Sex With Emily - It’s Open (Relationship) Season w/ Dr. Wednesday Martin
Episode Date: August 10, 2022Let’s talk about non-monogamy! In the nearly two decades since I’ve been doing the show, I’ve never gotten so much interest in this topic as I am right now. Which is why I’m joined t...oday by cultural anthropologist Dr. Wednesday Martin, who in addition to researching non-monogamy for her books and articles, has first-hand experience opening up her own marriage. On today’s episode, Wednesday reveals what modern sex research shows about female sexuality and long-term, monogamous relationships: a woman’s desire typically wanes between year 1 to 4. In addition, Wednesday and I discuss the difference between non-monogamy, swinging and polyamory, how to go about finding a partner outside of your primary relationship, how to set rules, and the surprising ways opening up improved her own partnership. Show Notes:More Wednesday Martin: Website | Instagram | Twitter | YoutubeUntrue by Wednesday Martin7 Myths of Non-MonogamyFeeldOpening Up by Tristan TaorminoOpen Monogamy: A Guide to Co-Creating Your Ideal Relationship Agreement by Tammy NelsonThe Ethical Slut: A Guide to Infinite Sexual PossibilitiesOpen Deeply: A Guide to Building Conscious, Compassionate Open RelationshipsCrazy on the Inside: A Memoir of Nobody SpecialPolysecure: Attachment, Trauma and Consensual Non MonogamyThe Anxious Person’s Guide to Non-Monogamy: Your Guide to Open Relationships, Polyamory and Letting GoMore Than Two: A Practical Guide to Ethical Polyamory Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Everybody I know who opened up their relationship successfully said at the beginning, oh no, I could
never do that.
And I count myself among those people.
I wouldn't want anybody to think that because I'm in an open marriage, I'm advocating
more for other people.
I just want people to have a lot of options on the table.
And I love what you said.
So many things you can do.
Lou, my new Lou, my new sex toy, watching porn together, going to a sex party
but not participating. Right? There's so many things that you can do to get variety and novelty
and excitement into a long-term relationship when I love that you talked about it.
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. Let's talk about non-monogamy.
Because here's the thing, in the nearly two decades since I've been doing this show, I've
never gotten so much interest in this topic as I am right now.
Which is why I'm so excited to be joined today by cultural anthropologist Dr. Wenzay Martin,
who in addition to researching non-monogamy for books and articles, she also has first-hand
experience opening up her own marriage.
So, in today's episode, Wenzai reveals what modern sex research shows about female sexuality and long-term monogamous relationships.
For example, did you know a women's desire typically wanes between year one to four?
Wenzai and I also discussed a different to Chi Nga Banagami swinging in Pali Amri.
How to go about finding a partner outside of your primary relationship, how to set rules,
and the surprising ways opening up improved her own partnership.
Alright, intentions with Emily for each episode join me in setting an intention.
What do you want to get out of this episode?
How could it help you?
Well my intention is to help make this topic seem a little less scary.
Listen, Nam Monogamy isn't for everyone. I get it. But it could speak to you very deeply.
And by the end of this episode, I think you'll feel empowered by the data and what it reveals
about our adaptability and sexual creativity as human beings. Please rate and review
Sex with Emily wherever you listen to the show. My new article, The Seven Myths of Non-Monagamy, 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, leave me your questions, or message me at sexwithemily.com.sext.emily.
Or call my hotline 559-TalkSex, or 559 559 825 5739. Just include your name, your
age, where you live and how you listen to the show and it's totally cool to change your
name or remain anonymous. Alright everyone, enjoy this episode. Before we get into this amazing interview with Wednesday, I want to share some rules that
she actually put in place in her relationship when it became non-monogamous.
We didn't get to this in the episode, but I wanted to share it with you now.
So number one was no kissing.
She said that fell by the wayside after a few months, which by the way, to see you know,
it's good to have some rules when you start, but the couples who are successful in opening up
relationships often adapt and change their rules as they go. Okay, her second one was condoms,
and she says we've always stuck to that. Number three, sex only no feels, so no feelings, and she
said that fell by the wayside pretty quickly too. Number four was in our house is okay
but not in our bed. Number five always check in and keep the other informed. So check in with each
other how it's going, maybe after the date or maybe like in the middle of the date or the next morning,
just keep checking in and stay in contact. Number six was do whatever I want without checking in
or permission while traveling. So traveling they were able to do what they want to do.
So those are the rules she wanted to share.
Also, we're going to have some great resources on this topic, which we will include in the
show notes.
So please check those out.
Dr. Wenzay Martin is a social scientist with a background in anthropology and primatology,
a feminist cultural critic and, number one, New York Times bestselling author, who focuses on
gender, motherhood, parenting, and female sexuality. She is the author of Untrue,
why nearly everything we believe about women, less than infidelity is wrong, and how the new science
can set us free. She's currently working in a book about sexual autonomy and women in their 50s.
Find more Wednesday at WednesdayMartin.com. I'm Twitter at WednesdayMartin or Instagram,
WednesdayMartin, PhD.
If so many questions for you that I realize
that so many of you now are interested
in actually alternate relationships,
now I'm not.
And they believe that it's just for certain types of people
and they've all these judgments right,
or beliefs right, but I'm true. Yeah, there's a lot of myths on, first of all right or beliefs right. Yeah, really interesting.
I'm true.
Yeah, there's a lot of myths on,
first of all, you're right.
I moved to LA in December of 2020
with my whole family became for the holiday.
And then the holiday was over
and I had always wanted to live in LA.
But I had stayed in New York for the sake of my career
for the sake of my family for the sake of my marriage
for the sake of my career, for the sake of my family, for the sake of my marriage, for the sake of appearances.
And during COVID, we came here, like I said,
for the winter holiday, and my family was going back
and my husband said, I know you want to stay.
My youth is stay.
And we first thought I would stay for a month or whatever.
And I've been here for year and a half.
So when you and I first met up in LA,
I was at the beginning of being in what some people I know call a partnership. You and
your partner are partners, but you live apart. And then some people call it living apart
together, LATRs, living apart together relationships. So yeah, when you and I first met,
I was at the beginning of that journey
of being in a living apart together relationship
or in a partnership after basically 20 years
of a very traditional marriage.
And then what I've never talked about ever,
this is the first time I've ever spoken publicly
about being in an openly non-menogamous
marriage, which is something that we started in 2019, I believe. I'd love to know about your
journey into now, not be what sparked it, how it evolved. I think it'd be so helpful for everybody.
How did you do that? Yeah, sure. I'm always happy to talk about the personal in order
to kind of illustrate the data or to be an end of one,
especially when there are a lot of data
to go alongside of it.
But yeah, like I said, I've never
have spoken about this publicly ever.
Of course, I would do it on your podcast first.
This would be the place to do it
because you're such a great interviewer and you're so compassionate and curious about where people's
desires take them and how the sexuality and relationships are just a total adventure. So thank you
for handing me on to talk about it first of all. And yeah, what I would say is that I was in a very
And yeah, what I would say is that I was in a very traditional, exclusive marriage for the better part of two decades.
It really suited me.
I started writing my book on True and I started reviewing
the data about just what happens in relationships over time
and how desire among men,
if you're in a heterosexual couple,
tends to add more slowly and female desire,
you know, tends to draw.
I don't wanna skate over that real quickly
because I know that was one of the main points
in your book that I thought was like a huge myth.
We often believe that it's the other way around.
So what we know from numerous well designed
large and totaling studies, two German studies, studied by Christian Mark in the United States, a
very comprehensive study by Cynthia Graham in the UK, an important study by a
Finnish sex researcher named Anna Kaganst in Finland obviously, it's just
finished. And what these studies find over and over and in some, you know, these
studies looked at the experiences of tens of thousands of people across a broad range of ages.
And they found a very interesting fact about what guys, desire and a heterosexual, exclusive,
co-habiting relationship will stay pretty steady. It'll end slowly over the course of 9 to 12 years.
Whereas for women, it's very, very normal for straight women in co-habiting,
exclusive relationships to experience a steep drop in desire in years 1 to 4.
Now this is what led so many people that I interviewed for my book on True to tell me so many
experts said to me our cultural narrative is wrong because monogamy is really a much much tighter
shoe for women. And I found that also, you know anecdotally among men and women that I interviewed.
So, yeah, there's a lot of our beliefs about sexuality, especially the gender difference.
Yeah, they're myths.
Right.
Talk to you about alternatives.
Like, what do we do?
What do we do that is?
Yes, exactly.
So, what are the solutions to that, right?
One of the things that women end up doing is they end up having something called service
sex, right?
They have this 100% normal drop in desire for their long-term partner with the years one to four.
And literally everyone in that I interviewed for I'm sure you reported that.
And then so they say, well, but I know that sex is good for my marriage, for my partnership,
for whatever. So let me keep having it. And we call it service sex because
it's sex that women are having a long-term exclusive cohabiting partnerships in service
of their marriages, in service of their partners, in service of the social contract that tells
them that you have to keep having sex even if you don't want it. It's like going to the gym
once you get there, you'll enjoy it., blah, blah, all the things we say.
So they end up having service sex, which isn't pleasurable.
And what we really want to do,
and I think I can speak for both of us,
I think we're both on a mission for women and men alike
to be having less service sex
and to be having more of the kind of sex
that they find pleasurable and exciting.
And to facilitate conversations
and about alternatives, exactly, exactly what you said.
So I would say to people who came to me
after a lecture about untrue or tough
or whatever a salon that I did,
they would say, yeah, but what can we do?
Right?
There are so many options on the table.
Not everybody's gonna want to open up their relationship.
You know, we know that one of the things that women really need is they really have an evolved appetite for sexual variety and novelty.
And if they don't get it, they shut down and start doing service sex and think they don't like sex.
But it's really just that they don't like having sex with the same person over and over and over and over and over again after one to four years
So just makes it up a little bit even though we're told that it's man
But I'm also thinking a partner who knows is going into it could also say okay, we know this is gonna happen
What can we do?
This isn't this isn't a catastrophe. Nobody's to blame. Do you know how many people I know?
I know so many people who blow up their marriages
Because after years one to four the woman being a normal human woman is like
You know in the aggregate, right? We're tired because that's what we do in social science to talk about in the aggregate most people
They're exceptions, but so many people blow up their marriages. They get divorces
They just so they can have sex with new people, just so they can be into sex again.
And so I'm on a real mission for helping people understand
like you can have exciting sex again.
You just have to find out ways to engineer
novelty and variety and excitement.
And that might mean remaining monogamous.
And it might mean something else,
but there are tons of options.
What we're saying here is what we're just going to talk to is about, is just how you kind
of came to this and what it looks like.
Because we're also going to get into and define whether it's open or swinging.
There are just so many different ways to kind of find that variety and also a lot of these
enhance intimacy.
But just to close this loop about the one year or one to four for a moment,
what you can do if you're like,
well, I won't even know how to miss.
I just want that dessert of Saturday with my partner.
Well, then it's all the things that I talk about
when they talk about on the show all the time is,
the more you communicate about your sex life
and you start to say like,
let's keep doing things that turns us both on,
whether it's going deeper into our fantasies,
deeper into tantric sex, trying new totally,
even loom could be a variety one night.
Yeah!
And it's that couples just get into this road pattern of sex
that's going to get dull,
so you can't keep it interesting that way.
And a lot of couples, you know,
I think might think like,
well, I want to have sex with other people and I've attracted you,
but oh my god, how would you open it?
It seems so crazy.
No one's ever going to work for anybody.
Everybody I know who opened up the relationship successfully said at the
beginning, oh no, I could never do that.
And I count myself among those people.
Just to get back to your point, like I love your point, I wouldn't want anybody
to think that because I'm in an open marriage, that I'm advocating for it for
other people, I just want people to have a lot of options on the table.
And I love what you said.
So many things you can do.
Lou, the new Lou, the new sex toy, watching porn together,
going to a sex party, but not participating.
There's so many things that you can do
to get variety and novelty and excitement
into a long-term relationship.
And I love that you talked about it.
For me, personally,, the decision eventually became
to transition from a really traditional relationship container of monogamous marriage to an open
marriage. At first, it just seemed like a solution to a problem, you know, but I realized eventually
that it was a lot more than that. Once this decision was on the table, it requires
so much talking and communicating. I remember I interviewed Carrie Jenkins who is this
philosophy professor in British Columbia. She is a genius and she wrote a book called What Love
Is and What It Could Be. And she came out publicly in this book,
and it's a book of philosophy about attachment and love
and connection and all those profound things.
But in it, she writes about having a husband
and a serious boyfriend.
And she got a lot of flat for it.
It's a beautiful book, What Love Is And What It Could Be.
But one of the things that I thought was so funny
when I interviewed her is she said,
when people think of open relationships or non-monogamy,
what they usually think of is, oh, wow, wild stuff,
sex and sex and sex and more sex.
And sure, there can be plenty of that.
But what she said, she said, what I found to be the case,
which is what people don't talk about as much as that in an open monogamy relationship container. Those people who are
primary, if that's your relationship structure, where there's a primary relationship, you
are going to do a lot of talking. And then you're going to do like a lot of, if you're a
poly person, you're going to do like a lot of Google calendars and a lot of scheduling.
And so the practical aspects of it are hugely important, like communication and scheduling, but I can tell you that in the beginning of deciding to be in an open marriage for us, there were many, many, many conversations. And there needed to be.
We have to talk about how would we feel about stigma that we would encounter?
How do we keep this private?
How do we protect the primacy of our relationship, which was really important and is really important
to us?
How do we communicate with the people
with whom we have adventures?
And then people do things like,
do they want an adventure together?
Do they want to adventure separately?
What are the rules?
A lot of people,
including me,
felt strongly about rules like the following.
Nobody who's a friend or in our social circle,
nobody that we work with,
for a long time we agreed to just be very quiet about it.
For personal and professional reasons,
some people are very judgmental.
You can be quiet about things with that being ashamed of them.
You can just be quiet in a pragmatic way.
Some of our other rules were, and some of the other rules I've heard that people have
were like, how many times you can be with this person?
Is it going to be purely sexual?
Or are you going to open the door to feelings?
Are you going to be more of an open model, or a poly model, or a swinging model?
So we had to have all those conversations.
And believe me, they were exhausting.
But then when you're talking about rules,
you're talking about feelings.
And your partner might be like,
what, why do we need that rule?
That rule's dumb.
And you might be like, what?
I don't care about if we know them or not.
Why do we have to have that rule?
And then it's a negotiation and a conversation.
Oh my God, if you open your relationship,
you are going to get to know your primary partner
if that's your thing.
So, so, so, so well.
You guys did it for a while.
It sounds like you exhaustively went through.
Like you were not frivolous,
because that's why I advise against couples,
you're like, well, sex hasn't been great. We want to spice up. Well, let's go open or let's be open.
Let's go swing for a night. So maybe we should take a minute.
I love that.
Into your story. How do we define like the terminology like
swing?
Yeah. Yeah.
Right.
This is so important, right?
Versus people like, what does it mean? Like, yeah.
Okay.
This is so important to know your vocabulary words,
which I didn't know, except that I had written on true,
otherwise I wouldn't have known my vocabulary works.
So, okay.
A lot of people use the term consensual nonmenogamy.
I don't use that term.
I just say nonmenogamy.
It can have open nonmenogamy,
or the kind of nonmenogamy that's on the DL.
So obviously today we're talking about forms of open nonmenogamy.
I got that term from Tammy Nelson, one of our favorite sex researchers who writes a lot
about nonmenogamy.
And I just, personally, I don't like this term consensual nonmenogamy.
And as you can imagine as an anthropologist, I hate the term ethical monogamy.
Like just because you're living in Brooklyn and lots of people are non-monogamous, that doesn't
make you more ethical than a woman who's doing it on the DL, right? Because she's in a really bad
situation and she wants to get out in the only way she could do it maybe economically as to bridge
children or the parent. Nobody's what I, so I don't say ethical or consensual, I'm just gonna call it open non-monogamy. Now there are different forms of open non-monogamy.
There's swinging, which kind of gets such a bad rap,
you know, like we think of the 70s and swingers
and like, I don't know, the ice storm
or people in bad clothes, whatever.
So swingers are, and by the way, I love swingers.
I love their personalities.
I've interviewed many people into swinging,
and I've never liked a group of people more
than I like swingers.
Although swinging's not for me.
But swingers do this cool thing
where the couple is primary,
and then they adventure usually together.
Primary really quickly.
That primary means like you are married,
or you're committed to somebody that's your primary that's your primary
partner and everyone else is like secondary, third like first year yeah whatever
thanks for pointing that out that's really important. So if you're a
Swinger here's the awesome thing about Swingers. I remember I was invited to be a
speaker at a Swinger's convention in New Orleans. I didn't end up doing it
there was a hurricane or something, sadly.
But like, swingers have conventions.
They go on cruises.
They have swinger parties.
They have a real sense of community.
And the couples are usually pretty bonded with each other
and really good communicators.
So that's what swinging is.
They meet somebody for a night.
They go to party.
They hook up with someone else and they go home
with two-footed beds together. Like it's a really good description of swinging and swingers.
And I think the really important thing to understand is that they have clubs. They go on
cruises, they go to conferences, they have a real sense of community. And it's like, it's
like they're entertainment or there's something for the night, but it's not ongoing.
Yes, we, right.
Sometimes it could be ongoing
and sometimes swing or couples will connect with each other
and do like a swapping thing,
like a spousal swapping thing
and stick together for a while and enjoy that
and then kind of move on.
Or sometimes they might have a rule
that they only do it some you know, some other way.
Okay, so that's swinging and then there's this other thing called an open relationship
and the way it was described to me is that open is kind, the other kind of openly monogamous relationship,
it is what we might call an open marriage or an open relationship.
And that's kind of a misnomer
because it's sort of like a lot of times
people in open relationships,
it could be don't ask, don't tell.
It could be that we do three sums together
and nothing else.
But usually an open relationship means
that the primary, there are primaries
and that they go
off and have their adventures separately. And then they come back together, they
might talk about it, they might not. It's all disclosed, but there might be
degrees of disclosure and concepts of privacy. And more kind of like, don't ask,
don't tell. Or yeah, if you ask me, I'll tell you.
So that's the way that those relationships go.
Then there's polyamory.
And I always say, poly people, I love them in their chaos.
I love these people.
So poly people might not even have,
and I mean, that in a totally positive way,
but they just said, people who are polyamorous might not even have a primary partnership, right? They might do a thing where
there are three people in a relationship. They might live together or not. It's all equal.
There's no hierarchy. There's not like the couples here and here's the guest over here.
It's like, no, we're in this. Like this is our relationship, right? And that's a thing
we think of. We fingers, but like a thruple kind of thing could be that too or just in
jay. A thruple, a quad. And also the important thing about polyam, reach, understand is it
means an open relationship or swinging, you know, swinging is pretty much just sexual
although, swingers become very friendly with each other.
An open relationship is mostly like,
I'm off doing my thing, you're off doing your thing,
we'll talk about it or not.
Collie Amory is more like, not only are we doing a sexual thing,
but we're doing a romantic thing.
And we're getting into feelings and connection
and a relationship with another person
or with other people.
So that's the easiest way I can describe it.
And then there are other subcategories.
There's hot way thing.
There's the cuckold lifestyle.
Those are the main flavors.
So where would you say you're in then,
you're in nonmenogamy?
Yeah, open nonmenogamy and an open marriage.
That's right.
And that's what I've been doing.
Yeah, we're the better part of at least three years,
maybe a little more.
And yeah, and like I said, the beginning of that,
I don't think people get it.
I don't think people know how good you have to be at talking to each other and how good
you have to become at talking to each other.
I mean, there was so much talking, I couldn't believe it, sometimes I would say I can't
talk anymore.
But it was really important because we had to set up those rules, right?
That we both agreed on.
We had to have the conversations about like, why do you want that rule?
Like why is that even an issue?
You have to be respectful, right?
It sounds like you guys have done it in a really healthy way and you're constantly learning
and evolving. Another question though is like, so what was the point when it got to in your
relationship? You said when you first thought about it, you thought, well, this can never be me.
I'll never do that. Yeah, exactly. I was like, no way. I was like, I want to have adventures,
but I don't want him to. That's the thing. Most people, I wouldn't want that.
I want that.
Exactly.
I like it to pay for me to do it, but I don't want them to do it.
Yeah, I was one of those people who was like,
well, I could handle me doing it.
And I would know that I could trust myself.
But that's really a lot about trust, right?
When you say that, it's a lot about like,
I don't know if it's so
much about imagining that you're super jealous, it's more about, could you trust your primary
partner? And that's why there have to be. And thank God, most people, a lot of people
who do this have really deep conversations first because that, all this negotiating about
rules and how do we feel about this and
do we really want to do it.
You're honing your communication skills and you are going to need those if you don't
want to wind up divorced beside yourself, angry, broken up.
Part of the duty of open marriage for me has been a couple things. Communication,
really upping my communication skills, not just in my marriage, but in general in the
world. I got a lot of communication skills being in an open marriage that I use every
day in my life, in my work, in when I interview people just like I had to
develop a lot of communications with a lot of empathy being able to see
somebody else's point of view, not just my not just my long-term partner but
like my fun time open relationship partner, right? You have to be seeing things
from multiple points of view and that's helped me in all kinds of ways on that skill.
The other thing, I think, is really important for people to know other than that they're
going to work on communication a lot.
Like you could become much, much closer to your partner for that.
And here's another equally important thing.
That would be despite all the judgment and stigma
because there's still a lot of that.
From the outside world, you mean?
Yeah.
You actually do get closer if you are
able to get to that point, which is what the thing we talk about
is couples get to a place of compulsion is the term
that we use where you actually have this great deep love and connection for your partner. Tell me how you would define it, but you actually have great pleasure and satisfaction, doing that your partner is getting your needs met in a beautiful, consensual way.
You actually can feel that love and appreciation for them, which sort of trumps any insecurity and jealousy, although it's still weird as a Ted.
I'm so glad that you talked about compulsion.
Because when I was writing on true,
I remember I was doing something interviewing somebody,
and I didn't know what compulsion was,
and I needed to explain to me.
And so sometimes compulsion is sexual
that some people report being really, really excited
by seeing their partner get sexual pleasure from somebody
or by hearing about it or just by thinking about it.
And then there's, I mean, you could also say that compersions are about before I talked
about developing empathy, developing really good communication skills, we had to talk about
everything.
And then empathy for other people's, how other people would be experiencing this and
we're experiencing this. And so, you know, yes, compulsion is not always sexual in my understanding of it.
Compulsion can be that somebody's really happy for his husband,
that his husband is off having a really fun adventure and having a good time instead of just going crazy and tearing
his hair out about what's going on right now.
Right, because it's been seen for exactly.
Look, if you're in a place right now where I get a lot, and we're actually going to get
in some questions in a bit from listeners, I think you'd be so, I'd love your help.
But that's it.
They're like, I, my partner wants me to do it.
I'm not sure that I want to do it.
This is not to let you talk a partner into.
You have to both be wholly on board with it,
like fully communicate.
So then this is what tells us that you did.
And so you got to a point where you're like, okay.
So you got beyond that part of like,
oh, we can never do it because once you and your partner
started to talk about, well, what would this look like?
You communicated and then you were able to go out there
and find a new partner.
And how did that happen?
Hmm.
What was it right?
Apps.
Apps, the apps because because I, there was, I mean, we had a rule, right? It wasn't going to be anybody in our social lives.
It would be obviously, you know, we had our rules and our boundaries.
And that meant people that we didn't know.
So dating apps were a really helpful ecology for me in finding partners, and we would
all talk about the downside of apps a lot, and there are downsides.
But the upside for me as a woman in an open marriage was that I could be very, very clear
about what I was looking for. I could change it over time. I could be very direct. And eventually,
I learned that some apps are better for this than the others, right? So like some of that
some apps I would go on and people wouldn't even know what an open marriage was.
Oh, and you like, I don't got time for that.
Or like, for example, like a Tinder, right?
A Tinder would be maybe, I mean, you can find anybody anywhere, but like on Tinder, I'm
more chended to match with people who just thought, okay, well, this means just hooking
up, right?
Or, but on someplace like, hooking up, right?
Or, but on someplace like say, field, right?
Field is an app where people go to find a third or to find a
Zadi or a daddy or a sugar daddy or people go to find a sub, right?
Or a DOM. So, so I very quickly learned that these apps were very different
ecologies and that people had different levels of awareness about my relationship container
on the different apps and some apps were better than others. So for sure though I was on
apps. And then like a lot of women I had to screen for my safety, right? My emotional
safety, but my physical safety. And I mean, everybody has to
screen for the physical safety when they want to be with people on apps. And I can say
that for me, you know, initially when I was a person who had been married for the better
part of two decades, and then I, we opened things up. For me initially, it was really about experiencing that variety and novelty and adventure and excitement in the initial phase.
Eventually, I was looking for forms of connection, especially when I was in LA on my own in a partnership.
I was looking for people who would understand that I was in the partnership,
who would understand, like, I'm not looking to get divorced. I'm not, right? And then
I noticed that people in different demographics had different understandings, right? Like,
if I were dating guys close to me and age or maybe older than I was.
Often these straight guys had very traditional expectations
and they kind of couldn't wrap their mind around
what it meant that I was in an open marriage
and that my marriage was my top priority.
Whereas younger people seemed to really understand it
and that's born out in the data.
We have data that show us that younger people at gay men
and people in sexual and racial minorities.
A lot of people who've been on the wrong side of power
really understand these alternative relationship forms
more readily.
We need more studies about exactly why that is.
But yeah, so that was part of you asked how I started to do it.
I went on apps and then because I'm a social scientist, as I was on the apps,
I was kind of like gathering information almost and I was researching,
looking at all the data that's out there. Amy Moore is one of my favorite sex researchers. And basically if there was anything out there
about open non-monogamy, any study,
Amy Moore's and Helen Connelly,
have probably had their names on it.
I read a lot of her work.
So for me, once I was in an open marriage,
and also in a partnership, there was a shift.
I was more looking for, and it was
during COVID, right? So I was lonely. So I wasn't just looking for people to have variety and
novelty and exciting adventures with. I was looking for people to go for a walk with, you know, to have,
like, to meet up, you know, for, I don't drink, but like for a drink.
I was looking for company more on the apps at that point.
And a lot, and well, what's interesting was that during COVID a lot of people were doing that.
So that's kind of how it shifted, both because I went from being living together to being
and in a partnership to being on lockdown.
And I think that just shows how flexible our sexual and social strategies are, right?
It's almost sapiens because that's how I see the world.
I think my own personal experience kind of demonstrates that we evolved this super-flexible
sexual strategist and social strategist and we still have that software in there.
And I would say that in practical terms for people who want to open just expect it to change over time.
We come back more with Wednesday Martin. So meaning even your openness is going to change, like just because you're open that's constantly changing.
Yeah, you might want to close. I mean, I know people who are open and they then they close up.
Like I I knew a couple who was very committed to being open and
having fun adventures and they then somebody's parent got sick and they had to
nurture their parent you know and take care of them when they were very very
ill and dying and so a lot of couples then decide you know we're gonna close
for this we're in the stressful time I've known people who are open and they have a
baby and they decide, you know what, we're going to close for three years, not even discuss
it. And then we'll discuss it again in three years. So it's a myth that once you open
all the shit hits the fan and things are terrible or that when you open, you're going to be
open forever. Things change.
We can have a flexible mindset. You evolved to have a flexible mindset about
sex and relationships, so go ahead and do it. Yeah, exactly. We have evolved in that way
and find out that you talk a lot about it and a lot of your work that we have evolved.
Like these are our primates, our species, right? We are not. Right. There are no social
primates species that are monogamous, but that doesn't mean that some of us don't like it a lot and try to enjoy it.
We're giving people, like, I guess that's why I love that you're here. Thank you for actually talking about it for the first time openly, because I think that that's what I hear for people a lot.
They just think it's so this extreme, like you're open and once you're open and just like you just mentioned, the majority of my friends who are in what I would say healthy, non-mis-relationships, it has changed
over time.
They're just tired sometimes.
We get it right, but now we're moving homes or now we're feeling that we both want to
spend more time together.
And then they decide to open it up again.
And this time it might be more of a swinging thing or more of like a one night thing.
Exactly.
I'm in the language. Like you get to decide kind of like you evolve like your workout routine over time too, right?
Like I love that analogy that we're changeable.
So of course, our sexuality and our sexual strategies and our sexual desires are going to change.
And so yeah, I just always want people to know that opening doesn't mean opening forever.
So you found new partners at the beginning. so just to say like the different stages you
went through at the beginning, it was about sex because it was novel.
You've been with one person for a long time.
So it's kind of like, I can't imagine what that would be like to be with one person all
these years, 20 years, and then to all of a sudden you get to do so and else.
Like that's a thrill.
That's exciting thing.
Yes, and a lot of people just stop they're thinking about open relationships there.
That'll be so awesome.
And that is, I mean, it's wonderful.
Women have been involved in, I'm sure,
I really get into why women have this evolved appetite,
probably even more than men in the aggregate
for variety and novelty and excitement
and adventures, actually.
And it was fun to get that.
We also have, I should also mention that there are studies that show that women
who sort of habituate to sexual stimulus more quickly over time, right?
One to four years is a plus to nine to 12.
Why some of them might do better and have a real young for non-menogamy
even when their partners don't? might do better and have a real young for nonmenogamy
even when their partners don't.
Amy Moore's our wonderful sex researcher
who's into studying nonmenogamy.
In 2014 she co-authorized this study
and one thing they found is that people
with avoidant attachment styles
tended to report interest in open nonmenopathy,
more than other people,
and they found that people with secure attachment styles
tended to do pretty well with it.
And so did people with avoid an attachment stuff.
This 2014 study that Amy Mars did
kind of just confirms what you might suspect,
which is that people with anxious attachment styles
had more negative attitudes about open nonmenonomy and found it more difficult when they did it.
And in that same study, Moore's and her colleagues found that what they wrote with some evidence
suggest that women may prefer open nonmenonomy more than men because women, but not men,
habituate to sexual stimuli over time and more quickly. So there's a counter-intuitive
finding. But yeah, we do know that if you have a pretty secure attachment style or a slightly or slightly avoid one. You might have an easier time
in an open relationship type of container,
whether it's Paul Lee swinging,
hot white thing.
You'd be like, oh, you're with somebody else.
It would just be hard, all this stuff.
Right. Yeah, just imagine doing something that goes against the grain of your being.
I think it'd be connected all around. Yeah. We don't have time. So then, so it sounds like you kind of your being. I think it's like, it's like speed be connected, you know, all around.
Yeah.
And we don't have time so then,
so it sounds like you've kind of evolved this
and like a really healthy way.
Like you continue to talk about with your partner issue
with your primary partner,
as you move through all of these stages in it.
So like what are some of the challenges you've had now,
would you say,
or what are the biggest challenges for you
or what people should avoid?
When it's, rather than like not talking,
I think what we've established is that you have to talk
about it, don't do it as something that's going to,
you think it's gonna spice up your sex life.
Anything else that you keep thinking?
Yeah, for sure, I would say, I mean,
because of my background, I always say,
well, use the data to help you make better decisions.
So like, for example, we know that there are people who,
I mean, in my own experience, there are some men
who have been total dicks about this, right?
They think it means I just want to hook up.
I'm just lying, whatever.
And then some of them, they're not being dicks.
They just don't understand. I would say that based on data, what we know
is that younger people, people who identify as bisexual or gay, these are people
who have more of a familiarity with non-menogamy. So, you know, I would personally, you know, want to be with somebody in one of those communities,
because I don't want to have to educate my sexual partner or my partner about what this is.
I don't want to have to take them through it. I want them to have a familiarity with it
it. I want them to have a familiarity with it and to be from a culture like for example younger people where it's not stigmatized. I don't want to be with somebody from a culture
where like it's a totally stigmatized thing and they think there's something wrong with
me and I must be mentally ill. Right. So the first thing I would say is I would look
in communities where there's support for this idea.
Why beat your head up against a rock?
I would also have people know,
I think it's really important,
this is another database insight for people who want to do this
to help them actually do it.
It really helps to know about the prevalence of open non-monogamy
in the United States and Amy Morris, once again,
along with Helen Fisher and my friend Justin Garcia,
who's the director of the Kinsey Institute.
They all did a study.
It was great.
It was one of these massive representative sample studies.
Over 8,700 people, they were crunching census data
that was nationally representative sample.
I mean, it was a great study.
And they found that over 20% of people reported that they had been in an openly non-monogamous
relationship at some point.
Right?
So, don't let anybody make you feel like, oh, you are a freak show if you want to do this. Right. It's there's a
And then they did another study, Amy more or something other study about polyamory specifically. And she found that like there was a high level of people, like almost 17% of people in this, again, like a great representative, huge
sample, that almost 17% of people reported it as the IR to be Polly.
One in nine people have engaged in a Polly relationship at some point in their life.
So just know that you're not free.
And it's not that weird.
And thankfully now we have like TV shows and stuff,
scripted stories, it's supporting people in doing it.
So I would recommend familiarizing yourself with the data
so you don't feel too weird.
Looking for a person who understands what it is
and you don't have to educate them
and you don't have to deal with them stigmatizing you.
And then I would just, would just say that if you want to be open,
you have to be open-minded, that things might not always
go the way you want.
You might start out by saying, OK, we're only
going to have sexual relationship.
People are only going to see them once.
And then you might really connect with somebody
and want to see them 10 times.
And then you have to go back and negotiate, right?
I hear this all the time from people.
And so if you're in an open relationship, in all relationships, the ground is always
moving beneath your feet.
But in an open relationship, the ground might be moving more and might be moving faster
and you just have to be ready for that.
And one of the best ways to do it is to work on your communications skills.
It's so true.
Do not, I mean, do not assume that you know,
if you have a primary partner,
don't assume that you know what they want.
Ask them.
Don't assume that something would be okay.
Ask them.
If you need a rule redefined,
a really common rule is like,
well, when you're traveling, do whatever you want.
Right?
But then some people are like, you know what?
When you're traveling, and we have this rule, I just so upset about what you might be doing,
I need to change the rule.
Or when you're traveling, do what you want, but like, let's have a check in every day,
right?
And then I would say the other thing that people really fear
is that if they have a primary,
they really fear that their primary
is gonna fall in love with somebody and leave them.
That's it.
That's what they might.
It happens.
You hear those stories.
I mean, that might happen if you're monothembed.
That's true.
Well, one of the question for this ties into one thing
you just said is that, yes, that is a big clue.
Like, well, what if my partner runs off with a person that can happen?
We've heard that this happens, but what about also the notion that it is when we set up rules
sometimes like, well, let's just do it for sex. We're not going to catch feelings. We're not going to
develop emotions and connect with this person, but how do you avoid that?
Guess what? You can either just cut it off like a brittle branch and say, well, or you
can say, okay, this is a conversation to have with my primary partner, or this is a conversation
to have with myself, or this is a conversation to have with my partner and adventure.
Yeah. Relational risk is real. It's real if you're monotony and it's real if you're open.
And I think that open people, the only difference between us and people who aren't open,
is that we have made a bargain and explicit conversation with ourselves about how
real relational risk is. And my marriage has never felt more precious to me.
This is the next question, was like,
how has it been going?
I only speak for myself, my husband and I
are both really private.
What I can tell you is that for me, having the support
of my primary partner has meant a lot to me revisiting our guidelines, letting
him know what's going on with me.
You know, I have never valued that partnership more than I do now.
And also, you know, our communication just got so much better.
I mean, imagine going from a place in a long term exclusive
relationship where you can't even talk about the possibility
of maybe having an adventure with somebody else
to granting permission, if you will, and support and care.
A lot of people report, oh, it's a whole new phase
in a marriage.
And I have found that to be the case.
I for sure have.
And I think we re-immigurated that again, too, right?
Because you guys are doing it.
To me, yeah, I mean, for me, it's been an enhancement of my marriage.
It's definitely different than the way my marriage was before.
Marriage has changed.
Relationships change.
People change.
Everything changes.
Why not? For sure.
How has it been with your partner, your primary part
are talking about, do you, is your role
to share what happens or not?
Like, how much do you talk about?
I think we're very typical.
I can say I'm very typical of a person
in an open relationship versus a poly relationship.
I haven't introduced anybody to my partner
that wouldn't be comfortable in terms of our understanding
that we are primary.
There is that open model where it's like,
just go do your thing, we'll go do our thing
and our relationship is primary.
So that's pretty much how it's been.
I can say that I have felt great comfort
in having a partner when I've had a breakup.
You want to break up with one of your partners.
You want to have your new-
Because you're like, he's nursing you.
He helped you through a breakup, which I think is a beauty.
I mean, it's really low people's minds.
A lot of people would not think that I want people to consider that it's possible that they could,
you know, be in some kind of open relationship contain or whatever it is.
And breakups happen, hurt feelings happen. Consider the possibility that when somebody that you're
having sex with hurts your feelings or somebody, some people get into relationships, so
somebody you're having a relationship with that really hurts your feelings and
you're beside yourself. Consider the possibility that like your spouse or your
primary partner could be just a really wonderful source of support for you.
You have the thing. I love my weird but true.
Like, so what's next for your open relationship?
Where do you think it's going to go from here?
And what do you want?
Now, what a great question.
I mean, I think that what for sure is on the horizon
is a lot more checking in.
Things are going to change a little bit
because I will be less in a living apart together relationship and more in a living together relationship.
So that will be interesting, you know, as my husband and I are physically together more.
I think there are a lot of people who are coupled might think, oh, like I like living with my partner. For myself personally, what I can say about myself
is I have really loved the adventure of moving to LA
and my own, making all new friendships,
learning all about a new city,
struggling with loneliness,
but enjoying connection and all its many different forms.
And so it's gonna be a real change for me
and my husband to have a lot of day to day time.
Together, we're always together on holidays and we travel back and forth to see each other. It'll be an
interesting new phase having been in the living apart together thing to now
live together a little bit. You know what else is in the future Emily? Being open
to anything. I lived in New York for 33 years. It is a culture of planning out every single thing
in your life.
And when I really, as I moved into my 50s,
I realized that I wanted to say no to more things,
that I didn't want to do.
I wanted to say yes to more things that I did want to do.
And that that was changing all the time.
So I think what's on the horizon in terms of my open marriage,
it's what's on the horizon for me in general,
which is more autonomy, you know,
enhancing my connections with other people,
enhancing my connection with my husband,
enhancing my connection with my friend.
It's not for everybody,
I'm not advocating that other people do it, but opening my relationship
has made me learn to think in new ways
and communicate in new ways that really truly
is enriching my ability to connect with people,
whether it's professionally as friends, as lovers, as people I go for hikes with,
you know. And the other thing that's on the horizon is selling my new book called Free Agent,
which is about women in their 50s kind of seizing agency, kind of rewriting our cultural narrative
of who women in their 50s are because I see women in their 50s as just dazzlingly daring and brave and making big changes in their lives as opposed
to what we're told about them, which is like, oh, well, when you go through metaphors,
your irrelevant dead, you don't matter anymore.
So this book is coming out and this book is very personal.
And so I'll be going public in an even bigger way about being in an open
marriage. And so that's on the horizon as well. And my husband and I were together with that.
I'll be well thank you for you too because to see you know when's in there,
your friends who's spending so much time together would I cherish. And I know that the book hasn't
even come out yet, which we're all dying to read. But for you just to be able to share this because I am getting so many much
interest from my listeners, my collars, who are like, I want to be open and what do I do and
does it work? There's a question. So I'd love you to answer how we answer this question Wednesday,
and then we're going to get into a few more things. But let's just ask this question. Johnny 56
and Idaho, hey, Dr. Emily,
in the last four to five years
by marriage has lost its intimacy.
My wife is pretty much zero interest.
I've tried to get her interested again,
and I've been pretty patient.
I've learned to have some pretty good sex by myself.
Over the years, I've expressed my interest
to her about trying to swing.
Three sums and group sex
and exploring bisexual curiosities.
She's always said with the right people
and the mood was right.
I hate to pressure about sex.
As in the past, I've had partners that have commented,
is that all you could think about?
She mentioned the past I should get a girlfriend
to keep me sexually satisfied,
but I always glued off inside and want that.
I want to be with her.
But for the past year, we've not been together,
she took another job.
She said she's been thinking about it.
If I'm okay with her pursuing her career,
she will hold me back from experiencing things
that I want to do.
With that five rules, no one she knew
from the one from the town I was on.
Not in her bed, practice safe sex, and don't fall in love.
It blew me away.
I didn't know to believe her or something sort of trick.
She said she was dead serious,
and I should get to experience those things.
So, here's my question.
I would like to experience those things,
but assume if I did, she would be involved.
Okay, first thing I wanna say to this guy is,
wow, you lucked out with this partner
because this is a generous offer.
And so just be grateful for that.
Step number one, like how close do you feel to your partner
and how much do you appreciate her for this completely,
like really very mature response and problem solving.
That's the first thing I want to say, right? What would you say in addition?
You're right because it sounds like he brought it up in the past. He's basically saying that his marriage is
lost intimacy. He's much more sexual than she is. She said to him several times like, I'm not going
to be the one you want. Go out and do it. And he was like, oh, you're joking. You're that wouldn't
really work. And then finally, she literally laid down the rules.
I love that she laid down the rules.
And then I think what I'm hearing is he's like,
A is that really true.
I was just going to put my face like she's saying I could go do this.
And what if she's just trying to bait me because it's unbelievable.
But it also sounds like the next thing when we talk to a lot on this show
about communication at Nazim, it just sounds like he's some additional questions.
Okay, so now that these are the rules,
and let me look at these rules,
what does it actually look like?
So am I going out on a date and telling you about it later?
Are you following, are you coming with me on the date?
Am I going with you?
Are you doing it as well?
So now it sounds like he's gotten over the like,
oh my God, this is amazing.
And now that you see the hammer out some more details
of what's the vision?
Yes, what's the vision?
Like check in with her.
Does she really want it to be this separate?
He's saying that he assumes that she'll participate.
Well, ask her.
It sounds like she's saying go do your thing.
And it could very well be that she is saying
go do your thing on your own.
And go ahead with my blessing.
And so yeah, I think you're right,
just to ask some really specific questions.
Do you wanna be involved in this?
Do you not wanna be involved in this?
I can live with those rules, could we have this other extra rule?
I'm gonna say one other thing, okay?
And I think this is so important.
Ask her again and again and again in many different ways and don't give
up on it. What she want. Because at first she's going to say, just want you to have what
you want. Because right now she's trying to solve a problem. Just keep asking her what she
wants. Because she's giving you permission because she's open to this idea not just for you but
perhaps for herself.
So that openness that she's extending to you, if you just keep extending it to her as
well and just stay curious about just keep telling her how much you appreciate that she's
doing this and willing to go there,
but don't forget to just ask her what do you want. And I've found personally that a partner who
really wants to give you the freedoms to do the things that you want is a person that you just
care for more and more and more and you want want talk about compulsion. You want them to have the wonderful things that you want. So keep
asking her until you find out. I mean, don't fad your her. But right now she's
trying to resolve a problem, which is getting him what he wants down the line.
That means that we let's get her what she wants.
I love what you've won out of here is that she's trying to solve a problem. She's
like, babe, I don't want the sex, I'm busy,
I'm on the road, like here's how you can get the sex.
So you're right though, in some ways,
she's kind of deflecting like take care of my husband's needs,
but eventually, or maybe even now,
she has some needs too.
And she might have to point them.
So like you said, that much more efficiently than I did.
Yes, back, like Dr. Leigh, no.
All the things, it's all good.
That was very, very helpful.
Okay, so Tom and was very, very helpful.
Okay.
So, Tom and love it.
Love it.
And really 34 in Alaska.
My wife and I are looking at adding a girlfriend to our relationship.
We don't want it to be just about sex.
We want a real connection.
We've tried some dating apps, but we've gotten nowhere.
We're slightly introverts, but aren't opposed to going out of the possible.
So our question is this.
What would you recommend for finding a girlfriend or a married couple
looking to have a real connection with it, have fun?
It's hard to find someone who isn't just looking
for a one night bling or something along those terms
and we really aren't into that.
Being in Alaska, I feel like we're limited, but choices.
We don't have the means to travel
so long distances out.
Thank you for your time.
We love your show and tips.
Alaska, yeah.
Okay, you know what I would do? Honestly.
Talk to talk. I have a few things to say. First of all, I would get on a dating app. I would set my
location. I would be 100% clear about everything that you want as a couple, everything you're looking
for. And then I would show these potential girlfriend
that you want to add to your relationship.
I would show them that you already understand
what would make them wear in that you're not going to do it.
You're not going to treat them as a needs
for filling machine.
You're not going to treat them as like a person
without feelings who's just there to be your sexual thrill,
right?
Because this is what unicorns complain about.
And they have a really good point
that they're often dehumanized
and that the couples all about themselves
and just using her be really clear.
Not only about your location and what you're looking for,
but be really clear that you understand
their humanity and that you're looking for somebody
who wants to be in a relationship
and that show them that you are down for that
and that you know what the risks are to women
who you and a corn and that you're not gonna
be part of them having that kind of bad experience.
That would be flexured by.
I like that really speaking to their needs
too is important you're right
because they're probably like,
it could be so unclear but like,
are I might have slave or might as just for sex or a super-deceiver room? So really them getting like, it could be love it. And I also
think some apps I've heard that field F E E L D has been successful for many
companies. Yes. There are many people on field looking for a third. So there could
be some profiles on there that you could look at and see if any of those
get you interested. But the great thing is you can also start to adapt and
evolve your profile too and just see what people are responding to.
Exactly.
I loved your dating profile that you had up with so I just love how specific you were and
this is what I want and you asked for it and it was just so clear and you got it.
We do want to share that.
Oh sure.
Yeah.
I remember realizing when I went on dating apps,
I remember realizing, oh, this is such a great opportunity.
I can say exactly what I want.
So, you know, if you're a person who has a tall thing,
say I have a tall thing, I didn't apologize at all.
I was like, take care.
It's me to take a seat Please be an over-only.
Please be athletic.
Please be clitorate.
Please be clitorate.
Whether it's a big one.
Yep.
Please be GGG.
Please care about closing the orgasm gap.
GGG, what's GGG explained that?
So that's a term from Dan Savage,
who coined the term monogamych,
to describe a relationship where you're mostly
you have other adventures but your primary is your primary emotionally and
sexually is your home base. So he also coined this term GGG which I believe
means good giving and game. Oh, I remember that. Yeah, let's guess.
OK, and I could have it wrong.
I love Dan and his work.
And sorry if I got it wrong, Dan.
But GGG just basically means, are you a good communicator?
Do you care about somebody else's pleasure
as much as you care about your own?
You know, are you open-minded?
All the things that we want in a partner, right?
Yeah, and at certain points, I would say things like, I'm only going to see you three times,
right, or I'm only going to see you five times. At certain points, I was very specific, like,
you know, this is just for just excitement and adventure.
Eventually, like I said, when I was living alone, I changed it.
And I said things like looking for somebody to go for walks with, um, uh, looking for
somebody, you know, yeah. Um, so it changed over time.
But yeah, I was super specific. Oh, when I even said things like, I like to be
pursued. That's the one that I, yeah things like I like to be pursued. That's the one that I
yeah, you say like to be pursued and treated. Yeah, I like to be spoiled and pursued. I think I said
at one time. Yeah, I would eat it. This is amazing. You know how it's too scary to tell people
things sometimes for us. I have found, especially among women,
I have found so many women get so nice and entitled in their dating bios. It's like they
feel freed up to say what they really want. Now I felt super freed up because I don't
I don't show a lot of my face on my bio. You know, you and I are people who we don't want people being like, oh,
are you so-and-so, right? Or whatever. And my husband and I were keeping it very
private for a while. So I felt really freed up, right? Like I had these pictures where I was a
little bit blurry. I said exactly what I would have had the hell I wanted, but I really
encourage especially women, I really encourage especially women.
I really encourage them to get as specific as possible, whether they want to be open or
not.
Just be so specific about what you want.
When it's like you're going to get a chance for that again, if you're a woman, join
a woman who just wants to go down on you for two hours, do you want a guy who just
are you really into intercourse?
I mean, you'll get.
There will be things that you will not be allowed to say,
but say everything that you wanna say
without getting kicked off the app.
Exactly.
What I love that you said was that I want someone
to pursue me and I want to be spoiled.
I want someone to make a plan.
And I was like, wow, I want that too,
but I didn't think that you could say it
and you said it and you got it.
And I just think that that's such a great.
And you'd be surprised how many people really,
really a lot of people don't read,
but a lot of people do, and they're really gay.
And I love that.
I love that about dating apps.
So when I was in the people who are gay,
and we're not looking for the people you got to convince,
like you might as well be gay.
People who aren't totally down.
So I love that.
Exactly.
Oh my God, exactly.
You so much for sharing all of this.
I'm going to ask you the five quickie questions
that we ask all of our guests.
Okay, what's your biggest turn on?
Someone who puts care into saying me,
what's your biggest turn off?
Somebody who wants to just drop in in my life
rather than be intentional about it.
What makes good sex?
Lack of inhibition, being open-minded about trying new stuff, because sex is iterative.
You so have to be in the present moment responding to how the person's body responds.
Something worked for you, X-Girlfriend, might not work for me.
So to me, a great sexual partner is somebody who can be in the moment and adjust and doesn't
feel criticized and has an open mind about it.
Right. Something you would tell your younger self about sex and relationships. Sex is good.
Keep being careful. You don't have to be exclusive if you don't want to be and you can if you do.
What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex?
It's good for you. It's good if you do. What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex?
It's good for you.
It's good for you emotionally. It's good for you psychologically,
but it's good for you physically.
You can't be healthy if you don't have sexual health
and pleasure is part of psychopathy.
You deserve pleasure.
You deserve pleasure.
You deserve it. It's your fundamental human right.
Pleasure is your birthright.
Yep, that's it.
I love it.
That's what that's all, finding relationships
and the sex that work for you
so you can have more pleasure.
And you've done that Wednesday.
What a beautiful example.
Thank you so much for being here.
We can't wait to read your book.
I love you and do our new pieces.
Where can people find you?
Thanks Emily.
I just want to say I treasure you.
I treasure your friendship.
I treasure your brain.
I treasure our conversations in private and here.
Thank you, honey.
People can find me on Instagram.
I'm at Wednesday, Martin, PhD.
On Twitter, I'm Wednesday, Martin. You can just search me doctor Wednesday, Martin, PhD on Twitter, on Wednesday, Martin, you can just search me
doctor, Wednesday, Martin. And those are my two main ecologies where I do stuff.
And I'm currently finishing the proposal for my book free agent.
So I hope to be able to connect with a lot of women in their 50s and people
and their 50s who understand that this is the best phase of our lives and
that can be the absolute best phase of our sex ones.
Love it.
We all can't wait to read it.
You're going to come back into it.
Thanks, Emily.
Oh my God.
You have the exclusive.
I want the excuse that I want to, we can't wait.
Because I'm getting a little bit with you a little bit, a little story, so I can't
wait for everyone to hear it.
And I can't wait for a podcast where I'm going to
interview you. Yeah, it's okay. When does it get interview me on a
podcast because we're friends are giving questions or things you want to
answer and you can ask when you can do me. Sam, the question is what do you
want to know about the fabulous,
sexologist and sex educator? Dr. Emily Morse, like do you know her well enough?
What do you want to know about her?
I'm going to ask her for you.
I can't wait.
Thank you.
Thanks, thanks, honey.
That's it for today's episode.
See you on Friday.
Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily.
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If you'd like to ask me about your sex life, dating, or relationships, call my hotline 559
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