27:07 — The story behind "You up?" the viral Tumblr poem

    29:38 — Gender roles in creative relationships

    33:41 — Power dynamics beyond patriarchal stereotypes

    34:52 — Where desire and power intersect

    ***

    Our music, Hit Her Up, is written by Nakisso Peralta and performed by Chillers.

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    35 mins
  • Not all suffering is meaningful ft. Stephanie Wambugu
    Nov 27 2025

    Laura Federico sits down with Stephanie Wambugu, author of the critically acclaimed debut novel Lonely Crowds, to explore the intimate relationship between desire and suffering in the lives of Ruth and Maria.

    Together, they unpack the complex dynamics of Ruth and Maria's decades-long friendship, examining how childhood shapes adult patterns of longing, the shadow Catholicism casts over pleasure in the novel, and why penance becomes inextricable from passion. Stephanie shares her perspective on trauma narratives in fiction, the problem with making suffering too tidy, and how secular life leaves us without clear pathways for moral absolution.

    ***

    Laura Federico

    The Cycle Book

    Stephanie Wambugu

    Lonely Crowds

    ***

    TIMESTAMPS

    04:49 — Why Stephanie believes desiring is better than being desired

    06:21 — Ruth's patterns of desire and reenactment in Lonely Crowds

    07:58 — Remembering vs. forgetting: The responsibility of memory

    08:31 — Pop psychology and the trauma narrative

    10:45 — How we narrativize traumatic events through language

    17:12 — The compelling unavailable person

    18:52 — Ruth as Maria’s acolyte

    24:10 — Secular life and the search for moral absolution

    25:08 — Religion as organizing principle in times of collective pain

    28:37 — Mental illness without metaphor

    32:01 — Why novels can hold unanswerable questions

    ***

    Our music, Hit Her Up, is written by Nakisso Peralta and performed by Chillers.

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    35 mins
  • Parallel timelines ft. Erin Somers, author of The Ten Year Affair
    Nov 21 2025

    In this episode, sex therapist Laura Federico (The Cycle Book) talks with novelist Erin Somers, author of The Ten Year Affair, about desire inside long-term relationships, the fantasies we carry, and the secret inner lives that shape us.

    Erin’s novel is a sharp, funny, emotionally rich portrait of two parents navigating forbidden desire across parallel timelines. This conversation unpacks both the psychology and the cultural moment behind it.

    ***

    • Laura Federico
    • The Cycle Book
    • Erin Somers
    • The Ten Year Affair

    ***

    TIMESTAMPS

    00:00 — Welcome to The Desire Question

    05:50 — Affairs and the Arrival Fallacy

    08:20 — Polyamory: Gentrified Cheating?

    12:45 — Who Am I When No One Needs Me?

    19:00 — Nothing Forbidden, Nothing Fun

    29:15 — Rejecting the Ballerina Farm Industrial Complex

    31:00 — Broccoli Mom, Patron Saint of Chaos

    ***

    Our music, Hit Her Up, is written by Nakisso Peralta and performed by Chillers.

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    33 mins