Sex With Emily - Like Your Body, Love Your Sex Life
Episode Date: December 13, 2022We’ve all heard of “body positivity” - the idea that we should celebrate the skin we’re in, rather than emphasize how we think others see us. But in practice, how really is your relationship w...ith your body? Today’s show is all about giving our bodies the respect they deserve. I’m first joined by Bethany C Meyers, whose fitness company the be.come project aims to change our motivation behind working out. Bethany also shares why sex takes on a new, rich depth when we learn to connect with our movement on a daily basis. Afterwards, I’ll answer questions from listeners struggling to accept their own bodies. Because if we can’t learn to love our own bodies, how can we share them intimately with someone else?Show Notes:Article: 4 Sex Toys So Pretty, They Double As ArtArticle: Ask Emily: How Can I Be More Confident in the Bedroom?PromescentMore Bethany C. Meyers: Instagram | TwitterThe Become Project: Website | Instagram Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
No matter what age we're at, I think that there's things that make us really insecure
and prevent us from having the sex that we want.
And as soon as we can kind of unpack those and realize that what we're worrying about,
what we're stressed about, is not going to upset our partner likely.
It's mostly our own judgments about ourselves.
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.
We've all heard of body positivity,
the idea that we should celebrate the skin
we're in rather than emphasize how we think others see us.
But really, how is your relationship with your body?
Well, today's show is all about giving our bodies the respect they deserve. I'm first joined by
Bethany C. Myers, whose fitness company, The Become Project, aims to change the motivation behind
working out. Bethany also shares why sex takes on a new, rich depth when we learn to connect with
our movement on a daily basis.
I'll also answer questions about your struggles with body image because listen,
if we can't learn to love our own, how can we genuinely share them intimately with others?
Intentions with Emily. For each episode, I want to start off by setting an intention for the show
and I encourage you to do the same. My intention is to have you start a new respectful
relationship with your body.
Because sex only feels better when we get into our body regularly and lovingly.
Please rate and review Sex with Emily wherever you listen to the show. My new article for
Sex Toys So Pretty They Double Is Art is up at sexwithemily.com. 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 slash ask Emily or call my hotline. 559 talk sex or 559
8255739. Always 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 choose to remain anonymous.
Art everyone, enjoy this episode. Before we get started, I just want to remind you all that this is the best of episode that
may include outdated language like references to gender.
I started using the term's penis owner and vulva owner in 2020 in order to become more
inclusive of all gender identities and expressions.
We're always learning and growing here at Sex with Emily and can only do so with your continued
feedback.
Bethany C. Myers is the founder and CEO of the Become Project.
Myers approaches fitness through a body neutral lens, the idea of shifting from self-criticism
to a middle ground of body acceptance.
Beyond the Become Project, Myers is a prominent voice and advocate in the LGBTQ plus community
with particular ambition to amplify issues facing non-binary and transgender
communities. Learn more at thebecomeproject.com and follow Bethany on Instagram at Bethany
Seamires and the Become Project at the Become Project. Hello, hello Bethany. Hi Emily. It's so glad that the things that we're having a great chat. Bethany's in Newark
City-based master instructor know for body positive and inclusive approach to instruction. You know a lot about
body knowledge, alignment. I was watching all your tutorials. It's not about just losing weight and feeling skinny
and you also have your project the they can find the Become Project.
So the Become Project is where they can find the app.
Tell me about it.
Tell me how you started it.
Totally.
And all your journey.
Yeah.
The Become Project.
So basically, I was an instructor for years and years and years.
Sound like I'm really old, 10 years though.
I was teaching in boutique fitness and decided that I wanted to take my workouts online
to be able to reach more people.
And then I think the bigger thing that happened in the Become Project is that I realized how
kind of toxic the fitness world can be in the way that we think about our bodies.
So I think that they really try to sell us on the workout by saying your body is not good
as it currently is.
And so I wanted to create a place where people could work out
for the reason that's not necessarily just about weight loss.
Even if your goal is weight loss.
Exactly.
I think the motive is to go in and say,
I wanna move, to feel good,
I wanna move for my mental health.
I wanna like have some me time.
I wanna move my body, you know?
It's really is switching.
So this is where I love it.
I watched your TED talk, which I thought was great.
It was so powerful and so moving.
And your journey about being in the industry
and being someone who had any disorder,
and then realizing like,
it's all about this external need to like, to lose weight.
Then you had your whole journey to realizing
is about, you know, loving your body.
And I actually want to know what your process was for healing.
What I love that you said that so motivating me
is that we know that it's right for us to work out,
but it's so hard to motivate because we use this negative.
We beat ourselves out, we guilt ourselves in it,
we feel shame if we don't, I gotta work out,
I gotta lose weight, I gotta look better,
we hate our bodies, we look in the mirror,
we hate every animal we're telling people,
look in the mirror, look at what you love about yourself.
It's so hard to do and there's so much pressure
for women and for men, we all have it. And so it's like, I love that your project, the Become Project,
which is so cool. I love like just the whole process of congratulations. It's not easy
putting that shit together. Thank you. That has been grassroots as fuck. Right? It's been
really, yeah, it's been a process getting here, but amazing at the same time. Right.
Of course, the journey. Wait, it was never my thing.
I've got a lot of people, I was like, oh, you're lucky.
I've got so many other issues.
I'm not so lucky.
Like, oh, you're skinny.
I'm like, do you how much time do you have?
Do you know what goes on in my goddamn brain every day?
I barely made it here today, okay?
Because I realized when I started running first,
when I was like in my 20s, it just, it gave,
I felt better.
I got the indoor football match. I felt like an accomplishment. And then I started rock climbing. when I was like in my 20s, it just, it gave, I felt better. I got the indoor front wash.
I felt like an accomplishment.
And then I started rock climbing.
And I never felt that was good at sports.
And so it was all these things for me.
And for me now, I've gotten to the point
after all these years, like, if I don't do it for a few days,
I need it.
I have a really good, like, I love it.
It's healthy.
It clears my mind.
It helps with depression.
By 25, I did love it.
I didn't love it until I was about 23.
But how would you say?
Because I think your approach, Bethany Seymires,
is kind of like getting people to kind of learn
to just hook up with it in a way
that is not judgy, not blamey, shaming.
Yeah, well, it's interesting because a lot of the client tell.
I mean, I have two different types of client tell.
One is like a super athletic person
who loves working out and they like the routines
and the movements very unique. It's almost like a dance athletic person who loves working out and they like the routines,
the movements very unique.
It's almost like a dance class without dancing at all.
And then I have people who are like,
I hate the gym, never wanna work out of day in my life.
Like, no, thank you.
And I think the reason why people get attached to that
is mostly just because of the language
that I use in teaching.
So, you know, often times,
look, if I was an in fitness,
I probably wouldn't be a workout person
to be completely honest.
Like, it's not, I would never just go to a gym on my own
and get on the treadmill.
Like, I don't even know how to do that.
I have to take a class or somebody guiding me, right?
I think that a lot of times,
like I would go into a fitness class and make,
go lower, go deeper, push harder, like come on, what
are you resting sort of like this like very like bashing almost a little bit scary.
And I really like to teach from a place it's still tough, it's still like getting there
and do it.
But it's like, okay, where do you feel the best?
What would happen if you didn't come down instead of dropping what would happen if you
go to your knees? Like, it's sort of this different approach to bring people in
where I feel like a lot of people have found a safe space within where like they can
let their like their body is allowed to have flaws. They're allowed to mess up. It's
okay. If you have fat rolls on your stomach, right? Like it's not all about getting a freaking
bikini body.
Like there's other things that we're talking about
and thinking about, and one of the main things we're thinking
about is how do you feel?
So my favorite part of the app is before and after each workout
in order to unlock and lock the routine,
you have to answer the question, how do you feel?
And I think that that really starts to let people recognize,
am I starting this workout feeling unmotivated
and then finish feeling really energized?
Yes, yeah.
And so if you can take the attention
to how you feel after, maybe that becomes more motivating,
what's not motivating to workout is you
sock you ate too much food this weekend.
And now you have to go to the gym.
Like that's miserable.
Right.
Exactly.
Why we don't stick with workouts.
Exactly.
We use it as a punishing if you could really learn to be in the moment and be thinking
about how does your body feel.
I love that you have that check in.
And the beginning of all your videos, I think what I love also about your workout videos,
first of all, doing it home.
You can do them anywhere.
And I love it because I do now the kind of practice that you're doing.
It's more like Pilates, yoga, bass.
It seems like some of it just are the positioning and you give modifications because I have a bad back.
And I feel like I've hurt myself in classes when they're not like afterwards.
I had to do the instructor recently and she said to me, well why do you tell me you're a bad back?
I'm like there's 20 people in here and I wasn't going to go up there and tell you but
she'll don't you know the modifications yet.
I'm like no, I don't. It's a fairly new injury.
I was working.
It just pissed me off.
Yeah.
I've actually started.
I just can't go around, but you're doing that in the delivery and making people feel
good.
Totally.
So I've actually started not even calling them modifications.
I just call them alternatives.
Because what I realized is, you know, a side plank.
Like, if you don't have a good shoulder, you don't have a good neck, there's a good chance
that you always need to be on your knees and a side plank, no if you don't have a good shoulder, you don't have a good neck, there's a good chance that you always need to be
on your knees in a side plank,
no matter how strong you are.
And I kind of like over this idea where it's like this,
it's the harder version and this is the easier version.
It's just two different versions.
What feels best on your body.
And when you're doing things that feel good
on your body rate, then you're working it in the right way.
And it's a different relationship. And it's not like every time I do this workout,
my back is killing me. So I think that I would, I like the idea of finding power and figuring out
what our body needs. It's essentially body autonomy, right? Exactly. What do I need at this time?
So then a big part of my job is to make sure that people know all the different ways
that they can do something.
And you do it seamlessly, it seems like it's ever less than that way. So it's really is your gift.
I really like telling people what to do with it.
Just like telling people what to do in the bedroom.
Sometimes, yeah.
I do feel like you're more like dominant, submissive, dominant.
It definitely depends on who I'm with.
Right. So your width, let's talk about your you're with, let's talk about you.
Okay.
Let's talk about your, so you're with men, women, women mostly.
Women, tell me.
Women, you're mostly.
You've met my spouse who is born, male, identifies as non-binary,
uses they-them pronouns as do I.
You use they then pronouns too. We could talk about that, they then. I was afraid I,
I mean, I've done this, but I feel like I don't want to mess with they then.
It's okay. Okay. It's a thing. It's a thing that I care.
It's a practicing language. It is, and I'm not going to put it in a important language.
I know. I don't think that you would. No.
Okay. Because I actually remember times when I was like really hard for me when I started,
you know, having friends who use they then, and I had to like, I had to really practice.
You have to practice.
It's just like mindful of it.
It's like learning a language, right?
It's a way of speaking.
And so I think oftentimes people are very intimidated by
the words because they don't want to offend someone.
But I try to look at it from a place of like, it's just
learning how to talk.
And this is just a more inclusive way of speaking.
Exactly.
Okay.
Yeah.
So they that, right.
So what would you correct somebody?
So, how do we explain that though exactly?
So, I wouldn't say she.
So, Beth and you'd like to bring they, I would say.
Yeah.
Days.
Beth and he is here today.
We're really excited to talk to them.
To talk to them.
Beth and he is here today.
They look great.
You do look great.
And you sound great.
And you're in an open marriage.
Okay.
So, I'm in an open marriage.
So, let's talk about that because people are often confused by that.
They're intrigued.
They're not sure how it works.
How do you get past it?
And you've had a lot of experience.
So how does that work for you?
You know, it's a topic I talk about often.
And honestly, it's something I'm still figuring out as far as how I can help other people.
Something that's interesting about the relationship itself is
Nico and I have always been open.
We've known each other for 13 years.
There's been times that I suppose we dated monogamously,
but neither one of us are monogamous people,
so we've just cheated on each other.
And then easily got over it,
because we're like, whatever, I don't care.
Kind of thing.
Right.
We're both queer. as far as my identity,
like I'm married to somebody who has male parts,
but I wouldn't ever consider any other guy.
Now, how would you say that being in your body,
like this work that you've done,
because this is why I wanna go back to for a minute,
because how has it improved just your sex life overall,
because coming at a place of starving your body of nutrients and restrictive?
Like a lot of us do.
We're when I'm talking about self love, I remember it was a big light bulb moment when I realized
that self love was like, it not only is it words, but like the little things that you do
are like eating the bad food or the negative talk.
It just happens all day every day.
I can if you don't monitor it.
So you learn to like really get into your body.
How is that helped you sexually? Would you say? Because I would think when you were
out of it. Well, I mean, even more than, I mean, it's helped me sexually. It's, your body
is everything, right? It's like this home that it's not everything. It's the home that
we reside in though. And it's this physical manifestation of ourselves. And so that
carries into every single aspect.
What I found is at the height of my eating disorder,
at the height of my body bashing
and really, really just being super uncomfortable
in my skin was also at the height of my most disconnected sex.
And sexual encounters where I was like,
I don't even, I don't care who it is.
Like just like, I mean, honestly,
I feel like really disrespectful to my own self.
Yeah.
This is like, whatever you can be an asshole,
but you can still fuck me sort of thing.
You know, I just didn't, like did not care.
As I started to heal and really started to focus on like,
I'm only gonna move for reasons
because of my own mental health.
Like, I'm gonna stop doing workouts
because of anything that's exterior
and I'm only gonna work out for things that are interior.
And then like, I'm gonna spend every day
like literally standing in the mirror
and being like, I love you legs.
I'd like to do it.
Let's do it.
Cause I totally did all the time.
And that's part of your program too.
You give these tips or just part of your way of life.
It's true, look in the mirror.
Yeah, I mean, you have to.
And there was definitely a timer.
I was like, oh, that's so cheesy.
But it really does help, especially on bad days,
which I still very much have.
Yes.
All the time, right?
I'm not this perfect.
Like, I'm super body neutral and everything's great all the time.
It's like, some days it sucks.
But talking to yourself is really helpful.
Reminding yourself that the way, you know, it helps me is the way that you, like, I'm
feeling this way about my body because society has painted a picture of what is beautiful
and what is perfect.
And this is an idea that's been sold to me.
Often helps me to take it to like a bigger perspective.
I don't know if that helps other people.
But I think it absolutely does.
I think that is a really big shift to realize
that you can have the agency over your own body,
those own decisions, and then stopping the negative.
Because it really is true that we see,
I remember when we were selling lingerie at the flea market,
I just love this example and she was saying it,
she'll have women come in that two women,
same day, different body, same body type, same exact.
And one comes in and she's like,
I look so hot, I feel so good.
And then someone else is saying,
she's like, oh my God, I can never wear this.
And it's like, we all have that choice in every moment.
It decide to love the body that we are in and to have this notion that it's supposed
to look any certain way.
And I do think we're getting certain places in society.
We're seeing all different sized bodies like in advertisements and people are being
a little, but we're still got a long way to go.
So I love that that this app is really about and what you're doing.
Your whole movement is about just helping everyone just being on this more body, not even
body positivity, right? Being like neutral because positivity, even being body positive, is kind of stressful.
Because if you hate your body, you're like, I'm not going to be positive, but I can be neutral.
Right.
And that's a good place to start, if that's where you need to start.
Because we often do things that set ourselves up to fail.
And the idea that you can be positive about something 100% of the time, like I can't think
of one thing in my whole life that I am positive about all the time,
being either.
And so the more like you need to be body positive and then you have days where you don't feel
super body positive and it's like, oh, you failed at being body positive.
It's just so much stuff, right?
So I use the word body neutrality with the idea that Sundays you love your body,
Sundays you hate your body all days you love your body, some days you hate your body, all days you respect your body.
And I go back to that often where it's like, okay, today I don't feel great about it.
I'm going to accept that and acknowledge it, but like I am more than just my body.
This is not the only thing that I am.
Right.
There's so much more.
Yeah, so much more to you.
I think that's a great, I think that is such a good message.
Really? So how do you feel? How has it been going? What's the response been to the Become Project?
It's been, it's been amazing. It's honestly, it's been very heavy in a good way.
It's an emotional, like it evokes something very emotional in people. And the stories that we get in from clients
is this really powerful thing.
I mean, if people being like,
I did the workout in my underwear today.
And this is the first time that I've stood in my underwear
and like really looked at myself.
Like that's a huge thing.
That is a huge thing.
For people to be like, I'm feeling more comfortable.
We've actually had a lot of people saying that they're feeling more comfortable around their spouse and that their sex life is a huge thing. For people to be like, I'm feeling more comfortable. We've actually had a lot of people saying that they're feeling more comfortable around
their spouse and that their sex life is a lot better.
That has to be, you got to move your body.
100%.
And like, it's really cool to have people writing to be like, you've been proved to my sex
life.
Yes, that's it.
You know all about that, right?
Yes, no. Well, all day every day, that's what, that's it, because it's, it is the life force.
So would I also want to explain to people people and this is something that I'm just like
ah
If we don't move our bodies like our life force like our like the pelvic floor
I mean there is so much tension and there's so much that we hold memories we hold the we hold stress and tension and that actually prevents us
Front like you have to move your body to have better psych
I mean and I hate to be like you have to move your body to have better second. And I hate to be like, you got it, but you do. And we
wonder why sometimes I hear from a lot of men and women, but
a little bit more women were like, I don't know why I've never in
the mood and sex has gotten boring, but like I don't have time to
work out and I can't do anything. And like a lot of time to
a lot of things start in the way you have pain. We have to learn
to like strengthen our core, do exercises that get you the more
you move, the more you will want sex, your blood's flowing.
Your blood is the less stagnated if you're not doing it.
Right.
I honestly haven't thought about it that way, but you're absolutely right.
Yeah.
I mean, it's really, once you start moving, and that's why even couples do it together,
like if they like, it's just, and that is something, because when couples play together,
I always say they play together, they stay together, but it's true.
When you move your bodies together, it's hot.
It is. Or take a class or do something
that's challenging both of you,
get that dopamine, that serotonin, that connectivity again.
Right.
And gaining your own, just your own stance,
like understanding what it feels like
to be inside of your body.
I'm really big in my instruction,
I've always been this way,
I'm really big about putting the mind into the muscle.
Yeah, put your mind into the muscle. Yeah.
Put your mind into your body.
Where do you feel it?
Where do you want to feel it?
Like taking yourself mentally there.
And I think that that's just so important to really be inside of yourself.
I can understand what you feel like.
Well, I think that, okay, yes, I'm so glad you brought this up because that is a so hard
for I, that is something that personally,
I've had to learn that, and that has been a journey
where I literally would have,
like I remember like 20 years ago,
I had a therapist say to me like,
well, where do you feel this in your body?
And I was annoyed.
I was like, no, I,
I don't only feel anxiety, I feel it everywhere.
So I don't know what you're talking about,
I don't have emotions in my body, I don't feel it.
And it took me a long time,
and that's from a lot of us who'veassociated things happening to childhood. I had trauma.
Things happen. And I had to learn. And I'm still, it's always a journey. Because we can numb out.
We cannot feel things to feel things. So what is your process?
What's the language that you would use to get someone to really like stop and go, where am I feeling this?
To put it into movement. Right. I mean, when I'm doing a certain move,
I'm helping evoke the feeling.
Yep, if you're doing a glute exercise with me,
your ass is gonna be a fire.
You know, like I'm helping encourage that
by the position that we're doing.
And then I'm like coaching a lot of form
to work people into a spot.
So what often helps is to figure out,
if you're feeling it in the wrong place,
in order to feel it in the right place.
So it's sort of using that, that like back and forth, is that make a little bit of a
side?
Yeah, no totally.
Are you feeling it in your knee and if you shift your backwards and do this, can you then
feel it in your butt?
So you have, you have no other option but to think about those places.
Exactly.
And you do that throughout, right?
Do you remind people that, because this is what pisses me off in nothing class is to when they don't tell you. And I'll say this
to my instructor, I'm like, well, where am I supposed to be feeling this right now?
Because I don't know. And I'm just a perfect, I feel like if I do it wrong, so to keep
having people and then that's what keeps you like to keep saying you should be feeling
instant or left in your right hand. And you know, yeah, well, if you know where you're
supposed to feel it, then you can adjust. I mean, so my main job for years was being a teacher
trainer. I trained instructors. And I job for years was being a teacher trainer.
I trained instructors, and I'm obsessed with the format of teaching and how you're supposed
to teach.
And like, what cues make someone understand something and how you use your voice against
the music?
I mean, I could go on for hours, hours.
But that is, like, teaching other instructors how to teach is one of my favorite things.
And that's one of my number one things I say is, if you tell people where they're supposed
to feel it, it helps them better adjust their body to get there.
Absolutely.
I think every single instructor, those are my favorite instructors.
I'm like, thank you.
Like after yoga, like thank you because I've been doing it for yoga forever, but I still
need to remember that my shoulders have to go over my hands.
Right.
Or don't be because you just keep going back, you know, you keep going back to how you're used
to doing things, so to keep correcting.
I kind of got to go back to your open relationship
because I got you off.
Let's go back.
I know that people, because you're in a successful one,
and I would just let where you're working on it.
And I think I love your language of work and progress.
We're always working on it.
I think it's a super-success.
I do, I think we have a really successful open,
like as far as how we interact with each other
What has been harder right now? What I'm struggling with right now is who who am I dating?
Who are like the people who are into the open?
Who are the people that are okay with the fact that you're married who can get it? It's you know
The idea of what marriage is is so ingrained into us.
We're so ingrained to only know what a monogamous relationship looks like.
And I know that there's more.
You know, I know that it can be something else.
And that's been the hardest thing is finding other people who are on board.
Yeah.
Well, I think that you're doing a lot of educating in all different areas of your life.
So they have to understand what it means.
But it's hard though if you're listening it just for sex.
Right.
If you want something more than that,
you never know what things are going to be.
Like, if you have energy with somebody.
Yes.
I think you're going to find people.
Something that you would tell your younger self about sex
and relationships.
Um, it's not a sin.
I was raised really religious. Oh, okay. Yeah. So it's okay to explore.
Masterbait. Yes, masterbait. I always bring it back to you.
Masterbait, right? Say every, me too. It took me way too long to find it.
Yeah, same experience it. Yeah, how old were you?
Like late 20s. Oh, okay. Yeah. I mean, great.
When I was young, I was like hanging on like the pole of my bedpost.
Like I was doing that.
Oh, you were right.
You didn't know you felt shame or it was weird.
Right.
You're from the Midwest too, right?
You're from Zuri?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm from Michigan.
And then the first time that I like really went in with my hands and like did it full
out, you know, put all my heart in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that you got to do.
I was like, holy shit.
Yeah, where have you been in my whole life? Yeah, yeah, yeah, that you got to do. I was like, holy shit.
Yeah, where have you been my whole life?
I wanted to fuck it.
This is amazing.
I have to say, the more you work out,
move, I always want to be like, master, after work out.
It's all the blood flow.
It's a good thing.
Okay, something random that gets you in the mood.
Something random that gets me in the mood is a steam.
Ooh, like bathing.
Yeah, steam char.
Yeah, I did that today.
I just, I did.
I'm a tuned in.
I love it.
I just steam room and it's the best.
It really does.
It does.
It's not right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The biggest dating deal breaker.
The jealous crazy.
Yeah.
I didn't get to how you get through jealousy and open thing.
You know, I really, I don't know if it's me.
I feel like I tend to attract pretty crazy people.
Oh, okay.
Or like people that like love the drama stuff.
So, yeah.
I don't know.
We start to recognize it, but then you can't.
Like after a while, I will be like, that's, if you see it, it just recently happened and
they did.
I saw the red flag and I ran.
Yeah, we got it. Right, good.
Yeah.
I felt very proud of myself.
That's good.
You just keep doing that.
You don't even know what you're doing.
They won't even be in your right.
Right, but then you'll realize you're like,
that can't even come into.
Right, yes.
You can choose here.
Number one, sex dating or relationship tip.
See?
Number one, you can pick one.
Sex dating or relationship tip?
I'll talk a little bit.
I'll say something about jealousy is understanding that love is not finite.
It's more, you know, like it's not like a glass of water where if you drink some, it's missing.
It's more like a candle and you can light other people's and love is much more expansive
than we think.
Yes, exactly.
You've ability to love many people.
That's a good answer.
Okay.
Thank you so much.
Absolutely. Thank you. Bethany for being people. That's a good answer. OK, thank you so much. Absolutely. Thank you. Thank you.
For being here, this was a blast.
Find them at Bethany C. Myers and at the Become Project
on Instagram and at thebecomeproject.com.
After the break, I'll take your questions all
about loving the skin you're in.
So don't go anywhere.
We're taking a quick detour from today's episode for our holiday gift-guide spotlight.
This week I'm joined by Jeff Abraham, CEO of Promessons, a company paving the way for
the better treatment of early ejaculation and enhancing couples intimacy.
Here he is sharing how their line of products can bring joy and a whole lot of pleasure to you and your loved ones this holiday season.
Tell me what's new and exciting right now.
I think one of the things that's most exciting is we are no longer a delay spray company,
okay?
We have transitioned into a sexual wellness brand.
So obviously our delay spray is still far and and away the best product on the planet for men who want to last longer for couples who want better intimacy longer duration of intercourse.
But our Vitaflux is fucking phenomenal.
I mean, both for men and women, it's phenomenal. It's clearly our number two product.
I mean, no comparisons. The female arousal gel has been unbelievably strong.
It grows every single month.
It's insane.
The delay wipes we have are the best delay wipe
that's out there.
They're better than Romans.
They're clearly better than the Roman Delay's wipes.
Now, they're not as good as Delay spray.
So what we like to tell people is Delay Spray
on your bedside table or on your vanity
in your restroom at home.
And Delay wipes when you're going to a club,
but you don't want to carry a little bottle around with you.
So they've been the perfect compliment.
It's been a great product for us
because some people just want that convenience.
The vibrators have been nothing short of phenomenal. I mean, you
talked to people at Wildtech. We're one of their largest freaking distributors of vibrators
now. We're talking about great holiday gifts, what to put in our stockings. Talk to me
about the arousal gel. The thing about the arousal gel that is so phenomenal, it's external.
It's not systemic. It's not like pills. It's not, you know,
anything that you ingest. It is something that you just rub about a pea size. So out of
the average container, you get like 80 applications, but you take a pea size and you just rub it
right on the clip, right on the vulva. It just creates this gentle warming sensation.
Anytime you have warmth, you're going to increase blood flow.
So it helps with the rousal.
It has the same effect on men.
Now, there's enough things out there for men already.
So we've kept it as female arousal gel.
And a lot of men find out because it'll rub off when they're with a woman
and they'll go, you know, it actually helped me with my erection
because I felt this warming sensation, which increased blood flow.
We're like, yeah, it does work, but you got so many other things out there. Don't worry about it.
But women have really taken to the arousal gel.
And I had one gallon particular tell me she goes, guess what I'm wearing right now?
And I was on a Zoom call. I go, you have on a cream colored blazer.
She goes, no, she goes on my bottom half. I go,
and I start laughing. I go, well, I can't see you. She goes, I'm wearing some a rousal gel. I'm like,
what? She goes every morning when I go to work. She goes, I just give myself a little dab. And she
goes during the morning, she goes, I just feel that tingling. She goes, I just feel that sensation.
And she goes, I feel turned on.
She goes at lunchtime or right after lunch, she goes, I give myself another little hit.
And she goes, by the end of the day, I come home, I feel like I've had eight hours of foreplay.
She goes, if I have a partner, I'm all ready to go.
She goes, if not, I bring out my vibrator.
She goes, I feel like I've had four played for eight hours.
We've had women that tell us that they use it even when they're not going to be intimate.
It makes them feel more vibrant.
It makes them feel more sexy.
It makes them feel more alive.
It's the difference between guys and gals.
Okay.
I guarantee you if a guy rubbed it on and he started feeling it, he'd go in the bathroom.
And if he's by himself, you know, rub one out.
A guy gets that feeling, he's like, I want to feel orgasm right now.
And I just find it amazing that women have actually told us that they love the idea of even
all day prior to being intimate to just help create the mood, to just feel sexy, to just
feel turned on, to just feel warmth
and passionate all day.
Thank you, Jeff.
We love to hear all the ways you've all are enhancing their lives with promescent.
And if you're interested in anything we just discussed, shop at promescent.com for free shipping,
60-day money-back guarantee, discrete delivery, that's prombscnt.com.
That was this week's holiday gift guide spotlight
for more holiday shopping inspiration,
for sure to check out my sexiest gift guide ever.
Emily's picks for 2022 holidays at sexwithemlite.com.
Okay, this first one comes to us from Zach 25 in Colorado. Hi, Dr. Emily.
My question is, ever since my wife had our daughter two years ago, she really doesn't like
Nippel Play.
She says it reminds her of breastfeeding.
Is there any way I can get her to like the feeling of sucking on them, slashing them again?
That was a big part of our foreplay and I wish I could get her to enjoy it again.
Thanks for any tips.
All right, Zach, thanks for your question.
So here's the deal.
When women give birth, when we age,
move through the decades, our bodies change.
And so does our hormones, our desires,
what we like in the bedroom, the frequency of sex,
there's a lot of things that are going to change.
So while your wife might not have the same exact feelings about you, you know, with Nippelplay,
I don't think that she's completely, I'm fairly confident she can get back to a place of enjoying sensation.
So it's more like she got a new pattern, she like is associating Nippipple Play with breastfeeding. So now we gotta get her to kind of rediscover
the sensitivity of her nipples again.
So I would say let her know, you can talk to her.
Outside the bedroom, you just say, you know what?
I love watching you be a mom.
I love our sex life, all the things that are great
and then say, and I really miss playing with your nipples.
I would love just to slow down.
Sometimes you don't, if intercourse is a problem,
you kind of wanna bring back massage.
Well, I think with her, you could say,
I just wanna lightly start to massage your breasts.
I wanna start like massaging the sides of them.
It feels really good.
Like, explore her breasts in a bunch of different areas
that are not the nipples.
So it's kind of like a tease,
like when you're teasing your thighs
and you're playing with your inner thighs.
And then you tease it, maybe use a light touch
and then you go back to the nipples.
If you can take it slow
and she can start to kind of rediscover
all those nerve-ending sensations,
I think she's gonna get that feeling back
and she's gonna learn to love the nipple feeling again.
Now, if she doesn't,
like if for whatever reason she can't get
there, I'm sure you guys can find some other ways to play in bed. This is from Sarah 23 New York.
Hey, I'm a 23-year-old girl with double A cups. I keep seeing posts that boob size doesn't matter,
but I'm having trouble getting it through my head and it definitely affects my confidence and
intimate situations. How can I feel confident and sexy in the bedroom with my super flat chest?
All right, Sarah, thanks for this question
because I get it.
You don't see culture, society, glorifying smaller breasts.
We're never told, like, from a young age,
like, oh, big boobs and all that stuff.
But here's the thing about confidence.
It's just remember, it is a,
I'm love that you're asking this at 23
because it is a process and it takes time to learn to accept our bodies and love our
bodies. And I can tell you I don't, I don't have a large, I've small, I'm a small breasted
woman. For my sexual confidence, what really helped me was understanding like what felt good to me.
So when I was with someone intimately,
like I felt confident in my ability
to move in certain ways that felt good.
Like through masturbation, I learned about orgasm
and I learned about pleasure.
And so I feel like that confidence truly is,
and I don't want to sound cliche,
but that really is like the sexiest thing in the bedroom
because somebody who's confident and knows their bodies and what feels good and knows how to give
themselves pleasure and others pleasure, that is sexy.
So well, I can't get you to say you should just love your body.
There's a certain amount of body acceptance that I like to preach.
And there's some things we've talked about like exposure exercises, like getting naked in your bedroom and looking at your body and touching yourself all over
and realizing like how magical your body is and how much pleasure you can give yourself,
you know, maybe you can have a nipple orgasm.
Like most, I think that many of us can, but we don't know because we never try it out.
And also just know that this whole notion that only like your partners want
to be with that everyone is craving large breasts, I can tell you just not true. Now maybe
I haven't been with those guys because they're just wouldn't be attracted to me, but like
I don't spend my time worrying about the people that aren't attracted to me. I spend my
time worrying about the people that I'm attracted to and return that. They return that attraction.
And we could spend like, I'm not a tall
person, I'm petite, I have smaller breasts, you know, it's like, I could spend a lot of time on
those negatives, but just like everything in life, when we focus on our literally our assets,
and the things that just make us who we are uniquely, and all the pleasure and a rod of
zones, and all those things. So I think the first thing realizing like,
it is in your head.
Maybe you were shamed, right?
Maybe someone said, oh, I couldn't be with you.
And then I would just say like,
even though that might hurt, that's not your person.
And you will find someone who is your person.
Again, it's a progress, not perfection,
and keep working on yourself.
And not making apologies and not saying,
I know they're small.
And just like
learning to say, you know what, I like my body.
This is what my body can do and getting into your pleasure and rejecting the people that
aren't for you.
People show you who they are, believe them.
Let's talk to our female caller, 51 in Arizona.
Hi.
Thanks for calling.
Oh, hi, Emily.
How are you?
I'm good.
How are you?
I'm fine. Thanks for calling. I just have a question. Yeah thank you I
enjoy your show. I was just thinking I'm 51 and I've been married to my husband for 25 years
and things have changed a little bit physically. It's all right both of our physical, you know, we both gain a few pounds, not anything crazy, but
and things got a little stale and I think I'm going through menopause, I'm not sure.
And my pubic hair is gray and I'm so like embarrassed by it.
That happens. Yeah. Could you shave it? You could dye it or shave it.
Those are your options.
I tried to dye it one and it was just,
I don't know if I just waxed it.
I'm not sure.
Or embrace it or just say, you know what?
My pubic hair is gray.
But if it doesn't make you feel sexy, go get it wax.
Get it waxed.
Trim it.
Shave it. shave it, or just...
Yeah.
I mean, that's really what you do.
And have you ever had it all removed before?
No, never.
I mean, you might like it.
When I first started doing that, years ago, I got the Brazilian wax, where do you live?
Arizona, yeah, going to a...
A Medi...
Go into a spawn.
There's different ways you can do it.
It might even be less painful right now.
I mean, it is kind of painful at first,
but they take all the hair off and it's really, really smooth
and it can feel really good.
Because there's so many nerve endings on our vulva,
the exterior part of our vagina,
that there might be more access
and you might realize that he kinks sort of with oral sex
and using some
lube it might feel good it might be a little change or diet.
There's like, I wish there was a magic bullet for it.
Either accept it.
You're trying to go down there and I'm like, no, no, no, no.
Oh, sweetie, I want you to go.
What about shaving it all off?
I mean, carefully or getting it waxed.
Yeah.
And you bring it together 25 years,
you might not even know, you might be like, great.
So, but if you've never tried it,
if you've never tried taking it all off,
I'm all about variety and trying new things.
So either you embrace it and you're like,
yep, you're even saying the thing, this is who I am,
or you try something new.
And see how that feels, because it grows back. Yeah, yeah, you're like, yep, you don't even say anything. This is who I am, or you try something new. And see how that feels, because it grows back.
Yeah, yeah, you're right.
Yeah, I'm going back.
I'm going back.
Okay, let me know how it goes.
I'm dying to know now how you think
if I've never ever done it.
Okay, thanks.
Let me know.
Retirement, yeah.
I appreciate you thinking of my course.
Of course.
Thank you.
Of course, I'm here for you.
I got you.
I mean, really, there's nothing.
I wish there was something you could do
when your hair turns gray, but there isn't.
It's embrace it, dye it, shave everything.
That's what you do.
It's true, even when you're with someone for 25 years,
there's still stuff to work on.
There's still those issues.
You know, I think you're 25 years together.
You'd be like, oh, look how cute you have gray hair.
Remember, it's all what we want,
like what makes us feel sexy.
If she's not allowing her partner to go down in her and she enjoys that,
then I'm saying, okay, either embrace it or take it off and see how that feels.
Because no matter what age we're at, I think that there's things that make us
really insecure and prevent us from having the sex that we want.
And the sooner we can kind of unpack those and realize that what we're worrying about, what we're stressed about, is not going to
upset our partner likely. It's mostly our own judgments about ourselves.
That's it for today's episode. See you on Friday.
Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily.
Be sure to like, subscribe, and give us a review wherever you listen to the podcast
and share this with a friend or partner.
You can find me on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter at Sex with Emily.
Oh, I've been told I give really good email.
So sign up at sexwithemily.com.
And while you're there,
check out my free guides and articles
for more ways to prioritize your pleasure.
If you'd like to ask me about your sex life,
dating or relationship, call my hotline 559 Talk Sex.
That's 559 825 5739.
A go to sexwithemily.com-ask-emily.
Special thanks to ACAST for powering the Sex with Emily podcast.
Was it good for you?
Email me feedback at sexwithemily.com.