Sex With Emily - The Hottest Episodes of 2022
Episode Date: December 30, 2022As the year comes to an end, what are the biggest revelations you’ve had when it comes to pleasure? What is something new you’ve learned that has redefined your sex life - now and in the new year?... To answer this, I turned to you - the Sex With Emily community - for a roundup of the best of the best. From oral secrets to solo sex, your sex language and your sex fantasies, these are some of my favorite moments from the episodes you listened to the most this year. Consider this your end of year send off, from Emily with love. Show Notes:Article: How to Write Your New Year’s Sex ResolutionsMagic WandBreathe AppPodcast: Your Top Sex Fantasies, RevealedPodcast: Your Sex Language w/ Dr. Jen FreedPodcast: How to Relationship Better w/ John Kim a & Vanessa BennettPodcast: Best Blow Job EverPodcast: Orgasms with a Capital OPodcast: Sex & Loving Your Body w/ Shaun TPodcast: Therapy: The Relationship Game ChangerPodcast: Sex + Creativity w/ Liz Goldwyn Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I need to be turned on before I want to have sex.
He can want to have sex before being turned on, right?
That in and of itself is a mind-blowing thing to understand about the two of us.
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.
As the year comes to an end, what are the biggest revelations you've had when it comes
to pleasure?
What's something new you've learned that has redefined your sex life now and in the
new year?
To answer this, I turn to you.
Sex is only a community for a roundup of the best of the best.
From oral secrets to solo sex, your sex language, and your sex fantasies.
Well, these are some of my favorite moments from the episodes you listen to the most this year.
Consider this your urine send off from sex with Emily with love. Intentions with Emily. For
each episode join me in setting an attention for the show. I do it and I encourage you to do the same.
So as the year comes to the end, I want you to think about what if you learn when it comes
to sex and pleasure and what would you like to see more of in the new year? Hopefully,
this show is going to ground you in some pleasurable intentions.
Please rate or review sex with Emily wherever you listen to the show.
Mind you article how to write your new year's sex resolutions is up at sexwithemily.com. Check out my YouTube channel, social
media and TikTok. It's all at sex with Emily for more sex tips and advice. If
you want to ask me your questions, do it. Leave me your questions or message me
at sexwithemily.com slash ask Emily or call my outline 559 talk.59, 8.255739.
Today's episode is presented by Magic Wand,
and before we get into the show,
I want to tell you a little bit about the Magic Wand Plus.
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Art everyone, enjoy the show.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
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.
First, 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,
you know, 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.
Do you ever think about it?
Like, why don't we talk about sexual fantasies?
Why don't we share these with our partner?
Are you embarrassed?
Are you afraid they're really taboo?
Well, here's the thing I want to tell you about fantasies.
First off, almost everyone has them.
And if you don't have them, well, I'm gonna inspire you
and let you know how you can sort of channel your fantasies.
But it gives us valuable data.
Like, when we know what our fantasies are,
well, then we know what turns us on.
So I wanted to ask you,
I went to you, our sex-dominated community,
and I asked you on Instagram, tell me.
Tell us, what do you go to sexual fantasies?
And we got so many responses, it was quite amazing.
So here's a success story that we got
from Mike 36 in Denver.
Hey, Dr. Emily, I've been listening to your show
for a short period of time and during the weekend,
I used your suggestion.
I overcame my fear and explained to my wife of eight years
that I'm a submissive by nature.
And I gave her permission to make our sex life more about her pleasure and to be dominant
in nature. Her reaction was incredibly positive, and since then we've discussed a number
of topics I would never have imagined we would have discussed this time last week. She's
already started to incorporate small acts of dominance into our play and she is wearingly LOL a natural.
I can't wait to see where this leads.
Alright, I love this story.
Thank you, Mike, for letting me know this.
And I just want to highlight something here.
His wife of eight years, he couldn't have imagined a week ago that she would have been willing
to live out his fantasy.
And all he did was have a conversation with her.
He's a listener to the show, so he did it.
Honestly, and he probably followed by three T's,
timing, tone, and turf, and he knew how to talk about it.
But let me remind you that talking about fantasies
and sharing your authentic turn-ons with your partner,
really, it helps enhance intimacy
and helps helps your communication
in every other area of your relationship.
You both were trying roles that you weren't used to
and seeing your partner trying something new
that's actually about your pleasure is really a turn on
and I'm sure it's going to enhance
other areas of your relationship as well.
This is from Scott 51 in New York.
Hey, Dr. Emily, my wife and I have been married
for 26 years.
We're both in our early 50s.
I still have a high sex drive and she really doesn't.
We talked recently and she understands she's trying.
I respect and appreciate that, but what's still missing is fulfilling my fantasies.
She never asks, never tries even though she knows some of them because I've told her,
but there's no effort, no desire or passion for filling them.
She never has fantasies, desires or anything.
She's happy with the basics of what we do.
I want more.
I've always just accepted the status quo, but I'd really like more and don't know how to
go about it.
Is it normal for her to have no desires or fantasies?
I want her to have wants and desires so I can make them a reality.
I've brought toys and she was okay with one of them and another one she tossed back to me
and said she was tired and wanted to sleep.
And one of them's been in my nightstand
for two and a half years
and she's never asked me about it.
I by lingerie, she doesn't wear it, not her style.
I'm like, it's new, let's try it.
Nope, I'm feeling stuff wanting more
and knowing it will never happen.
I've never heard of people not having fantasies before
and not wanting to do them for a partner.
She doesn't need to try all of them, but maybe a couple of them.
Just looking for advice and what to do next, help.
Alright, thank you for your question.
Scott, wow, you've been together for 26 years, so congratulations on that.
And first, I'm wondering, what was your sexual relationship like at the beginning of the relationship?
Did it sort of wane over time?
Have you ever been able to talk to her about your sex life previously and there were some
improvements or are you just starting right now 26 years in?
Because we all get really, really set in our ways.
You have to remember that.
You guys have a dynamic going and I'm going to think that she wants to be a great lover
to you.
I just make these assumptions.
If we're with partners for a while and we're loving and we care about them, she probably
does want that for you, but maybe she doesn't really understand how to go about it.
So that's when we love these requests through our partners and we're like,
Hey, let's do these fantasies or hey,
let's try something new in the bedroom.
They're just like, yeah, I might or I would or,
or maybe even know what it's sounding to me is like,
she just doesn't want to talk about sex.
She's not really interested in it right now.
That's why it might take a little bit of therapy and some help with someone
who can help facilitate these conversations. So you can really get
to the bottom of like, what is it about talking about sex? What is it about trying new things
in the bedroom? You know, maybe there are some triggers around it. Maybe she thinks that you're
going to want to do things that might be a get something that she believes in. I'm not sure what
those are. Maybe she feels bad about her body right now. Maybe she's having some pain. You know,
I remember there was a caller once who just said he kept trying and trying to use the brink of divorce
with his partner for years. He was like, babe, what do you want to do? What's going on? She wouldn't
talk about it. And finally, she was like, I have pain. I have pain during sex. And I was too
afraid to tell you. And sure enough, they went. She went to see a public floor physical therapist.
She wouldn't got in a hormone replacement
therapy and she was able to be an incredible sexual lover to him and they were having sex
way more frequently and they didn't get into worse. So sometimes there's things going on that we
don't even know about. So I'm wondering if the approach here would be to talk to her about stuff
that lets you do with your fantasy life and more to do with what is going to turn around sexually
like maybe we just scale it back.
So maybe taking the pressure off of her
to kind of fulfill some sexual fantasy,
but to kind of start with ground zero and say,
let's just commit that after all these years together,
we both want to be great lovers to each other.
And we both want to figure out ways to enhance our intimacy
and make sure that we can continue going
the distance for another 25 years. One way to rekindle desire in your relationship is simply by better understanding it.
Dr. Jennifer Fried seeks to do just that in her book A Map to Your Soul. For more on Jennifer
Fried, follow her on Instagram and Twitter at Dr. Jennifer Fried and on our website,
JenniferFried.com. Dr. Jennifer Fried, welcome to the show. I am so excited to see you here.
I feel like you exist between two worlds,
one is psychology, which is broadly accepted, right?
And you have that depth of knowledge of psychology
from all these years and the other is astrology,
which is not as widely accepted.
And some people think it's a pseudoscience.
And I think I wasn't,
didn't really even understand it before I really met you.
And so this whole book is kind of giving tools on how we can see this in ourselves and the
different activities we can do to actually grounding it.
That is that it.
Yes, in my dream, I have a big dream that people will get together as families, couples,
groups, organizations, and do a lot of these exercises together because to really love
somebody is to know them.
So how can couples, I love the real examples you're giving the book though of couples too,
like how they figure out.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
Well, I think part of it is when you take these inventories in a map to your soul, 8th chapter
on sex, then you begin to have outside the bedroom because as you've pointed out in the middle of sex
is not the good time.
That's not the time time.
That's when people feel really ashamed and self-conscious.
So when you're outside the bedroom,
just like at dinner, you'd be talking about
this great movie you saw, do the inventories
and really get to know better what pleases you,
what pleases your lover.
I know a lot of people have no idea about any of this about themselves.
That's never thought about it. Never. See, this is what I love. Is it so practical that you get into the nuance?
Like their partner might say to them, I'm bored or let's spice it up and people have no idea where to start.
So to just even read this last assessment of like, oh, I get a Rosé partner's mind good to know, babe,
we haven't talked about anything interesting lately.
That's why I'm not turned on, right?
Exactly.
Like, I like to be touched everywhere,
but you've been touched me everywhere in months.
So I think that people are gonna have
some major breakthroughs just by you giving them
these examples to know what,
because most people know there's a problem
and they don't have to fix it.
So what I love is they'll be like,
oh, none of these things are happening.
So no wonder why I don't want to sex.
And also I think a lot of people are more willing
to have greater sex if they don't feel to blame.
You know, a lot of what shuts me down
or shuts anyone down is if I feel inadequate.
If I somehow am guessing it's not me that can change this thing, it's kind of out of my hands.
But if you actually talk to somebody and start to understand their sex language, your sex language,
or even start understanding your own, like when I was writing fantasizing about sex, I'm just going to give some examples. Yes. Now, you know, for a lot of people, they don't actually
want to reveal some of their fantasies because they feel scared, threatened, or they'll be rejected.
But if you do these exercises, you can kind of just say, well, fire. I like to imagine powerful
scenarios. I like to imagine dangerous scenarios. I like to imagine victory scenarios. I like to
imagine highly creative scenarios. I like to imagine worship scenarios. I like to imagine highly creative scenarios. I like to imagine worship scenarios.
That's fire.
And remember, there was all that talk about
how so many women love to fantasize
being raped and dominated?
Well, that's very fire.
But that's not the whole picture.
That's just fire.
Earth.
I like to imagine sultry sex.
I like to imagine long and gorgeous seductions.
I like to imagine being savered. I like to imagine sultry sex. I like to imagine long and gorgeous seductions. I like to imagine being savered.
I like to imagine intense sensuality.
I like to imagine a slow and steady build-up.
Air.
I like to imagine montages of union.
I like to imagine equal pleasure.
I like to imagine ideal bodies.
I like to imagine rebellious scenarios.
I like to imagine sexy conversations scenarios. I like to imagine sexy
conversations and spoken words and then water. I like to imagine psychic sex. I
like to imagine ideal intimacy and sharing. I like to imagine absolute vulnerability.
So again, if people just go through the fantasies, they don't have to say, well,
I'm fantasizing about our neighbor period, you know, that stuff that's threatening.
But you can say these are the kinds of fantasies I have and all of a sudden the partner gets a closer look at, like what's actually in that person's soul.
Vanessa, Bennett and John Kim are therapists and they'd be the first to tell you that keeping this spark alive is hard hard even for those who have made a career of helping others with these same exact issues.
Follow Vanessa on Instagram and Twitter at Vanessa Bennett and follow John at the
Angry Therapist for more. Thank you for being here Vanessa Bennett and Don Kim. Your new book,
it's not me, it's you. Break the blame cycle relationship better. So let's move into the
fanning the flames you're chapter.
I just got to read a further one because I was like, oh yes, we're going to go there.
So John says the book is a he said she said, which I love is that you guys tackle these
really important issues in every chapter that I think anyone in a relationship is going
to deal with.
But then you get John's perspective and then Vanessa's, which are sometimes conflicting
or complimentary and you can kind of see yourselves in both of you, which I love.
John says, when Vanessa and I first started to get intimate, I asked her if I could slap her while we were making out, about to have sex.
She looked at me and very seriously said, if you slap me, I'm going to slap you back.
In that moment, I knew we spoke very different languages in the bedroom.
I like a little kink, she likes long massages. That's what I have. I could keep going.
But yeah, tell me more about that. I want to start by saying, I'm a New Yorker. So I'm very
blunt and direct. I love it. I don't need a sex dungeon, but I do like a little kink, you know,
in the beginning, you're exploring, it's hot and heavy, it's a honeymoon. And so I just pulled that card out.
I was like, hey, can you, can I slap you?
And she's like, no, well, you can,
but I'm gonna slap you back.
And I was like, oh, it doesn't work that way.
And I knew in that second that, okay,
there's gonna be a journey here.
There's gonna have to be exploration, compromise.
She's not into some of the things that I'm into.
Well, let me stop up you though.
It's not necessarily that I'm not into the things that you'm into. Well, let me stop up you though. It's not necessarily that I'm not into the things
that you're into. I think what it is is that I need to feel more emotional safety before I can...
Well, actually, it's one or the other. Either I can be like I was in my 20s and have one night
stands that I kind of did some of that crazier stuff, but I didn't care. Or now that I'm with somebody
that I care about, I need to feel a little bit more emotionally
safe before I can go there.
So are you saying that now that you do feel safe?
I can't.
Is that so?
That was my next question.
So you're saying there's a chance as long as I can slap you back.
We're fine.
Not on for done.
Emily, I don't want to be.
One of us has to be the dominant one of us have.
It just is real.
Well, the masculine family too.
If someone has to lead and someone has to follow, there's the polarities or then nothing's happened, right?
If you're both laying their way to be slapped in a sense.
Someone has to lead a father to slap or a kiss
or something.
So maybe it's not that kind of kink,
but where I think a lot of couples,
and what you talk about too,
is how you sort of found different desire styles, right?
You kind of like how you guys have figured out
your desire and your arousal and how you get turned out
So however you but what has been the journey with that because it's very common
It's someone's like my partner wants to choke me or my partner wants to stop dirty and I don't I mean
It's one of the most common things that happened with sex and it's compromised a lot of talking
It's you know, so maybe you could share more about that
I I will say that desire types was really mind-blowing for me when I found out about this concept.
And this is a new discovery in the last year of this idea of spontaneous versus responsive
desire. I was floored and it normalized so much for me, right? So I'm sure you've talked about
this before in your podcast, but knowing that most men, 75% of men rank as spontaneous and about 75% of women rank as responsive.
And so I need to be turned on before I want to have sex.
He can want to have sex before being turned on, right?
That in and of itself is a mind-blowing thing to understand about the two of us.
So if I come home and John has like cooked dinner and done the dishes, I'm blowing thing to understand about the two of us. So if I come home and John has like cooked dinner
and done the dishes,
I'm so much more already like prone to being like,
oh, I'm feeling seen, I'm feeling taken care of,
my love language is acts of service.
I'm starting to get those wheels turning.
I'm more open to being sexual, right?
He's not like that.
Yeah, and it's a chicken or the egg,
because if I'm getting a lot of sex,
I will definitely make dinner and watch the car and mothalon and do a lot of acts of service
just because I'm now elevated. I feel loved and resigned. I feel like connected. So it's like how do we
create this where it's feeding into each other instead of one person waiting for the other person
to do it? And then it's just kind of a different happening. That is really tricky, but really just a
matter of talking about it and like knowing yourself. I suppose in being like, I realize then it's just kind of a That is really tricky but really just a matter of talking about it and like knowing
Yourself I suppose and being like I realized now it's been a week or two and I'm kind of getting to get the sense of my body
That we probably need more of a connection right now or it's planning it planning for sucks
It's knowing that if we go this whole week without it. I know this is how I'm going to feel on Sunday and and then
Vanessa can say well, this is I don't know if you're asking for advice now, but I would say that it's really about planning.
It's really about like, we know what this week is going to look like or this next month.
How do we find time where it's going to feel good for both of us?
We're taking a quick break, but we come back more of the best episodes from the past year,
so don't go anywhere.
Second, are you taking responsibility for your own pleasure?
Think about it. How can we expect anyone else to know what we like and
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. You 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
This is from Ryan 30 in Yukon. Hey there, Dr. Emily
I've recently been referred to your podcast by a good friend and I cannot get enough
So I'd like to start with the fact that I'm so very grateful. Thank you now into it
I've always had a hard Thank you. Now into it.
I've always had a hard time staying hard while receiving oral.
I love receiving and giving, but I find myself much harder while giving.
I am consistently trying to learn and develop as a lover, and my current partner really
enjoys giving oral.
I love it when she goes down to me, such a turn on to see how she enjoys it.
However, like mentioned before, I'm unable to say hard, most time while receiving.
Our current workaround is a 69, which is kind of a win-win.
However, I want to be able to say hard for her without needing her vulva in my face to
do so.
In my sexual past, I've climaxed no more than 10 times from oral, and most of those were
in a higher risk of being
caught situations.
So I'm wondering if you have any tips or tricks on helping me stay hard.
I've also been visualizing and daydreaming about it while gently touching myself, envisioning
me being hard and coming orgasm yet, when the apt I still lose it.
Thanks a ton, your show and the space you create for freedom of sexual expression is a breath
of fresh air. Thank you so much Ryan for your question. I
appreciate you so much. You really like receiving and there's some kind of
thing that's happening in your mind that it's hard for you to receive. Maybe in
your life, you've always had to be the giver. You've always had to take care of
things. You are a super attentive person. It doesn't feel good to have all the attention on you.
I think that for a lot of penis owners, they were raised in environments where they have
to be in charge.
They have to know everything that's going on.
And when it comes to sex, well, they know the way around a woman's body.
They have to know how to please somebody.
They have to finish at the right time.
They have to stay hard the whole time. They have to always be raring and ready to go for sex.
Do you realize how much pressure there is
on the society of penicinus owners
to be just rared to go at all times into hard?
So I think that there might be some of that
that I'm hearing here and we have to undo that conditioning.
So we gotta rewire some programming in your brain.
And I'm telling you, breathing, breath work.
Breathing, breathing, breathing is one of the most important things you can do during
sex.
In fact, I know someone who had a very similar situation as you, some of that I was actually
with, and he realized that he held his breath the whole time during sex during when he was
receiving all of it.
And when you like really truly learn to breathe
deep into your pelvic floor, it calms down your nervous system and then allows you to truly
like lie back and relax. So you know what you're doing this visualizing of you being hard?
I would visualize you breathing deep breathing. There's a great app called breath and it's a free
app in the app store and I download it and I do three minutes of breathing every day. So it's a great app called Breath. And it's a free app in the App Store, and I download it,
and I do three minutes of breathing every day.
So it's a great way to practice.
Just, there are a lot of us are shallow breathers.
And so for my friend, he was able to stay harder
and ejaculate in ways that he wasn't able to in the past
because he learned to breathe.
Because when we're not breathing,
oftentimes we're clenching and we're in our heads,
worrying that something is wrong.
I feel like the breath is also going to help with the anxiety because you probably have
some anxiety around this.
So do you know when it happens?
Can you pinpoint like the moment that you start to lose your erection?
Because then the fear of that is what's going to actually make you soft.
This is going to take some work on your own.
Like I'd love you to take some work on your own.
I'd love you to practice some mindful masturbation, practicing your breath, and the key is
like understanding your own body, like during solo exploration, and then you can communicate
your needs to your partner.
All right.
I hear from you all the time about orgasms.
And a lot of times you're going to state of desperation.
Dr. Emily, help.
I can't orgasm with my partner or help.
I've never had orgasm before.
If you've never had one and you have a vulva,
because again, I don't hear from many penis owners who have never had an orgasm.
So what I do hear it from vulva owners and then their partners
who are like, why can't my vulva owning partner have an orgasm?
So let's get into it.
You got to train for it.
Yes, there are some vulva owners who had intercourse penetrative sex and they were able to have an orgasm. So let's get into it. You got to train for it. Yes, there are some vulva owners who had intercourse
penetrative sex and they were able to have an orgasm.
But that is rare.
And even if it does happen that way,
I highly recommend masturbation to help develop
our own neuro pathways to pleasure.
Understand how you're going to have an orgasm.
What works for you without the pressure
of someone staring over your shoulder
and saying, are you there yet?
Are you there yet? It's really hard to have an orgasm for the first time
when someone's just kind of waiting there and staring at you and trying to help.
But you're like, I don't even know what I'm looking for.
You know, and culturally, there is this sort of social expectation that young penis owners,
young men are going to start training their orgasms. They're going to start finding their
orgasms younger than vulva owners, younger than young girls. And that's why we get this question.
than vulva owners, younger than young girls. And that's why we get this question.
Because we have some ketchup to do.
We glorify men masturbating and their penis is on the outside of their body.
And there's just so many things that in media that talk about, well, men are going to masturbate.
And women know we never see it anywhere.
So it makes sense why so many vulva owners are still kind of trying to figure it out.
There's also the orgasm gap.
Let me remind you that there is a disparity in inequality in orgasms between vulva and penis
owners.
For example, in heterosexual relationships, penis owners take about 4-6 minutes to orgasm.
Let's just say an average.
A vulva owner takes between 10-40 minutes.
I find that to be more like 15-20-40 minutes. That is a huge gap. And that's why
there's such orgasm disparity and there's also been studies show that time and time again
Penises are just gonna orgasm. It's not as hard for you
It's something you're practicing for and it's gonna happen
It might take you a little bit longer and you might come before you want to but you're going to orgasm
How do our sexual penis owners orgasm the most during sex? And amongst vulva owners, lesbians orgasm the most. So that means
that vulva to vulva, they know what's going on and they know how to please each other.
So I hope that's inspiring to you because if you have a vulva and you have an orgasm yet,
it just means that you need to be your own best partner right now. You need to be patient,
you need to take the time with yourself. And I want to just remind you that only 20% of vulva owners orgasm during penetration.
That's important.
In other words, why to focus on masturbation so you can explain to your partner, this is
how I like to be touched.
I really like oral sex, this is how you can use your hands, but we got to be responsible
for our own orgasms.
Finally, 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. Here is Sean T sharing his
inspiring journey to self-acceptance and how it has unlocked a whole new level of pleasure.
Follow him on Instagram and Twitter at Sean T or find him on his podcast Trust and Believe.
Sean T, welcome to the show. You are a, I can see why, beloved podcast host and fitness
celebrity and you motivate people and now you're motivating me. I want to go back to something you were talking about embodiment, which I've got to talk about a
lot in the show about like being connected. A lot of us are disconnected. I think you see that too
during your work of training people and we're so focused on the end goal. Like I'm going to lose five
pounds. I'm going to be ripped, but what's like a disconnect right from like our head to our heart.
Like it's the way we breathe, shallow sometimes. And so what has been that journey for you,
because I know you talked about you're growing up
and you had sexual abuse growing up.
And then I think what you were saying that when your partner
grabs your butt, that first you might have a trigger
back to your childhood abuse that you said happened
in that way.
And so I'm wondering what that process was
of sort of learning to kind of connect into your body
and disassociating it from the trauma.
Yeah, it was really, really interesting
because there was definitely a response,
like a physical response of fear, perspiration, anger
was like the first thing and it made me feel really bad especially when my spouse did it
I had friends that would not even see me and they would just snag me in a bucket like oh my gosh
It's so big right and I would just like I would basically relit those moments of the interviews but the process of it
It was therapy and I know it sounds very redundant for people, but it was talking through the layers of
What it felt like and I I'm going to go here, Emily. My first day, the very first time I was sexually abused,
my malester, who was a man, tried to put his penis in my butt. So like, my entire, that entire
region where I learned to therapy is like clenched and stressed. When I was a kid,
and I'm a girl here because I want people to really understand the depth of this,
like I would not go to the bathroom a number two for like eight or nine days, and when I would go
it would just be a tremendous amount of pain, right? So like I went through this entire process
of really being clenched and stressed to make the first that was being able to be like, okay, like having a healthy digestive system, understanding that I had to like really have a
good relationship with going to the bathroom, which people probably never experienced before.
Then the next part was, you know, accepting my body and knowing that this is a part of your body
and it's not separated from everything else because my butt was separated. It was a fear.
It was a trigger. It was a stink. That's when I really got into the fitness industry and I was like, this is a part of my genetic makeup.
And, you know, I would use the joke around with my mom. I used to think, thank mom for the booty. It was like, those little silly things that maybe it's complicated. This is it. Then there was the getting past the sexual abuse
when it came to sex.
And so this was huge.
So for the long and time in my relationship,
I didn't enjoy gay male sex.
You're used to your bottom.
And I didn't enjoy being a bottom.
Like there was no way I could relax into that.
Like even after I got okay with my husband touching my,
but I was like, okay, I'll do this for you,
but it was always just like a moment of non-pleasure,
but the emotional pleasure of pleasing my husband,
it was like so crazy.
It was always so emotional.
To the point where he helped me work through that,
and now I'm completely free of like,
what you wanna do?
How you wanna touch it?
You wanna lay on it?
You wanna use it as a pillow?
You wanna use it as a night pillow?
Like, so it was all of that work
and all of that process.
And but the phases of it were minor
and me telling Scott, okay, you can touch my butt now
and then have a relapse moment of that of like,
and then get to the point where I would have an internal
relapse moment, but I wouldn't show it to him,
and that was the next level of saying, okay, like this is okay,
like you're not hurt, you're not in a dark room anymore,
like to the point now, I'm just like,
I cannot believe you didn't touch my butt today, I'm over it.
Thank you so much for sharing this story because sexual trauma is so common and I hear
from a lot of people like your story and then I hear from a lot of vulva owners who are
like, you know, have sexual pain, right? Because it's a clenching, it's a constricting.
So if they've had sexual assault or trauma, they've something called vagendismis or vestibulidinia
and there's all these nerve endings in their whole life like it's painful. And until you go into therapy and understand for me and for many people EMDR therapy,
trauma therapy has been helpful, I'm not sure what you just sounds like talking through and just
noticing the parts so and noticing where you've the pain and that it's all possible. So what a great
example for people who are still sort of working through a lot of this stuff because if you don't
deal with it though in therapy, it really just does, you know, whatever you resist,
persists, and it really would stay with you
if you hadn't done this work
and had a loving partner
that you could actually work through the stages,
because it's not, you don't just decide,
and then it's gone.
So thank you for taking the time to explain that.
I do appreciate that a lot.
I probably recommend therapy to you all,
at least once per episode, if not more. I've been going to therapy for years, as I've talked to you all at least once per episode if not more.
I've been going to therapy for years as I've talked you about and I actually asked my listeners
via us on Instagram and I just found this fascinating. You guys are brilliant. You really, really
would encapsulate how therapy has helped you. But I saw some common themes I thought might be
inspiring for you because they sure were for me. So some of the answers are learning compassion for yourself. That's a big one, learning to
go easy on yourself. A lot of you said boundaries, setting boundaries with everyone in your
life is a must and you learn that through therapy. This was another key takeaway that therapy
allowed myself, someone said here, to actually feel emotions. Instead of seeing them as being too much,
you know, we are not taught how to feel emotions
by most of our caregivers.
They're not expressing emotions,
their parents and express emotions.
And so a lot of us block them,
we keep them inside,
but learning to say, like,
not only is it okay for me to express my emotions,
but I'm not too much.
It doesn't make me too much for others.
In fact, I will find me
my life who will welcome my emotions. But first, we have to welcome them and feel our emotions
ourselves. How to feel my feelings. So not only do we learn that our feelings are okay to have,
but how do we actually feel them? You know, I remember when I first went to therapy.
I was 25 years old and I remember a therapist said to me, where do you feel this in your body?
I think she was asking something and I said, I'm just anxious. And I remember a therapist said to me, where do you feel this in your body? I think she was asking me something and I said, I'm just anxious.
And I remember saying to me, where do you feel that in your body?
I wanted to run out of the room.
And I don't think I went back to this therapist because I was so confused by that question.
That's the blocked version of Emily at 25 years old that did not know how to feel feelings.
Like, what do you mean I feel in my body?
I think my feelings.
But remember, if you ever want to feel feelings. Like, what do you mean I feel in my body? I think my feelings.
But remember, if you ever wanna understand any
this is a great book called The Body Keeps the Score
that talks a lot about this,
but basically it says like our issues are in our tissues.
So if you experience any trauma,
you didn't learn how to express emotions,
they are stuck in our body.
So remember there's lots of different modalities of therapy,
but that one I wasn't ready for yet,
but now a lot of my therapy is based around
what am I feeling in my body? Because our body is constantly giving us information about what we're
actually feeling and what's going on in the environment. So that's a really big one. Another one
said understanding what my body and emotions are trying to tell me you guys get it. Someone
else said, I learned I lacked certain skills because they weren't taught to me. Join the club.
Self love you learned.
Another one said, we all have anxiety and some handle it better than others.
That is true.
How important self care is.
It's part of the self-love path.
I mean, I love it.
It's a lot of you learn self-compassion and self-love.
Mental health is just as important as being physically healthy.
We have to do the work every day.
So true, you can be going to the gym every day. You can be eating healthy. We have to do the work every day. So true, you could be going to the gym every day, you could be eating healthy. If you are not managing
focusing on understanding your mental health, none of that other stuff matters.
Mental health is so crucial and that's what therapy can help you kind of learn
to understand it. Learn to work with your mental health, learn to celebrate
your mental health. I don't need to instantly react.
I can take a breath and respond in an adult manner,
ask questions and ultimately understand.
Oh, that's a big lesson, you guys.
The power of the pause.
I have a post in here on my laptop that says pause.
You know, a lot of us just instantly react.
Again, that's a learned behavior to respond
to something immediately, but to
learn to take a deep breath and pause such an important skill to learn. I can change my
thoughts and break cycles. It is true. You learn to recognize that your thoughts are not
the truth. That's just so important, you guys. Your thoughts are a version of the truth,
and maybe it's a version of what you think is the truth in the moment, but most of you
realize that I am programming my brain right now and I am serving up thoughts
that don't serve me and I don't have to believe them. Another one of you learned, you can't
change other people, you can only change how you let other people affect you. So, I also
that my trauma wasn't my fault, it was liberating. Finally, the things that made me feel crazy actually
just made me human.
I love that.
And a lot of you listen to this show
because I think you have let me know
that you just feel like everything's okay,
that you're not alone.
So many of us silently suffer alone
and think that we are doing something wrong
or we're moving through life wrong
or we're the only ones who have trauma,
the only ones who have anxiety
and the only ones worry about how we're doing in the bedroom.
And the truth is we're doing in the bedroom.
And the truth is, we are all in this together, which is, you know, bringing back to why I
started this show.
I started this show so we could all share our experiences and learn together.
Liz Goldwyn is a writer, artist, and filmmaker.
Her new book, Sex, Health and Consciousness is out now.
Find more information on Liz and her work at thesexed.com.
Liz Goldwyn, congratulations on your new book,
Sex, Health and Consciousness. Thank you. I think it's such an important book. Thank you for being
open and vulnerable at your own experiences, because I think so much about sexualities, like we talk
about sex, if you want to check it off the list and I learned this tip or I did that thing, but you
really talk about your own journey from like an inner felt place.
Because it's not just about talking about sex,
we have to feel sex, a body sex,
we have to be more vulnerable around it.
So it's a great example of that in your book.
Thank you.
I feel like people have a very one-dimensional idea
of what sex is.
In the book I liken it to drawing with like a 12-crayola box.
We're not even at the 64-crayola box or
the 120-crayola box. So people think of sex as something that has to do only
with penetration or between two people, but as you and I were talking about sex
is an energy. It's a life force. It's your creative energy. It's so much more than
just the act of an orgasm with another person or even with yourself.
Yeah, it's that deeper feeling, knowing and being in touch with ourselves.
And maybe listening, you feel like I don't understand that, but there's so much that gets in the way.
Like you didn't just wake up and feel the energy.
You talk about this in your book, Sex, Health and Consciousness, about like the journey it takes to
start to understand ourselves as sexually and get rid of all the stigmas and stereotypes.
100% but from a very early age, I did see other people's sexual energy.
Like I saw how much sex seemed to drive the adults around me and not in a positive way,
generally.
Even in my own family, I saw how much my father, for example, was very much rolled by
sex. And
my mom had a lot of trauma around sex. So from very early on, age before I could really
understand intellectually or emotionally what was going on, it was almost like a color
that I could see. Like it was like a gray color. And I could see that even now. I know
that that also sounds pretty hippie out there. But I could see that with a lot of people.
That sex energy is ruling them
instead of getting to the bottom of it.
And even when I got older and started having sex,
I wasn't conscious of how to use that myself.
You know, it was sort of looking at other people
and thinking, oh, they must have it figured out.
They must have this sex thing figured out.
I think for the first like big chunk of my
career, I was researching burlesque and then sex work. So the darker sides of the energy of sex.
And I think this book for me is like the light because I think you have to have both. I think
so much of the way that we operate and the way we talk about sex, unfortunately, our culture is
trauma-based. It's not pleasure-centered,
and it's fear-based, too. Like, if you look at what's even going on politically,
like, not only in our country, but around the world. So, it is focused on the darkness. But,
yet, we don't want to talk about it. But we need to talk about it to get us to this
place where we can all sort of, I guess, it is a reclaiming and understanding our own energy,
because we all have it, which is a good thing, right?
Not everyone, I think what people can take from this, you have your energy right there
with you now as you're listening to this.
And then it's just a way of understanding it, recosing it, making it take a deep breath
and feeling it.
I love that you have some screen break exercises for people to tap into it.
What would be you love people to take from this?
What would be a first step?
So let's do it together. Okay. I was hoping be a first step? So let's do it together.
Okay.
I was hoping we'd do an next step.
Let's do it together.
I think a good first step that I think I talk about
in the introduction of the book is breathing into your genitals.
So what does that mean?
Let's just take a deep breath now.
So I think most of us don't really think about what our genitals are up to. Except if we're going to the gynecologist or getting a prostate exam or having sex.
But it's like a part of our body that's, again, tends to roll most of our decision making.
But right now, how many of you listening or aware
of how your genitals are feeling right at this moment?
What I love about this is that a lot of us are completely disconnected,
and then we expect that we go to have sex with someone,
that's the only time we pay attention.
And we're like, why are you performing?
Why aren't you connected to your,
why would I feel anything, or why aren't I wet,
or why aren't I hard at all the things,
but if you think about it,
if you are literally not connected, every other moment of your life to it, you think you're just going to like turn on, you know,
it's like you but walking through life and being more even if it's just a few breaths a day.
All right, that's a roundup of some favorite moments when the podcast is past year.
If you want to listen to more of the episodes featured in this podcast, they will all be linked in the show notes.
And I'd like to thank all of my guests.
You are wonderful.
Thank you for your time and your insights.
And all of you called in last year to have your questions answered.
You're so brave.
And you know that when you ask a question in this show that it helps so many of our listeners.
So I'm grateful for all of you.
I'd like to also thank all of our partners and sponsors for making this show possible. And finally, I'd like to
thank the sex with Emily community for making this year just incredible. And I
just want to thank you because I'm heading into my 18th year and I would not be
sitting here being able to do this job without all of you for listening and for
supporting the show on all of our platforms. And I'm just super grateful. And I
hope that for all of you this new year brings you
more sexual fantasies, new ways to orgasm and of course you gotta tell me about it if you find
new ways to orgasm right we're all in this together and also more open conversations around sex
with your partners and most of all those conversations about pleasure because really that's what
this is all about remember Remember pleasure is productivity,
and pleasure is present.
So I'm wishing you more pleasure in the new year.
And thanks again everyone for listening to this show.
Happy new year. That's it for today's episode, see you on Tuesday. Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily.
Be sure to like, subscribe, and give us a review wherever you listen to the podcast
and share this with a friend or partner.
You can find me on YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter at Sex with Emily.
Oh, I've been told I give really good email.
So sign up at sexwithemily.com and while you're there, check out my free guides and articles
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your pleasure.
If you'd like to ask me about your sex life, dating, or relationships, call my hotline
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That's 559-825-5739.
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