Sex With Emily - Ejaculate Responsibly w/ Gabrielle Blair
Episode Date: July 27, 2022When it comes to sex, why was the world set up so that vulva owners are the ones in charge of preventing a pregnancy? That’s the central question of a Twitter thread that went viral in 2018, and on ...today’s show I’ve got Gabrielle Stanley Blair, the author of that thread – and a forthcoming book, Ejaculate Responsibly – here to talk about it. I’m also joined by anthropologist, author, and my dear friend Dr. Wednesday Martin, to unpack this fascinating topic. In a post-Roe world, Gabrielle is calling for a wholesale shift in the way we think about pregnancy prevention: namely, by inviting penis owners and their bodies into the conversation. On today’s show, we talk condoms and sexual pleasure, how society pressures vulva owners to become mothers, how to talk to young men about ejaculating responsibly, why MORE sex ed leads to LESS unwanted pregnancies, and why Gabrielle – mother of six and a Mormon – is passionate about arguing that women’s lives matter, and so does their pleasure. One more thing: Can pre-ejaculate, or pre-cum, cause unwanted pregnancy? Pre-ejaculate actually does NOT contain sperm. However, any sperm remaining in the urethra from a previous ejaculation may be carried out with pre-cum which would have a chance of causing a pregnancy.The solution? Urinate before having sex to flush out any leftover sperm, and, as always, wear a condom!For more information, visit Teen Health Source.Show Notes:More Gabrielle Blair: Instagram | Twitter | Website Gabrielle’s Viral Twitter ThreadMore information about her forthcoming book: Ejaculate ResponsiblyMore Dr Wednesday Martin: Instagram | Twitter | Website The Secret to Better Sex? Talking About It Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is not controversial to say that in current practice, in current cultural expectations,
women do the work of pregnancy prevention, period.
And in the case that a pregnancy occurs, women carry 100% of the burdens of the pregnancy.
So all the work of pregnancy prevention and then all the work of dealing with the burden
of a pregnancy.
Whether they decide to have an abortion, whether they decide to have the baby, whether they have a miscarriage, they don burden of a pregnancy. Whether they decide to have an abortion,
whether they decide to have the baby,
whether they have a miscarriage,
they don't have a choice.
They have to deal with this pregnancy
that they did not cause.
You're listening to Sex with Emily.
I'm Dr. Emily, and I'm here to help you prioritize
your pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex.
When it comes to sex, why was the world set up so that Volvo owners are the ones in charge
of preventing a pregnancy?
That's the central question of a Twitter thread that would viral in 2018, and on today's
show, I've got Gabrielle Stanley Blair, the author of that thread, and a forthcoming
book, Ajaculate Responsibly, here to talk about it.
I'm also joined by anthropologist, author,
and my dear friend, Dr. Wednesday Martin,
to unpack this fascinating topic.
So in a post-World, Gabrielle is calling for a shift
in the way we think about pregnancy prevention,
namely, by inviting penis owners
and their bodies into the conversation.
So on today's show, we talk condoms and sexual pleasure.
How society pressures vulva owners to become mothers? How to talk to young men about ejaculating
responsibly? Why more sex ed leads to less than 1 of pregnancies? And why Gabrielle,
mother of 6, and a Mormon is passionate about arguing that women's lives matter? Oh, and so does
their pleasure. All right, intentions with Emily for each episode join me in setting an intention for the show.
I do it. I encourage you to do the same. So when you're listening, what do you want to get
out of this episode? Well, my intention is to help you think about responsible sex in
a whole new way where everyone experiences abundant pleasure and everyone is invested
in preventing pregnancy until they're ready.
Please rate and review Sex with Emily wherever you listen.
My article, The Secret to Better Sex, talking about it is up at sexwithemily.com.
Also check out my YouTube channel, social media and TikTok.
It's all at Sex with Emily for more sex tips and advice.
If you want to ask me questions, just leave me your questions or message me at
sectwithemily.com slash askemily or just call my outline. 559 talk sex or 559 825 5739.
Just include your name, your age, where you live and how you listen to the show.
Totally cool to change your name to remain anonymous. All right, everyone, enjoy this episode. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
In this show, you're going to hear information
that reframes the responsibility of pregnancy
and abortion from the amazing Gabrielle Blair.
And one of my dear friends, the brilliant Dr. Wednesday Martin. Gabrielle Blair and one of my dear friends the brilliant
Dr. Wednesday Martin. Gabrielle Blair is a mother of six, a Mormon and the founder of Design Mom and
award-winning 15-year blog devoted to the intersection of design and motherhood. In 2018,
Gabrielle's Twitter threat on unwanted pregnancies went viral, prompting her fourth coming book
ejaculate responsibly, a whole new way to think about abortion,
which will be released October 4th and is available for pre-order now at Amazon, Indie
Bound and many major book retailers.
Find more Gabrielle on social media at DesignMom or online at DesignMom.com.
Dr. Wenzay Martin is a social scientist with a background in anthropology and primatology,
a feminist cultural critic and a number one New York Times bestselling author, who focuses
on gender, motherhood, parenting, and female sexuality.
She's the author of Untrue, why nearly everything we believe about women, lust, and infidelity
is wrong, and how the new science can set us free.
I love that book.
She's currently working on a book about sexual autonomy and women in their 50s. Find more Wednesday at WednesdayMartin.com on
Twitter at WednesdayMartin on Instagram at WednesdayMartin PhD. Welcome to the show Gabrielle.
It is so wonderful to meet you. To start things off, I would love if you could read a part
of your viral Twitter thread for listeners who've not read it.
Also, for those listening, we will link the full thread in our show notes.
But before we ever start reading, I understand that we're only reading part of the thread, but to say that men are 100% responsible for 100% of unwanted
pregnancies could be like, Oh, God, I'm tuning out.
What is Emily talking about?
But I want you to listen for a minute because what we're saying here is that
There's really just no unwanted pregnancy unless a man ejaculates because pregnancy just can't happen without a sperm
And the other thing I want to say is if a penis ejaculates it has an orgasm
So there's an orgasm that happens no matter what
For a penis what I like about ejaculate responsibly is, no matter where you are, whether you're
pro-christ or pro-life, I thought this was so important because over all these years,
two decades of studying sex and human sexuality, I've never thought about it this way.
And since I'm so focused on pleasure and giving you ways to have more of it in your sex
life, well, the opposite about pleasure is worry and anxiety and specifically about pregnancy.
I just would love all the penis
havers to just think a little bit differently. Are there other options? You know, the condom,
share their responsibility for birth control, like paying for it, and one more thing that we've
established that men have an orgasm when they ejaculate, but most vulva owners don't have one.
During penetration, only 17% have one. So really this just sets up a new debate about pleasure and
responsibility, and I think you're going to find it fascinating.
I'm a mother of six and a Mormon. So I have a good understanding of arguments surrounding
abortion, religious and otherwise. I've been listening to men grandstand about women's
reproductive rights and I'm convinced men actually have zero interest in stopping abortion. Here's why,
if you want to stop abortion, you need to prevent unwanted pregnancies and men cause 100% of
unwanted pregnancies. No, for real, they do. Perhaps right thinking, it takes two and yes, it does
take two for intentional pregnancies, but all unwanted pregnancies are caused by the irresponsible ejaculations of men, period.
Don't believe me, let me walk you through it.
Let's start with this.
With rare exceptions, a woman's eggs are only fertile about two days each month, and that's
for a limited number of years.
That makes 24 days a year a woman is fertile, but men are fertile and can cause pregnancy 365
days a year. In fact, if you're a man
who ejaculates multiple times a day, you could cause multiple pregnancies daily. In theory, a man
could cause a thousand plus unwanted pregnancies in just one year. And though their sperm gets crappier
as they age, men can cause unwanted pregnancies from puberty till death. So just starting with
basic biology plus the calendar, it's easy to see men are the real issue here. Wow.
I mean, Mike drop. How have we not thought about this before? I mean, you really do go
on to just reframe the entire abortion debate without even talking about abortion entirely
and then to say like men are 100% responsible for unmodern pregnancies. I love how this is a complete
paradigm shift really, right? Because we used to think, oh man out of the goodness of their
harder, if they're allies or if they're good guys, they will join us in this fight, right? Because we
have to reestablish our rights after Rose then overtour. We just think they'll do this
out of goodness for their heart. You're saying, well, they should because they're responsible
for these pregnancies, but I love how you're inviting men to be more involved because
they're more responsible.
Right.
A lot of people get upset that I'm dealing with an absolute here,
that I say 100% of unwanted pregnancies,
the men cause all unwanted pregnancies.
But it's just a biological fact.
Ouvulation is involuntary.
We don't get to choose when we ovulate,
we have no control over that,
but ejaculation is totally voluntary.
Men impregnate, women are impregnated.
And I know, I know, I know, people just really want to say, it takes two.
It takes two.
And I want to say, sure, it takes two for sex.
Like, people are having sex all over the world right this minute.
I hope they're having a fabulous time.
And no unwanted pregnancies will occur unless a man decides to ejaculate your
spulphate. And anyway, so I just want to say like it doesn't take two to cause an
unwanted pregnancy. It takes two plus sperm. Now you wrote this Twitter thread in
2018 probably having no idea how it would become an even more urgent, right, and prescient, and necessary.
I know that the Twitter said got a lot of attention at the time, but then there was a reupping
of it because it was so very relevant.
Can you just talk about what the reactions were?
Yeah, so in 2018, I wrote it, or I actually wrote it before I published it a few months,
but I published it during or I actually wrote it before I published it a few months, but I published
it during the Kavanaugh hearings. I don't know if you remember the Kavanaugh hearings,
but there was a lot of, you know, male politicians talking about women's bodies, talking about,
um, just kind of lecturing women about abortion. And it was driving me absolutely bonkers. And
I'm like, I'm going to share this thread. And so I did, and the reaction was swift. It was super
fast. It took off immediately. And it was my very first Twitter thread. And so I did, and the reaction was swift. It was super fast. It took off
immediately, and it was my very first Twitter thread. So I didn't totally know how to handle it.
But it was amazing to me, like for sure people want to argue, but by far what I was seeing,
and this just could be my Twitter settings are sets, so I don't see the worst of it. But most people were very positive about it.
I mean, I was getting thank you notes and just like outpouring
the tears of like, oh, I have never even thought about like this.
I'm a feminist.
I try to advocate for myself.
And I've never even considered that holy cow, my husband
should really get a bisectomy.
We're done having kids.
It's his turn now.
And then men going, oh my goodness,
this is a huge perspective shift for me.
I'm gonna respond differently to my girlfriend
as far as supporting her in birth control.
What can I do to help?
What can I pay for?
And lots and lots of men saying,
I called my doctor, I made an appointment for vasectomy.
I'm gonna take responsibility for my body.
So the response has been wonderful. And then basically what happened is, that's three and a vasectomy. I'm going to take responsibility for my body. So the response has been wonderful.
And then basically what happened is, that's three and a half years ago.
Every time abortion has hit the news, which most recently was when Robi Wade was overturned,
but many times between that there, the threat would take off again.
And at some point, it sort of felt me like, surely everyone's seen this by now.
But it's amazing.
Every single day, I'll get tweets.
And I mean that literally, even now,
all these years later, where people are finding it
for the first time, and these ideas are still new to them.
And I'm so excited about the book coming out,
because it's just gonna be really accessible for people
in a way that Twitter isn't always.
Not everyone's comfortable reading a Twitter thread.
I mean, I really think the book
is breaking down like the biology. So people just understand that it's really in Twitter thread. I mean, I really think the book is breaking down like the biology.
So people just understand that it's really just the facts.
I mean, ever since I read it, my jaw dropped.
I was like, I can't stop thinking about it
because I was thinking about my whole process
of like, I was 18 years old.
I went to the gynecologist, I got my birth control,
I went up to college, I had a lot of side effects,
didn't really know it was birth control or not.
Over the years, I just thought I have to be on the pill or then when I was off the pill,
like, guiding it, condoms, I always had condoms, like, I just took it on. I didn't even question it.
To think that like, all these ways in my life and all the money I've spent, the doctor's
glaring at gynecologist, that just you just point out so many things that it really occurred to
me to ask my partner to contribute to pregnancy prevention, either by sharing the cost of birth control or simply just having a conversation about
who will be responsible. Condoms are easy, they're free, they're cheap, you know, like
everyone can have them if we would absolutely prevent all the unwanted pregnancies.
But you just start reading this, you're like, I don't even know what there is to argue about,
because basically you just, there's not, this isn't even really controversial. Like to me,
what is the controversy? It's like just new information and people should
be like, namaste, thank you, didn't know this.
Right. It is not controversial to say that in current practice, in current cultural
expectations, women do the work of pregnancy prevention period. And in the case that a pregnancy
occurs, women carry 100% of the burden for the pregnancy.
So all the worker pregnancy prevention and then all the work of dealing with the burden of a pregnancy.
Whether they decide to have an abortion, whether they decide to have the baby, whether they have a
miscarriage, they don't have a choice. They have to deal with this pregnancy that they did not cause.
You know, I want to say something that I so relate to what Emily said
that as a young woman you get indoctrinated into this belief system that since you're the one
who can get pregnant, right, and carry the pregnancy to term or not, it's all on you. And so another
cultural reflection of this burden is men who say, I don't want to wear a condom.
I don't like the way it feels, and I want to read another part of your Twitter thread
which you didn't get to, which is absolutely amazing to me.
You said, while we're here, let's talk a bit more about pleasure and biology.
Did you know that a man can't get a woman pregnant without having an orgasm?
Which means that we can conclude getting a woman pregnant is a pleasurable act for men,
but did you further know that men can get a woman pregnant without her feeling any pleasure
at all? In fact, it's totally possible for a man to impregnate a woman even while causing her excruciating pain.
Okay, the point being, wow, am I leaving the one who has to go there and cause me to get
the birth control and take care of it and worry about getting pregnant and blah blah blah.
Meanwhile, it's all pleasure for this guy, right?
And I love how you're just saying, can we just balance this equation?
Jesus, but okay, tell us in practical terms.
Did you ever hear guys say to you,
I don't wanna wear a condom,
it just doesn't feel good, say.
And I think every woman has heard that.
And in terms of ejaculating responsibly,
I feel like that utterance,
I don't want to wear a condom,
it doesn't feel good to me.
It gets to the heart in a way of what you're trying to reframe here.
Yeah, 100% and it's a very deep cultural thing.
Like, I didn't grow up. I grew up Mormon. We didn't talk a ton about sex in our community, in our home.
And I knew that men don't like condoms, or that that was the idea.
Like, I definitely knew that going into adulthood.
How would I even know that?
Like maybe movies, maybe music, I don't know.
But it's just this deep part.
And this is like long before I've ever had sex
or knew anything really about what that process is like
in real life.
I knew that there's this antagonistic view of condoms.
And it's interesting because I did not expect this,
but since I shared the thread and I have had thousands
of conversations about it since so many men have said,
oh, actually, condoms are fine.
You just have to practice.
Like, you need to like figure out what kind you want.
Like, make sure you don't have a late-texology,
figure out which lubrication works for you,
some men like lubrication inside the condom,
and outside the condom, you know, like practice.
And then they're telling me, it's like not a big deal.
In the thread I mentioned, like a pleasure scale.
I'm saying, okay, so men don't like to use condoms
because it doesn't feel as good.
But like, what does that mean?
Is it, if sex without a condom is a 10,
and like zero is neutral, and say a nice back rub is a five. Where does sex
with a condom fall? And I was guessing like seven, eight, you know, I don't know, I'm not a man.
So many men have replied saying, no, it's a 9.5, 9.8. Like once you know how to use a condom.
Yeah, it's so brilliant. I have to say that I love that part of the thread. I'm so glad they
read that here Wednesday because first off, my show is all about pleasure, right?
How do we get people to have more pleasure less pain?
Two things to say here, the majority of women are not going to have orgasms through penetration only 30%
Well, and they might have some pleasure to help but definitely not gonna have orgasms
You think that's the apex of pleasure?
100% of pregnancies pretty much are going to are caused by an orgasm of pleasure from
Penis owners as we say on the show To me it's like there's that's already
saying that women are starting in a deficit and then they're gonna get
pregnant and we know like it's joy to have a baby. I'll be having life in your
body but it's not always you know pleasurable. I mean I've had six babies. I
have experienced pregnancy lots of times. I had as normal in quotes pregnancy
like unabempful as you can have all six times
and still it scars your body there's huge amounts of pain you're incredibly uncomfortable it's it
causes permanent damage even in the most normal unabentful pregnancies it causes permanent damage and
we do not talk about that we act like I don I don't know, this part drives me crazy.
Anytime there's an abortion and conversation happening
and someone sort of casually suggesting
that women just need to carry out the pregnancy.
I'm like, do you not understand what a massive ask that is?
There's, it is a hugely, hugely damaging thing to a body.
It takes your body basically to the brink of death.
It maxes out every system in your body and then you have the baby. It's insane. And just for reference,
it is you're more likely to die from pregnancy in America right now than to die on the job
as a police officer. And you know, we talk about you're one and a half times more, like it's
significantly more. And for black women, it's even higher, right?
But it's much higher.
It's so dangerous to be a pregnant black woman in America right now.
And not just because of the pregnancy in childbirth,
which is so hard on your body,
but also because the number one cause of death of pregnant women is murder.
Like your most vulnerable time to just be a woman
is when you're pregnant.
It's a terrifying statistic and it's super real.
I don't know what you can say beyond that
that if that doesn't sort of like shift your perspective
on how dangerous pregnancy is, I don't know what else to say.
I mean, it's more dangerous than pretty much any job
we ask people to do.
And I know in our heads the most, you know, masculine jobs,
the really tough jobs seem like the most dangerous.
But 84% of women will have a baby.
And many of them more than one time.
And there is nothing that we ask men to do.
That we ask 84% of men to do,
that is even close to his dangerous.
There's just nothing.
You can say the military, you can say dangerous jobs,
but we don't ask 84% of men to do those things.
Not even close.
We don't ask 84% of men to have such a burden.
Like, have something on their body that we know,
it's gonna be incredible,
because you're gonna give life.
Like, we can all agree to that,
but you're gonna have a baby. But just the responsibility, and like what you're going to give life. Like we can all agree to that, but you're going to have a baby.
But just the responsibility.
And like what you're saying when it goes to your body and your health, like it's just
a huge undertaking.
It's not just like, hey, can you do this favor for me?
It's like, no, you're carrying a baby.
I want to circle back to one thing to do about condoms.
The interesting thing is we could prevent all these unwanted pregnancies because what I
love about this thread and what I love about what you were writing and your ejaculate
response to read in your book is that no matter what side
you're on pro life pro choice, we don't want to prevent unwanted pregnancies.
And so this is the way of doing it.
Condoms just had really good like the bad condom thing had a great PR because exactly what
you're saying, people just don't know how to do it right.
You got to put a little lube in it.
You got to find your right condom.
Late text condoms aren't great for everybody,
but once you find it, you're like,
oh, this is just it.
And you're still going to have an orgasm.
And maybe it's not a 10.
It's a 9.5.
But then you have to wear our pregnancies or STDs.
Like it just makes so much sense.
It makes so much sense.
It's so profound, but it's so simple.
I love Emily's point and your point, Gabrielle.
It's like most people don't know how to use condoms.
And I think this might be like an unexpected thing
that comes out of this whole Twitter thread
that you did in this whole reversal of grow.
And everything is that people are gonna have
to start finding pleasure in other ways.
And I love the very practical hacks
that you suggested Gabrielle and Emily and I suggest all the time.
Maybe you won't loop on the inside as well. Maybe you have a latex allergy experiment.
Try different condoms, but before we get to that point, what do we say to men
who say I don't like wearing a condom that doesn't feel good?
I want to know what you and Emily, how you would respond to that because I know that literally
millions of vulva and vagina and clit-habbers have encountered somebody saying that.
Like, is the thing to say, like, well, you know, you have to ejaculate responsibly.
Or what do we want women to say who find themselves
in that position, say the guy has not read ejaculate
responsibly, unfortunately, or been educated about it?
Let's talk about this very practical issue
that Bulba and vagina and clut have her space.
Two thoughts come to mind.
One is, and I'm gonna sort to quote myself of the thread probably badly.
At one point I say, so men are choosing to have connoissex, and by so doing, they're risking
the health, the career, the social status, the life of this partner they're having sex
with, and they're doing that in order to experience
slightly more pleasure.
Like that's like from 9.5 to 10.
Like that's really the decision that's happening there.
If you can help a man understand that,
that's the decision he's making.
Like you are about to risk my life.
You're about to risk my career,
my family relationships, everything,
my ability to earn money, so that you can experience slightly more pleasure for a few minutes.
Like not even for like the rest of your life. This is just a very short thing. If you can help understand that, that's great.
But the other thing that comes to mind is we don't always know how our partner is going to react to a question like that. There are a lot of women that don't feel safe
insisting on a condom,
even with someone that they're having a great time with.
And this is consensual sex,
and they're happy to be there,
because there's no way to know who is going to react
and anger.
We just don't know.
If we knew, obviously, we could avoid them.
And so it is tricky.
And I don't know the perfect thing to say
to convince someone
Because I think people have been in that position where they definitely feel pressure
I think it's fairly universal based on a lot of tweets
I see that go viral of someone saying actually men is you know refuse condoms all the time and lots of you know lots of people going
Yeah, yeah, I that's familiar. I mean so many people feel pressured to not use a condom.
And to, I don't know.
It's such a deep cultural thing, not just
that condom is bad, but that the man's pleasure,
the penis hovers pleasure, is the most important thing
in the sexual act.
It's really prioritized.
And I'm sure you guys can confirm, but like in
any historical sort of demonstrations of sex or descriptions of sex or even when they're
trying to do studies measuring how long does sex take, they measure that based on when the
man has an ejaculation. So sex begins and ends with the man. And obviously that's nonsense
with the man. And obviously that's nonsense. As the three of us all experience our bodies differently than that. And anyway, but we really do prioritize the man's experience. And
so it's thousand years or however many thousands of years of cultural baggage on our shoulders
telling us you got to prioritize this experience. So if he doesn't want to wear a condom, that's
a lot of pressure.
After the break, Gabrielle Wenzay and I break down how comprehensive sex education is vital to reducing unwanted pregnancies.
In the moment, it is very hard to say to somebody, use a condom because we are afraid to be like,
oh, you know, we've all heard the stories about people not wanting these condoms.
I don't want to be that person that he's going to yell at me or say something, but it goes
back to comprehensive sex education.
Like if we could just say in sex ed, like, here's the deal.
Like it's not just about vulva having people saying, I'm going to take birth control and
here's condoms.
They're actually like, it's almost like rebranding.
Like, it's almost like someone's got to just say,
it's okay and saying, and then it becomes expected
that you should always have condoms.
Because right now, I think it's been for years
that people don't, they just don't take it responsibly.
They just, everyone assumes that it's condoms,
make it like less enjoyable when really it just doesn't true.
I think it goes back to education
and it goes back to responsibility,
which I would love to see this in sex ed,
because what you're saying here is like,
I was thinking about it like a designated driver.
I was thinking like, if you're with a partner
and you're like, you think like someone's drinking,
someone's not like, who's gonna drive tonight?
Well, I'm gonna drive and you can have a cocktail
and I won't drive.
Like it's almost like that should be the conversation
about birth control. It's like, who's going to be responsible?
You know, well, I'm on the pill. Okay, well, I still care about STD. So then
you're going to wear a condom and you just talk about it like, okay, great. Now
we're going to go to dinner, we're going to go to a movie. The world I want to
see is we are talking about it that way that you realize that you're both
responsible. You can decide it any night. Who's going to take charge of it, right?
Like I'll bring the condoms and you bring the loob,
but the fact that women are just always responsible
just isn't fair.
What about saying, you know how a woman's most reliable
root to orgasm is not intercourse, right?
Only the statistic that I use is from
Debbie Herbeneck's study that 17% of women can have an
orgasm from penetration alone, right?
And you talked about the scavriel.
When the way we define sex is we define sex as the woman, sorry, the man, you know, getting
off.
But the kind of sex that gets men off is not the kind of sex that gets women off.
Oh, God bless.
If you're in the 17%,
and you can enjoy that, have fun with that.
But what we know is that orgasm is not the most reliable
root to orgasm for women by a long shot,
but it is for men.
And I think Emily and Gabrielle,
part of what we have to do is redefine sex, right?
Because to talk about how it can be dangerous for women
to say, well, then you have to wear a condom.
Or it's dangerous for women to say, no condom, no sex.
I mean, I guess one thing that I tell people who ask me
about this, whether it's men having sex with men
or women who have sex with men is, I just say, okay,
then we won't have that kind of sex.
We'll have all the other kinds of sex, right?
And personally, I would want to have sex with a guy who cared so little.
And I also really don't want to be the educator about it, right?
And try to educate the guy about the burdens to my body and how, because those are very good points. But like, it's just so funny how your book can change
things by drawing men into the, the, the circle of responsibility for this. But it can also
free women from the burdens of having to ask and negotiate and educate.
I just want to say thank you so much.
Thank you, Ruby Millen, to discuss it.
I love it so much.
I mean, I totally agree that the burden should be on women
to educate their partner,
especially right as they're about to have sex,
such as does not seem fair.
And to your point earlier, Emily,
sex ed needs to be vastly different. I actually have
a big section on that in the book and throughout the book. I push condoms so much and talk about
also other benefits like, you know, women's birth control options don't protect from STIs.
But condoms do. They protect both partners. Anyway, so I really push condoms, but I talk a lot about
the sex said. And it's even better than whatever you're imagining.
Like, good sex ed reduces unwanted pregnancies so effectively.
And we know this from places like Holland,
like the Netherlands, where they have just really,
really fact-based sex ed, and they do it every year of school.
It's not just in fifth grade, which is kind of the standard
in the US.
It's every year.
Kids can ask whatever questions. It's, again, all fact-based, all very straightforward.
And the number of unwanted pregnancies for teens in the Netherlands compared to the US is just
comically different. Like, there's almost nothing compared to what's happening in the US. And
then we have states in the US where there's at least 11 states right now that don't require any sex
ed. There are some states that only require abstinence teaching and others that have this very, very
restricted curriculum where they're really not going to talk about all of sex but just like little
of one very specific sex act. And we just need to be better because education does work and we know
that. And so if you're someone that wants to see
abortions reduced and I know that's not a goal for everyone but if it is a goal for you
making sure there's really good sex that programs in schools is a way to do that you know
incredibly effective way without controlling anyone's bodies it's beautiful. And the other
thing we know that works if you you want to reduce unwanted pregnancies,
is free birth control.
We've seen it done.
They did it in Colorado, they've done it,
and I wanna say St. Louis,
but I know in Colorado, it reduced unwanted pregnancies
and abortions by 50%.
And they didn't even run the program that long.
Like we know it works.
And if we can make birth control so easy to get,
every form, every kind, it's free, it's accessible,
it's everywhere, then a lot of this goes away,
a lot of this debate, a lot of this battle goes away.
And I'm personally someone that,
I mean, I'm very pro choice.
I want there to be little abortion for anyone
who needs it always. At the same time, I have experienced pro choice. I want there to be legal abortion for anyone who needs it always.
At the same time, I have experienced pregnancy and did not enjoy it.
So, I would be delighted to see unwanted pregnancies go down because that means that people aren't
being subjected to experience that they did not choose, that they did not want to have.
And the first part of the pregnancy was always the most difficult for me.
Well, except the childbirth itself.
And if I could help anyone be able to avoid that experience,
I would be so glad for that.
That would be amazing.
Well, I think you are.
I think this book will, because I think what we're saying it,
and then the Dutch countries, which I think are really the only place we can point to
that are really doing it well, they do it every year, and they talk about pleasure,
which is something that we don't do anywhere else.
So I think if you bring pleasure into the equation and you really reframe, rebrand the
use of condoms where it's actually pleasurable, we aren't using them right, then if you put
pleasure in the equation as inequality thing too, like we want everyone to have equal pleasure,
then think about it.
Kids are learning this at a very younger age, so it just becomes common sense, then you
wouldn't have sex
that didn't have pleasure for all.
It's like saying, you know, going out of date
and the penis owner's like, I'm getting a meal
and you're just gonna sit there and drink water
and like you wouldn't do that.
You wouldn't say like, I'm gonna have a delicious meal
and you're just gonna sit there and stare at me while I eat.
And essentially that's how sex has been going down.
It's like someone's eating,
someone's just sitting in their chair.
It's not equal.
It's not fair.
And so if we really understood pleasure,
like that's why we're having sex.
In fact, most of us aren't having sex for procreation.
We're actually having it for pleasure,
but it's gotten so complicated.
So I think this just the facts of this,
which just haven't been cleared to anybody, I don't think.
I love that analogy of pleasure being like one person
at the meal, right?
Not eating.
You know, if men want pleasure, there is another,
and then they think that condoms are so horrible,
which we're learning that many men don't,
but what sticks out in our mind is them,
and probably, or the penis average who refused them.
An incredible thing is that I was reading recently a report that there has been a dramatic
increase in requests for bisectamies.
We know there are responsible men out there.
We know there are men who are willing to ejaculate responsibly, and we know that they're showing
it by going out and getting besectamies because a lot of men don't want to create unwanted
pregnancies.
But, you know, for these guys who hate condoms, there's another option, right?
You could get a besectamie.
Can you talk a little bit about that Gabrielle?
Yeah, so I am a big fan of the sanctumies and I can tell you from personal experience.
I got to choose when I have my babies. I'm very grateful for birth control. I got to choose
every time I want to be pregnant, but I hated birth control. I've tried every kind, starting
similar to your experience, Emily, like starting with the pill and having side effects and then I
tried the shot and we tried the ID, anyway, it all, and I had issues with every single thing.
Not so much that I wasn't like to use it,
I really loved having the control of deciding when I was going to have a baby.
But then after we were done and I knew it was the last baby,
my husband got a bisectomy and it just,
I can't tell you how
what an amazing thing it is.
Not only is it like a really simple procedure
the healing's really quick,
there's a,
like you basically like a funny like side story
is that a lot of men schedule bisectamies
during March madness
because they know they're just gonna be sitting on the couch
for a few days.
So like anyway, it's a very easy, easy,
you know, kind of healing time.
But it's also, it's not just that it's incredibly effective,
which it is, it's that it removes this psychological burden
that you're carrying around,
and you've been carrying around for decades,
or whenever you first started using birth control.
And it's lifted from you.
The doctor's appointments, the getting the prescriptions
refill, the trying, you know, trouble shooting
when it's not working well.
It all just goes away.
And that's a really common thing if you talk to couples
where the man had a sex me
or one of them had a sex me,
they universally talk about how their sex like improved.
Like they had more sex that it was more freeing
that there just wasn't a burden hanging over them.
And not, I don't know, I'm just a huge fan of them.
One interesting thing about the sex me is, you've heard of stories, I'm sure, where
I mean, I get to the sex amie and then ends up with a new partner and they want to have
a baby and so he gets a reversed.
And they are quite reversible, like 75% if you need it within the first three years and
then it can go down.
But those are kind of old statistics, Like Stanford Medical Center is right on their website
is saying they're getting 95% reversal rates,
even if it happened 20 years before, long-light,
there's doesn't matter how long it was.
And then I started looking, there's a place in Arizona
that also publishing results that they're saying
they're getting 99% now.
You need a skilled surgeon surgeon I don't know
that everyone has access to someone that can do this but I with the increased demand in
vasectomies that we're seeing I think we're going to get better surgeons at this if they know
people want vasectomies and then they're getting I assume they'll also get increased demands for
reversals as people change their minds and life changes. I think those statistics aren't just going to be at Stanford. They're going to be
widely available because I mean, the same way that all of a sudden there were a million plastic
surgeons when there was a boom in plastic surgery, I'd love to see a boom and really skilled
the sector me doctors because it would be amazing if men really could go get a bisectomy, have it reversed when
they don't have kids, get it again and done. Like that would be amazing if that was really a feasible
thing. And right now it's not, but we're not that far from it. Yeah, I think it'd be life changing.
And bisectomy versus IUD, I just want to say this, it's not standard for women to receive pain
meds. We're getting an IUD, but it is standard for men to receive pain meds, well getting an IUD, but it is standard for men to receive
pain meds and be knocked out for a vasectomy. Like, why is that?
I mean, we have a paternalistic medical system, with things women cannot make decisions about
our own bodies. That's the that's the larger answer. But it isn't saying, now, IUD, you'll hear
different stories when you talk to women, I know you guys talk to women all the time. Some women don't experience that much pain and insertion,
but a lot of women do.
And some women experience it to a point
that they're like, oh, I was off the pain chart
for an hour, like it was horrible.
And there are some issues there.
They've tried different pain meds.
I mean, this is pretty recent.
They weren't administering any.
They would just say, it's just a pinch.
It was not a pinch for me.
It was incredibly painful.
But anyway, they have started tying some pain meds.
And the only thing that really works when you're doing IUD
is general anesthesia.
Like it's that painful.
It's the only thing that really knocks it out.
But general anesthesia is its own risky procedure.
So right now, women aren't really given the choice.
You don't get to choose, like, do I want to risk
the general anesthesia or do I want to
risk?
And maybe it won't hurt me.
So we can try that.
They aren't really given the choice.
The choice is made for them and just like, hope it doesn't hurt them.
Like, there's just like almost no concern for them.
And of course, you have to accept me that always, like 100% of the time has pain really
administered.
And it's just a local anesthetic.
It's so simple.
It's not a big deal.
But that's a pretty routine thing
that we just expect women to endure pain.
Like that's just like, well, they'll just deal with it.
I mean, consider again, childbirth,
which is part of this conversation.
The beginning and end of your pain relief
in childbirth, you know, you just had a baby.
Like this is this very traumatic experience to your body.
And the pain relief is, okay, to have an Advil,
but not too much, we don't wanna poison your breast milk.
Like that's it, that's your pain meds
after getting birth, you get an Advil.
And that's just, again, this expectation
that women will be happy to endure painful things.
And we have been, I don't know that we've been happy to,
we didn't really have a choice,
but we do have a history of enduring painful things.
Like that's just...
Yes.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, in this country, we have medical students
in this country now and doctors who believe
that black women have a higher threshold for pain
than white women, and that women's pain in general
doesn't matter.
These incredibly ignorant beliefs that they do seem very linked to this idea of prioritizing
male pleasure and that enduring a pregnancy is just a woman's burden, right?
And so let's not think about what it actually entails.
But I love how this idea of ejaculate responsibly, get a
bisect to me, give women the pain relief they need and deserve if they're
getting an IUD inserted, and think about the burdens on a women's body of
pregnancy. I love how all these are subtle and not so subtle ways of saying
like women's pleasure feeling good for women
let alone you know not having a terrible trauma to their body in an unwanted pregnancy and to
our minds and to us psychologically. I think your message over and over again is not just for men
to take responsibility but you're really simple message that like almost made me cry honestly. It's how you just say over and over in so many different ways women matter
Women's experiences matter women's pleasure matters and how the hell are women gonna have pleasure
If men are ejaculating irresponsibly and
We all want to be responsible right? I always say we all want to be good partners to each other
So we're just giving you more information here.
There's like nothing to argue out here.
The other thing I want to talk about here is like,
I love that you brought up how society expects women
to want to procreate as like the duty of just being alive.
So that's also really a harmful assumption
that that's the reason why we're exactly
we should all be there.
I mean, I know that I've chose to never. I always knew that children was not in my bucket list,
wasn't my priority.
And I think that's changing right now for a lot of you,
maybe younger generations are, but really, it was always like,
I had to say, well, but I love kids, don't get me wrong.
Like, I can be around your children.
I'm not a bad person that I don't want that,
but let's talk about it from an expectation.
To be 100% an expectation. And you should not have to defend your choice to want to be
a parent or not be a parent. Like that's a super normal thing. Like lots of people don't want to
be parents. And for good reason, it's really, really hard. And like not everyone is drawn to that.
Great. But there is an expectation. You really do see it come out in abortion debates
and abortion discussions,
like that somehow this is it,
this is the purpose of women's existence.
It breaks people's brains, the idea that a woman would be
impregnated and not wanna have that baby,
like, well, what's wrong with her?
Doesn't she have an instinct to become a mother
and no, for sure, we don't,
like not everybody, and neither do men to be fathers. Like, that's not an instinct for everybody,
but the assumption that it is for women is just, it's just universal and it truly like people can
always wrap their head around it. That's, that there's a, the women can exist and have a purpose and have wonderful lives
without ever being pregnant and that's without ever even wanting to be pregnant.
I love this point. It's so related to everything you say about choice. The more men step up,
the more choices women have, right? And of course, the road thing is about conscripting women's choice and this idea that
women's, I think you're so right, but the idea that these people have a lot of times is this,
it's not just that it's a retrograde idea. It's an incorrect idea that women evolved to carry
every pregnancy to term because that's the way the human species works. I mean, I know as an anthropologist, I take a very kind of long view of these things. Never in our history,
in our evolutionary history, never was there a time when female hominins or female
homeless sapiens. There was never never time when they were not very strategically
deciding whether to carry a pregnancy to term,
whether to take care of an offspring or not.
We evolved to be super facultative
about these things and strategic, right?
So when these people start talking about how it's
the natural thing, I say, you literally don't know
what you're talking about.
Every single species that evolves successfully So when these people start talking about how it's the natural thing, I say, you literally don't know what you're talking about.
Every single species that evolves successfully, if you will, and it's here.
It's here because the mother just to be decided, you know what?
I'm not going to invest in this brood of chicks this time because there are not enough
berries and lorms, right?
Or female hominins deciding, we don't like this,
but they did not decide every single time
to burden themselves and their future offspring
if they had an offspring that was not gonna make it.
So when people say this is the natural thing
and women should be and we evolve for this,
they are completely wrong.
We have been trying to circumvent pregnancy, prevent pregnancy, and balance our own needs
with those of our offspring and potential future offspring, or not having them literally
forever.
So I love that this idea of asking men to
ejaculate responsibly. It actually fits into a deep groove in
us. As long as we've been able to become pregnant, we've
been working on avoiding it, reducing the burdens to
ourselves, and negotiating and finding end runs around it. So
when people tell you that a woman carrying a pregnancy to
term every time is natural, they, you can tell you that a woman carrying a pregnancy to term every time is natural,
you can tell them that they're absolutely wrong.
And you know, this idea of men stepping up that people do have this idea still.
You know, it's so linked to what Emily said.
Emily, when you said like you made a choice not to have children and then you felt like you had to apologize for it,
it's like if men were ejaculating responsibly, it wouldn't even be a question.
It's like, obviously, this is a choice every time, right? And penis adversive part of this equation.
All right, I have two kids. I went through three pregnancies and I know how burdensome they were on my body. I want to talk
about as a mom, how am I going to talk to my boys about this? They're 14 and 21. I
want Gabrielle and Emily's thoughts on, you know, not just talking to
her, I could generally about sex, but about ejaculating responsibly because they
have penises. How do I do this and how do listeners do this? Gabrielle, how do you do this?
Yeah, you saw, I can, I mean, I found this accidentally
by writing this thread.
My oldest child was 20 at the time.
I first wrote that thread or published this thread.
And the youngest was nine.
And of course, at the time, no one had any idea,
like my kids had no idea that their mother would be like
talking about the details of like how pregnancies
are caused on public platforms all the time, right?
Like that I would be writing about
a response to what I had, the calculations.
But I write about it so straightforwardly in the thread.
And so I mean, I feel like I write about it intentionally
in like the least sexy way possible.
I'm just gonna like tell you the stats,
tell you the details.
I'm like middle age mom,
let me just lay this all out for you
in this very practical way, right?
And because of that,
I have heard from many parents
that they have just read this read
and read this to their teens.
And I've had an
college professor that have added it to textbooks. It's actually really approachable for teenagers
and I can tell you the book is even more so like I intentionally wrote it with my kids in
mind with teenagers in mind. I'm picturing health classes and picturing discussions with parents.
It says all the words that can make people uncomfortable. I know people don't like to say penis.
They don't like to save a giant. I don't like to say bull. I know that. It says all the words,
but in just the most straightforward way that it's like, you know, it doesn't feel threatening.
It doesn't feel as weird as it think it might be. And people have had a great success just
might be. And people have had a great success just reading it aloud as a family. Like as weird as that sounds like, Oh,
okay, let's just talk about this. Let's just lay it out.
Dinner's going to be so interesting tonight. I'm going to read
you guys a Twitter. But yes, I love that idea. I'm going to do
it at Shabbat. The next time I have everybody here for Shabbat.
We're going to do something special tonight for Shabbat.
Go ahead, like me, handle us, and then, Elliot, my 21 year old, you're gonna read this.
Or Lyle, my 14 year old, you're gonna read this.
Go ahead, read.
Oh, that's gonna be awesome.
And of course they might be surprised to hear this from their mom at first or from their
dad at first or someone they're not used to talking about this with, but there's also
something to be able to say, well, look at Twitter. Lots of people have read this. Lots of people
are, I've talked about this, we can handle it too. Like, it's okay. It's not, you don't have
to be freaked out by this. Going back to the thread because I feel like I, again, just
so it's not controversial, the way I mean, it is controversial, but it is so straightforward
a matter of fact. And so I, you've heard every argument in the book, I'm sure not every, I've heard
you a bunch of interviews saying, like, yeah, people get to the second tweet.
They're like, I am not 100% responsible.
They don't read the whole thing.
But it's like, what, I don't really know, I know you're reading a book about this.
We're going to read it.
But how would you argue with this?
Like, in a way, it's like, just more facts.
Like, I just feel like the whole world, everyone's minds going to be blown open by this.
I hope that they're going to say, Oh, wow, I know I'm already thinking about it. In all
of my interactions, everyone I talk to is like, it just sort of blows up and everything
that we believe to be true and it isn't. I think we should all just be like, thank gratitude
for you. But what's the main argument against it?
Sure. So the main argument, and I'm like not even not suffering all the main argument, and I'm not even not satirizing all the main argument by far, by far, by far, is just that I say 100%, that I say all men 100%, like all among one of parentheses.
No one wants to hear that.
And I'll even respond to them and say, okay, let's say 98% because if you use condoms correctly, they're 98% effective.
So let's say 98% and I'm just rounding it to 100%.
No, they just, they're just really effective. So let's say 98% and I'm just rounding it to 100. No, they just,
they're just really bothered by that. Interestingly, if they will read the whole thread, which most
it like, remember, Twitter's a fine place. And people are just like literally there to argue.
That's why they come to Twitter. Fine, no problem. So no, it's not come to Twitter for that.
Fine. But anyone who actually reads the thread, I don't really have anyone argue with it.
If they've read the thread,
I don't have anyone that's just like,
they might say, oh, I think this statistic is different,
or this is updated, or whatever.
Fine. But no one really has argued me on that.
They only argue if they get stuck on that,
this claim, which I intentionally made very bold,
and I'm trying to drop people in,
this claim about 100%.
And in the book, I was actually,
I mean, I mentioned it in the introduction, but then I actually pushed the argument farther
into the book so that you can get there and already have a lot of knowledge behind you before you
get to the argument I make that's like men cause all and one dependencies. And that was intentional.
I hope that it will get people into the book further
because they're pro-choice, if they're anti-abortion,
people love this thread.
Everyone gets the idea of prevention.
Everyone gets the idea of like, oh yeah, that makes sense.
Instead of yalling it women,
it's a walking to an abortion clinic,
which is obviously not gonna be effective.
Why don't we just prevent the unwanted pregnancy
from happening at all?
Like why not? It just makes sense to everybody. So if you can get people to read the thread
or get people to read the book, I hope, it really, there isn't a lot of argument. Like, they really
get converted quite quickly. And I hope that I corrected for that in the book, you know, where
people were getting stuck so quickly. I hope I corrected for that in the book. We will find out.
We'll see how it's received. But I
did try to do that. Okay. When does the book about? Book is out October 4th, but you
can pre-order it now. It's on everywhere you order books. You can touch your local
bookstore. They can get it. Anyone can get it right this minute.
You guys as an author, I want to say it is so important to pre-order a book. Like, if you are
as passionate about this idea and this real
paradigm shift as Emily and I are pre-order this book, I am pre-ordering 10 copies because I want
publishers to understand, I want Gabrielle's editor to know, I want the Amazon algorithm to know
that this is a really important issue that manage calculate responsibility, that we unburden women I'm going to preorder a whole bunch of copies as soon as we're done recording because it's such an important book.
Thank you, Renzi. That means a ton. You're exactly right. Of course pre-orders mean a huge difference
in whether the book is seen by the most amount of people. So thank you.
Okay, we're going to do that. We're going to do some giveaways. We'll do the whole thing.
Because I just want to say to people, we're going to do it. And I want people to read this because
this one more thing that came to mind is that people are still, because we didn't read the whole thread,
just that people understand that I believe that once people grasp this concept about ejaculating responsibly, we're not just like in any way saying that if you
have a pain as your 100% responsible, you're at blame, we're not even making you feel
about it.
In fact, I think this could be like a huge sigh of relief.
Like, every time I had sex, you know, I didn't know with a vulva.
I didn't know like what was going to happen.
And I worried like what's the the pill to the con of break? Like it's literally takes to being control.
You can actually enjoy sex more when you actually are certain
about who's in charge and who's taking control responsibility.
And even feel that conversation ahead of time,
it's like the consent conversation.
Like once you know what's happening,
then we can have the best, most pleasure,
possible and have incredible sex. So I just think as someone who's been studying sex for a long time,
I know when they feel this as well, it's a game changer for sex education.
And I really hope that we see this in schools and the literature that we're
people talking to their kids about. We're like, I don't know how to talk to my kids about sex.
Or I can't talk to my boys about it. We'll talk about this. Like
you're telling them not to pee on the seat.
Don't pee on the toilet seat and ejaculate responsibly.
Like, it just becomes part of the argument.
So part of the conversation.
It's so true.
You're changing the way that we talk about sex
to the pleasure.
If I could just say one last thing, you know how
there are so many penis averts who God blessed them?
They care a lot about their partners orgasm.
If you, as you do in your thread, explain to them that part of a vulva havers pleasure.
And a vagina has pleasure.
It's taking off the plate of fear of getting knocked up from this pleasure. It's taking off the plate of fear of getting knocked up from this pleasure.
You are going to give her such a better chance of having a pleasurable experience than you
would otherwise. You know, some men's egos get really involved in they say making a woman come. Okay, fine, hook
into it. You want to help a woman come? Make her feel comfortable that this is going
to be all about pleasure, not about a potentially unmarked pregnancy. God bless you Gabriel.
I love that. Gabriel, thank you so much for being here. We so appreciate you. I'm going
to ask you the five quicky questions we ask all of our guests. Oh, OK. They're just quick.
And you can answer them however words come to mind.
OK, the first one is, what is your biggest turn on?
Basically, any time I have to make some laughs.
We go to bed and he starts making a laugh.
I'm just so turned on, I love it.
The biggest turn off.
I mean, exhaustion just tired busy days.
But my mind is like won't relax.
What makes good sex?
I love sex and for me, it's such a positive experience.
It's like I feel really good physically.
I have someone saying really nice things to me.
It's just this super positive, wonderful thing.
I love it.
What's the number one thing that you wish everyone knew about sex?
That's a great question.
I guess I just want, especially young people to know that if they just want to have happy
sex that maybe isn't as adventurous as it looks in the movies, that's just fine.
If both people feel great while they're having sex, that's a wonderful, wonderful thing
and you don't even have to go beyond that.
Something you would tell your younger self about sex and relationships.
I would just say it's your relationship and what it looks like and how it's functioning.
So much of that is a choice. Choosing to like love your partner every day to get up and
think about the best things about them and why you love them and appreciate what they breathe
the table. Like you get to choose that and you can really improve
your relationship if you do choose that and you have to
choose it every day and that's a good thing.
Thank you. That's great.
Thank you so much for being here.
So appreciate you.
Thank you so much.
I love this conversation.
That's it for today's episode.
See you on Friday.
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