Sex With Emily - Take Your Sex Life from Stale to Sexy, Part 1
Episode Date: January 12, 2022It’s the #1 question I get as a sex educator: “our sex life is stale, how do we make it hot again?” For long-term couples, this issue is so common it’s almost a cliche. “Once you’re marrie...d, say goodbye to your sex life! Haha!” Except, it’s not funny, right? It’s actually pretty painful, once the new relationship energy wears off, and we no longer have that magical chemical cocktail running through our veins. That’s why I am so pleased to be doing a two-part, Best Of special on this precise topic, kicking things off with sex educator Ian Kerner, author of the iconic book “She Comes First” and his latest, “So Tell Me About the Last Time You Had Sex?” I’m also sharing advice from Drs. John and Julie Gottman of the Gottman Institute, who have led some of the most comprehensive studies on successful couples, and the key ingredients of their success. (Which includes a great sex life, of course.) I’m pulling out the best-of-the-best of their advice and techniques, so you can try them yourself, and create your own “arousal runway” to bring excitement back into your relationship and the bedroom. Show Notes:Ian Kerner | Website | Twitter | BooksThe Gottman Institute | Website | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Everything takes priority over the relationship.
Essentially, relationships die by being ignored.
80% of them said that fun had come to die in their relationship.
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.
It's the number one question I get asked as a sex educator.
Our sex life is still.
How do we make it hot again?
Well, for long-term couples, this issue is so common.
It's almost a cliche.
Once you're married, say goodbye to your sex life, ha ha!
Except it's not funny, right?
It's actually pretty painful. Once the
new relationship energy wears off and we no longer have that magical chemical cocktail
running through our veins, well that's why I'm so pleased to be doing a two part best
of special on this precise topic. Kicking things off with sex educator Ian Kerner, author
of the iconic book She Comes First and is latest,
so tell me about the last time you had sex. I'm also sharing advice from doctors John and
Julie Gottman of the Gottman Institute who have led some of the most comprehensive studies
on successful couples and the key ingredients of their success, which by the way includes
a great sex life, of course. I'm pulling out the best of the best of their advice and techniques.
So you could try them for yourself
and bring excitement and pleasure
back to your relationship and the bedroom.
Intentions with Emily, for each episode,
I wanna start off by setting an intention for the show
and I encourage you to do the same.
So when you're listening, what do you wanna go to the episode?
How can it help you?
My intention is to compile some of the top tips for keeping
your relationship hot that you can even try tonight. Rate review, sex with Emily, wherever you
listen to the show, we read all your reviews, it really helps us. Thank you so much and we've got
tons of new articles at sexwithemily.com. Check those out and also check out my YouTube channel
for more sex tips and advice. If you want to ask me a question, call my hotline
559 talk sex or 559 825 5739. Leave me your questions or just message me sexwithemily.com slash
ask Emily. Alright everyone, enjoy this episode. As you listen to the show, you'll hear us explore a lot of ideas for evolving your sex
life in a more stimulating direction.
But here are my top three pieces of advice on the topic and I'd love for you to keep these
in mind as you listen. First, a great sex life has to do with your body and your mind.
In other words, it's not just physical, it's deeply psychological too, but don't let
that scare you the psychological part.
That's just going to help you understand that it's more complex than just what's going on in your body.
And I'm here to help you figure it all out. Second, expect NRE or new relationship energy to
wear off. It's not a sign that anything's wrong or that you don't want each other anymore,
that you should end the relationship. Believe me, I used to think that I thought if I didn't want to
have sex with them in the same way I did during the honeymoon phase and it should be over.
No, this is where the work begins, but it's fun work.
It just means that we have to understand different ways for activating a rousal.
Once the novel becomes familiar, that's what happens.
It's going to happen to all of us.
The reality is you're not going to be turned on the minute your partner walks in the room, especially if you've been
together for a while. You have to create that spark and the tension. Okay? That's
the work. Finally, are you taking responsibility for your own pleasure? Think
about it. How can we expect anyone else to know what we like in bed if we
don't know it ourselves? So if you want better coupled sex, invest heavily in your solo sex routine.
Get to know your turn-ons.
Get to know what feels good.
Pay attention to your body.
It doesn't have to just be during masturbation.
It could just be, you know, when you're in the shower and you're sudsing up, like, where
does it feel good to be touched?
You know, what are your rousal zones?
We have so many different parts of our body that feel good,
so just start becoming an expert in your own body
and what it wants.
All right, on to the show.
Let's kick things off with Ian Karner,
who explains what a sex script is
and how to know if you're trapped in a dynamic
that no longer serves you or the relationship.
I believe that every sexual event tells a story.
It has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
There's a sequence of interactions that are, of course, physical, but they're also emotional,
they're psychological.
And you put them together and that creates what I call a sex script.
And I believe that most couples, especially ones that start to settle into
long-term relationships, kind of have a sex script. And if it works, they're not coming
to see me. And if it doesn't work, they are coming to see me. And there's something about
the sex script that's reinforcing the problem that they're having.
So I literally want to help couples rewrite their sex scripts
away from the problem and towards pleasure.
Okay, so let's talk about this sex script,
which you spend a lot of time unpacking in the book,
chapter by chapter with homework assignments
and every chapter that really just, I mean, couples can take this at their own pace. I mean they might find that just even
the first chapter they stay there for a while after those homework assignments
the second chapter because you give it you give so much in this book like I
could just feel so much of yourself and so much of your years of doing this work.
So let's talk about the sex script. How would you explain that? And also, is there a common sex script?
Interestingly, about 90 to 100% of my heterosexual couples, if I ask them,
tell me about the last time you had sex. And I'm not using this like, oh, we're rewriting a
sex script. Like that's sort of what's in my head. I'm just asking them to tell me about the last
time they had sex. Half the time they don't even remember. They're arguing about when they had sex.
They can't even agree on it. But with heterosexual couples, especially, I would say 90% to 100%
either had intercourse in their last sex script or wanted to have intercourse and failed
to. And if I asked most heterosexual couples,
well, how long did it take you to get to intercourse?
Most of my couples will say,
hmm, two minute, one minute, two minutes, three minutes,
five minutes, if we're getting to seven minutes,
we're already getting extended.
I'm not kidding.
I know.
So the sex script is so
Dominated by this one behavior
What I love about your book is that you don't center on penetration you do not center it on
penis goes into vagina and that is sex which forever You know, I think a lot of people in our field are trying to expand the definition of sex into what
if you just kiss one night, what if it's just oral sex, what if it's mutual masturbation,
all of that can count as your last time you had sex.
However, what you're finding is, and this is the couples that I hear from mostly two,
there's no warm up, there's no four play, it goes right to penetration just to get it
over and check it off the list.
And there's probably not as much satisfaction in that. Absolutely. And they can choose from those 12 acts. We
could still choose from those acts, but we don't. Right. Choose from those 12 behavior studies
also show that the more behaviors you put together, the more likely people are to experience
pleasure and orgasm. So create your own personalized idiosyncratic sex scripts
that work for you.
Like why does this one behavior of penis and vagina
for heterosexual couples have to dominate
an overshadow sort of the way we have sex.
When A, we know it's the sexual behavior
that contributes most to the orgasm gap, right?
That's obvious. Like a penicent of vagina
just doesn't really stimulate the clitoris very much.
And I deal with so many cases of performance anxiety
that are all centered around intercourse.
So one of the reasons so many men that I work with
focus so much on intercourse is because they're like,
holy shit, I have an erection.
I got to do this thing right now.
I guess that's what it is.
I never really thought about the way.
I think that they also believe then that not only a joy and not of other options, really,
but that's going to be the most satisfying option because maybe it has been up until now.
So what we're saying is the elements of the sex script,
there's way more than 12 acts, right?
Did you find that or are there common acts for it?
Let's just say for now that there's 12
sort of common behaviors.
There's gonna be more behaviors.
Now then the question is, there's two questions.
One, how should those behaviors be organized, right?
Because you could have a certain behavior
that's sequenced in the wrong way, right? Because you could have a certain behavior that's sequenced
in the wrong way, right? A lot of women will complain to me, you know, like, I don't mind
oral sex, giving, receiving, but like for it to be the first thing, it's like that just
doesn't feel good, you know? It could be a great activity, but it's potentially at the wrong
time.
The other thing that I think that is really important to the book is that I don't think
that sex scripts should simply be reduced to behaviors.
I think that that is the problem so often.
Even for couples who have working sex scripts, they're living so much in the physical domain and not in the psychological
or the erotic domain.
So it's like once you know sort of maybe what the physical sequence of your sex script
can be, how do you make that really erotically alive?
So let's talk about that.
Let's talk about the psychological, because we always say the brain is the largest sex
organ.
How do we get our brain on board?
What are some of those cyclats?
So you start with the sex script
and you figure out the accent feel good,
because that's sort of,
you say, that's the basis where we understand.
We're like, okay, I really like seeing,
I like massage, I like oral,
I like using a finger here,
but how do you get your brain on board?
And this is where we get into desire and the rest.
Yeah. So one element that I didn't describe, which I should have said, is like, when I'm asking
a couple about their sex script, I'm really guiding them.
I'm saying, so how did you initiate?
Who initiate?
How did you end up of all the things in the world you could have been doing?
How did you end up having sex?
Oh, okay, great.
Someone initiated and what, how did you begin to cultivate a rebel soul?
Like, did you do undress your selves, do undress each other?
Like what happens?
Is it interesting?
And then, well, how do you get going?
How do you get absorbed in this sex?
Like are you present or you distracted?
How do you get focused?
And then, wow, how are you building up that momentum towards orgasm?
Is orgasm important?
Are they happening both at the same time,
one after the other, not happening at all?
What happens after the orgasm?
Do you connect?
Are you staying there?
Are you reaching for the iPhone?
And then, oh, what happens in between sexual events?
Is there an erotic thread?
Does eroticism stay alive?
So I am hearing all of this and I'm getting data back.
And a couple might say, you know what?
We don't even initiate.
If sex happens, it's just because one of us feels obligated.
Or we get going, but he loses his erection,
or I'm never really into it.
You know, so Emily, I'm never really into it.
So Emily, I'm listening for all of the problems in the sex script, but I'm listening for the
first problem because that's the first problem that I can target and I can give them homework
and then they can come back and we can work our way through every element of rewriting
the sex script.
That's so good. So if they say to you, I'm just not in the mood and he loses his direction,
but how do you start talking to them about arousal then? Getting actually in the mood for it,
not just going through the motions. Absolutely. We're talking in this phase, we're talking about
arousal. We're talking about absorption, right?
Just getting absorbed in the moment,
just getting present.
And then I will often ask a couple,
they'll tell me the activities that they're engaging.
And then I'll learn that they'd like more for play.
Or I'll get a sense of kind of the physical behaviors.
But then I'll ask them, I always ask them.
I'll say, so what kind of like psychological arousal do you generate?
And it's kind of like a leading question because you know that everyone's gonna say, what are you talking about?
Exactly. Yeah, they're like, none. What? What? What do you mean psychological arousal? And I'll say, well, listen, we know for a fact that there are women who can fantasize their way to orgasm.
I know for a fact when I'm working with men who have erectile unpredictability, and I want to give them a homework, and I'll sometimes say, hey, next time you're putting on some really hot porn, I want you to wait five minutes before you touch your penis and tell me what happens.
And those guys will come back and say, hey, I had a pretty decent direction.
And once I did touch it, I was really had a good direction.
So that's the power of psychological arousal.
It's hands free.
What are you doing that's hands free, that's touch free, to generate arousal. And why are you doing this with
yourself and not with your partner?
Because we're never taught. We're never taught anything about this at all. We don't understand
it. We just go towards sex because it's pleasurable until it's not, right?
Exactly.
Because I think this happens in most relationships. I really do. I mean, after the honeymoon phase is over.
The honeymoon phase is amazing because, you know, A, we got a nice little neurochemical cocktail back in
us up. And B, there's so much excitement just in not knowing somebody and wanting to learn about
somebody, you know. That's all new. It's all exciting. It's all new. It's all exciting. So, you know what I love Emily?
Is that once I explain it in these terms,
every couple I meet is says,
we want more of that.
We want that. We're ready for that.
We don't have it. How do we get it?
That's $1 million. That is the $1 million question.
So, I think complicated questions
really have simple answers.
I really do believe that.
So I think it's important to engage in what
I call the cultivation of psychogenic stimulation.
That's the clinical term.
And I think that there's two ways of doing that.
I think it can be face to face.
And I think it can be side by side.
And by face to face, you know what I mean?
By face to face, Emily, you watch two little kids
or three little kids, five or six year olds
playing in a playground.
They're making something up.
They have no props, except maybe a twig to be a gun
or who knows what, or a jungle gym to be a castle with nothing but their
imaginations. They're actually creating worlds and characters that have power structures
that if we played those same games as adults, they'd be really hot. They'd be really
dark, you know. So face to face psychogenic stimulation is being able to not just pull out a vibrator, not just grab
a set of handcuffs. It's really being able to reach into your own psyche and begin to
share something that turns you on. And it's crazy to me that so many of us either can't do
that, won't do that. I think we shouldn't need to do that, or believe they don't even have those fantasies, or don't do that. I think we shouldn't need to do that or believe they don't even have
those fantasies or don't know that.
Right. Well, we don't. I mean, this is what we hear all day every day. People think,
well, I hear what you're saying, Emily, we should talk about our fantasies or we should
roleplay, but that's just awkward. We've been together forever. Like, they're going to
laugh. Yeah, it's all those reasons I can't. I won't. I haven't. I don't have any fantasies.
But I agree. But so I'll sit down with that couple
and I'll say, but listen, we've agreed
that you need psychogenic stimulation.
And I sometimes say, you know,
we need a different on-road into a rousal,
or we need like a different on-ramp,
or we need an on-rousal runway.
Those two terms, like an arousal runway,
and on-ramp, people kind of like relate to those terms,
you know?
And I'll say then, you know, I think that we
got to do some side by side psychological arousal.
And that's really simple.
I just want you to take in together some sexy media.
I don't care if it's reading a Rodic literature aloud.
I don't care if it's listening to an erotic podcast.
I don't care if it's listening to audio porn. I don't care if it's watching ethical porn, which is always interesting because everyone will then say ethical porn. And then that gets me to give them a whole nother But like I said, complicated issues have simple answers.
Yeah, then taking something really sexy together
with the shared aim of letting it get you aroused,
maybe get into a little mutual masturbation,
you know, while it's happening.
You know, like...
Let's say someone says, yeah, but port is wrong
or it makes me feel bad, right?
That's against my beliefs.
Right.
First of all, I can try and make it fun.
I can try and make it like that version of the newlywed game.
I can say I want you to pick a Radica or porn that doesn't turn you on necessarily, but
you think it's going to turn on your partner.
And then that always becomes it.
Oh, that's fun.
Yeah, that becomes fun.
And then I will say like, listen, I don't really care what you do.
Like, look, I grew up old school.
I'm a kid of the 70s and 80s.
We didn't have the internet.
We had books, we had literature, we had the story of,
oh, we had a manual.
Right.
Manual, yeah.
Exactly.
So first of all, I will really,
people who most of the time, one or both partners will dismiss
porn.
And I really just want to explore that as a conversation. I want to say great. You're definitely not going
to watch porn. I just want to know why, right? Because there's a lot in there
like, oh, it's objectifying or, oh, I'm afraid that that's what he or she is
going to think I want to do. Oh, because it's sleazy. Oh, because the actors don't want to be there. And then I can sort of just
lightly challenge all of those assumptions. So I do believe I will never push anything, but I
always want to challenge people a little bit. And then Emily, the other thing I do is
everything for me, it's like, the book is very structured, right? Yes. And the sessions are very structured.
Like, I always say, like, listen, I just want to do an experiment.
We're just bringing data back.
So, I don't even want you to have sex.
If you go and have sex, that's your own business.
But I just want you to do a limited experiment of watching
this erotic media together or taking it in.
And I just want you to bring me back the data from that,
sort of like what happened.
Yeah, yeah.
And so then that leads to the second session.
Some will say, we really couldn't not have sex.
We just had to.
We were turned on or some will say,
we actually never did it.
We just never got there. And then that becomes interesting like why?
So I guess what I'm saying is like the idea of a sex script is really breaking things into
smaller units and then just addressing those units with a focus and getting some just interesting
Experience back from that.
Right. So now we've got a lot more tools to work with to create an
arousal one way and write a sex group that works even better for you. Now
let's hear from Ian as he talks about fantasy and how to wrap any sexual
behavior with erotic psychology. What we're talking about now is moving from
the side by side to the face to face, right? We want people bringing their erotic selves into the picture.
They've engaged psychologically and they got aroused.
Like, look, Emily, this could be a couple that now has a new on-road into sex, which always
involves watching some ethical porn or reading something or getting turned on, right?
That might be their sweet spot for a little while.
But you're talking about something different,
which is how do we begin to bring our erotic cells?
And I have a few ways of doing that.
In every first session, and I give this
as a homework assignment in the book,
I'll ask a couple.
So look, now we know about the problem.
We sort of know about the sex script
that's reinforcing the problem.
I want to ask if we work together for not that long, like two or three months and we meet
each other every couple, two or three weeks with the homework in between.
And let's say like what month are we in right now?
We're in like April, mid April.
Let's just say by June, not too far away at all.
Things are actually getting
better. I want you to first off tell me what does better look like. They're reconstructing
the sex group for me. They're saying like, oh, like, he's going to like just come at me
with like more desire. Like, I'm going to really feel, or I'm going to feel her desire
more palpably, or we're going to really engage in some great oral sex,
or we're going to start to play with some power,
something that we've already always wanted to write.
So they're going to start to tell me about the solution.
So we've moved from problem to solution.
My job then is to raise the temperature in the room a little.
And around that solution, turn it into a fantasy.
So okay, so what does that mean like?
You want him to desire you a lot more.
Do you want him to say something?
Do you want him to do something?
Yeah, I want him to push me up against the wall and tell me he wants
to fuck me.
You know, like, wow, okay, like that's not something he probably does, or it's not the
way you talk about putting together the shopping list, right?
So you sort of want to like want to or hunger for you or almost want you to be objectified
in those moments, right?
So I'm just working with them to build the fantasy right there.
And then he might say, well, I don't know how to do that.
Or that feels weird or how to write.
And then do you give them tools to do it as well?
Yeah, I do, but I feel like the main thing that they need
is permission from each other.
Like once they've sort of talked about a little more,
like it's okay to come up to me and just, you know,
bite me on the neck.
It's permission and it's getting them
to get in touch with their erotic self.
So sometimes people will come back and say,
yeah, I picked out the porn for him.
It was a POV of a blowjob because I know he loves blowjobs,
and I hated it.
Why is everything a blowjob?
Well, that's interesting.
Do you like blowjobs?
Yeah, I do.
He'll say, yeah, I really do like blowjobs.
Is it simply because it's a lubricated mouth
with some friction of a hand against your penis?
I mean, that could be just you masturbating, right,
with some lube and your hand.
No, no, I like it because it makes me feel like,
like she totally loves me.
Or it makes me feel like I'm totally in power.
Oh, it makes you feel like really loved.
Or it makes you feel powerful, right?
Then we're getting to, even a sexual behavior
or a body part, it contains an erotic element.
It contains an element of fantasy.
So when I think when people think about fantasy,
they're getting way too ambitious.
They're feeling like I have to be so super creative,
like I want to be annually probed by my alien husband.
I'm a line solider after coming out of suspended animation.
Like it can just be next level of the blowjob or what it makes you feel to receive or
it's all it's all in the feelings. So I'm glad you brought up low jobs because I hear from so many men and women
and heterosexual relationships. The man would say my partner won't do it. She won't like it. She won't swallow. She will never do it
She just swears it off and then I hear from the women who are like, I just don't like it
How can I learn to like it and I get bet that you in corner have successfully
Encourage couples are like gotten them to get to the point where they do.
I do, I do, Emily, like, first of all, though, I want to say what you live to be my age,
which is actually women to be getting up their years, right?
You deal with like so many sexual problems.
You realize there are so many paths to pledge your first level.
So I'm not going to ever, I hate when couples get so hung up on one.
I have a blowjob.
I agree.
I like, let it go.
Do something else.
There are so many paths to pleasure.
The other thing that I really try and do is say,
anything you do, whether it's a blowjob,
whether it's intercourse, whether it's a kiss,
it can have some kind of psychological meaning.
It can be the most loving, romantic kiss.
It can be the most passionate kiss that oral sex can come from, like, look,
you can go to any porn site and oral sex can be done as femdom domination, right? Or it can be done as a morning loving act.
It's like we're not watching just to see the penis in the mouth. No. Watching for the
psychological context. So I always want to come back to, well, what's the psychological
intention behind what you want to convey? It doesn't always have to be the same thing.
It can be something different every day, you know?
Right, so what you're saying is we don't have to force everyone
to learn to love low jobs or going down on their partner.
It's like we want to have a threesome or all the things.
It's like how else can you get that same feeling?
What are the other paths to pleasure?
How can you wrap a behavior and like a really nice gift wrapping
that's really a turn on?
And listen, you know, once you know something about human sexual anatomy,
and we know, like when a fetus is in the womb,
it's not until seven or eight weeks that it's determined,
does that fetus gonna become a boy or a girl
or intersexed most of the time,
it's gonna become a boy or a girl?
So it's not like once
that's determined like the material that tissue goes away, it just gets used in a different way,
right? So we all share common tissue, common sexual function, and once you learn some basic principles of stimulating,
like once you learn like,
hey, you know, like a penis really responds
to friction at the head and the glands, right?
And lubrication can help with that friction.
And it really responds to pressure at the base.
And you can really experiment with friction and pressure and it's sort of going
to be those two things in combination with some psychological inputs and sound, some
emotion like well then you don't have to like swallow.
You don't have to like deep throat.
You don't have to do anything you don't want to do. In fact, you should
do the things that are going to be within your safe space, within your good feeling space,
and that can be sexy.
Let's take a short break when we come back. The Gottmins talk to us about communication
patterns and what the research says about great sex.
How does poor communication tank our sex life?
And what can we do to improve it?
The Gottmins explain why conflict management skills outside the bedroom is key to overall
relationship satisfaction. One of the things Emily that I would really love to see
are high school kids getting a class in relationships, right?
Yes.
Because all those patterns get started so early
and they don't particularly change that much in adulthood.
So if kids knew that criticism doesn't work if you're dating somebody, if they knew
that it really helps to take responsibility for what you contributed to a negative incident,
and how did you do that without kind of losing yourself? I think it would be tremendously helpful
for kids, and they would probably end up making better
choices of life partners later on.
Absolutely.
I mean, there's so much lacking in education for our youth.
I always say that I wish they had comprehensive, accurate sex education, but to throw in communication.
Right.
So you're talking about kids, though, and tell me what you think about this, because I
do see it all the time,
that having kids is going to change your relationship
in many ways.
Absolutely.
I hear from people when it's the sex.
They stop having sex, they stop initiating sex.
And so how much of that have you ever talked to couples
about that?
Yeah, one of the things that we discovered was that,
and this was backed up by a study done at UCLA
by the Sloan Institute, that, especially for dual career couples, a lot of times,
everything takes priority over the relationship. The children do the career does, and essentially
relationships die by being ignored.
And they stop really having romance and playfulness and fun and adventure.
We found in a very large study we did that couples about to start therapy, 40,000 couples,
gay lesbian and heterosexual couples.
80% of them said that fun had come to die in their relationship.
And that's what the Sloan study found as well, is that people stop really romancing one
and other.
They stop playing together and having fun and really having an erotic life with one another.
Yeah.
A lot of new parents find sex going over a cliff.
And I think, you know, there's a lack of real understanding of what's happening there.
And when we did our study, which was part of our book, Bringing Baby Home,
what we saw is that couples, first of all, underestimated how much work a child is.
They underestimated the effects of sleep deprivation.
And what research has shown about sleep
is that you don't have to actually have less hours of sleep.
But after 30 days of interrupted sleep,
you are going to show almost every clinical sign of depression,
including a loss of sex drive.
So it's very typical for parents who
are losing sleep, of course, with a new child
to get more irritable, feel exhausted all the time,
just wanna think about the baby and nothing else.
And they forget how to really connect
with one another, prioritize time with one another.
I've seen couples, for example, is really fun.
Who they would have a date a month, an overnight where, you know,
grandma and grandpa would come in to take care of the baby, they'd go for a date, and
they would go to a hotel, you know, thinking it would be really romantic.
What would they do?
They'd go to fall asleep.
Which is the most romantic thing ever.
No one would walk us out for nine hours. And it was hot.
Oh man.
It's true.
And I love that we're normalizing this
because it's fun.
Every time someone has a baby or they go through the situation,
they think they're the only ones.
I can't believe this is happening.
And then you're so in it, it's almost too late.
I mean, it's never too late.
But it's almost like they can't even think
their way out of it.
Yes.
I want to get back into conflict for a minute and in relationships because that's a lot
of what we you know there's so many conflicts and there's so many problems that people just
won't get past.
They might not go to therapy and I always said it seems like you're repeating the same things
over and over and then hearing your stat 69% of conflicts are never solved and in fact they
stay the same.
So over years, so like, this is never going to change.
But then yet we call these relationships still successful.
How is that possible?
Well, here's the thing, you know, the question about successful relationships
isn't, do they solve all their problems?
It's again, how they solve all their problems? It's, again, how they
dialogue about those problems. How do they dialogue? Right? So, you know, you were talking
about compromise. Well, one of the things that is really, really important is taking the
time to really understand your partner's point of view about a particular conflict,
and where it comes from, what it's about for them, what's the history behind that?
Childhood history, other relationship history, why is it so important to you that you have this particular position on the issue really lived.
What is the underlying sense of purpose and meaning for you in having your position on
the issue honored?
And when you have that kind of conversation with one person as the listener and the other as the speaker. And that listener just staying
with question after question to really understand the other person's point of view
and then reversing the roles. So there's deeper understanding. Then compromise becomes so much easier
because you develop compassion and a much deeper appreciation for your partner's internal world regarding
their position on a conflict issue.
Could you give me some examples about how a conflict that stays the same but how you
kind of learn to do the juzhits, it works in a way.
We call this the dreams within conflict and we analyze 950 of these
conflicts that seemed like deal-breakers, you know, where they're opposed to each other and compromise
Seems unthinkable because in these deal-breakers, you're kind of selling yourself out if you compromise
That's the way it feels and so after we analyze that and we also saw that in our own relationship
as well, we found that some of these unsavable problems become the points of better connection.
We really learned it from the couples in the lab who took these dealbreakers and asked each
other questions that deepened their understanding of their partner's point of view.
And and Julie really is the one who was insightful enough to see
that this was an important therapy technique because of her background
as a therapist.
Wow.
You guys are like couples goals.
We heard from Ian Kurner earlier on sex groups.
Now let's hear from the
gotmins on sexual self-discovery and consistent connection. Can you talk about what are the
traits of couples that you found that have a great sex life? The largest study ever done
on this question was done with 70,000 couples and And in 24 different countries, and they had that one question,
what's different about people who say they have a great sex life
compared to people who say they have a bad sex life?
And, you know, reading that study,
I was able to list about a baker's dozen of things
that people did who had a great sex life.
And none of them had to do with what happened in the bedroom.
They were all things like, people have a great sex life. And none of them had to do with what happened in the bedroom. They were all things like people have a great sex life, tell each other they love them
and mean it every day. They ask questions, they give compliments, they give surprise romantic
gifts, they cuddle, they know their partner's preferences sexually, they know their partner's preferences sexually.
They know their partner is sort of in a world
of desire, what turns them on and turns them off.
And they release, they good friends.
And that's so fascinating, I think.
Yeah, I think also successful couples
are really, really good at both initiating and refusing sex without
putting pressure on the other person.
So I'll give you an example.
I had a couple where he wanted more sex than she did.
This was a heterocouple.
And she had had a history of sexual abuse. And so
when he would initiate and she would refuse, he would get angry at her. And the anger felt like
a reenactment of the sexual abuse in the sense that if she didn't conform to his desire
abuse in the sense that if she didn't conform to his desire and do what he wanted, then she was a bad person, right?
And that's oftentimes how a perpetrator will make a sexual abuse survivor feel.
She's retraumatized every time, right?
That's right.
So she was retraumatized every single time.
I mean, it was a very, very difficult case, very difficult situation.
But what ended up happening that really, really helped is this was a woman who came from a deeply
religious background and had never had anything more than a kiss on the cheek. He had been married three times before and was a
porn addict, right? So what he expected of her was complete pornographic sex
basically with him in control all the time and it was scheduled according to his needs, which was three times a week at 9 p.m.
So we stopped all of the sex.
She had no idea of what she liked at all, zero,
because it had all been his preference.
And so I gave her one of my favorite books in the whole wide world
by Lonnie Barbuck called For Yourself,
Female Sexuality.
I told my mom when I was like 20, I never had an orgasm.
I didn't know what masturbation book.
I was like 20 something in college, my friends.
I said, Mom, I never even had an orgasm.
She gave me that book Lonnie Barbuck for yourself.
And I still have it on my shelf was my first masturbation book.
Anyway, I've never, here and even else bring it up.
So that was a moment.
Okay.
Lonnie Barbuck, yeah. Anyway, I've never here anyone else bring it up. So that was a moment. OK. Yeah.
Lonnie Barbuck.
Yeah.
Your mother was just spot on the moon.
Yeah.
Because it's one of the best books ever written for women.
And Lonnie went on to create programs
to help women with their own sexuality, videos, more books,
and so on.
She's really been a huge contributor,
especially for women in the field of sex.
So this woman read the book, did all the exercises by herself,
and by the end of about eight months or so,
which is what it took her during which they were abstinent by Goli.
Then she could ask him for what she needed and what she wanted. And the reality was that
you know, he knew she wasn't there really emotionally. She was more like a zombie who was putting up with his sexual needs. And he missed her.
He missed her.
He felt lonely.
He felt disconnected when they had sex.
So now they were able to move back into having a sexual relationship in which both of their
needs mattered with hers, mattering first more so and then eventually reaching
a balance where they were so much more fulfilled because she learned what she loved sexually,
essentially, and could convey that, had to tell him specifically
and this woman didn't know she had a clitoris, right?
But a lot of women don't,
but what I love that you're saying
and it reinforces something that we talk about
a lot here is that a lot of people,
we just haven't done the work.
We just a lot of women who've raised it
could be more performative during sex
or just kind of give up and kind of fake orgasms.
It just, you have to take time, might be eight months,
might be eight weeks, you just study it,
and you say, I'm gonna figure out what I want
so I can come back to you and show up
as a fully more sexual being
and not looking at our sexuality
and the eyes of our partners,
but sort of figuring out what we want.
You also talk about methods for initiating sex
in chapter three of your book, let's get it on.
And for listeners at home, an indirect request for sex
would be like, why don't we have sex anymore?
Whereas a direct request would be more like,
hey, wanna have sex or initiating using touch.
So much more effective.
Okay, it must be in couples or more likely to be direct
than heterosexual couples.
Yeah.
Also, they talk about the importance of kissing.
I know kissing is so important.
Have you found that kissing is the first thing that goes
in long-term relationships?
And I think you have found in some studies
how important, how important kissing is.
There's a German study that shows that
German men who kiss their wives
goodbye when they leave for work
live five years longer than German men who do not.
That's not an example of everybody. The kiss your partner before you go to work. I don't know what is.
I mean, come on.
How hard is that?
We're really talking about constant connection and communication.
Right.
The healthiest thing that we see in relationships.
I'm going to take a quick break, break but after I'm taking your calls and
answering your questions.
Okay guys we are on to calls and answering your questions. Hi Janet. Thanks for
calling. How can I help you? So I'm calling because so my partner and I we we have a good sex life and he's he's very
kind and considerate and a considerate lover, but he asked me he's asked many times in the past like
what my sexual fantasies are and once you know what I want to do and what what you can do to make
me happy and stuff. And it's the frustrating thing for me is that I'm already fine or happy with the things that we do.
And I feel like I'm not very creative.
And so I feel like I...
And again, it's not that there's a whole huge amount of pressure or whatever.
But I feel like I don't really have any other real fantasies.
I grew up in a pretty strict Catholic home.
Sex with for marriage was not okay.
masturbation was really wrong and stuff. And so I feel like that's played a part in my creativity,
I guess. And so I feel like I'm not very creative. It's not that I'm not open to ideas. I just don't
have ideas. Does that make sense? Yes, absolutely. You're in the perfect situation right now because you're open and you're willing,
but you just don't have any fantasies.
And that's really common.
I hear this from people all the time.
Like some people's brains are more creative sexually
and some aren't, and that's all okay.
Now you get to go deeper into what you do.
Like maybe it could,
here's a few prompts for you
that might help you figure it out.
Cause it's a journey.
So first thing I would be honest with your partner
and say, I don't have a lot of fancies,
but wanna go on a ride with me,
let's figure out what they are.
You could start to think about some of your
most memorable sexual experiences,
even you could do that for yourself
and just think about, what was I the most turned on about?
And, you know, maybe with this partner,
was there a night that was particularly hot
with something happening?
And so you can kind of look at your own sexual history
and think about things like that
that might just kind of get you to start thinking
what's hot for you, maybe it was unexpected or spontaneous
or you were dressed up or you were outside in nature,
you know, maybe something happened
and start to think about some really hot moments.
Also, you know, maybe you guys could read a rotica to each other
or find some hot sex scenes
in movies or watch ethical porn together.
Like, I don't think there should be any shame that you don't have any, but I think you
might have some fun trying out what your turn on is.
What do you think about that?
So that's thank you.
Those are really good suggestions.
I appreciate that.
I feel like I just maybe talking ahead of time because sometimes I feel like in the moment
I'm like, I don't know like a deer on the headlights or something. Oh well, there's what my thing is that I always tell couples to
To talk about this stuff outside the bedroom. So it doesn't happen in the moment
It's some it's timing turf and tone. I always say like your tone has to be light and curious and open
The turf is outside the bedroom.
Maybe when you're going on a walk or you're having dinner and the timing is when you guys
are feeling good, you're hanging out.
You're not fighting about something or talking about something else.
So in the moment, a lot of us can't answer stuff in the moment, but that's why you have
to say, you know what?
I want to talk to you about our sex life.
Here's what I think is really hot and you ask you out of fantasies, but I tell you, I don't have any.
But here's what does Termiata.
Here, I would you like to explore with me.
Let's figure it out together.
So just know that some people do, some people don't.
Nothing wrong with you.
That's very helpful.
I appreciate that.
I feel like he has some ideas that he doesn't, you know, that he, that maybe he's afraid
to share with me. But I'm open to a lot. I just, oh, you know, that he, that maybe he's afraid to share with me.
But I'm open to a lot.
I just, oh, well, this is great, Janet.
I think that he probably does have fantasies.
And that's the other part of this is to say, here's my fantasies, what are your fantasies?
And that's how you're going to find out what he's into, what you're into.
So this is going to be great.
It sounds like you already, you know, you're getting a sense that he's got some things he
wants to talk to you about.
So maybe he does.
And then remember, you get to ask questions and say, tell me more about that.
Oh, that's really new for me.
I haven't known that.
Tell me more about that fantasy because it might be something that you're just sort of
haven't heard of or don't understand.
Just say, tell me more about that.
When did you first have the, how would it go down?
What would it look like?
And the couples who have more of these conversations about their sex life have much better sex,
more pleasurable sex, more orgasm, stronger connection, but it's awkward, Jan, if people
don't often do it, but that's my mission on the planet.
So I promise it works.
Thanks, Jan.
Okay, guys, this is like the base, this is like what I talked to you guys about all the time
that it is okay to have these conversations.
It's okay if you fantasize.
It's okay if you don't fantasize. It's okay if you're afraid to have this conversation. It's okay if you fantasize. It's okay if you don't fantasize.
It's okay if you're afraid to have this conversation.
It's okay if you love talking about sex.
It's okay if you've never talked about sex.
It's all okay.
It's just finding ways to talk about it
in a way that is not shaming and blaming and healthy
and it's really in the all the name of being
a great lover to yourself and to your partner.
It's the most important talk and we can do. You can find John and Julie Gottman on Instagram at Gottman Institute and Twitter at Gottman-I-N-S-T. For more Ian Kurner, check out his books. She comes first
and tell me about the last time you had sex. You can find Ian-n-on-twitter at e-n-corner and Instagram e-n-corner-l-m-f-t.
That's our show. I hope you enjoyed this best of special. Stay tuned for part two this Friday.
We'll have John Wyland, Esther Perrell, and Tom Bilieu talking about eroticism and essential
methods for reviving a stale, sex life, and transforming your relationship energy.
forming your relationship energy.
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
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