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The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

Salma Hindy
The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women
Latest episode

18 episodes

  • The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

    HOW I LOST TWO SWEETHEARTS WITHOUT MEANING TO (HOW I BROKE MY OWN HEART)

    23/02/2026 | 52 mins.
    In this deeply personal solo episode, Salma reflects on the two heartbreaks that changed her life (one romantic, one a friendship) and the painful realization that she was the one who ended them.
    Two years ago, after losing her family, moving 19 times, living in survival mode, and spiraling through manic travel, chaos, and sexual hunger, Salma met two people who were sweet, sensitive, and safe. And when things started to feel intimate…she panicked.
    For the first time, she explores her avoidant attachment - not the anxious narrative she used to blame men for, but the part of her that burns things down when they get too good. She opens up about how she pushed away Joaquin (the only man in America she’s slept with), how she sabotaged her friendship with Didi, and how her nervous system (dysregulated, grieving, and terrified of real intimacy) made her mistake sweetness for danger.
    This episode includes excerpts from letters exchanged between Salma and her therapist as they closed two years of therapy together. It’s raw. It’s recent. And it’s the most honest she’s been about her patterns.
    She talks about:
    Growing up in dysfunction and confusing chaos for connection
    Why her avoidance shows up when things are going well, NOT during conflict
    Trauma bonding vs. true intimacy
    Sexual imprinting, jealousy, and nervous system dysregulation
    Celibacy after heartbreak and assault
    Learning to “stay” instead of explode
    The difference between chasing unavailable men and allowing real love to bloom
    Being the first woman in her bloodline to choose a life not structured around marriage
    Now, Salma is in uncharted territory: practicing slowness, living in her present reality in New York, and allowing a new connection to unfold without control, sabotage, or fantasy.
    This episode is a love letter to Joaquin & Didi.
    I’m sorry I lost you.
    Recorded February 16, the last day of The Year of the Snake.
    CREDITS: 
     Host & Creator: Salma Hindy
     Executive Producer: Salma Hindy
     Associate Producer: Rania Harris
     Writer & Editor: Salma Hindy
     Studio: 30 Irving Studios
     Artwork: Rana Omar
    © The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women, 2026
    Instagram: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    YouTube: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    HOST'S INSTAGRAM: @salma.hindy
    HOST'S TIKTOK: @salma.hindy
  • The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

    GET THE F*CK OUT OF YOUR PARENTS' HOUSE

    13/01/2026 | 1h 9 mins.
    What does it really mean to “obey your parents”? And what happens when obedience becomes suffocation?
    In this pillar episode, Salma is joined by an anonymous guest, Fatima, for a deeply honest conversation about emotional enmeshment, delayed adulthood, and what it actually takes to cut the cord. Fatima grew up in a close-knit Arab Muslim family in the U.K. where independence was only acceptable through marriage. Despite being asexual and aromantic - and having no interest in men - she was taught that the only way out of her parents’ house was as a wife.
    What followed was a years-long attempt to do everything right: changing careers (from architecture to engineering to teaching) to appear more “wife-friendly,” tolerating constant scrutiny, and engaging in the arranged marriage process as an exit strategy rather than a desire. That path ultimately led to a breaking point when Fatima was GHOSTED AT HER KATB KITAB (Islamic Wedding) and then blamed by her parents, accused of wrongdoing, and subjected to even more control. It was then that she realized what so many adult children eventually learn: there is no finish line, no amount of obedience that guarantees peace, and no way to make your parents happy by sacrificing yourself.
    In this episode, Fatima walks us through the practical, financial, and emotional steps she took to move out of her parents’ house, including how she secretly saved money, planned her exit, managed guilt, and rebuilt her life afterward. Salma weaves in her own experience of individuation, grief, and the disorienting freedom that comes after leaving and rebuilding a life without parental guardrails.
    This conversation is for anyone who keeps asking, “How do I actually get out?” If this episode stirs up anger, grief, or urgency in you, that doesn’t mean you’re ungrateful. It means you’re waking up.
    This is a pillar episode of the podcast. If you listen to only one, let it be this one.
    CREDITS: 
     Host & Creator: Salma Hindy
     Executive Producer: Salma Hindy
     Editor: Salma Hindy
     Artwork: Rana Omar

    © The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women, 2025

    Instagram: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    YouTube: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    HOST'S INSTAGRAM: @salma.hindy
    HOST'S TIKTOK: @salma.hindy
  • The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

    I WENT TO A SEX CLUB LOOKING FOR A HUG

    17/12/2025 | 53 mins.
    In this solo episode, Salma Hindy recounts attending a sex club in Berlin, where a man violated her and then tried to disappear - only to be confronted months later, unexpectedly, at a comedy show in New York. She reflects on what it meant to call him out publicly on stage,  reclaiming a sense of power she didn’t realize she’d lost. She reflects on the first feeling she noticed immediately following the assault: not anger that he crossed her boundaries, but sadness that he had left.
    She walks through the reality of sex clubs and sex parties beyond fantasy: leaving phones at the door, navigating explicitly sexual environments without pressure to participate, and choosing observation over access. Salma speaks candidly about vaginismus, bodily boundaries, two years of celibacy, and how her body understands trust long before her mind does.
    Despite what happened in Berlin, she still chose to attend a sex party in Beverly Hills a month later: a very different experience shaped by a consent assembly, brief but confronting eye-contact exercises, and an atmosphere built around communication rather than coercion. There was also the frivolous indulgence: getting her first STD test, watching a close friend have a threesome, rope performers, sensual complimentary massages, squirting competitions, kinky dungeons, queer kisses, and being offered lots of drugs (a sex-party love language).
    With humor, softness, and clarity, Salma explores the difference between sexual freedom and sexual obligation, what safety actually feels like in sexual spaces, why being in a sexual environment doesn’t mean owing anyone access to your body, and why wanting tenderness (even in the most explicit environments) isn’t naïve, but deeply human.

    CREDITS: 
     Host & Creator: Salma Hindy
     Executive Producer: Salma Hindy
     Cinematographer: Ian Ritter
     Studio: 30 Irving Studios
     Editor: Salma Hindy
     Writer: Salma Hindy
     Artwork: Rana Omar

    © The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women, 2025
    Instagram: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    YouTube: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    HOST'S INSTAGRAM: @salma.hindy
    HOST'S TIKTOK: @salma.hindy
  • The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

    THE GAYS AREN’T GOING TO HELL, DAD. (From Corporal Punishment to Queer Liberation)

    25/11/2025 | 1h 12 mins.
    Comedian, writer, and actor Tarek Ziad becomes the first Muslim man (and first queer man) to join the podcast. Like two besties at a slumber party, Salma and Tarek honestly and hilariously unravel everything their communities tell them to hide: queerness, shame, corporal punishment, disownment, religion, sexual repression, and the long, painful road toward loving yourself.
    Tarek shares his journey growing up Berber (Amazigh) in a strict Moroccan household in Florida: from being punished for harmless physical contact with the opposite gender, to enduring violence and religious guilt, to getting into Yale, exploring his sexuality and cutting off his parents for his own survival, to eventually being disowned after coming out.
    Salma opens up about calling child services on her abusive brother-in-law, losing access to her nephews, and the real reason her family cut her off (hint: it wasn’t the hijab - it was her sexuality). She also shares her father’s iconic line, “Let’s just agree the gays are going to hell,” and her equally iconic clapback.
    Together they explore:
    how repression destroys entire generations
    Muslim queerness vs. white queerness
    whether you must abandon culture or family to live authentically
    what Islam actually says about sexuality
    the obsession with top/bottom labels
    vaginismus vs. bottoming fear
    indigenous Amazigh tattoo traditions
    breaking cycles of violence and shame
    finding chosen family and safer community
    the privilege and danger of “coming out” in MENA contexts
    This episode is a portal: painful, funny, deeply human, and radically liberating.
    It's a love letter to everyone raised on fear who is now trying to build a life rooted in truth. 
    This episode is dedicated to Salma’s 17 nieces and nephews - she loves you no matter what.

    CREDITS: 
    Host & Creator: Salma Hindy
    Executive Producer: Salma Hindy
    Cinematographer: Patrick Samaha
    Studio: 30 Irving Studios
    Editor: Salma Hindy
    Artwork: Rana Omar

    © The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women, 2025
    Instagram: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    YouTube: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    HOST'S INSTAGRAM: @salma.hindy
    HOST'S TIKTOK: @salma.hindy
  • The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

    NERVOUS SYSTEM ON FIRE (Molested by Father, Crucified by Siblings)

    17/11/2025 | 54 mins.
    TW: SEXUAL, PHYSICAL & EMOTIONAL ABUSE
    From the outside, Sara’s life looked like a dream: a respected gynecologist father, a big Gulf family, religious prestige, and the illusion of stability. Inside, it was a battlefield.
    At five years old, she was molested by her father - the same man who later walked her down the aisle. Her childhood was chaos: screaming, bloody domestic fights, a mother beaten and belittled, and a nervous system that learned to survive before it ever felt safe.
    Years later, after surviving addiction, rebellion, and trying to rebuild her life, Sara faced her second heartbreak: her siblings kicked her out, called her a “cunt,” turned their faces away from her, and left her estranged for seven years. Sara calls that day her crucifixion - the moment her entire family abandoned her.
    We talk about: surviving childhood sexual abuse; watching violence erupt daily in her home; EMDR, trauma healing, and nervous system recovery; being disowned and estranged by her siblings; losing her mother to heartbreak after divorce; addiction, double lives, rebellion, survival; and raising a child while reparenting her own inner child.
    Sara is the Arab daughter who refused to stay silent. The one reparenting her nervous system after a lifetime of flinching at yelling, and healing from the violence we were told to normalize.

    CREDITS: 
     Host & Creator: Salma Hindy
     Executive Producer: Salma Hindy
     Editor: Salma Hindy
     Artwork: Rana Omar

    © The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women, 2025

    Instagram: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    YouTube: @thesecretsexlivesofmuslimwomen
    HOST'S INSTAGRAM: @salma.hindy
    HOST'S TIKTOK: @salma.hindy

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About The Secret Sex Lives of Muslim Women

Podcast discussing the secret sex lives of Muslim women. Hosted by Salma Hindy
Podcast website

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