Oh my lanta!
Candace Cameron Bure accidentally attended an “S&M sex thing that ended up being so dark and demonic” with her husband, Valeri Bure.
The “Full House” alum, 49, revealed the “weird embarassing moment” on Tuesday’s episode of her “Candace Cameron Bure Podcast.”
“Although I shouldn’t say embarrassing for me, they were more shameful of going to places where I thought, like, ‘Oh, this person’s a friend, and I’m going to be cool and do this,’” she explained.
Talking to “Bachelor” alum Madi Prewett, she explained, “We walked in [to the sex party], and my eyeballs were popping out of my head because I saw stuff I’ve never seen before in my life.”
“I’m looking at Val, going like, ‘How are we here? What is happening?’” the Great American Family CCO continued. “We made a hard U-turn and walked right out of there. It just was so slimy and weird.”
Following the uncomfortable moment, the couple promised to “pause” before accepting invitations from that friend going forward.
“We just had no idea what we were walking into, and it was so disgusting and gross,” Candace noted.
Candace married Valeri in 1996, and they share Natasha, 27, Lev, 26, and Maks, 24.
The “Fuller House” star’s confession comes after she revealed that thinking about God watching her have sex makes her uncomfortable.
“See, […] a visual of, like, God watching me having sex weirds me out, OK?” she said with a chuckle during the March 3 episode.
The star suggested that her upbringing is to blame, explaining, “It totally just depends on your upbringing and what your past experiences have been or the things that you were taught as a kid, all of those.
“Again, I’m almost 50 and some of those adolescent thoughts never quite leave your mind or those high school teenage thoughts never quite leave your mind,” she continued.
“I’m giggling at it now because I, whatever, don’t want to think about God watching me have sex. But I’m very comfortable in that sense.”
Aside from sex, Candace has been candid about the “really low lows” she’s experienced in her marriage to Valeri in her podcast.
“I know that during some of those low times — I wouldn’t even say it’s low —you’re just kind of, like, sitting in the shallow of the valley,” she explained. “Where you’re like, ‘This isn’t the best, but that’s just life. We’ll just kind of go through it.’”
As Bure acknowledged, “[There have been] lots of highs and there’s been some really low lows.”