Sex With Emily - Sex Gets Better With Age w/ Dr. Wednesday Martin
Episode Date: October 18, 2024It’s time to debunk the toxic myths around sex and age. Does sexual satisfaction drop off as you get older? Absolutely not! In fact, the data tells us the exact opposite is true. Today, anthropologi...st, bestselling author and my dear friend Dr. Wednesday Martin and I lay out the facts, which is fitting: we’re both in our fifties! If you’re not in your fifties yet, here’s what you can look forward to. It’s the decade many of us hit the reset button on our sexual desires. It’s the decade you start purely having sex for pleasure. And it’s the decade your confidence and communication get even better because you’ve honed your relationship (and career!) skills. Wednesday and I talk about why your fifties are so sexy, the signs of perimenopause and menopause and how to treat both, and our best advice for younger women. In this episode, you’ll learn: Why your 50s are a time for empowerment, confidence, and embracing your desires. Tips for navigating bodily changes and maintaining intimacy in midlife. Understanding the impact of menopause on your body and libido, and how to adapt for a fulfilling sex life.​ Show Notes: More Dr. Wednesday Martin: Instagram | X | Website | Book Enter the Solaray giveaway now! Entries end on 10/21 at 11:59 PM PT and the winner will be chosen on 10/22. Follow @solarayvitamins and @sexwithemily on instagram Like our giveaway post on our Instagram Tag your friends in the comments – each tag gets you an entry, so go ahead and tag all your people! Join the SmartSX Membership: Access exclusive sex coaching, live expert sessions, community building, and tools to enhance your pleasure and relationships with Dr. Emily Morse. Yes! No! Maybe? List & Other Sex With Emily Guides: Explore pleasure, deepen connections, and enhance intimacy using these Sex With Emily downloadable guides. SHOP WITH EMILY! (free shipping on orders over $99) The only sex book you’ll ever need: Smart Sex: How to Boost Your Sex IQ and Own Your Pleasure Want more? Visit the Sex With Emily Website Let’s get social: Instagram | X | Facebook | TikTok | Threads | YouTube Let’s text: Sign up here Want me to slide into your email inbox? Sign Up Here for sex tips on the regular. See the full show notes at sexwithemily.com
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You guys do not catastrophize about midlife. I am literally, indescribably more happy,
feel better about my body, more confident, and just more living in a space of delight
in my 50s than ever before.
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.
Today I'm diving into something I don't usually talk about, my age, because it's only a number.
But in honor of World Menopause Day, my amazing friend, anthropologist and sex expert Dr.
Wednesday Martin is here to talk about why your 50s are the hottest decade yet.
And not just because of the hot flashes.
I mean, did you know that nearly 1.3 million women in the US enter menopause each year?
And menopause affects everything from mood to libido.
It's crucial we talk about it openly.
Also check out our Menopause Must Haves article titled 4 Menopause Problems and How to Solve
Them on SexWithEmily.com.
I'm breaking down the top solutions for everything from hot flashes to dryness with product wrecks to help you feel
amazing through Menopause and beyond, and really wherever you're at. We'll also put a link in the
show notes. Oh, I'm so excited to announce that we are doing a special Solarray giveaway. In honor
of World Menopause Day, I've teamed up with my friends at Solare to bring you a giveaway that's all about making menopause way less sucky.
We're giving you a chance to win Solare's amazing new Her Life Stages supplement line
to support you through everything.
And that's not all.
We've also got some seriously game-changing goodies in this prize pack like the Prim pillow
by Taboo, the health serum for vaginal regeneration, Women's Lotions, Ember Wave Cooling
Bracelet, Evercool Cooling Pillow Cases, and a Refreshing Panty Spray by The Honey Pot.
All you have to do to enter is, number one, follow Solare Vitamins and Sex with Emily on Instagram.
Number two, like our giveaway post on our Instagram. And three, tag your friends in the comments.
Each tag gets you an entry. So go ahead, tag everyone. Entries end on 10.21.
Good luck everyone.
Please rate and review Sex with Emily
wherever you listen to the podcast.
It helps get the show out to more people
and so I can keep doing more shows.
It just takes two seconds.
Please, right now, I'll wait.
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You can also find me on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok,
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We tried the world's first silent vibrator.
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All right, everyone, enjoy this episode.
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Welcome to the show again Dr. Wednesday Martin.
So good to have you here.
I could not be more excited to be here with you today because I love our topic and I have a question for you.
Okay.
Because I love our topic and I have a question for you. Okay.
Do you remember that time I accidentally outed you?
I do remember what you're talking about.
It wasn't accidental.
It was just the first time I shared
some information on the show.
It was not, I was not outing you about your sexuality.
That's true, that's true.
But it was something that people
can be just as touchy about. Yeah's true. That's true. But it was something that people can be just
as touchy about. Yeah, absolutely. I realized that on the episode where
Wednesday interviewed me about my book and my life, which you guys should
totally listen to. You can link it in the show notes, but I realized that it was
very personal. I revealed a lot and we talked about my age. Yes. Listen,'t often listen you can Google me it says my age but I often don't talk about age
related matters for many reasons but one of them is you know when I started the
show I was like 35 and I would early on was talking about my hookups and all the
things I was doing and then as I grew older matured I just sort of became less
relevant about me and the show became more about my listeners.
But you were able to bring a lot of stuff out of me that I hadn't quite revealed.
So I thought today's show would be really fun to talk about sex in your 50s, aging and
sex, what happens, what you need to know and how we can help other people.
Because we're all going to age.
We're all aging right now.
Right now you just aged.
Everybody as you're listening to this, you are aging and everybody's gonna age.
And you know what I love?
I just love that you went with it because there are a lot of taboos around aging.
And when you look at the data, you see that, you know, a lot of our preconceptions about
aging and sex and vitality and all these things are so actually incorrect. Like we
have a lot of old ideas about people in the 50s, women in the 50s especially, but
what I love about that you just came out with it when I asked you was you were
doing something brave. I mean I remember when I first moved here I first had a
deal in LA and I was talking to an
executive and his wife who is a very like out there feminist and communicates
it and he said to me my kids came in and he looked at my kids and he was doing
some math and he said how old are you and I was at the time 49 and he looked
at me said I'm gonna say something to you. I really, really hope you'll listen to me.
This is really, really important.
And he said, do not ever tell anyone ever how old you are, ever,
if you want a career, any kind of career in entertainment,
or if you want your career to flourish, basically anywhere.
He said, do not have another birthday party. Do not
talk about your age. Do not disclose your age. You could get away people probably
think you're 35 and your career will go a lot better if you don't correct that
notion and so the next thing I decided to do was write a book. Being in my 50s. Good for you.
I mean really. I have gendered ageism. There's ageism, right?
There is ageism.
And then there's gendered ageism.
Like it's, I look at Bryan Cranston's craggy face
every day on a huge poster on Sunset.
I look at Harrison Ford's craggy wrinkled face.
I'm like, they look hot.
We do not allow that for women, right?
Women don't get that, no.
And we have to do all the things to keep up, right?
You have like Botox and your hair done,
all the things that women have to do.
And men like, oh, he's older, he's just more attractive.
The dad bod, the wrinkles.
Yeah.
There's just, it's kind of sexier
when men get salt and pepper hair.
Yeah, and they get like gravitas, right?
They're like silverbacks.
I had similar messaging when I moved here at 42 to LA
from San Francisco and people were saying
similar things to me.
You don't talk about your age, you look so young,
which always felt great.
It feels good.
People are like, oh, you seem so much younger.
And so maybe we should just first talk about
what are some of the things,
because we're gonna debunk all these myths,
but one of the things that we do hear,
I heard that, oh, in your 50s, life is over.
I remember reading all these articles about women who were like when I became 50s when I
was younger but when I became 50 I felt invisible. Yeah. I thought that I had no more
power. I felt that no one saw me. Yeah. And I've read some of those things. Yeah.
Me too. Not been my experience. Okay let's talk about it. What else have you. It's really
important I think to front load what the negativity is in our culture and in our
minds right? Okay well if you'll indulge me there are some data driven facts
there are some clear data that there are things about being a woman in your 50s
that are harder. Here's something how about this women in their 50s are more
likely to get fired than men in their 50s. Women in their 50s earn less than men in their 50s
and less than women in their 20s, 30s, and 40s.
And if you're a woman in your 50s
and you're attempting to re-enter the workforce,
that will be harder for you
than it would be in your 20s, 30s, or 40s.
That's no good.
We don't like that.
We also don't like that as we age some people, including people in the medical
profession, there have been studies that show that people in the medical
profession tend to be more dismissive of women in general and what we're
describing is going on in our bodies. But as women age the data show us
that we're considered less and less reliable narrators of our own experience
in the doctor's office. And so health care professionals, especially white ones,
the data tell us tend to harbor bias against women in their 50s and beyond.
These are actual real experiences that women have in their 50s.
Nationwide, ageism is a very real thing
and discriminating against people for their age
is a real thing.
And discriminating against women more is a real thing.
Maybe it gets better when you get to that grandmother stage,
right?
And you're not-
People open doors for you and give you your seats
on the bus, is that why?
And they're like, oh, she's a grandma? Yeah.
And we have like a lot of cultural love for grandmas,
but we do know that people harbor bias against older
Americans and especially older American women. I mean, these are the facts,
but you know what? I mean, Emily, you and I have talked about this. We,
we have undergone incredible changes in our 50s
that for me, I'm just gonna say this
in spite of all the data, I feel better, hotter, happier,
happy, joyous and free, sexually satisfied
than ever before in my 50s. And the data show that a lot of women are
doing that. I think it's about the people, my friends, the people I surround myself with,
my family, my mother who's 80. She never once, have I heard her say, oh god I'm
older, my back hurts, my this hurts. She acts as if she could be 50 or 40
and she never let age hold her back.
It wasn't like.
Never.
And I feel like it's mindset.
I haven't felt that discrimination
and I think I personally don't identify with now I'm 50
and I have limitations.
So I think it's been a mindset thing.
That's a big part.
And I import.
It's really important.
My mindset has been like, great, like bring it on.
In fact, I don't look back to any part of my life
and wish I wish I was 39 again.
I wish I was 25 again.
God, no, I wish I was, so hard.
You couldn't pay me to go back to my 20s.
I think that there's so much now
that we kind of covered what people believe to be true.
And now I have to say, I do have some friends
who have said to me, oh, but we're old now,
like in our 40s, like, well, we're getting old,
we're old, we're half light.
And I was like, stop.
I would literally say, we are not talking like that.
If you are actually have internalized ageism,
that's something to look at and say,
am I the one who's telling myself I'm older
and I shouldn't be doing these things?
I find to say, I shouldn't go to that bar
or I shouldn't apply for that job
because I'm too old.
I shouldn't wear this skirt.
Exactly.
I shouldn't wear this body suit.. I shouldn't wear this body suit.
She looks very sexy in this body suit.
I love that profound idea about mindset.
It's really important.
And there is something supporting us in that mindset,
which is a very simple fact.
Remember, we were joking, everybody's aging.
Like you're experiencing cellular turnover.
You're aging right the second as you're listening.
You're aging.
Everybody's aging.
Everybody's gonna age.
But here's another great thing that supports your positive mindset. The
entire country is aging. The average age of an American was 30 in the 80s. Most
recently the average age, our average national age is 38, but there's a lot of
other stuff going on where lifespan span is extending for those of
us who are lucky enough to be privileged to take advantage of advanced nutrition, more
knowledge about diet and exercise and how they impact us, better cancer treatments.
For a lot of reasons, the whole entire American population is aging.
In fact, there's going to be a watershed moment in 2030 when older Americans outnumber younger Americans and it's
going to be for the first time in our history. So I just want to say this. When
you're feeling a positive mindset about aging and you're like, I'm not that old,
right? I always say that the age that most Americans believe is old when they're polled, they say 57, right?
But because the entire population is aging, 57 is not the old 57.
57 is younger and the fat, look, Nicole Kidman's not going to stop working.
She's in her 50s.
Reese Witherspoon, I don't know how old she is, but Angela Bassett, she's not going anywhere. Viola Davis just started kicking ass in her 50s, right? So all
these women coming into their power, Shonda Rhimes, in their 50s, I mean this
we're gonna see more and more of that because we're not going away. We're
living longer and we're like listen I'm not gonna live the last 40 years
of my life in orthopedic shoes.
Exactly. And not having sex.
No, well, we're gonna get to the sex part.
But I think that 50s are the decade
where we're likely to see women press the reset button
by asking for divorce, right?
Decade most likely to file divorce is the 50s
because I think the kids are off to school,
they're empty nesters, they realize what else is there.
And they also realize this is what I want.
They're asking to change a relationship container
from monogamous to non-monogamous,
acting on desire to be with a woman
after years of being heterosexual, starting a business.
Yep, and then when they do,
they're much more likely to succeed
than younger people, women in their 50s.
I guess they're starting businesses, Emily,
because of two things,
like they finally have the self-confidence
and maybe the resources,
but also maybe they're experiencing gendered ageism
and getting the boot at their jobs.
We have the knowledge, we have the wisdom also,
and we have the confidence.
Feeling a sense of swagger.
The data proves something, that our 50s for women,
it's this time of incredible bravery.
I mean, we're literally changing the social fabric
and saying, I want a divorce.
We're saying, guess what?
I want to be with a woman now.
We're saying, guess what?
I don't want to be monogamous.
We're saying, guess what?
I'm starting a business.
You know, we're changing the social fabric
and I want women in their 50s to get credit for it for how we are
shaking things like this is not a
Decade of like drying up and decline which I don't know. We've kind of told that it's not
This is daring do this is like dazzling daring and doing in our 50s exactly. You're an example of that
Mmm. Thank you. So are you Wednesday?
I do think this thing that you said about women having more swagger and confidence in their 50s is
Completely, right and that's what my book free agent is about and in free agent
I really say that I don't think there's anything tougher or more
Revolutionary than a woman in her 50s.
You know, she's been on the wrong side of power probably for decades. She has a
lot of experience and she's entering a big transformation. Hey, I can't get
pregnant from sex anymore. Hey, if I have kids maybe they're gone. Hey, if I'm a
lesbian maybe I'm feeling
more confidence than ever before, hey maybe money's not such a problem right
now. We're just entering this transformation and we're having fewer
fox to give. I love women in midlife. I do too. We can follow our intuition more which is something that I've
always been told to do but it was a little bit harder to do.
Having confidence, knowing that we can move
through different experiences.
Like when things used to get me down,
like, oh, this thing didn't work out,
or this project didn't go through,
or something happened with a friend,
it used to feel like, oh God, what do I do?
Like every time a problem happened,
I used to feel like I have to solve it differently.
But now I have the confidence of years of saying saying this always works out. I've been down
this road before. I know what I bring to the table. I know that I'm a good person
that I'm confident that I'm smart enough and I don't let things things don't get
me down anymore as much and I think that's part of wisdom too. It is part of
wisdom and you know I think a component part of wisdom is excellence and a
component part of excellence is wisdom. Like you have been working at your craft, honing your knowledge, keeping up to date,
communicating for decades now and you're just getting better and better and
better at it and that leads to swagger. I mean part of it is just like we're
getting better and better at stuff and so we're more confident. We're so more confident with the experience.
But I also feel sexier.
I feel hot.
I feel just confident sexually.
Like I know what I'm doing.
I feel when I walk into a room.
I really don't feel what I think we're told we should feel in our 50s.
That's right.
It's like one of the best times of my life.
This is the best decade of my life so far.
I'm 57.
I finally have come to understand that I am the main character in my own story.
You know?
Because before it was always about my kids.
It was about my friends who needed help.
It was about my husband.
It was about helping my husband's career.
It was about helping my kids with school.
It was helping my girlfriends who were going through divorces or infertility.
There's something about your 50s that's so wonderful
when your kids have fledged if you have them.
I didn't have a big commercial success
until I was 49 years old.
So that piece finally fell into place.
I stopped drinking and really leaned into my sobriety
in my 50s and that was life altering.
And a lot of women are doing the same thing just because,
and men too, because we can't metabolize alcohol
as well in our 50s.
You and I have taken steps.
And also the other thing about your 50s is
by the time you got there,
a lot of the difficult choices have been made.
You've made those choices.
And you've already like decided to have kids or not have kids,
you know, your career, you know, you're good at.
It's like this huge weight is lifted also.
So much tumult is gone.
It's so much tumult. You're like, I don't need to decide that.
I don't need to prove myself. I don't need to do all these things.
I made that decision.
So liberating.
But I do think that some of the things that we go through, for example,
here's the amazing thing to everyone listening,
and I don't care if you have a vulva or a penis,
because this affects everybody,
is that this perimenopause thing,
every single person with a vulva is going to go through,
can last up to 12 years.
And it's a legitimate medical condition
that we do not have a lot of information on.
Still, we're just starting to have enough information. We are just
talking about menopause and perimenopause in the last year and a half or so. It's become, it's really
exploded. And just to define it really quickly, perimenopause is that period that surrounds the
final years of a woman's reproductive life. It begins with the first onset of menstrual irregularity,
ends after one year of amenorrhea has occurred.
So that's your final menstrual period.
So there's basically two stages to the perimenopause
or menopause transition.
The early transition where cycles are mostly regular
with relatively few interruptions,
and then the late transition where amenorrhea
becomes more prolonged, lasts for at least 60 days,
up to the final period.
So what you need to know is this,
the perimenopause is the part that can last up to 12 years. Menopause is one day. Menopause is the day
where a year has gone by and you have not had your period. And then you're a menopause. Hallelujah,
hallelujah, hallelujah. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, exactly. Look, now we're saying the word, especially, I love
that it's happening on social media.
Yeah. We're saying perimenopause. I don't care if it makes men I know throw up.
Is it? Like, not menopause. I guess I don't want to know those men.
I don't want to hang out with those men. So guys who are listening, now you heard the definition of perimenopause,
and it's a cool thing you can know. You can support your partner or your sister or your mom, you know, it's
really part of your vocabulary as a person with relational skills is to know about perimenopause
and menopause and sort of disabuse yourself of all the stereotypes and yeah, just be able
to know, you know, if someone that you care about is going through a hot flash.
To be there to support them, bring them some ice.
I'll remind them not to eat spicy food.
If somebody's having terrible PMS, right?
We know to be supportive of our girlfriends
and the people that we love
who are going through terrible PMS.
Hormonal transition can be messy and difficult and just to know that it's a
transition, that it's a real thing, it's a real thing, your girlfriend or friend or
sister, whoever, that person, she's not losing her mind, she's not difficult, she
has a medical condition that she's going through, it's normal, it happens, it's
supposed to happen and
there are ways to be supportive, ways she can support herself and ways you can
support her. Exactly. Right? Yes. Let's just stop acting like it's such a dirty
word. We'd all be so much better off if we understood it. So some of the signs of
it too, you mentioned like it's like hot flashes and night sweats, a little bit
harder remembering things or concentration. You can have, you know, some onset of depression.
What is it?
Changes in sexual desire.
Yes.
You might feel a little drier.
Your sleep might be disrupted.
And you know what I just wanted to say really quickly?
There's a resource that I love about menopause.
Okay, tell me.
I love it.
It's called the Menopause Manifesto by Jen Gunter and it is evidence-based advice for surviving the transition in
style and to thrive through the transition. But it is also like a lot of
cool science and you know how I geek out. So we're not gonna really get into a lot
of science today but in case people want to the Menopopause manifesto is fantastic by Dr. Jen Gunter.
Can we personalize this a little bit?
Let's do it because that's what we've been going through.
Yeah, what have you been going through?
I wanted to actually, well while we're on paramenopause, because I know you just shared
me when we were talking about this that you said it was hell for you.
Like you didn't have information at the time.
You guys.
You were in New York, access to the best doctors.
I want to frame this for people that it's's literally, and I'm gonna get into mine,
because I living in LA, who knows?
I had access about five years ago,
but it was still hush hush.
It was still no one was really doing.
I had to go out and find my own doctors.
But yet your experience was very different
because it wasn't really known.
The doctors didn't know what was going on.
Oh Lord, I mean, I think for sure my my OBGYN knew the term perimenopause but it's almost like when I was going
through this starting really at age 36 or 37. First of all I always had terrible
PMS which is one thing I want to say. My whole life. My whole life I didn't have cramps and
bloating but I had mood swings and I did have a little bit of bloating and it
was really difficult right now at a certain point they do say that bad PMS
might be predictive of a more difficult menopausal transition including through
perimenopause I believe mine started at about 37 but nobody wanted to say it to
you it's like if you have a baby nobody wants to tell you that the baby has colic, right? Because you'll flip out. The baby's crying, right?
Yeah. Why is the baby crying all the time? Oh, the baby's just adjusting.
People almost in the medical community at that time didn't want to use the P word with me.
So I didn't know what was going on. I had to read about it. You know, I have a
background writing about women and sex and gender and so I did know the term but not in a way that
would be truly helpful for me and I tried everything and my really bad PMS
just segued into a pretty difficult perimenopause absolutely and that lasted
I'm not gonna lie it lasted for a long time. Here's when I decided I have to do something about this. There's a time when your PMS is maybe a few days,
right, and you're bloated, you're crabby, whatever your PMS symptoms are, you're
having them, you're having cramps, whatever, for maybe three days before you
period. Then later in your life, it might go to a week before your period. During my
perimenopausal phase, I had those PMSE symptoms from the moment my cycle ended
to the moment it began again. I had the bloating, the mood swings, the emotional
teariness, I had discomfort, I had two wardrobes.
Eventually I was like, when do I get my body back? Because I realized it used to
be I would get my period and then I would get my body back and it would be
fine. Then it just got to the point where I was always wearing my period clothes. I
was always bloated. I didn't want anything that hurt me. I needed to be
comfortable all the time. That is when I went to my
OBGYN and said this perimenopause thing is killing me. And we got serious about
trying to do something about it. But one I tell you, I changed my diet, I changed
this, I changed that, I changed the other thing. But finally, thank the goddess, I
eventually, after a lot of research and
figuring out what was good for me, given my family history and what I
was experiencing and what my doctor recommended, I finally got on hormone
replacement. I got on hormone therapy, I guess people call it now. Yeah. And it was like, whoa, oh my God,
life went from being in a minor key
to back in a major key.
That's amazing.
Because I needed to treat this medical condition
that I had.
And what's happening is we are losing our hormones.
We're losing,
pedestrian, estrogen and testosterone.
And I wanna hear how it changed for you actually,
when you started taking these right away, What did you notice right away? Well it
wasn't like I did that like opera voice because I can be dramatic sometimes. But it was a
big improvement. Here were what some of my symptoms were. My libido never went
away. I mean if you have sex with a partner like do the things that make you
feel good,
even when you're feeling really bad
and they can lift you up.
We know that when people are like,
oh, I'm not in the mood for sex,
and then they have sex,
we know that it actually does enhance their mood.
A lot of times people will report
it's like going to the gym, right?
I didn't wanna do it, but I did it and I felt great.
So that was one thing that really helped me.
I always say sex begets sex.
That's what we're talking about.
You might not always be in the mood for sex,
but once you get yourself there,
you go yourself doing it,
you're gonna be so glad that you did.
And in midlife, sex really begets sex a lot.
So that was a big important thing for me
during paramedic pause.
The other really important thing, as you mentioned,
was I was experiencing hormonal fluctuation and change. I don't like to say hormonal
decline, but some people use that term. So I got together with my doctor,
I'm not gonna lie you guys, I was a little bit like a science experiment and
I would say why don't you guys know more about this? Why aren you prioritizing women's health and my doctor who's a feminist like me said
because we don't prioritize women Wednesday. It's true. You're right this is a
feminist issue but he and I finally found a protocol a hormone replacement
protocol that really worked for me and he helped me cut through a lot of the
lies and the bullshit that I
was seeing on Instagram that people said this will help, do this, do that and I
really think that one of the reasons I thrived was that I was talking to an
OBGYN with experience in this area who knew to prioritize my sex life. He knew he had a very sexual patient.
And he also knew to talk to me
rather than to talk down at me.
And those things worked.
And yes, there were some rocky roads
trying to get the hormones right.
But once we did, I slept better, right?
I did not have hot flashes. And I really just was enjoying life more in general.
Thank you for sharing all of that, Lindsay. Because I think it's so important first to point out that
it is a journey. We all have bio-individuality, meaning I hesitate to say like what I did,
specifically what you did, although I will talk about it. Because you have to go get tested on
your own. Because we are all so different about what's gonna work for us like
certain things have worked for me but didn't work for my friends. Yes I mean
let's face it there are 21 million women going through menopause in the United
States right now and their situations are gonna be a little different but what
we know overall is that their hormones are changing and that for many of them
hormone replacement might be helpful but you need a doctor for it. Get it treated because we have so much going on because
we're not talking about menopause and because women aren't able to deal with
it with the support of a doctor. There was a big New York Times study on
menopause and productivity. Oh my god listen to this. I love this. Menopause
costs American women an estimated 1.8 billion
in lost working time per year.
The source for that is a Mayo Clinic.
Right up of a study, I just wrote next to that,
holy shit, that's amazing.
But $1.8 billion lost.
And we're just not supporting these women.
Did you know that there are some countries
where women can take a menopause sabbatical? No, that would be amazing. Couldn't we get some
days off? Like couldn't we like you just say if we're actually going through all
of these changes and this one point billion loss is because they're taking
sick days and they're cutting back on hours. But we have to hide it. Talk about
shame. Talk about shame and sex and feeling like we can't talk about it. I can't come in today
because I'm having like a hot flash or whatever you know it's like we can't talk about it. I can't come in today because I'm having like a hot flash
or whatever, you know, it's like, we can't talk about it.
But I love that there are studies like this out there.
And I love that we've shown that it actually is recommended
now for women over 45 to consider hormone replacement
therapy.
We just have to find the right doctors in your area to be
able to help you keep pushing for answers.
And so for me, I think it was about five years ago that I
started feeling like I had night sweats and I just started this is my field so I
started hearing more about it. It actually was Dr. Drew Pinsky because I
was in love line with him and he told me that his wife went through menopause,
perimenopause early like in her 30s and so he found that when she did these
hormone placements and this was like in 2014 he told me this she did these hormone pellets you could this was like in 2014, he told me this, she did these hormone pellets.
You could like set it and forget it.
And he said that was a change,
or she got her sex drive back and everything was great.
So I first heard about it then.
And then when I started going through it, I thought,
well, I wanna go find out about hormones
and therapy and these pellets.
And so I called out to several doctors
and I spent a lot of money going on my own
because insurance didn't cover this.
And they just weren't the right fits.
They had different competing beliefs around hormones.
And then I finally found one doctor
and the thing that I did was I did the pellets.
I tried the pellets.
So the pellets are a little bit more controversial
just in that, well, let me explain this to you.
So the hormones that we're talking about
that it's important for women to take is progesterone,
estrogen, and some testosterone.
So these pellets, why they're great for me
is because you take those drugs by putting on creams and lotions. Like before I got the pellets, why they're great for me is because you take those drugs by putting
on creams and lotions.
Like before I got the pallets, for example, there'd be nights where I have to like shoot
this thing in my vagina.
Then I got a rub on the testosterone cream and you got to take a pill for progesterone.
And it's like, I don't even remember to wash my face that night because I'm exhausted.
Then I got to do these three steps.
And I know myself that the steps are not great for me.
Repetitive steps, no matter how many reminders, it's not how I move through life.
So I learned that there's a pellet that I can put,
it's like the size of a rice pellet.
And you put it in your back, doesn't hurt at all.
I go to my gynecologist, I had to find one who did it,
she's not many that do this.
And then every three months I go back
and I get the right amount of hormones for me.
Now the challenge is they say,
well what if you need more or less,
you can't really alter it. So she started very low with me and then we went up. And
for me that's worked because in the past again and then I tried to stop for a while and then
went back to the lotions and the potions and again I wasn't just keeping up with it. Okay
can I tell you, I said to my OBGYN, do better. I said you guys need to do better for us.
I'm putting vaginal estrogen in which I love which has been game
changing and life-changing for me. But hey how about we think that women in
their 50s are sexual and so maybe we don't want this cream coming out of our
vaginas because maybe we enjoy you know someone performing oral sex on us maybe
we enjoy intercourse
talk to your doctors about this and insist that you want to be sexual and
sexy going on in your life and I was saying that I sometimes complain to my
doctor and I ride him and I say you need to do better for us and one of the
reasons is you put in the vaginal estrogen and it's like well I'm doing
this because I want to have sex and yet here it is you put in the vaginal estrogen and it's like, well, I'm doing this because I wanna have sex.
And yet here it is a really potential inconvenience
and potential embarrassment during sex, right?
You guys, that's not good enough.
Women in their 50s wanna have sex.
Oh, and other forms of stimulation might come into play
in midlife too, right?
I didn't get a vibrator until I was 53.
Yeah.
Oh. Best day of your life.
I was reborn. I. Oh best day of your life. I was reborn.
I was off to the races but it's a really good thing that I had it because as my hormones shifted
and my life changed I needed different forms of stimulation. If anybody ever said to me you don't
need that. You don't need your vibrator. You know. People are still saying that you know by the way.
You know what would happen next. Yes exactly you'd be by the way. Yes, exactly. You'd be out.
I mean, that's the thing is that we're changing,
is that you'd be like, no, this is not my person.
But here's the thing.
Here's, let's talk about like what happens with sex,
midlife sex.
Yeah, let's be real.
So the real thing is, yeah, there are,
there might be some changes with your vagina.
You want to have lube, but you know how I feel.
I've been using lube for a very long time.
We've recommended lube to people in their 20s and 30s
and people love lube.
But definitely in your 50s, 60s, beyond,
just have some lube on your nightstand.
Just definitely use lube.
That's gonna help with a lot of the problems.
But the other things that could change is,
and this happens decade to decade,
and I'd love to do another show where we actually talk
about what happens in your 30s, 40s, 50s,
because also after childbirth, things change.
You're different in your 20s. this goes for men too by the way.
But my body, the way I get turned on, the things that turn me on are different than
my 40s.
They were different in my 30s.
So now my 50s, I have to realize that like it's certain positions don't feel as great
and also yeah, orgasms are just different.
They're just a little bit different, but they're still attainable.
And in fact, I think I like them more
because I have a little bit more knowledge,
I think, of how to do them.
And I know how to move, and I know how to explain it.
And toys definitely are a game changer
for I think any stage of life.
But toys and lube, I definitely felt my desire to change,
but I have to say something else.
I've never been anybody who had strong
sexual desire. So I don't know if I've ever even said that on the show, but like I remember
when I was little, I was friends like, I'm so horny. I can't wait to make out with this
guy or this girl. I'm so horny. I was always somebody who like loved sex and I never got
tired of having sex when I was with a partner, but I'm definitely responsive desire. It's responsive desire, not spontaneous desire. So I don't think like I need it, I want, I have to consciously do that.
So I consciously made it like I'm with somebody, it's important to have sex. I'm like, I want to
make it part of our life. I need to figure out the ways that I can hack it. So for me,
my hormone replacement therapy didn't necessarily make me want to have sex more. It's not that I
don't want sex,
but I never had that,
and I think that many people like this,
I just never had it.
This is such a great point.
I want us to do a study or I wanna read a study.
If anybody who is a Kinsey Fellow is listening,
maybe they can help us with this.
I want to see a study on whether we get better at cultivating our
responsive desire as we age and whether it's a really good thing to do because
here's something that I hear. On the one hand, a Lumen survey found something
great. Did you do a quarter of people that they interviewed who were in their
50s said that their sex lives were better, more
interesting, and more adventurous than ever before. So there's that, right? But
then there's also, I hear people, men and women say to me that they have less
desire and I think that to your point, they might mean that their spontaneous desire is lower,
but that's just one part of desire.
So let's cultivate that responsive desire
because here's the deal, you guys, just to explain this.
Spontaneous desire is when you,
I know Emily's explained it to you before,
but we can always use a review.
Spontaneous desire is just spontaneous desire.
Oh, I just wanna have sex.
I feel horny, I wanna have sex with this person. There's my partner. I'm so attracted to my
partner. I want to rip their clothes off. Yeah. Now responsive desire is more once
you're doing it, you're really into it. This is all with consent and everything
you guys. Or once something happens. Or once your partner says something,
touches you in a certain way. You could even look at something and say,
oh I remember when we had sex on that blanket, right? Or for me it's literally
responsive desires, maybe I need to watch some porn because I know how
enjoyable it's gonna be. It's not like it's coming at me like a lightning bolt,
right? But once I get into it, knowing that it's going to be rewarding. So I
think cultivating your responsive desire in midlife could be a great strategy for
men, for women, for everyone. Because I don't know about you, don't you hear from
people who say like I just don't want it anymore? Yeah, that is the key is that I
think that we think we don't want anymore so we must not want it. So we're
talking about cultivating it. I hear a lot of women say this like I would be
fine if I never had sex again. Have you any friends who've said that in their 40s, 50s?
Like, if I never, and I'm just saying,
it's because we are equating our desire
to how men typically get around.
And to only spontaneous desire.
And just spontaneous, and it's more responsive.
It's more like, I gotta get in the mindset.
And that's what my whole book, Smart Sex, was about,
is the five pillars of sexual intelligence
is knowing your self-knowledge.
Like, when are you turned on?
What's gonna get you there? What is previously worked for you in the past
how is your body changing how is your health you know the second pillar have
you looked at your hormones your well it's like there's all these things that
we need to look at to understand when we're gonna be aroused and turned on so
I think that just to throw in the towel and say oh I no longer have a
spontaneous desire and I'm saying I was never somebody who had a lot of the
spontaneous desire except for the early on I was never somebody who had a lot of the spontaneous desire
except for early on in a relationship.
Like most people.
You had to be touched or see something.
Yeah, if I'm touched though, you massage me,
you touch me like I'm in.
But I'm not just walking around thinking about it.
Like oh my gosh, I have deaf sex.
And you know what?
And this is one of the big myths
and I get at this in Untrue and I love that you get
into this in Smarter Sex too.
One of the biggest myths we have is that women's libidos are quote weaker unquote or lower than men's,
and it's that's just because we were measuring desire incorrectly.
We weren't measuring both spontaneous and responsive desire.
So that's just a little aside, but something for people to know.
And you know what? You know what I love about women and pleasure in our 50s, can I tell you what I love?
Yes.
Okay, you know how you've been told like, oh yeah, you get to your, you get older and you have fewer
fucks to give as a woman, right? Okay, well I found this clinical psychologist who specializes
in working with women in midlife and she basically says women in midlife are like revolutionaries and
this could apply to sex too because she says women in midlife decide that they
are gonna stop living in this acquiescent place of yes to other people
yes I'll do it for the social contract yes I'll do it for my husband's
happiness yes I'll do it for my girlfriend's happiness yes I'll do it for my husband's happiness. Yes, I'll do it for my girlfriend's happiness. Yes, I'll do it for the sake of my children."
Women stop living in this acquiescent place of yes, and it allows us,
when we're encouraged and given the space to do so, to
be more selfish about our pleasure and to have the time and the bandwidth and the
energy for it because we're not saying yes to everybody
and everything anymore.
I think that what you're saying is so many times
we're thinking about our family, our jobs, our kids,
we're pleasers, we're providers, we're nurturing.
There's so much responsibility and something happens
when you get into your 50s where you're just like,
this is the time, if not now when,
like this is the time where I'm going to prioritize
my own needs, my own pleasure, my own desires,
and not care what anyone else thinks.
Not care what anybody else thinks.
And like, have that selfish moment because I did it all for my kids.
I did it all for my husband or my wife.
I'm not sweating so much about money anymore.
I'm not worrying who will I be when I grow up.
I am a grown up.
I'm not thinking I'm a bad person if I'm not giving free psychotherapy to everybody.
You're like, oh, hold up.
This is the time.
You know what I read?
Retirees have a lot more sex than people think they do
because they're home and they have the time.
Yeah.
We're having sex, exactly.
Right?
They are.
What else are they gonna do?
Right?
No, but also it's true.
It's the other notions that we stop at our 50s
or you stop becoming sexual.
There's a lot of studies that show that people
are having sex until their 70s, 80s, 90s.
You still have that desire.
I just saw a headline that there are studies
that show that a considerable number of women
want more sex in their 50s than they wanted it before.
And I think, you know what?
I see that too.
Can I tell you one of the things that went into it for me?
I couldn't get pregnant anymore.
The amount of time in my life that I spent
from my late teens to my mid forties,
cause I was pregnant for the last time at 43.
The amount of time, the bandwidth that took up in my brain
that I was afraid to get pregnant
and the pleasure that drained from my sexual experiences I couldn't even quantify until I got on
the other side of it. I couldn't get pregnant. Sex became purely recreational.
Didn't have to worry about it anymore. What a relief to let that go. This was a
personal revelation. It changed everything.
So I think that's one of the reasons too.
Plus my kids were out of the house.
Plus we opened up our marriage.
Sex just-
You had all the things working for you.
I feel like you did it right.
But so do a lot of other women.
Even if they don't open their marriages,
even if they didn't have kids,
they're just at a better place in their 50s
and it's time for women to understand this.
I want women in their 20s to understand all the things that get better in your 50s.
It really does.
And young men too.
I also want to emphasize though that also if that's sex in our 50s too, it just might
take a different kind of work.
I'm always talking about helping people in different stages of life and I think it's
work to be honest in every stage of life.
I get just as many questions to people in their 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s.
I just think that there's less information about this and that's why we're talking about this right now. You know, I think it's just really important to know
that it doesn't mean that it's over again
because you don't have the responsive desire,
because you might feel drier,
because there might be some pain,
because you don't feel great in your body.
There's a lot of different reasons,
but it doesn't mean that once you get going
and we help you put all these pieces in place
that you won't want sex again
and it won't actually be better.
I love that you cited the study that showed
that women are having more adventurous, exciting,
satisfying sex in their 50s. That's the data. that you won't want sex again and it won't actually be better. I love that you cited the study that showed that women are having more adventurous, exciting,
satisfying sex in their 50s. That's the data. I think they just finally feel like
they deserve it. I know I did. And I finally felt like I deserved it. Yeah.
So that's a big part of it. And I know how to get it. Hello, I've been masturbating since I was 12
and I'm 57. Well right, we're also experts in our own body. You've been
masturbating for 40 years. Literally you are an expert in your own body and if
you haven't masturbated yet like this is the time to start. Oh my god how amazing
would it be for a woman to start masturbating in her 50s? I think many do.
Yeah like welcome to the pleasure palace. pleasure pleasure revolution that is midlife it is you
guys do not catastrophize about midlife I am literally indescribably more happy
feel better about my body more confident and just more living in a space of
delight in my 50s than ever before.
I am done with the struggles.
I'm done with figuring out what I'm going to be when I grow up.
I'm done being in my 20s or my 30s in tears trying to figure out what to wear.
I put on anything now I look at myself. Killed it.
It's different. Life is better.
We have more resources in the aggregate.
We have more social support in the aggregate.
We have more professional networks in the aggregate. We have more free time in the aggregate. We have more social support in the aggregate. We have more professional networks in the aggregate. We have more free time in the aggregate.
It's just, gosh, it's a good time. Do not catastrophize the 1950s.
What an inspiration. Please don't catastrophize it. We got you. We're also going to add some resources for some tips,
some books, some great resources for preparing menopause, menopause and all that.
We wanted to share our own personal experiences. But, and also if you
want to hear more about this stuff we can definitely do
more shows, bring in more experts which you will be doing. And don't forget to
follow a black girls guide to menopause which is awesome. Okay. And Dr. Jenn
Gunter. If you're interested in this stuff no matter what your gender identity
and no matter how old you are this is really interesting geek out on it
science and a way to be a really good friend
to anybody who's going through these transitions.
Stick around because after a quick break, Wednesday and I are sharing our best advice
for those of you in your 20s, 30s and 40s. Hey Emily.
Advice from us gangstresses of pleasure and self-love for women in their 20s who might
not be feeling it.
Well, I think the first thing is therapy.
Start early with therapy.
I think it's really important to find a therapist to start working on stuff that happened in your childhood. Start to understand your
narrative, to hear a relationship with your parents because it's going to stay
with you for the rest of your life. So for me, starting therapy in my 20s, seeing a
therapist regularly was a game changer. So I'd highly recommend do the work now.
The sooner you do the work, the more evolved you're gonna be. It's gonna help you.
I know you think you can't afford it. it's too expensive, you don't have time,
but there's a lot of different resources right now
where you can find the time.
It's really, your mental health
is probably one of the most important things.
I mean, so is your physical health.
But mental health is, if you don't have that,
it's so much harder to deal in life,
to have healthy relationships.
It's gonna help you in everything that you do.
Amen to that. I mean, if you healthy relationships. It's going to help you in everything that you do. Amen to that.
I mean, if you can afford dry cleaning and going up for drinks, you can probably afford
a sliding scale free therapy session.
And I love that advice.
Here's what I would suggest.
Get a vibrator now.
I mean, it changed my life.
I waited until I was 53, as you know.
Get a vibrator now.
Play with sex toys now.
Don't let anybody shut down your curiosity about your body.
And don't let yourself shut down your curiosity about your body.
You guys, I want to tell you something.
You're in your 20s.
Your body is absolutely beautiful.
You are just right. You do not need to do anything about any part of yourself, okay?
And when you get to midlife and you feel like the babe you are, you're gonna look
back and say, damn I wish I felt this way in my 20s. You guys, I didn't wear a
bikini in my 20s. What on earth was I thinking? I'm wearing one for sure now at 57. You guys wear the bikini, eat the ice cream cone, have the orgasms, go on the dates, take
the risks, apply for the job even though you're only 50% qualified. That's what
guys do. Yeah all the time. Those are all great things. It's true and I love all
of that. It's true like take it's so hard though because my mom you say to me she say to me do you see these spots on my
arm when I would be laying in the Sun these spots I'm gonna you're gonna have
these spots one day like put the sunblock on and I was like yeah I need
to be tan for prom I remember mom it gets so hard to take parents advice when
they're telling you this because it's like but nothing matters more now than
being tan for prom mom so I'm not wearing ablock. And I think the sex part is really big.
Like if I had masturbated in my 20s more,
if I had really realized who I was as sexual being,
what my fantasies were,
a lot of the stuff that I teach all of you,
I wanna make this point that just because we're saying
in our 50s we're more confident, it's better in our 40s,
I truly believe that you can have a lot of this
in your 20s and your 30s and 40s.
Work on the shame, work on the pleasure thieves, the things that are keeping you from like
what is coming up for you, what is your shadow self that's telling you that you're not good
enough or you don't deserve it.
Work on all that stuff in therapy.
When I say that the most attractive thing in the bedroom is somebody with confidence,
I don't mean that you know how to give a great blow job or go down on someone really well
or you know how to give a great blow job or go down on someone really well, or you know all the moves. It literally means that you understand your own body,
you understand pleasure,
you understand that you have to get your needs met
during a sexual situation,
or it's not going to be satisfying.
I mean, think of it this way.
You go to a restaurant and you sit down with your partner
on a date in your 20s,
and let's say their food gets delivered,
they get their appetizers, they get their drink drink and then you leave and you got nothing. The
waiter brought you nothing. That's literally what sex is like in your 20s. At least I felt.
And you deserve to eat full plate desserts, appetizers, everything in your 20s
and you it's totally available for you and the confidence is knowing that,
experiencing your own body, being able to advocate and ask for that. That is what my sex was for me until my 30s
was not having anything to eat,
it's not having my pleasure.
It's never too late and you can start now
and if you're listening to this show right now
or if you know someone in your 20s, 30s,
pass this along because I think it's a really important
knowledge now.
Yes, and you know, I just saw a big overview point to that of what you're saying because that is so profound and so important. Yes, and you know I just saw a big overview point to that of what you're
saying because that is so profound and so important. You guys, I wish I had known
this in my 20s. I am NOT a conduit for other people's pleasure. I am NOT here to
provide visual pleasure to strangers on the street that I don't know. I am NOT
here to give sexual pleasure
to another person in bed
just by contorting my body in certain ways
and giving them what I think they want.
I am not a lingerie model,
although sometimes I like to wear it.
I am entitled to pleasure myself.
As you said, I wanna say one other thing.
You guys, nobody's looking at your acne.
Literally nobody is looking at it.
Guess what?
Here's what I learned in my 50s.
Life is a wedding and I am not the bride.
Did you ever get dressed for a wedding
and feel that wash of relief?
The eyes are not gonna be on me,
they're gonna be on the bride.
I am free
to like let my freak flag fly. And that is what I heard you saying about
pleasure, you're entitled to it, ask for it, do it, you are not a conduit for
other people's pleasure. And you guys, I, all eyes, you are gorgeous, you are
beautiful, but all eyes are not on you.
People are not judging you.
They're obsessed with themselves.
They're at the wedding and they're looking at the bride
and you're not the bride
and that is the greatest freedom in the world
until you are the bride and then I hope you elope
because planning weddings is really hard
and I feel for you whatever your decision is.
Exactly, God, weddings are hard.
Okay, that's why, another reason I didn't wanna get married.
So here's the thing.
I think it's really important to learn to be alone
and it's very important to spend time in your life
without a partner.
It is crucial.
I see a lot of people now who were married for a long time
then they go to another relationship, another relationship.
And I think it's so important to learn
to like your own company, to be by yourself,
to practice it.
And I don't know where this came from,
but I'm glad that I had this inspiration
when I was about 32, I realized I've been in a relationship
since I was 16.
I would date someone for a few months
and I'd break up and date someone else.
And I was like, who the hell is Emily Morse
without a man in my life, without a partner?
I have no idea.
I called it a manatorium and I took a manatorium
and I said, I'm not dating, I'm not thinking about men,
I'm not doing anything. Because I think people have this pressure and I took a manatorium and I said I'm not dating, I'm not thinking about men, I'm not doing anything.
Because I think people have this pressure because there is a societal pressure that
if you are not with a partner you should always be looking towards finding a partner.
If you're not with them that it's not okay to be single is a stopover to partnership.
Okay, here we go.
And it's not a place to live.
Right.
And I realized I love living single.
You loved it.
You were the bachelorette of bachelorettes and goals. Just goals. If you guys
had seen Emily out on the town, if you had seen her at parties, if you had seen her being her best
bachelorette self, that was a beautiful thing. And I will say something else. One of the things I
love about my 50s, other than cultivating my solitude, on the other hand of it, prioritizing my friendships
and cultivating friendships has been a great thing
because when I'm in solitude,
I mean, I didn't prioritize my friends
in my 20s and 30s and 40s, they were just there.
I was busy, my friends were there.
I tend to my friendships now like that is a garden
that is gonna feed me and then when I'm solitary, I know I have my friends.
When I have my friends, I know I love my solitude.
All that therapy to your point helps get us there, right?
That's true, we talk a lot about that.
I love that about friendship.
You are such a wonderful friend too.
I have to say that.
We talk a lot about the importance of friendship.
And I would say on that is that, you know,
again, choosing not to have a family
and other things like that.
I've always been someone who prioritized friendships
and made them a priority because that was my thing.
But what I wanna say about picking your friends is this,
try to avoid the people if you can.
First off, if you meet somebody
and they don't make you feel good,
you go out with them a few times,
you're like, something's off here and what's going on?
I don't know if I feel so great and safe with them.
Trust that.
Those are probably not your people.
Stay away from the drama.
Stay away from the people who talk about other people
behind their back.
I've always avoided friends like that because it's toxic
and those people attract other people like that.
And so it's not that I don't Wednesday,
I might be like, what did you think about so and so?
But if we do, I think that even I,
I don't think we've ever really talked about anyone.
And if we ever did, it was like, from place of like love, like, well,
maybe they should work on this if we ever do,
but it's not my go-to.
And I think that people who do spend a lot of time
criticizing others, aren't feeling great about themselves.
And it's such a shallow life.
So I, eventually they turn on you.
If they are talking about other people, primarily,
I guarantee when you leave them, they are talking about you.
So I think that is just, and I've had the same
of the friendships for 40 years, I can say,
dear friends, I just know, like we don't,
and that's something that I've cultivated, it's important.
So you know if someone's not a good friend,
and just because you've known them since you were 15
doesn't mean they have to stay in your life.
Yes, that is such a good point that you have to have
a high standard for friendships and for intimate partners.
And you know, it's interesting, I do think building on that, Emily, I wish that in my
twenties I had started to say anyone who feels like a frenemy, anyone who makes a cutting
remark or, you know, is like consistently sort of trying to bring me down a little bit
that I feel that way.
Anybody that I would categorize as a frenemy, let me just empty that space out and open it up
for somebody who has really good relational skills and can be a really
good friend. I wish I had done that. Well see this is good. We're helping people.
And then the final thing I want to say is that it's never too late. Never too
late. You didn't miss the window, your time hasn't passed,
life is not over, you didn't miss the boat.
I mean, I just wanna say that I feel like
I thought that a lot in my 20s too.
I always thought I've always been very driven
and very ambitious.
And so I always felt that I wasn't there enough,
I didn't do enough, I wasn't.
And I look back, I'm like, you were doing a lot
and you were just fine.
And so everyone, you are fine where you're at,
it's never too late, just be wherever you are now.
Put everything into it, put your attention into where you're at now and don't too late. Just be wherever you are now. Put everything into it.
Put your attention into where you're at now
and don't be worried so much.
I know this is easier said than done
that you're like, it's too late or I can't do this.
I think we have to look at our limiting beliefs
and our limiting thoughts
because that's really what's holding you back
more than anything else.
And ask women in midlife.
That's the only thing I can add to that.
Whether you're a man or a woman of 20s, 30s, 40s,
ask women in midlife. we have a lot of experience and we're not insecure anymore.
Eventually you're going to come to a place where you're not either and you're going to have this personal revolution.
Love it.
Thank you so much, Dr. Wenzzi Martin.
You are brilliant and beautiful.
And I just love your insights and I love that you're being here sharing all of this wisdom.
And I love that you've been a friend to me where we've been able to
talk about a lot of things. We have these conversations and so I thought let's just bring
them on the mic. Let's talk to the people. Let's just talk to the people about it. Thanks for
having me on Dr. Emily Morris. You know you're my hero and we get to go for a
walk now. I'm excited. I love it. Thanks for being here. That's it for today's episode. Thanks for listening to
Sex with Emily and be sure to like, subscribe, and give us a review
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