Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 216: Sexual Confidence & How to Show It (with Emily Morse)
Episode Date: June 14, 2023Today I'm joined by the fantastic and insightful Emily Morse. Emily is a sex therapist, author and media personality and host of the 'Sex With Emily' podcast. In this conversation we discuss: How to... improve your sex life by understanding your own body Being confident enough to feel sexy in your own skin Talking about sex with your partners to have a fulfilling sex life Getting rid of shame around sex and exploring your sexuality --- ►► Discover the 4 Secrets for Escaping Casual Dating Traps. Claim Your FREE PASS for my Dating With Results Training. . . → http://www.DatingWithResults.com --- ►► FREE download: “9 Texts No Man Can Resist” → http://www.9texts.com ►► FREE download: “5 Compliments to Get Him Addicted to You” → http://www.SayThisToHim.com
Transcript
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🎵 Hey everyone, it's Matthew. Welcome to the Love Life Podcast.
It's more than just me today. We have Dr. Emily Morse joining the Love Life Podcast,
the world-renowned sex therapist the host of sex with Emily the major
podcast that she has had for a long time and author of the new book smart sex dr
Emily Morse is second to none when it comes to the world of sex therapists sex
advice and we talk about all different aspects of sex in early dating how to accept
ourselves and our body how to connect with our sexuality dealing with our intimacy issues
sex in relationships it is a powerful conversation and for anyone who's a love life club member you
also get access to the second hour with me and Emily, where we answer Love Life
Club member questions. We bring some people on live and we talk about a whole bunch of subjects
in more depth that we cover in the first hour. To unlock access to the full conversation with
Dr. Emily Morse, you can go to joinlovelife.com and get your free trial right now to become a member. Now I present to
you Dr. Emily Morse. I am here with Dr. Emily Morse. Hello. Welcome back. So good to be here.
This is always a good time. We had so much fun last time. We got to answer so many of our Love Life Club member questions.
You are just the best.
To me, you are second to none in your department.
You are able to make subjects that other people squirm around feel so safe and so easy to
talk about.
What could be more a reflection of
how seasoned you are and how long you've been doing this and how good you are
because it's a subject that in a way I feel like one of the reasons you exist
and have to exist is that so many people feel like they just don't know how to
have these conversations and yet they're at the heart of this crucial part of our
personality and our needs. Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that we all, none of us had great sex education.
None of us grew up in environments where people were talking about sex in a healthy way.
And there's so much misinformation about it.
So yeah, if I can normalize it and make us all feel good, like it's just sex.
Let's have some fun with it.
Talk about it in a way that isn't so shameful and weird.
Yeah.
And awkward.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That idea that it's just sex is so important because I don't know where it came from.
You may know who said it originally or whatever, but I once heard if sex is good, like if it's
taken care of, you talk about it 20% of the time.
If it's a problem, it's 80%.
Exactly.
It's true.
That is a real quote.
When it's a problem, it is a problem.
When everything's great and we're coasting, sex is, we don't even think about it.
But when it's a problem, it takes over the relationship because it's a problem, but then
we don't know what to do about it.
Like if our car breaks down, we take it to a mechanic.
We've got some psychological things.
We go to a therapist, we talk about it.
Problems with business, business coach,
but sex, where do we go?
Who do we talk to?
We feel bad about, we have shame,
so we just sort of, it becomes bigger and bigger.
We don't know how to quite,
like even how to get a handle on it.
So that's what we'll do today.
That's why I'm so excited about you being
in the Love Life Club is because it's a place
where people can actually talk about these things. And I asked for questions beforehand from people,
and we're going to go into those at the end of this session, because there was some really
pointed questions that people asked that I know in other environments in their lives,
they're not asking those questions and they're asking them here. So I'm excited to get to those.
You have a new book. I'm going to start by telling
everyone that because Emily's book is called Smart Sex. This is, we were just talking about this.
I think that you released a book around 12 years ago, which was a more specific book in its
approach, but this is like your life's work. This is my life's work. Exactly. So I'm excited to get
in. This is called Smart Sex for anyone who wants to know.
And I know by the end of this session, if you didn't know Emily already, you're going
to go and get a copy of this because you're going to see how much great stuff she has
to offer.
But we're going to get into some of what's in the book.
We're going to get into the areas that affect people most here.
One of the things you talk about in the book is sexual IQ.
When you say that, what do you mean by sexual IQ?
What I mean by sex IQ is...
Or sex IQ.
Sex IQ, sexual, yeah, sexual intelligence, essentially.
So what happened was I was writing this book,
and again, it was two decades of doing this work.
I was like, okay, I'm going to write down every,
I'm going to answer every question that people have about sex.
I'm going to give them all the tips. I I'm gonna give them all the tips I'm gonna give them you know every position
every sex toy every move like everything that people want to know about sex is in
this book and it's broken down into like you know if you want to know about your
own body masturbation and oral sex and all the things and then I was right I
thought you know people always come to me for this quick fix. They're like, what can I do about this, you know, orgasm problem or this, you know, how do I make this move?
And then I realized that sex isn't about a quick fix. Like I can help you. I can definitely give
everyone, and today we're going to help people take the next step. But holistically, sex IQ is
that sex is a foundational part of our overall well-being.
And there isn't just one thing that there's.
So I created these five pillars of sexual intelligence that we can get into.
But really, it's about realizing that you can't have healthy sex without understanding that it's your emotional intelligence, your self-awareness, your self-acceptance, how embodied you are,
how's your physical health and your mental health.
All these factors are contributing,
and it's not just about a position or the right move
or even an orgasm.
There's a holistic approach to becoming sexually intelligent,
and all these things are constantly changing
throughout our lifetime.
We need to monitor them and understand them
that they're all playing into each other.
So could you give us the summary of those five pillars?
I feel like that sounds like a great structure
for us to start.
Okay, so here's the structure of it.
So the first one is embodiment.
How embodied am I during sex?
For example, am I present?
Am I feeling a partner's body or in my head
worrying about what I'm doing?
Am I disassociating or am I present?
And I've got tips for people of how to stay present during sex because Matthew,
one of the top questions I get asked is how do I stay focused during sex? Like how do I,
I'm worried about all these things. The second one is health. Your overall health and wellness.
Am I eating right? Am I moving my body? Listen, pleasure and orgasm is all about blood flow. If you're not exercising on a regular basis, if you're not eating healthy foods,
it's going to impact your sex life. And then the other part of health and wellness is your
mental health. Do you have untreated trauma? Have you dealt with your issues? It's an ongoing
process. We never solve them, but have you been in therapy the third one is collaboration how well do i communicate to my
partner my needs do i let them know what i want in bed do i know what do i know what i want in bed
do i have shame around sex so collaboration the next one is self acceptance this is a tough one
am i accepting my body as it is today my experience you know maybe a
lot of times you hear this from people all the time saying gosh my partner has
had so many more partners than I have in the bedroom what am I how am I gonna
measure up so do I accept my body and my experience today that's really the
confidence piece and the last one is self-knowledge how well do I know myself
do I know what I even like do I know whatknowledge. How well do I know myself? Do I know what I even like?
Do I know what I like in the bedroom?
Do I know what I like in a partner?
Do I know what is required for me to feel good during sex, during intimacy?
What have I learned from my past?
And so all of those things are going to contribute to you being sexually intelligent, sexually present, and I don't know where to start we've got time I have so many
things to ask I that's that those are great and it just what it sums up to me
is that you can't you cannot talk about sex without talking about life, the human experience.
Exactly, it all is in the bedroom with you,
every time you're having sex.
But Matthew, what I realized,
and literally it wasn't until halfway through the book,
was like, okay, check, I've got the oral sex chapter,
check, I've got the masturbation chapter.
But wait a minute, what if you've untreated trauma?
What if you're not exercising?
So yeah, there's a lot, and not to overwhelm people,
but to say, it's okay.
We got this.
We can get through this.
Just know that you're okay and we can work through all of these pillars together.
I love that it's a holistic approach and it acknowledges the true foundational pillars
that are there when it goes right and where it goes wrong for us in ways that are hidden
and we don't even see
or talk about or not aren't even necessarily conscious of and it talks about there's this
guy john k who wrote a book called obliquity and the idea behind this book was that results in life
are best achieved indirectly that oblique yeah obliquityliquety is the idea that when we have a goal, achieving it obliquely is the best way.
That if you want to be wealthy, focusing on becoming a person of value, focusing on creating something that the world needs, focusing on serving your customers and taking care of them.
That's how you get rich. You don't focus on money. And there's an oblique approach going on here that
actually one of the greatest ways to improve your sex life, the great ways to improve your sex life
can actually be oblique. It could be all the things you don't even necessarily associate
with sex that feed back in. So given that there's so much here, what have you experienced as the best way in?
If people could focus on one thing first that would improve their sex life, of all of these
things, what do you think it would be?
It's such a great question.
I love this question.
And first, it's going back to the oblique thing I was going to say.
It's almost like how it focuses on money.
With sex, everyone focuses on orgasm. That would be the equivalent, and it's not about orgasm oblique thing I was going to say. It's almost like how it focuses on money. With sex, everyone focuses on orgasm.
That would be the equivalent.
And it's not about orgasm.
So we can come back to that.
So the first thing, gosh, I think that everybody can start.
I would say the most important thing is to look at is your own, I would say it's self-acceptance.
It starts with yourself.
In a way, this book and the work I do is about, like, you know, remember the Joy of Sex was that book
that came out many years ago?
This is like the joy of you,
the joy of being you on the planet
and who you are as a sexual being.
So I would say everyone can start
looking at their own sexual messaging.
And I would say for women in particular, masturbation.
I'm just gonna put it out there.
So, and this is all coming from experience, okay? I'm all with you. I was not born knowing all of this stuff
I had to go through a period of having sex that wasn't satisfying not knowing my body relying on my partners
I used to think that men were shipped off to some secret school where they learned all the parts of the woman's body and they knew
Like I literally thought only I know I thought because I was like well I certainly don't know because
they must know so then I would be in these relationships this is like the
easiest way I can explain is truly by being with you I want to be real with
people and tell you that like I thought that they would know what felt good and
they would eventually figure out and then it would get disappointed when the
sex wasn't satisfying and this is just my own. Hopefully people know more now.
I'm talking about almost 20 years ago now when I started this work.
So then I realized that how were they going to know what I realized
in studying this that I needed to figure out my own body and get in there
and be like, what makes me feel good?
And for a lot of guys, I don't have to often remind men to masturbate,
to self-pleasure.
They're good.
They got that. Yeah, we got it covered. They're like, we're good. We know we're in. I'm like, dude,
you're at Walgreens. You don't even do it now. Stop. But with women, I often, they often think like, you got this. But with women, they're like, well, either they have shame around it.
They don't love their parts. Maybe they grew up in an environment where they were told that
like masturbation is wrong or it was sinful unfortunately we don't move out of our
home and then we realize that it's uh you know okay we still hear these messages or maybe they
just you know they just never quite figured it out so it takes time learn your own body so i would
say it starts with taking even another thing is take a mirror and look between your legs and see
what's going on and understand how it's all working, when you get aroused, what looks, because it's
really your own machinery.
So get in there, understand.
I have a lot of tips in the book too about solo sex and learning to make that something
that's actually pleasurable and enjoyable.
So I would say that's going right in there, but I would think that that would be one of
the best places to start.
And yeah. that would be one of the best places to start. If people, a big part of sex for people is feeling sexy, right?
It's almost that element of in some way turning yourself on or feeling sexy about yourself,
but it's something that so many people don't feel they can relate to because maybe it's
because they don't like their body, maybe it's because of how much their body has changed over time maybe it's
because they don't associate their age with sexiness and there's conditioning there how
can someone who doesn't accept their body right now that feels like but I'm you know, people may have a story that I'm objectively not sexy. I'm objectively not
Attractive and I don't feel that way about myself. So what what do you suggest for people when they're starting from that place?
It's such a great question. I think that
sexual being sexy and feeling sexy is so interesting
It's such an interesting concept for women because so many of us are taught We have to look a certain way to be sexy, but we don't actually feel it.
Right. So I think that the first thing would be probably the first pillar too, which is embodiment.
And I know for me, when I've had times, and again, all of this stuff is, you don't arrive to a place
where you're fully embodied. You don't arrive to a place where you don't check it
off the list. This is constantly changing throughout our
lifetime, and maybe even throughout the week for some
women, right? Like, I think that women we've to remember that our
life is like on this cycle, like a 28 day cycle for many of us
and our hormones are changing throughout the month, our body's
changing, our arousal cycles. And so I want women to tap in
and realize that we also kind of have to work at that and know
that like it is true that when a woman is ovulating, many women are more likely to feel
sexier and to want more sex that time. So just starting to pay attention to those things.
But for me, like embodiment is a really big part of it. And that's like the things, the tips I give
for women is getting into like a, these are the things that allow women to feel more i think in bodies like movement
dancing uh breath work nature and these might all sound i don't want to go off into more of a go woo
place but that's where the feminine energy lives being comfortable in our bodies for me a really
big thing that helped me was this pole dancing so sheila kelly s factor i don't know she's been
around for almost 20 years and she teaches these classes for women and at first when i heard about
it i thought okay well this is another thing that women got to do i got to get in a stripper pole
and i got to look hot for my partner like this is i thought it was another part of the patriarchy
trying to control my body but i realized that pole dancing the whole thing about it was you're not
even really on the pole it's about the s curve of your body and breathing into your pelvic floor. And so for me, it was about movement and
dance and breath work. And so a great way to feel sexually, I can help everyone right now,
if all the women listening and men too, if you practice breathing. So here's what happens.
Here's where sexiness comes from. So I'm just kind of go, I'm going to go into the body now
is that a lot of women walk around,
and men too, but we're talking about for women, very disconnected from our bodies, okay? So all
day long, like I might have put the makeup on and I'm walking around, I'm doing things, I'm at the
bar, but I am not connected to my bodily wisdom, my pelvic floor, where all the wisdom is. Maybe
because I don't like my body, I'm not feeling great, I've gained weight,
all the things. And then we get into the bedroom with someone and we're naked and we're like,
why don't I feel hot? Why don't I feel turned on? Well, all day long, I've been disconnected,
not loving my body, not touching it. So a great exercise is just doing some breath work.
And we could all even do that when you take like five deep breaths in. And when we do this,
do you mind if we do this real quickly? like we can breathe for a minute and then we're
gonna do a little kegel and this is what I want to say is that men can do them as
well it's essentially your pelvic floor it's like the pee stopping muscles when
you stop and start the flow of urine and that's also where your sexual energy
resides it's a way of waking it up and saying hello I'm in touch with you and
if you do this
just a few minutes a day or before you're going into any sexual situation or before your
masturbation practice, you're going to start to connect more to the source that is your sexual
energy that's going to remind you who you are and how to sort of awaken. Amazing. Can we go there
for a minute? Yeah, please. Okay. Let's do a count of... Let's do five in, and then we're going to do a kegel, and then
we're going to release for six, and maybe we can do three to five.
Can I ask a question?
Yeah, for men.
How do I do a kegel?
Okay, great.
So, a kegel are the... And I love that you're asking this because men... So let me tell
you, women are often told about kegel exercises. It's the's the p stopping muscles where you stop and start the flow of urine so let's say
you're going to the bathroom right now and someone knocks on the door you want to stop like it's that
muscle got it okay so it's that right there and you and you just tense it and relax it and then
how you do a keg is you hold it for about three seconds you release for three seconds so one more
note about the pelvic floor is that for men,
the more you do your Kegel exercises, it can help you last longer in bed, have stronger erections.
It helps you just be more in touch too. And for women, it can help straight. It's essentially,
it's the muscles that are responsible for orgasm. So the stronger these muscles are,
you'll experience stronger orgasms. If you've had, you know, over time, like urinary incontinence, sneezing and peeing.
So this is all strengthening that whole area.
So that's what it is.
And it's also where our sexual energy resides.
All right.
Okay.
On your cue.
Let's do it.
All right. We're going to breathe in for one, two, three, four, five.
We're inhaling, and then we're going to squeeze there.
Do a kegel.
Hold it, and then exhale.
Exhale.
One, two, three, four, five. you can squeeze again do a kettle at the bottom release three, four, five, squeeze, release, one, two, three, four, five, squeeze, release, inhale, one, two, three, four, five, inhale, and then we'll squeeze. And then we'll exhale.
One, two, three, four, five.
One more squeeze.
And then release.
Okay. And then release.
Okay.
Okay.
How are you all feeling?
Connected?
A little bit more connected?
Do you see what I mean? I like that exercise.
Did you like it?
Yeah.
It's good, right?
I've never done it in a live with,
I don't know how many people are watching.
So that was new for me too,
to do that with all of you here.
Did you do it or did you? I thought, yeah, she was doing it. Were you all doing it?
Did you feel a little bit? Did you do it, Anik?
What was the, did you feel a little bit more? Sensual.
Sensual, right. Right. You feel like, oh, hello.
And then the next exercise from that was, we're going to get in there. So now I hope that for a lot of women
listening and men, that you felt a little bit like, all right, that's the energy.
So that's the movement I'm talking about.
And then there's like some swaying of your hips because now we've circulated the energy.
And you start moving.
And there is some exercise.
I don't know if anyone ever does like yoga.
There's like the cat-cow position where you're in your, what's it called, your tabletop and you're breathing in and out.
And there's a lot of exercises that you can do that sort of work this area. So it's really just a moving and a circulating.
And then there's some dancing and there's some movement. So it's all about this area. And I
think just some easy breath breathing. I mean, Audra just said it, she feels it a little bit
more in touch. Maybe for the first time today, maybe for the first time in a while.
Hopefully with Audrey, not the first time in a while.
Since this morning
Do you know I really love this because it's it highlights the importance of
How do I say it so many people
Aren't actually haven't been used to really using their bodies now in a while
You know that especially if we don't if we don't even have an exercise routine
Then we don't even get it from that right but then some of the things you're talking about which make you feel
Different things whether it's dancing, you know, I dance sometimes, you know, and I have over the years
I've had someone like an instructor that I dance with and it's,
you know, even that, it's not even like a, it's not salsa or something sexy.
It's like just hip hop or whatever.
But I've just, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just that feeling of you come out of it feeling different.
And the idea that whether it's yoga or even just doing an exercise like this, it's actually getting us to just connect again with our bodies.
And it sounds like anytime I used to hear words, you know,
like get into your body or embodiment or whatever,
I always used to kind of associate that with a kind of woo-woo.
I do too.
I did too.
And that's why I was like, guys, hang out with me.
We don't usually get to blow job tips. But no, I mean, I'm too. I did. I did too. And that's why I was like, guys, hang out with me. We don't use,
we can get to blow job tips, but no, I mean, I get it. But you know what I'm saying?
I agree with you. But it's so important. It's like, ah, yeah.
Because it's real. There's a real benefit to that. And so many people, especially as they get older,
they start to lose some of those, you know, just the activities that we do that connect us to our bodies start
to fall off. Exactly. And it's amazing how much something can throw us, like me and Audrey went
away in the last year at a time when I was not feeling body confident because I just was, I'd
let myself go. And I was in a time where I was eating badly a lot. I was, we were traveling,
I was in exercising. And I remember being on this trip and just not, I didn't feel like myself. I didn't feel like I wasn't feeling good in my body. And I was,
it was crazy the extent to which just sexually it threw me off. Cause I was like,
I don't feel like, I don't feel sexy. I don't feel myself. And that's making me not wanna like rush into because I was just I got in my head
Yeah, exactly. That was like a couple of months
So over years of accumulated not feeling that way and not exercising and not doing things
It can only imagine the way that people start to disconnect from their body and their sexuality. That's exactly it. That's exactly it
We don't that's like pointing out that connection to it that if it's an incentive for people
like, oh, I know I should get to the gym or I know what to do with my body.
I think like realizing the connection that we often don't think of that truly there,
if you're not moving and not feeling great in your body, you're not going to feel as
aroused, turned on, ready for sex.
And maybe for some people that, well, yeah, that's obvious, but it really, like I can tell you,
all the years of research and studies,
that the more people have a regular exercise routine,
that they're in nature, that they're eating good foods,
they are more aroused, more turned on, they feel more sexy.
They wanna wear the clothes that make them feel good.
And then the opposite is true is if we're not moving.
And so I think it's just, you know,
if people just need that extra incentive to get moving
and to, you know, it's going to help every other area of your life.
And I guess we're not the first people to tell people the importance of exercise,
but I think drawing that connection to your sensuality and your sexuality is key,
looking at all the things we're putting in our body.
Now, I want to switch gears a bit because there's a question that comes up a lot from women around sex and their value, especially in early dating. I may give up my value in some way by either having sex with someone or
even perhaps more subtly because there's that that's a kind of very
Obvious way of if I have sex have I given up my power, but there's also the
Fear of if I show I'm very sexual to a guy
Is that guy going to somehow think I'm less valuable? Are they going
to think that, you know, because of all their associations and societal programming, are they
going to think that, oh, I don't want her because she's clearly got a lot of sexual experience.
She's really sexual. I don't like that. There is all these messed up associations that,
so, and by the way, you don't have to spend long is all these messed up associations there. So, and by the way,
you don't have to spend long on Reddit to realize that there are a lot of awful lot of guys who do
have those associations. And so how, I don't know the best way to get into this, but it's such a
complex and big area, but on a practical level, there's a lot of women out there who are trying to figure out
how sexual should I be? Because I don't, I want to maintain my power. And it feels like
I may be giving it up without even choosing to, because he sees me differently based on
how I bring sexuality into the dating process. Yeah, you know, I love this conversation
because I think it's so important that this has been around for so long,
this notion that women are told to be like sexy, but not too sexy,
be available, not too available, know what you're doing, but not too much,
and keep your numbers low.
And there's all this way that our sexuality has been policed and so as we know that that's why women are walking around
feeling not sexy not turned on not having orgasms because we're so concerned
what all these guys are gonna think about us and I think at the end of the
day first I mean my easy answers like oh that's not your guy the one that's gonna
judge you because of all the your sexual history but that's going to judge you because of all your sexual history.
But that's too simplistic.
Let me just reverse that because I actually think, yes, there's the guys on Reddit, but
they're spending their time on Reddit.
They're not going on dates with them.
They're on Reddit angry.
That's true.
I'm just saying that there's all these misconceptions around it.
I think that the women who truly understand their sexuality, what they need to be turned on.
They're not having perform,
okay, let me reverse that into there.
So a lot of my early sex was performative.
I was having sex too that I thought looked good,
was pleasing my partner,
I wanted to be the best at giving,
the best at doing everything,
moving my body in the way that I had seen in porn
or the way, you know, it was just performative.
And I think that what I found is that's a very common experience. And I had to unlearn. I faked orgasms.
I faked pleasure. I had a good time. Don't get me wrong. Like, I like making out. I like kissing.
I love men. I love all those things. But I was thought like, I'm in service. I'm in service.
And I think it's a subliminal message that a lot of women get. And I really hope to change that narrative right now.
And so by asking this question, I'm going to tell women that I, it was really tough
to unlearn and be like, this is the point where I'd usually fake it.
And I've had to stop and say, and through, that's why I started out saying, let's get
in touch with our bodies again, whether it's through masturbation, whether it's through
movement, through dance, through realizing breath work, through realizing that when the power is in your own knowing of your body and what feels good. And then once you start to give yourself
pleasure, give yourself orgasm, you'll realize like, I can't settle for less. I know what it
feels like to be empowered, to be embodied. And other kinds of sex just doesn't do it for me. I
don't owe anyone anything. I'm not going to act the way I don't need to act.
And I'm going to relearn what it means.
I had to unlearn and then relearn.
And so I think once you come from that place of experience and knowledge and confidence,
I honestly think that you really will not be thinking about, you won't be making decisions
on who you're going to sleep with and who you're not and what you're gonna do based on these external beliefs that other people are gonna judge you because
you have a knowing and you're you're in touch with your intuition you know like
this seems like a good guy to be with and you know what I had a one night I
had sex them last night and it felt good to me and if he doesn't call me I really
don't care if I had sex on three times and he blows me off, I enjoyed that.
Like, I enjoyed that time because I got what I wanted, what I needed.
I did my best.
I thought it was good.
It wasn't.
I'm not going to spend too much time tripping on the fact that I'll never know what happened.
Maybe he didn't like the sex.
Maybe he got back to his ex.
Like, there's a million reasons why.
And I know you say this all the time, but we can't worry what other people think.
We can't spend all of our time we'll never really
know but it's almost like trying to think of the equivalent of it like you
just can't have regrets like I can't like you went to a restaurant you had a
good meal like I don't know you left you ordered the food you wanted maybe things
weren't ideal but like at least I had a good meal or you had a good conversation
with someone I'd love people like a date that doesn't go well or maybe it's
something that doesn't work out you think like what did I learn from't work out. You think like, what did I learn from this person? What did I learn from
this experience? What did I learn from this sexual experience, even if it doesn't go anywhere? So I
guess my point is being intentional about your sex. And is that answer it? Is that, that's so
many things there. I know it's a really petty question. no no you just said something that really I want to
thank you because you just you just connected something for me okay people have to lose this
association that by having sex with someone they've given up their power because if you think
that that was your power and now you've given it up you behave now as someone who's given up their power. So, but you just added a dimension to it
that I think is really, really interesting.
What I hadn't connected in the way that you just did
is that if you go into sex,
not from this place of being performative
and it's just my job to make sure they have as good a time as possible
and when you're coming from that place if you bring the people pleaser and i've seen this a
lot with women that i've coached they bring the people pleaser mindset into the bedroom
i remember coaching someone and there was a comment that she said where she was like,
I did this for him.
I did that for him.
I blew him all the time.
And I just remember hearing that and thinking that came from a place of people.
Just from the way you said it.
Because you could be someone who gives a lot of blowjobs in a relationship and it's just
coming from a place of generosity. That's just people taking care of each other because they
like doing it and they like making each other happy but when we're doing it from a place of
scarcity because we're worried we won't get love if we were if we don't do it that people pleaser
nature shows up in really bad ways in the bedroom. And that happens for people.
It can happen for people after a first date. They go home with someone they barely know.
And they're giving the performance of their life because they think, I really, really,
really want this person to think I'm great. And the more I can do exactly what they want me to do,
the more I'm gonna be valuable to them.
And the more they're gonna like me
and they're gonna wanna see me again.
Well, if you do that, it's all well and good
as long as that agenda you have plays out.
In other words, as long as they ask you out again
and again and again and again,
and that leads to a relationship
and that leads to a long-term thing.
Then you kind of look back and you go,
oh my God, thank God, all of those things I did
that I only did to make that person like me worked out.
It worked out because I now have them
but what happens in reverse is if it doesn't work out the person is like I would never have done all of that if I
didn't think it was gonna work out and
that's what makes people feel so used and so resentful and so hurt and so
What you just said about being intentional and essentially owning the experience
for yourself is a way of creating a scenario that is win-win for you because you go home
with someone, you in real time are saying, what would make this an enjoyable experience for me? And if you're coming from that place,
if something is happening that makes it not enjoyable
for you, you can speak up about that
and you can acknowledge it and say to someone,
I'd prefer if we did this, or I don't wanna do that.
And you're keeping it always within the bounds
of an experience that I'm really happy with.
And if it's an experience you're really happy with, if nothing comes of that experience,
you can look at that and go, I enjoyed it for its own sake.
If you were only coming from a people pleasing mindset, because you were coming from scarcity
and lack and I have to impress this person and oh my God, do they like me?
You are liable to do all these things that make you feel icky a week later because you
didn't get what you were trying to get from the situation.
Yeah, it's so true.
It just makes me sad too.
I think about it for showing up in this way that you think it has to be so in service
when going back to
embodiment and intentionality and like what, like if you felt good and you actually had a good time,
there's no regrets here, right? But I think where we get to is that a lot of women don't even
actually know what that is because of this life of feeling like you have to give, give, give during
sex. And I have to say that I realized this. And also in the course of writing my book, I was like, I never thought it was okay to stop
sex or to direct sex. Like I thought if I started it, I'm a people pleaser too. And I work on it.
I don't know if you ever, if you ever get over it, but you work on it. And I would think like,
I, if I'm starting, it's, I got to keep going along with what they want. I didn't know that
I could kind of redirect and say, you know what? Sex is moving a little bit fast. This is an experience I think a lot of women have where,
how do we go from kissing to now my clothes are off?
I've learned that I can say, you know what, let's slow down.
Like let's, I love the kissing.
Like I love making out.
Can we just go a little bit slower?
I need a little bit more time.
And I wanna remind women too, that like we are slow cookers
and men tend to be more like frying pans.
Like we need a little bit time to warm up and just acknowledge this power when it comes to sexuality and understanding
that. So this is like a whole process. And I love that we're talking about this way because it is
all the pillars to work into this, even just every sexual experience. Like am I present? Do I know
myself enough to know what I want? But that's how we start to get out of the mindset of,
am I going to be judged for what I did sexually to like,
you can judge me all you want, but I had a really good time.
Like this is for me too, right?
It is a reverse.
It is sort of a, you know, it's a mindset switch.
It's a lot to learn here, but it's, it's totally possible.
And it makes sex so much more enjoyable and,
you know, equal.
I guess. Yeah.
It's really powerful. everything you just said is really
it's so important I feel like it gets to the heart of why it goes so badly wrong in early dating
for people and why they end up carrying so much hurt and so much you know sort of
you know in some cases trauma is the right word in some cases, trauma is the right word. In some cases, it might be a strong word. But people carry so much baggage over into their dating lives because they feel so taken advantage of.
And that, I think we always have to realize that we can decide whether we're in it.
Not being taken advantage of doesn't have to mean not having sex.
Right, exactly. It can mean owning the sex you have and mean not having sex. Right. Exactly.
It can mean owning the sex you have and making it an experience that you actually like in
the same way that you kind of, a date should be like that.
A date, there's a, a date is a shared experience, right?
It's not like we go on a date going, I'm just focused on having a good time.
I don't care how much of a good time you have.
It's a, it's a mutual thing. It's like, I, I want to have a really good time. I don't care how much of a good time you have. It's a mutual thing. It's like
I want to have a really good time tonight. I'm not just focused on how great of a time you're having,
but I also want you to have a great experience too. But I'm going to have a great experience
with you that I'm comfortable having tonight. It's going to be the kind of date that I feel
is appropriate to the fact that we've just met. And I'm going to focus on having a good time. And a lot of people have bad dates
because they don't focus on having a good time themselves. They're still in their heads or
they're worried. Yeah. They're like, what conversation would I like to have? Or what
do I think would be fun to talk about? Or what questions am I really curious about in life that
I'm going to invite you to talk about with me? They're just always thinking, is this what they want to talk about? Is this a date that they, do they want to
go to this place? It's not like, oh, there's this awesome place down the street that I love. We
should go there. I think you'd enjoy it too. It's, do you want to go there? Do you think this would
be fun? And that, if you just think sex is life, it's just a continuation. It's literally the same
exact thing. It's the same stuff that you teach you while dating to be present,
and not to be worried, like, I hope he likes me, I hope he likes me.
Like, do you like him, right?
Are you present?
The same thing goes to sex.
Do you like the sex?
Do you like the situation you're having?
We're all in it together.
And the other thing I want to say is, like, men,
like, this is the thing I realized, too, by doing this work.
Because, you know, my listeners, my audience is always half men, half women.
Like, it's always been split.
I think that's always so interesting. People are people like I think it's a lot of women no
I used to think like I said guys no they don't know either and can I just tell you how relieved
a man is when he is with a woman who's like babe this is what feels good this is what I like do
you want to see this parts of my body that I've learned they're like thank god I don't have to
be guessing anymore like that is this I think that is also the hottest,
sexiest thing in the world.
When you're the woman who like knows what she wants.
And I don't, and I think that there's some fear
that if we don't acquiesce and we don't give in
and that somehow guys will feel like, oh, I can't,
going back to your other question,
if I show a guy that I, what I like,
they're gonna think I'm slutty.
They're gonna think I'm easy, cause I know this stuff.
But all I'm saying is like, that be the paradigm but let's switch that like
we have the power to show up as like fully empowered intelligent women who know what we want
and and I'm telling you the more that we all do that together the more men are gonna be like thank
you I I love this this makes like so much better for all of us because you guys want you to have
a good time like you're hoping it's good you're not thinking i'm only getting mine i don't think that guys set out to just have
it this way it's not this is not men's fault that women are more performative in many ways it's all
the way society is set up there's a lot of different reasons for it but i think we can all
agree i hope that like we all want to be great lovers to each other i think for for a lot of
guys especially healthy guys it's thinking that she's not having a good time
or she's not turned on is like the ultimate turn off.
It's, that is the thing that can make you get in your head
is that I don't know if she's,
I'm not getting anything back,
I'm not getting any feedback, I don't know.
And that's why performative sex is so dangerous because you're giving literally, you're not
just not giving any cues, you're giving the wrong cues.
Right.
You're giving false feedback.
And so he's getting reinforced for things that aren't even working.
Right.
So, and when we get reinforced, we go, okay, I should do that again.
Do more.
Do more of that and so you're literally setting up
you're you're you're like making the way paving the way for your own bad sex in the future
by telling him go that way exactly like there's nothing good that way but you're like no no keep
going it's great and he's just going to keep doing that thing. You have such a lovely way about you in the way that you communicate things.
And I really get the impression with you that when you're interacting with men, especially intimately, there would be a care to it.
There would be a warmth to it.
There would be a kind of a kindness to it and a way of dealing with things. I think between the ultimate kind of evolved guy and the depths of Reddit,
there are a lot of guys in the middle who have grown up with very complex associations
around women and sex because of what they've been taught because of society because a whole bunch of complicated reasons that they then you know the more there's a more evolved part of them that
doesn't struggle and is like oh no that makes sense I'm with someone who has a past I'm with
someone like me that there's an evolved side and then there's the monkey brain yes exactly that
trips them up and can make them act out,
can make them behave badly. I act, and I'm not talking about anything abusive. I'm just
talking about being jealous, being like, you know, triggered by something. You suddenly
say I like this and they're like, it's suddenly in their head going, wait, do you do that
all the time? Is that something you did with your ex? Is your ex, you know, are they more manly than me?
Did you like that?
You know, like now I'm picturing you with your ex and how, how do you, I really want
to, because I feel like so often we do have these conversations in an overly simplistic
way.
And you pointed that out yourself.
It's too simplistic to just say, you know, well, if he can't handle that, then screw
him or whatever, because we're people and women get jealous about those things too.
So how do you approach these conversations when you're talking about the things you'd
like, when you're talking about the things that turn you on, when you are talking about
something that you've learned from previous partners, but you know that it could make the sex better with this person you're with today.
You know it would make you happier and more turned on, but you also are trying to figure
out how to navigate that with someone who is a human with an ego and a baser side that
he doesn't want to have sabotage him, but it does.
How do you bring these things up?
It's such a good question, too.
It's like, it's so tricky.
And I cannot tell you how common this is.
Like, we're making it sound easy here.
Like, just roll up and say, hey, babe, this is what I want.
It is not easy.
There are couples who have been together for 10 years, 20 years,
who have children, who have hopeful lives,
and they've been naked in all situations,
and they have never talked about their
sex life so i'm telling you it is like this one subject that we just don't go there so my three
t's is such a great like i think people can remember this it is timing the first thing is
timing and a quick way to remember this is make sure you are not halt and that is hungry angry
lonely or tired if you're feeling any of those things, do not have the conversation.
But it's date night.
You're hanging out.
It's a Saturday morning, Sunday morning.
Find the right time.
It's not like when you're already fighting about something and also you never initiate sex.
Like, no, that's not it.
The next one is tone.
The tone about sex has got to be supportive, curious, open, you know, like lighter, a little
bit lighter.
It is not like heavy, deep, we need to talk.
It just can't be.
And then the turf is outside the bedroom.
Even though we think that we should have these conversations, we're in the bedroom already.
In the bedroom, we want to leave that for a different, for sleeping and for sex, but not for these conversations about
sex. So a great way to do this, the TERF is so many great sex conversations happen when couples
are going on a walk or they're on a road trip or they're just driving in the car because this way
it's still intimate, but you don't have to make eye contact because it might be awkward. And so
this is how the conversation goes, right? So you've got the timing, tone and turf.
You're on a road trip with your partner.
Even if you're just driving 20 minutes to dinner.
I realized, Ava, that we've never really talked about our sex life.
And I would love to find time to figure out what...
I want to be such a great lover to you and I want to know what turned you on and I want
to be able to share what feels good to me.
Never felt safe.
Would you be down with that?
Would you be down with finding ways that we comfortably talk about sex?
Like that's just really how you start.
See what they say there.
And I want it.
I want to warn everybody, but you might get pushed back.
Like, what do you mean?
What kind of shows you listen to?
That sounds crazy.
What are sex is fine.
You ain't down like our sex life.
This is why conversations about sex are not a one-time thing.
It's like a great hope.
You'd be open to it.
And then you could continue until, you know,
I have a lot of great tips in the book
that are like literally on the communication chapter
is all of these various, I have scripts.
I have tips.
I have like the sexual state of the union.
I've got the yes, no, maybe list,
which actually is a free, that's for a little bit,
people who've been together for a little bit,
but it's not even that actually.
The yes, no, maybe list,
which maybe we've talked about this before, it's probably the
most common downloadable guide I have on my website, sexwithemily.com, and it has 80 sex
acts on it.
And it has everything from kissing to hugging to dirty talk.
Is it a yes for you?
Is it a no?
Or is it a maybe?
And it just gives people a menu to talk about what they're into.
It's great.
Yeah.
That's great.
Yeah.
You have me so curious now about these scripts.
Is there a script that you think when communicating about sex or what you like or what turns you
on, is there one that you feel like is one or two that are standout that you can give
to people today?
I do. I'll give you the one. I'll give you the one that's the best for feedback. And this is the compliment sandwich.
Now the compliment sandwich, this again could also be used in the workplace, but I love the
compliment sandwich for sex in particular, because you start off the first piece of bread is the top
is just something that you really like about your sex life because i'm going to give feedback that let's say
that my partner i'm really bummed that they never initiate sex i am always initiating and i feel
like it's just been really frustrating and i don't like the way that they're not doing it that's
unless there's something else that comes up well i think that's a good one to start so i would start
with something that i love like i babe i want to say that the sex you've been having lately has
been get specific in your compliments. We give a compliment.
I am loving, like, I loved so much that you,
the way we were making out last night for a long time and the way you like slowly went down on me.
I love how we've been connected.
Like, I feel like our sex has been off the charts lately because of these.
I felt comfortable.
It's been hot.
It's been sexy.
I've been thinking about it at work.
It's just been like next level.
I didn't think our sex get better and it is and I really feel like
a lot of time I'm initiating it and I'm bringing it and I don't know if you're
really into it it would be feels so good to know that you want as much as I do so
would you be willing to initiate and to grab me sometimes and let me know that
you want it so I know you're as hot for me.
And then the last piece is, will you wrap it up and why it's good for both of you?
So whatever your request is, it's because I think if we both initiate with give and take,
we're both going to feel the most desired, loved, hot, and turned on and have the healthiest, most pleasurable sex life possible.
That's great.
That's such a great way of having the conversation.
Yeah.
It brings up for me, I know that I got asked earlier by one of our members about
differing sex drives. What's your most common answer to the problem of it's hurting my
self-esteem over time that I have a higher sex drive than my partner.
Well, I can tell you this is,
that is probably one of the most common question I get asked.
I hope everyone just feels good about that.
Like there is always a high desire partner
every relationship and a low desire partner.
That's how most relationships shake out.
Someone wants more sex than the other person.
So you're all in the right place and it might switch you might you know it
might switch over time but there's always going to be for whatever reason the two high desires
and the two life desires don't get together i mean maybe it's biology right evolutionarily speaking
so just recognizing that that that's a thing and we're going to have to negotiate like we do other
things early we're going to have to figure out a way to work around it and you know the low desire
partner has the power because they're the gatekeepers to sex.
They're deciding the sex is going to happen.
So really the best way of saying is recognizing and say, babe, I know that you want sex a lot more than I do.
That's just my drive.
I don't want it as much.
But we both agree that having sex is important.
So let's figure out when is the best time to have sex.
Like, that's why I think scheduling sex is really one of my
another one of my top tips because couples who have the mismatched desires find that they're not
having as much sex that's working for the partners because either the one who has the high desire is
tired of getting rejected and they think it's their ego that their ego gets hurt and the lower
desire partner is like oh my god i'm letting him down and you know so i think if you decide
that we want to
have sex on Saturday nights and date night, and it's a non-negotiable, you don't, you date night
is you always go on date night. Like no matter what you leave your phones at home in the car,
you don't talk about work. You don't talk about the kids unless that's, you know, you, you make,
and you do something different. You get out of the house, you do something that's going to build
connection and, and, and connectivity connectivity and you're gonna have conversations that
make you feel good. And that is a night that you know that sex is gonna happen.
But when you know sex is gonna happen, you can reverse engineer it and using a
lot of the pillars of sex IQ that I talk about in my book, you can think about,
well, what's gonna get me most... Because also for a lot of women, we're not always
turned on unless there's a few things.
And I help people realize this is part of the self-knowledge pillar.
I know if the house is a mess, if I haven't showered, if I haven't worked out that day,
I'm less likely to want to have sex.
If I have unresolved issues with my partner from the last time we had sex or just from the week because something happened, I'm not going to be in the mood for sex.
There's all these things in the environment that's going to keep us from having sex.
But if I spent a day becoming more embodied, I went for a hike, maybe I masturbated, I'm not going to be in the mood for sex. There's all these things in the environment that's going to keep us from having sex. But if I spent a day becoming more embodied, I went for a hike, maybe I masturbated, I took a bath, I shaved my legs, I did these things, I'm wearing something
that makes me feel sexy, I'm setting myself up for sex. I'm keeping my own pilot light lit,
so I am going to be ready and turned on for sex. We're responsible for our own orgasm,
so this is where it comes in, our own pleasure pleasure I can let my partner know that I need all these things but at the
end of the day I have to look at myself and say okay sex is important if I'm the
low desire partner I don't want as much as my partner but I need to figure out
because my life my sex life is important my relationship is so important to me
I'm not gonna wait for the desire to just hit me over the head.
This whole notion that we're just going to have this spontaneous desire like we did at the
beginning of a relationship, it's not true. It's harmful. Men, typically, if we're talking about
the genders here, you have more of a spontaneous desire. You might see Audrey and you are turned
on and it's aware it's apparent like you
are ready to go and a lot of times when we have to respond to something I respond to your touch
to your compliments to your kisses to your doing the dishes I mean we have to figure out what is
our turn-ons and so it's a complex cycle that couples have to figure out and it's a dance and
it's a negotiation but if I know that all these things are to be in place
and you know what turns me on, I know what turns you on,
there's gonna be more sex that happens,
more satisfying sex, more understanding.
So much important stuff here.
I'm making notes because there's so much I wanna say.
The phrase I wanna pick up on
and I want everyone to write down
because I think it's so important is keeping your own pilot light lit.
I think that's a great phrase in sex.
And I think of, you know, we all have non-negotiables in life that are important for us to just
feel good in general.
There almost should be, almost as part of being a good partner partner we should have non-negotiables that keep
our pilot light lit so you mentioned working out showering there was one more that uh working out
showering wearing something that makes me feel sexy like getting out of shaving shaving your
legs shaving my legs yeah like these you could see those as the non-negotiables that you have to do for yourself in order to keep your own
pilot light lit and take responsibility for that. And I think the other side of that is,
it's like there's the sex that is about both of us and there's the sex that's about the other
person. And I'm not just talking about penetrative sex or just anything, any sexual act.
And I think that sometimes we think everything has to be,
everything has to be the latter.
Everything has to be about the two of us.
And that may be true in early dating.
But in the context of a committed relationship,
there's always things,
like if you remove the word sex from it,
we all have things that are more important
to us than our partner and vice versa.
And part of a relationship is that we go,
well, where do you, oh, you like your head stroked?
Okay, that's more important.
I don't care about having my head stroked,
but I'll stroke yours because you like it.
You know, like that's just a part of a relationship.
Whereas we kind of, I think,
as soon as the word sex enters it, we think,
but I have to enjoy it.
Well, yeah, sometimes, absolutely.
Other times it might be that it's just about them
and you say, you know what, I'm just going to please you.
And I think the hard part about that is that we've,
the hard part as I see it,
once we decide to have that generosity of spirit
that I just, if it's important to you,
I want you to feel good,
is trying to navigate the waters of them feeling shame
that you don't want to,
of them feeling like, but you're not even into it or this is just charity and and that
doesn't make me feel good I think one of the hacks in a relationship for sex is
can you as the partner who has that generosity of spirit that just sometimes
makes them feel good and doesn't need to do it for you. Can you make them feel like that's just a thing that they shouldn't be ashamed of?
They should just receive the gift because you like doing it for them.
Not because you're feeling turned on, but because it's fun to do something that makes
them happy.
If you can achieve that, I feel like you can overcome a lot of mismatched sex drive absolutely
i think that is such a good a good point i i talk a lot about that about you know a lot of us are
not comfortable receiving yeah exactly that's exactly right and so i i realized you have that
i think it's in the oral sex chapter because you'd be amazed like how many like here's the thing so
for many many women oral sex is a primary source of their arousal their turn-ons their orgasms like i know we've probably covered this
but like penetration as delightful as it can be is not where the magic happens for for many women
like that's just that's not where we're going to have our orgasms our most pleasure however so
knowing that that it's oral sex is just an example when i think about receiving a lot of women are
like well i don't really deserve it.
Or does he really want to be there?
Or I have shame around my body.
And so I think that just learning to like receive, even if it's just a massage, another
way to say this is like, I love giving and receiving.
Like with my partner, we'll have times where we have a massage table and I love that.
Like, we'll just put it out.
And it's like, this is the time that he's giving me and I'm giving
him and then the same night it doesn't happen.
That's okay.
Get a relationship to know that it's all about your pleasure tonight.
I know I'll get mine.
And also, this is just kind of expanding your definition of sex and intimacy.
Who says that we both have to have orgasms and it has to be this explosive thing every
single time?
Well, that's exhausting.
No wonder why sex has become so problematic
for so many people.
That it's always supposed to be a symphony,
a 10-course meal.
Like what if sometimes it's just making out?
It's just one person's getting off
and the other person isn't.
Like that's okay.
It's not the end of the world.
Like sometimes you want dessert, sometimes you don't.
You know, sometimes you want this.
It's just, it's expanding what is possible for intimacy
because a lot of times we are craving sex,
but really we just want intimacy and connection and we get to decide what that looks like.
So learning to know that your partner just wants to give to you and then be able to receive
that is a process.
And as you said earlier, taking it all a bit more lightly.
If you're in a random moment, if your partner's turned on and you're not and you're like,
well, I could just do this quick thing for you or I could like, whatever. It doesn't have to be a big deal. I think when people
get that, develop that lightness about them, everything becomes so much easier. Because the
moment it gets this light shone on it about like, it's this big thing, we start to naturally tense
up and seize up. And it's, the whole thing takes on too much pressure.
I actually think that's one of the great ironies of talking about sex
is talking about sex is vitally important.
And yet it's like, how do we talk about sex
without putting this great spotlight on it
in a way that makes us even more aware?
Exactly.
The moment you talk about, I feel like you want it, you know, I feel like I
want it more than you do.
It's like shining a spotlight on it and you've given, it's almost like you feel like you've
given up some power and now, now the next time you do it, I've been honest with you,
but now the next time we do it, are you just doing it because I asked you to?
Now it's almost like by shining a light on it,
it's changed form on its own in a way that maybe is not desirable.
So I think having the conversations the right way is really important.
Yeah, it is because it's so complicated.
Anytime you're like, well, I don't want it to tell.
We think our partner is a mind reader.
We want them to be a mind reader.
Why doesn't he know I need this?
And then we think if we ask for it and they do it,
like, I need you to send me flowers.
Well, like, then you send flowers the next day.
You're like, oh, it's because I asked you.
But that's our decision to get annoyed.
How about your partner, like, heard what you said
and they're like, okay, I'm going to do something for you.
Like, that can feel really great.
So what if you had asked for it?
That's just switching your mindset around it.
Like, that's showing that a partner is listening to you.
They're attentive.
They're being intentional. So I think that text is the area that we need to be talking about it.
And how wonderful that your partner is listening and says, okay, tonight's going to be about
you, and I'm okay with it now.
Yes.
Yes.
Well, this has been incredible.
And I want to say to you, Emily, that everything, I honestly honestly of all the people I speak to I honestly think that
you're doing one of the most profound things in the work that you do I think it's life-changing
and life-saving because it goes to the heart of the human experience we so much of life is tied into our sexual beings our sexual being
our sexual nature it controls so much of life they say how much of how much of
violence is out there is just related to a lot of it is repressed repressed
sexuality people not being taught right people not developing the right associations, frustrated
people who have to take it out. There's so much of life that is connected to people not having
access to someone like you at a time in their life where it would have helped them and the rest of us
if they had had that. And what you're encouraging and not just encouraging but
teaching and practically is a model for us to have these conversations for us to
feel not feel shame for us to feel open this conversation is an absolute example
of that if you look at the comfort with which we as a group of people men and
women have all been able to discuss things that never get discussed.
And we're talking about it like we're talking about what we're doing this weekend.
The weather, exactly.
That's your gift.
And I want to celebrate that gift.
And I want everyone to join me in celebrating that gift because that's not something that
just anyone can do.
That's your nature, your kindness, your compassion, your complete lack of division
between men and women. You don't divide, you unite, and you don't make men feel shameful
either. You just bring people together, and it's beautiful and it's necessary. I'm so
happy you have a new book because I think more of the world, as many people in the world
can get your work, the better.
Thank you. Oh, Matthew, thank you so much for having me.
I am so grateful.
And you're just so, you're so magical to watch the way you're helping, the way you reframe
and the way you lift everybody up.
I'm honored to be part of your community.
Anytime.
Thank you for having me.
This has been wonderful.
All right, everybody.
I hope you enjoyed that conversation as much as I did.
Don't forget to get a copy of Dr. Emily Morse's book, Smart Sex, on Amazon or wherever you get
your books. And if you want to listen to the second hour of this conversation, which got even
better, if you can believe that, we talked about really sensitive subjects like how to deal with
dating and having herpes and when to tell someone.
We talked about how to get rid of the anxious thoughts as a woman when someone is going down
on you and you're too worried about their experience to have an orgasm. We talked about
fears of intimacy when you haven't been with anyone for a long time. We had someone who had
had an accident and since then sex had been really hard for her we talked about growing up
with a repressed uh sexuality because of religion and because of your family and how to overcome
that i mean there is no element of this that we didn't touch in some way and the people that were
there live were commenting that it was one of the most powerful
sessions that we had done inside the love life club so if you want to listen to that whole thing
go over to joinlovelife.com for a free trial membership enjoy the rest of the conversation
that i had with dr emily alongside all of the other master classes and courses and community
elements that we have inside the love life club i'll see you next
time thanks everyone