Sex With Emily - The Science of Love: How to Predict (and Prevent) Divorce

Episode Date: May 13, 2025

In this episode, we explore the science of lasting relationships with insights grounded in the Gottman Method. Discover the four behaviors that predict divorce with 94% accuracy, why emotional connect...ion is key to great sex, and how couples can deepen intimacy with better communication—not perfect compatibility. From sleep-deprived parents to long-term partners, this conversation is packed with research-backed tips to transform your love life. #love #relationship #divorce Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Relationship Success & Gottman Institute 03:14 - Couple's Coffee Shop Love Story 06:33 - Predicting Relationship Success/Failure 10:03 - Four Horsemen of Apocalypse 17:03 - Relationship Workshops & Education 20:22 - Post-Baby Relationships 23:50 - Relationship Challenges & Communication 27:25 - Deepening Relationships Through Dates 30:23 - Rediscovering Shared Dreams & Values 46:33 - Factors in a Great Sex Life 1:00:00 - Prioritizing Relationships & Intimacy Join the SmartSX Membership : https://sexwithemily.com/smartsx Access exclusive sex coaching, live expert sessions, community building, and tools to enhance your pleasure and relationships with Dr. Emily Morse. List & Other Sex With Emily Guides: https://sexwithemily.com/guides/ Explore pleasure, deepen connections, and enhance intimacy using these Sex With Emily downloadable guides. SHOP WITH EMILY!: https://bit.ly/3rNSNcZ (free shipping on orders over $99) Want more? Visit the Sex With Emily Website: https://sexwithemily.com/ Let’s get social: Instagram https://www.instagram.com/sexwithemily/ X https://twitter.com/sexwithemily Facebook https://www.facebook.com/sexwithemily TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@sexwithemily Threads https://www.threads.net/@sexwithemily Let’s text: Sign up here https://sexwithemily.com/text Full show notes here: https://sexwithemily.com/the-science-of-l…-prevent-divorce/

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Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 It's really important to stress that the topics, of course, are really important in terms of what couples fight about. Those are the most common things couples fight about. However, the way they fight is what predicts divorce, the way they fight. So they could be talking about who's going to hold on to the remote for the TV. And that can lead to a divorce because of the horrible ways that they're fighting. Real question. Are you and your partner truly compatible? Or are you just navigating the same storm in different boats? The idea of compatibility gets tossed around all the time.
Starting point is 00:00:46 But what does it actually mean in a lasting relationship? Does it come down to shared hobbies, chemistry, star signs, or is there something deeper, more science-backed, and actually more useful? Well, in today's episode, I'm joined by two absolute legends in the relationship world, doctors John and Julie Gottman, founders of the Gottman Institute, and partners in love and research for over 30 years. They spent decades studying the relationship world. Doctors John and Julie Gottman, founders of the Gottman Institute and partners in love and research for over 30 years. They spent decades studying the
Starting point is 00:01:09 actual science of what makes relationships succeed or fail. And today they're here to break down why the myth of compatibility might be messing with your love life, the four behaviors that are most likely to destroy a relationship, what's really going on with pheromones, attraction, and long-term connection, and how to use their book Eight Dates to have the kind of conversations that build real intimacy, not just surface level how-was-your-day talk. Before we dive in, let's set attention together. What do you want to take away from this episode? Better communication, stronger connection, maybe just some reassurance that your relationship is actually doing better
Starting point is 00:01:49 than you think? My intention to introduce you to the revolutionary research-backed work of the Gottmans so you can apply it to your own love life with clarity, confidence, and compassion. Let's get into it. Hello. Good afternoon. Hi. Hello. Good afternoon. Hey, Emily. Hi. Hello. Good afternoon. Hi. I am so excited to meet both of you. I'm a huge fan. It's a great honor to have you on the show. Thank you. That's very kind of you. Thank you. Thank you for being here. I'm excited. There's so much to unpack here.
Starting point is 00:02:25 I know you got the questions, but this is just, you know, there's so much to talk about. I am excited. I'm a huge fan. So we already started recording, but if there's anything you wanted to add and we're gonna do your bios and promote anything you want to promote after,
Starting point is 00:02:40 of course we can do that. We'll be adding that stuff in. So, yeah, this is great. Okay, so it is a huge honor to have you both on the show. I admire all the important work that you have been doing. You've helped so many of us, including myself, understand relationships and just the factors that contribute to having a healthy relationship,
Starting point is 00:03:01 which so many of us don't understand. We don't get to go to relationship school. Most of us haven't had healthy relationships modeled. And I quote you guys all the time. I think everyone does. And you're truly pioneers really. And so, you know, something to start with, that I'm so in awe.
Starting point is 00:03:18 I mean, there's many things that I'm in awe about, but I'm in awe about the two of you is that not only have you done this groundbreaking work over 30 years together, 30 years but you've maintained you work together and you've maintained a healthy relationship which is incredible because sometimes you will have a great successful career together and their relationship suffers and I also understand that the work you do is it has contributed to that but I just need to know how you both met.
Starting point is 00:03:46 Can you start there? Sure. So I was gonna be driving about an hour to a party and one cannot drive an hour without having coffee in your car. And so I stopped in at a little coffee cafe and car. And so I stopped in at a little coffee cafe. And John was sitting there, I went to go order coffee. And he asked me if I'd like to sit with him for a few minutes. Right. So we sat together for almost an hour, which made me late to the party, but I didn't really care because he was dazzling.
Starting point is 00:04:32 He was dazzling. I loved his eyes, I loved his mind. I didn't really know what he did or the fact that he was already a famous person in the academic world. But I think I just kind of fell in love right then and there. Okay. You fell in love with my car.
Starting point is 00:04:58 Well this is, I mean his car was voted the ugliest car in the University of Washington faculty parking lot. And I adored it. It was like a 19, I don't know what, 62 red Dodge with big white patches of Bondo all over it because he hadn't had it painted after he had all the rust patched up. I loved his car. It was just the color. You loved his car and you loved meeting him. That's amazing. And what I know is that, I'd been divorced for about seven years and I decided, you know, school hadn't started yet and I'd get to know the city and go on as
Starting point is 00:05:54 many dates as I could. So before I met Julie, I had gone out on 60 dates in 10 weeks, she was number 61. And she was a clear outlier. I had a database. I mean, that is incredible. Were you tracking the dates? Were you writing notes about them? Or could you just, you just kept moving until you found someone that you wanted to meet?
Starting point is 00:06:19 I didn't think I'd find the love of my life, but I thought I'd find somebody to go to movies with or out to dinner and I did meet people like that, but nothing compared to Julie. Okay, and you just knew. Yeah. And then you started working together, which I love because I've also heard you say, well thank you for sharing that story. I've heard you also say that, I think Julie was in the interview you said, we're not relationship gurus. You've just learned from a lot of the successful couples
Starting point is 00:06:50 that you've worked with over the years, and I would also say that does make you relationship gurus, but through the years of research and of observing all these couples, you now, you learn where couples are actually struggling, where they struggle the most. And I know this is one of your most cited pieces, but just for my listeners, you can predict,
Starting point is 00:07:10 so what you figured out together is, you can predict with confidence and accuracy what separates, I'm gonna use your words here, the masters of relationships from the disasters in relationships. You can tell with confidence which relationships are gonna succeed and which ones are not. Right?
Starting point is 00:07:31 Basically, that's true. However, that's a given that they're not getting any kind of intervention in the six years between when we first see them and later on when we find out what's happened to them. Okay, so they're not, so you mean, so it's after six, after that process of six years that you... Well, what I mean is that they came into the lab, they were hooked up to various physiology equipment and they were videotaped and so on.
Starting point is 00:08:08 And they would just have a couple of conversations with one another, each conversation for 15 minutes. They would also just be interviewed about the history of their relationship and that was important. And then we'd say bye-bye, they'd leave the lab, and we'd check in on them every couple of years. And within about six years, we could tell based on that day they came into the lab, what would happen to them six years down the road with 94% accuracy given that they didn't have
Starting point is 00:08:49 any intervention, any therapy for example, between when we saw them and when we checked in with them later. Actually if they got therapy they were more likely to divorce than if they got no therapy. Yeah that's what Bob Levinson and I found. Bad therapy. Yeah, it's always, but you know, things are different. In the last 25 years, Julie and I have worked together to create a new therapy and new ways of helping couples. And now things are much better and much rosier. So you can help people avoid relationship disaster
Starting point is 00:09:28 and to some degree turn a disaster into a master. OK, so so what you're saying is if they had therapy in the six years with you, like you said, they have some bad therapy. But if they were with you, like in the we're talking about the love lab, right? Right. OK. Well, if so, you know, basically what happened is at first, and John started this work before he and I met 35 years ago. So about 45 years ago, he was working with his colleague, Robert Levinson, who is a professor at UC Berkeley. And they did a lot of the initial lab work
Starting point is 00:10:07 determining what predicted divorce, or staying together unhappily, or staying together very happily. So they were the ones that determined those principles. And then we continued the work after John and I met. But what we also did 25 years ago is to make a decision that we wanted to create theory and interventions based on what we saw the successful couples do.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Try those out in a workshop and then see whether or not they actually worked. Fine tune them and then begin teaching them to therapists and doing the therapy ourselves, doing the workshops and then it just spread like wildfire around the world because people really didn't know what successful couples were doing to make them successful until John and Bob figured it out. Well, let's look, we could get into that. Like, let's find out what are the successful couples doing? Well, first of all, let's talk about what they're not. Well, yeah, we could talk about, yeah, let's talk about, yeah, exactly. We could do, there's so many different ways to go here. Let's talk about what they're not doing. Well, yeah, we could talk about, yeah. Let's talk about, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:11:25 There's so many different ways to go here. Let's talk about what they're not doing. What are they not doing? This could be the, yeah. Right, okay. So when they bring up a conflict, they're doing typically a lot of what we call the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
Starting point is 00:11:39 Yes. And those are very big predictors of relationship demise. The first one is criticism, which means they'll look at a problem they're having and they'll blame the other partner and put the other partner down with criticism. You're so lazy. You never clean up the kitchen. What's the matter with you? Here's what's wrong with you. Here's what's wrong with you. So criticism secondly Um, they will use Contempt and contempt is a bit like criticism, but it's coming from a more superior place
Starting point is 00:12:17 So it has sarcasm. Sometimes it will have an eye roll You know like oh my god, really? Are you really that stupid? That kind of stuff that if you have teenagers in your life, you've seen it a lot. So, contempt turned out to be the worst thing for a relationship. It's really terrible. Yeah, I use contempt. I mean, I think about contempt a lot. That's something from your work that stands out so much. Can we just stop there? Give me some examples of contempt just so people really get it. What it might look like.
Starting point is 00:12:52 Sure. Oh, you think I'm driving too fast. Oh, you're scared. Oh. Mockery. One. You slut. You disgust me. Name calling, contempt, sarcasm.
Starting point is 00:13:11 You wouldn't even think of doing the laundry, would you? Doesn't even occur to you, you know, that kind of thing. It's just this massive put down that's even worse than criticism. Okay. Does that make you? Yeah, no, absolutely. So what's the, and then the next one,
Starting point is 00:13:30 we're talking about the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, which we talk about often on the show. So yeah, the next one, we get to three. Yeah, so number three is defensiveness. So that's the hardest one really for people to do less of. We never really lose it altogether. But defensiveness is either, it's a response to feeling put down or attacked. And so a person will be defensive by either being kind of a righteous victim, like, what
Starting point is 00:14:03 do you mean? I do pay the bills on time. I always pay the bills, you know, that kind of thing. Or counterattacking. Oh, yeah? Well, you got a traffic ticket last week, you know, that number four is what we call stonewalling. And stonewalling really means that during a conversation you are in effect shutting yourself so completely down to the other person that you're not responding to them at all, you may not be looking at them at all, you don't say anything at all. And I'm not talking about a short pause, like a pause to think of an answer.
Starting point is 00:14:56 It's for minutes at a time. There's no response. No head nod, no uh-huh, I get it. Nothing. You're turning into a stone wall. That's the fourth one. Okay, those are the four that you observed with how many couples over the years now? A couple thousand, three thousand. Okay, so this is what, and it doesn't have to, are all of those present? Does just one have to be present? Yeah, one of the interesting things
Starting point is 00:15:25 was that the masters of relationship, even if their partners were critical, rather than counter-attacking and getting defensive or whining and acting like an innocent victim, they took responsibility. They said, that's interesting. Maybe I can be selfish and thoughtless at times. Tell me more about real and tell me what you need. And that was a very different response than pushing off,
Starting point is 00:15:54 pushing away what the partner is saying. So that became a very different way of talking. Just saying, if you're upset upset I really want to hear about it and that really gave us a window into what it is that people are doing when relationships are going well. Right, right so that right exactly that's what works so one person could be stonewalling or or could be you know and then the way the partner reacts is sort of diffusing it. Yeah. And sort of, and then that might actually turn it around.
Starting point is 00:16:29 That's right. So the thing is, I'm just wondering, is this the kind of thing when we see partner, people doing this, like, I just wonder, could we all learn that? Like, are there couples that have just been together a few weeks and they could just come to one of your labs and they could fit, could we learn these skills
Starting point is 00:16:44 because you'd save so much heartache you'd save you'd save so many problems in relationships before they walk down the aisle and I get many people won't even go through the door because they're riding the dopamine bliss of a new relationship but I think that it's just so I mean now I think if you'd heard you said you can predict it in under an hour because you are the masters right Emily you know one of the things that we discovered is that in prevention, and when couples take a workshop, and usually they're really interested in taking a workshop
Starting point is 00:17:15 to improve their relationship when they're expecting a baby. And they don't want the baby to be negatively affected by their arguing. And they just come to a workshop that lasts 10 hours. We can avoid all these negative consequences for almost 80% of couples in just 10 hours. These are the couple, these are the workshops that you do
Starting point is 00:17:39 around the world, right? We do a lot of workshops around the world, but this particular workshop was just an amazing research study. We didn't expect the results to be that good between the couples who expected a baby and did the workshop. It was a two-day workshop, five hours each day, five hours each day and the couples who didn't do the workshop. But, uh, who was right, 80% of those couples did really, really well compared to maybe about 25% of the couples who didn't do the workshop. Right. Wow. I mean, how can we make this a requirement? I mean, I would love all of
Starting point is 00:18:25 my listeners to go because I feel like at least if you're listening now, try to sign up for a workshop because I always tell my listeners that they really therapy is crucial. I believe that everyone needs therapy. And I think it's a requirement. I think you know that something's going to happen at some point. You might as well get into therapy before there's a huge problem, but it's really hard to get people to do that. And so do you agree with that? What do you think?
Starting point is 00:18:51 Do you think that most couples could benefit from therapy? The right therapy? You know, I think, I don't know if I would say all couples, but certainly a large number of couples could really benefit from it. Okay. 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 you know dating somebody, if they knew
Starting point is 00:19:33 that it really helps to take responsibility for what you contributed to a negative incident and how to 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,
Starting point is 00:20:01 but to throw in communication, when we can offline, I mean, I communication. Right. We can offline. I mean, I would love to create something like that. I know that they absolutely require that. 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.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Absolutely. And I usually focus on, 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 and what to do? We'll get into your book, Eight Dates, so we can always talk about eight dates. I think it's a fabulous read.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Everybody needs to read this book no matter where you're at in your relationship. But I know you talk about sex there too, being a really important factor that ask these questions do it now go on the sex date right I mean that's an important thing to get ahead of and get one of the things that we discovered was that and and this was backed up by a study done at UCLA by the Sloan Institute that especially for dual career couples
Starting point is 00:21:05 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. You know, we found in a very large study we did that of 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 another. They stop playing together and having fun
Starting point is 00:21:51 and really having an erotic life with one another. Yeah, they do, because they don't know how, yeah. I think that what you mentioned to Emily is really a good point, which is that 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
Starting point is 00:22:30 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. 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, you know, 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 want to 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, it's really funny, who they would have a date a month and overnight where, you know, grandma and
Starting point is 00:23:32 grandpa would come in, 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 both fall asleep. Which is the most romantic thing ever. No one woke us up for nine hours. And it was hot. It's true. And it's, I mean, I love that we're normalizing this because it's funny, every time someone has a baby
Starting point is 00:23:57 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 just, they can't even think their way out of it. So I love that you have these couples coming to you. And now I just have a question that I've always,
Starting point is 00:24:12 I've heard this before and I want to see if you think this is true that sex, having kids, and money are three of the biggest predictors of divorce or those are the biggest challenges in a relationship. Would you agree to that? Maybe I heard it from you. Yeah, there's some truth in that. Particularly the money disputes very often are labeled as the big predictors of divorce. But we've actually found that that's kind of a superficial view because arguments about money are almost always arguments about what money means. And underneath there is really about your values,
Starting point is 00:25:00 about how to live life and what life means. So one thing that's happened during COVID to good relationships is people have really talked about their lives together and how they can have more meaningful connection in their lives. And so I think the fights about sex, money, and other things, really a lot of times they're about the
Starting point is 00:25:26 absence of connection emotional connection and physical connection and they sort of are you know take a backseat to what really is vital in a relationship keeping it alive. Also I think it's really important to stress that the topics of course are really important to stress that the topics, of course, are really important in terms of what couples fight about. Those are the most common things couples fight about. However, the way they fight is what predicts divorce. The way they fight.
Starting point is 00:25:59 So they could be talking about who's going to hold on to the remote for the TV. And that can lead to a divorce because of the horrible ways that they're fighting. Um, the ways that they're using those four horsemen instead of the antidotes to those, which have much more to do with describing yourself, describing your own feelings. I'm lonely, I really miss you, I miss touching you. Could we have a romantic night tonight? Asking directly for what you need and not asking in a way that says,
Starting point is 00:26:39 would you please stop doing this? We call that a negative need. Right, exactly. But rather a positive need. You tell your partner how they can shine for you and who doesn't want to shine for the other person, right? Exactly. Well this is why when what you're saying is I love your book Eight Dates Essential Conversations for a Lifetime of Love and I'm obsessed with it because I do believe that every couple could benefit from this book.
Starting point is 00:27:06 And the title dates might be misleading to people, like, oh, dating, I'm already married. It's perfect for you. Because really, if you've been with your partner for 10 months, 20 years, it's all about communication and it's a guide that walks you through how to talk and to listen in a way that's beneficial for you as a couple. So it's what you're saying is it's not really about the money. It's
Starting point is 00:27:27 not that you went out and bought that pair of shoes and it's not that you know really necessarily even about the sex and so what I love is that you because what I get asked a lot is that people say I don't know how to even have those conversations but you lay it out in eight dates and it's very specific questions that on that date you just get your partners I mean I think any partner who would want wanna be a good lover and be a good partner would say, yeah, once a week, or let's say once a month, we'll go on a date
Starting point is 00:27:51 and then just take your book as a script. Because you emphasize a lot about the open-ended questions rather than just the closed questions. And I think that's just a concept that is so important because it's really how we listen, how we do deep it and how we start to understand it wasn't about money. It's about your relationship to money, about your upbringing, about what you've been told about money and fears. I know a lot of couples don't want to do that walk.
Starting point is 00:28:15 They just want to stay maybe more in the superficial, but hopefully that people listening to the show are coming to see you. Yeah, the eight are really about keeping curiosity alive. Yes. They're not confrontational. They're sort of like asking couples, well, you know, how did your parents do it? And what's the background? What's your history with getting angry? What's your history with conflict? I don't know. How do you like to talk about things? And, you know, what do you feel about commitment and trust how did your parents show that they were trustworthy or fail to do that you know how how can we feel more trusted in one another those kinds of questions yeah yeah we
Starting point is 00:29:00 feel tested the dates with 350 couples so who recorded their dates so we really know they work Right exactly and and I love I love how important those dates are. They really do work. They deepen the relationship So you you use those, you know eight concepts in the book to create different dates and exercises and open-ended questions to deepen the relationship Connection so maybe you can like walk us through because I think we're gonna hit on a lot of things there, you know, some of the dates, some of the most important of the sex of the date, not sex date. Okay, I want to talk about the sex date. I do. But there's a few, which dates do you find the most, you know, there's the conflict date, the money date, the sex date, there's the, you know, the kids date, the trust date, the
Starting point is 00:29:45 conflict date. I do want to get into conflict. So maybe we could give just some examples here. Is there one that's your favorite? The first date turned out to be in a lot of ways the most powerful emotionally. Where they're talking about trust and commitment. You know, can you lean on Can you are you going to be there for me? And what's been your experience in other relationships and what did you see with your your own family? How did people show one another that they could really be there count on it? And that person to be there in hard times, you know, we say that in the wedding vows, right, you know and in hard times. You know, we say that in the wedding vows, right? You know, and sickness and health and, you know, for better or for worse. But how do you actually, how do you actually act when things
Starting point is 00:30:32 are worse? Exactly. Yeah, you're still there. So that conversation turned out to have a lot of juice. People really wanted to talk about commitment and trust. Yeah, it's important. Cause if we don't have trust in a relationship, as you've seen, it's really, how do you, how do you really move on from that? And then to understand it with through this work. And I think I just want people to understand that it's,
Starting point is 00:30:58 you know, maybe you don't want to go to therapy, that's okay. But I think, again, this book is a great gateway. I see it as like a mini therapy. It's your own way to do it without going to actually to see counselors, but just to take it with you and to use it as a guidepost. So even if you're dating someone, I love that. So yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:15 What's your favorite date, Julie? Yeah, what's your favorite date? I think my favorite is the date on dreams. Not nighttime dreams, but looking at your own dreams for your own life. We get so caught up in the minuscule, in the tasks, in the pick up the laundry, in who's gonna make dinner tonight, all that stuff,
Starting point is 00:31:42 what happened at work today. However, all of us are philosophers, every single person, no matter what your education is, all of us have built a system of values and we look at the sense of purpose and meaning in our lives only in little tiny glimmers of light over the course of our life. It's so very difficult for us to carve out time to think about, okay, what do I dream about doing? What do I dream about being? Who do I want to be? You know that feeling when you're so lost in a romance novel that everything else just disappears?
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Starting point is 00:34:22 For a free, no charge, no obligation consultation, just head to 3dayblinds.com slash SWE. One last time, that's by one, get 150% off when you head to the number three, dayblinds.com slash SWE. As a human being, how do I want to give to the world? What's my dream of the legacy I want to leave behind? What great adventures have I dreamed about doing that at this point seem impossible, but they still linger in my mind? So it's a sharing of those deeper layers that we normally do not enter into because our lines are so cluttered, so cluttered with tasks and trivia. So that date I adore. The other thing too is that you know everybody shares dreams and so on when they first get together and when they you know commit to one
Starting point is 00:35:26 another and so on then you get busy well the reality is that over the course of time people change experience changes us the history that we're living through for example, this pandemic, is changing people so dramatically, not only superficially, but at a much deeper level in terms of their values, in terms of what they dream of doing when they can finally get out, you know, of the world with safety. So sharing those thoughts and how your dreams have changed over the decades can be really a momentous conversation. Yeah I think you're so right. I love what you're saying about dreams because you're right we do often share that when we start dating somebody and maybe that's what even attracts you to them that they have these dreams and passions of who they're gonna be and what they're gonna
Starting point is 00:36:26 do but then life gets busy and you have a kid and it is about the laundry and paying the bills and slowly but surely each one of you have little dreams that you're they're dying like maybe every year they're just getting a little bit more repressed and so to have it had to be able to talk about it and say you know this is still important to me this is is who I am. And I think this might be the antidote to, we always hear that couples grew apart. Well, we just grew apart. This would kind of prevent that if you kept kind of monitoring. Well, I'm, we grew apart because I was going after my dream. I mean, I've heard this, this is sort of a cliche example, but
Starting point is 00:36:58 well, I was home with the kids, but you were out doing this thing and you were out living your life and I didn't get to live my dream so I guess I just love this idea of getting people to stick with these conversations that why you fell in love and what attracted you to each other. It's so important. So how important though are the how important are the differences between the how important are the similarities versus the differences in people's dreams and people's personalities and and how they move through the world how similar do we have to be yeah there is a huge myth out there it's probably the most common myth about relationships that you have to be
Starting point is 00:37:38 compatible and how compatible are you but the reality is that you know if you're truly compatible, you're a clone of the other person and you get bored silly relating to them, right? So you really want to have a person who is different from you and that is fine. That is great. The key to really having a successful relationship when your dreams are very different from the other persons is do you support each other's dreams even though they're not yours. Now there's going to be exceptions to that where your partner's dream is your nightmare. Well, OK, that's, you know, not gonna happen probably. But I'll give you a classic example in our relationship. So I love to go to really
Starting point is 00:38:32 crazy, crazy places on adventures. So I went to Antarctica by myself about, I don't know, maybe five years ago or something or something was fabulous. No way in the world John was gonna go with me Not he's not okay. He's down. He's changed since then And I really really really really missed him a lot on this insane adventure. I went on and so next Spring I proposed Next spring, I proposed another adventure. So I turned 70 last April, and of course it was the midst of the pandemic.
Starting point is 00:39:12 There was no way in the world to celebrate it. Couldn't travel, couldn't do anything. So I said to John, honey, I really wanna go to the Arctic next spring. And how about we go to the Arctic next spring. And how about we go to the Arctic in honor of my 70th birthday that never happened and your 80th birthday that will have just happened. Let's go to the Arctic.
Starting point is 00:39:38 And he said, oh my God, really? And I said, really? It's okay, you can stay inside and read a book in the cabin. It's okay, it's okay. And he said, yeah, that sounds great as long as we can go to Amsterdam first, which is his dream, because he loves Amsterdam. I do.
Starting point is 00:39:55 Love Amsterdam. That's what we're doing, right? So it's an honoring of both dreams. And it's a compromise too, in a way, like figuring out, I know you've talked about this too, which I'd love to if you kind of drill down on that too, because what I see is most couples like, you want to go to Antarctica and I want to go to Amsterdam, this won't work. Like why are you selfish? Why do you go on your adventure? And this is what I want to do, but you made that
Starting point is 00:40:18 work and you make it sound easy, but you've also been working at it for so long. So what is that process compromise in a relationship? Well, you know, it really bothered me that Julie really enjoyed Antarctica, but she was alone a lot. And that was hard for me to hear about. So, you know, I realized I had to go on some of these adventures as well. And the Arctic is pretty interesting.
Starting point is 00:40:46 And we're doing it in a way that I can enjoy it as well. A lot of books. A lot of books, right. Yeah, okay, that makes sense. I mean, it's just a great way you talk about it because so many people just split in that. They're like, no, but it's really a matter of drilling down, why is this important to you?
Starting point is 00:41:04 Why do you want to go there? How can we make it work for all of us, which isn't always easy for everybody? Um, I yeah, I love that. I want to talk about too about The 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, there's so many conflicts and there's so many problems that people just won't get past, they might not get therapy, and I've always said, it seems like you're repeating the same things over and over
Starting point is 00:41:32 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 gonna 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
Starting point is 00:41:56 isn't do they solve all their problems? It's again, how do 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
Starting point is 00:42:37 have this particular position on the issue really lived? Why, 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.
Starting point is 00:43:11 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. You're never gonna see things. You don't solve it, but maybe, I know, could you maybe give me some examples about how a conflict that stays the same,
Starting point is 00:43:37 but how you kind of learn to judge it, so it works in a way. We call it the dreams within conflict. And we analyzed 950 of these conflicts that seemed like dealbreakers, you know, where they're sort of opposed to each other and compromise seems unthinkable because in these dealbreakers, you're kind of selling yourself out if you compromise. That's the way it feels. And so after we analyzed
Starting point is 00:44:05 that, and we also saw that in our own relationship as well, we found that some of these sort of unsolvable problems become the points of better connection. So, you know, an example from our own relationship, for example, was that, you know, we now live on Orcas Island in the San Juan Islands north of Seattle. And we vacationed here when we were first married and we really loved it. We loved canoeing, you know, on the ocean and we really enjoyed it. And at a certain point, Julie really felt like she wanted to have a cabin on Orcas Island, a small cabin.
Starting point is 00:44:53 And I was opposed to it, strongly opposed to it. And she really wanted to do it. And I didn't understand the reasons for it. I thought it was extravagant. We already had a house we could rent. I had all kinds of objections to it and and we finally went to therapy to try to get help with this and You know it the therapy didn't work the therapist said to me John You can say no to Julie and she has to live with it
Starting point is 00:45:22 And I turned to Julie and I said, do I sound like her? And Julie said, yeah, you do. And I said, well, let's quit therapy and talk about this more deeply. You're fired, right? Not all therapists are great. A lot of bad therapy out there. So she really asked me a lot of questions
Starting point is 00:45:41 about why I was so opposed to this. And I asked her a lot of questions about why she wanted it so much. And we found that there were deep reasons about why I was opposed to it, which had to do with my parents having survived the Holocaust and having to flee from Austria with absolutely no possessions at all. They lost everything. And my parents always conveyed this idea
Starting point is 00:46:11 that you shouldn't trust in property or things. You should only trust in what you can carry in your mind. And so the idea of trusting in property to me was terrifying, right? Yet, we really was born in the United States and wasn't a refugee like me. And she had grown up really appreciating nature in a very deep way and wanted to be a steward of nature, which is something I didn't understand when we first married and learned to understand over time.
Starting point is 00:46:45 So as we heard each other's reasons for wanting this, we decided to embark on an experiment and try it for a couple of years, buy a small place and see how it felt. And we tried the experiment and we both fell in love with having a home here. God, I love that example because so, I think the opposite of that is couples saying
Starting point is 00:47:08 that it just continues to be a fight for the rest of their relationship. Never let me live in the country, but you have that skillset of listening and teaching. I guess people learn this, they learn this from you, but we are not born listeners, right? Active listening. Right, we really learned it from the couples in the lab
Starting point is 00:47:26 who took these deal breakers and asked each other questions that deepened their understanding of their partner's point of view. 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. Really, your relationship is like a goal.
Starting point is 00:47:50 Like I look at your really like, this is how it should be done. Let's get into sex real quick in relationships because I wanna talk about like specifically the role of sex and I loved your chapter in your book, Eight Dates because it brings to light how different people approach and experience talking about sex.
Starting point is 00:48:06 I mean, I encourage people to talk about sex all the time. And one of the big things I always say to people, like, what are the top questions you get asked? And I say, people just always wanna know if they're normal. And I'm always like, it's okay, it's okay. Masturbation's okay, you want sex once. And people like, how, and people wanna know, should I be having sex once a week?
Starting point is 00:48:21 10 times a week, I said, well, it's what works for you in the relationship. I'm not here, I'm not the numbers police or the sex police, I'm not gonna not gonna adore it and say you didn't have sex enough this week. But can you talk about, you know, like what, what are the traits of couples that you found that have a great sex life?
Starting point is 00:48:38 It's really, you know, normally, you talk about the normals too, too. Okay? Yeah. So, you know, Here's a the largest study ever done on this question was done with 70,000 couples 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
Starting point is 00:49:08 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, tell each other they 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 sort of inner world of desire,
Starting point is 00:49:41 what turns them on and turns them off. And they really stay 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.
Starting point is 00:50:13 This was a hetero couple. 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 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. Yeah, she's re-traumatized every time, right? That's right. So she was re-traumatized every single time.
Starting point is 00:50:57 And 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,
Starting point is 00:51:49 because it had all been his preference. And so I gave her one of my favorite books in the whole wide world by Lonnie Barbach called For Yourself, Females Sexuality. It's all a mystery to me. It's all a mystery. Okay, yeah. Which is- Can I just say, that was the first, my mom gave, I told my mom when I was like 20, I'd never had an orgasm.
Starting point is 00:52:12 I didn't know what masturbation, I was like 20 something in college, my friends, I said, mom, I never even had an orgasm. She gave me that book, Lani Barback, for yourself, and I still have it on my shelf. It was my first masturbation book. Anyway, I've never heard anyone else bring it up. So that was a moment.
Starting point is 00:52:26 Okay. Yeah, Lani Barbuck. Your mother was just good for her because it's one of the best books ever written for women. And Lani 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
Starting point is 00:53:08 they were abstinent, by golly, 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
Starting point is 00:53:41 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, sensually and could convey that. Had to tell him specifically and this woman didn't know she had a clitoris, right? A lot of things haven't changed 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, and a lot of women who were raised it could be more performative during sex or just kind of give up and kind of fake orgasms.
Starting point is 00:54:27 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 in the eyes of our partners, but sort of figuring out what we want.
Starting point is 00:54:42 So that's a beautiful story about that. And I also know that you've talked about the initiating. We kind of covered this, but what I love, it was research you said that 70% of people use indirect strategies to ask for sex. Like they indirectly do it. And why not just be more direct? I just love that you cover that, right?
Starting point is 00:55:03 Like we're just sort of setting ourselves up for failure there. Like gay and lesbian couples are more likely to be direct than heterosexual couples. Yeah, exactly, right? It's just, and then also they talk about the importance of kissing. I know kissing is so important.
Starting point is 00:55:18 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 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 a good enough example for everybody
Starting point is 00:55:39 to kiss your partner before you go to work. I don't know what is. I mean, come on, how hard is that? But we're really talking about constant connection and communication. Right. Right. The healthiest thing that we see in relationships. We just have a few more minutes here.
Starting point is 00:55:55 I wanna know real quickly, can we talk about pheromones and attraction? Sure. I know it's a big question, but I get asked it all the time. Like, what is attraction? Do we have to be the same? And I know the t-shirt study and all the things but what is that about attraction and pheromones? We could talk about it to the t-shirt study. Yeah, Klaus Wedekind, a German researcher, found that women prefer the smell of t-shirts that men wore for a couple of days when the
Starting point is 00:56:24 men are most different from them genetically, just in terms of the genes of the immune system. So that women are much more interested in men who are genetically diverse from them. And that has an obvious evolutionary advantage for your children. You know, if you have the genes of very different immune systems, your children are more protected. But here's this unconscious process happening, and it's coming out in smell and other things that we probably aren't measuring. And the study was done, would those women actually like those men better, who smells they like better? And that study was done, and it's true, they do like them better. So, you know,
Starting point is 00:57:06 here we are, we're selecting people who are very different from us and we're most attracted to people who are very different from us. And the big mistake that people make is once they get together, if they try to turn their partner into them by being critical then the relationship is gonna go south as opposed to really accepting the differences and really learning from and benefiting from those wonderful and celebrate those differences. Right. How can we bring the t-shirt study today? I'm just trying to think through all your work and everything I read and study it's like you guys have the answers and everyone's running around trying to figure it out.
Starting point is 00:57:46 Is there a way to kind of hack the, hack attractions? Can we do a little mini t-shirt study? Like how can we find out that we're making these choices of the right partner? Like what are we, are there anything quick answers or things that we could just know that these are the things that have to be in place before you walk down the aisle or even go on the third date?
Starting point is 00:58:04 Is there any way to know? So we have an app that is free that people can download. If they go to the app store and type Gotman Card decks, one of the card decks is a hundred questions you can ask a woman about her inner erotic world and a hundred questions you can ask a man about his inner erotic world and they can download you can ask a man about his inner erotic world and they can download that for free. It's been downloaded 350,000 times so far and then they can know if they're sexually compatible. I love your app. I'm just telling you I have it. I recommend it all the time. Maybe I'm responsible
Starting point is 00:58:40 for like 20 of those downloads but yeah it's so well done. But to address the broader question, you know, you asked how can you know that you're really looking at somebody who can, you can have a really good relationship with. So attraction of course is a really important thing, but I would say there are several other factors that are really important. One is does your partner actually do what he or she or they say they're going to do?
Starting point is 00:59:12 In other words, do they follow through with what they say they're going to do? Because a lot of times people will experience, oh, I'll call you next week and then they never do. So leave that one. Okay. Secondly, are they there for you when you need them in all kinds of different situations? Are they there for you when you want to celebrate a triumph? Are they there for you when you want to talk about a defeat? Are they there for you
Starting point is 00:59:44 when you're physically sick? Are they there for you when you're physically sick? Are they there for you when you're depressed? Are they there for you when you want to go out and have a fabulous, ecstatic, spontaneous fun time? Are they there for you when you really need help with your kid? Are they there for you? That's probably the biggest question
Starting point is 01:00:07 along with sexual attraction. That really makes a big difference. Speaks to trust. Okay, I haven't, well, now you've heard, that is super helpful. Are they there for you? Do they show up? Would they stay there?
Starting point is 01:00:21 Are they reliable? Question about that sexual attraction, and I'm gonna, I get asked all the time, like if I wasn't attracted, I was never really attracted to my partner, but now I'm wondering if I could learn to be attracted to them. Like I heard they're my best friend.
Starting point is 01:00:36 We do everything together. I love them. Their family loves me. I love them, but we've never, the sex wasn't there. Do you think you can create that if it wasn't there. Do you think you can create that if it wasn't there in the beginning?
Starting point is 01:00:48 You know, I... it depends on what it is that you want to create. If you want to create a really hot, vibrant, really super duper passionate sex life? Probably not. However, if you want to create a sex life that is tender, that is loving, that is sweet, that is satisfying sexually, but may not be the hottest, most passionate thing in the whole wide world with fireworks, good enough. Yeah, I guess it's deciding what sex, the importance of what it means to you.
Starting point is 01:01:27 It's again, defining what sex means to you. Good enough, yeah. Okay, I have a few more questions. This is from our Instagram. We told our Instagram audience you were coming on the show and they were very happy. So we have a few questions from them. You can just answer them here.
Starting point is 01:01:41 This is from someone who says, we have a toddler and a baby. There is no gas left in the tank and we're losing our connection and chemistry help. Which I think we already probably answered that, to be honest, but do we kinda answer that? Do you guys have something? Date night, date night, date night, date night.
Starting point is 01:01:57 Go on a date once a week, no matter what. Have a bank of babysitters you can call upon and go on a date. You've got to give the relationship some priority and some connection and take along with you, maybe the book, and just have a conversation that helps you draw closer emotionally, but sit very close together on a couch somewhere. John and I, when we didn't have much money, we would go in Seattle to a hotel that had the most beautiful lobby in the whole wide world. It was dimly lit, huge stone fireplace, big soft couches in front of it. We would go there, we'd commandeer a couch pretending we were guests,
Starting point is 01:02:52 and we would order one drink each and we'd just sit in the fire and talk for three or four hours and then we'd go home. Fabulous. Non-negotiable date nights. I think that's, I think you even have some studies about that, that couples, maybe you cite in your book, a couple who stick with the date night are the most successful, or maybe it was a case study. Okay, here's another one. Steps to take while single to attract
Starting point is 01:03:16 a healthy relationship. Hmm. Okay, so first of all, how do you meet somebody, where do you meet them? You're probably not going to meet them at a bar. People go to bars for different reasons than finding the love of their life. So also don't drink a lot. Use a lot of drugs when you're first meeting somebody. You want to be sober, clear-eyed, clear-minded, so that you can really sense who this person is, right? And be yourself. And be yourself, right. I love it. Okay, one more. How do couples
Starting point is 01:03:59 address differing views of vulnerability and intimacy in sex. So they've different views, maybe it's even in the relationship. So they're different views of, I don't even know. Yeah, yeah. One person wants to be more vulnerable and open and intimate and the other one's just like
Starting point is 01:04:18 kind of more shut down, which I guess is classic. It doesn't have to be sex, but one partner is shut down emotionally, doesn't have a lot of experience, and the other one's a little bit more open and wants, how do you crack that? How do you get them to, ugh? Yeah, in sex in particular, right?
Starting point is 01:04:34 Okay, so one of the things is that if a person doesn't have the vocabulary to be more vulnerable, maybe they can be more vulnerable through touch. So will they allow themselves, for example, to just be a receiver and receive touch from you that varies in all kinds of ways in terms of sensuality and to tell you what they like and what they don't like. So you know one's a receiver, one's a giver and you can touch them with your fingers, you can touch them with a piece of velvet, you can touch them with a feather,
Starting point is 01:05:21 you can touch them all over their body. Where do they like to be touched the most? And when they really like it, why do they like it? What feels good about it? What does it remind them of that makes them feel so good? So it's a gradual opening when people feel more safe. Yes. They'll want to open up and be vulnerable. Yeah. I think Brene Brown has really talked so much about this
Starting point is 01:05:52 in a beautiful way. Yeah. I love your interview with her as well. Yeah, she's great. I love her. Okay, thank you so much. I, Donna Julie Gottman, this is amazing. Now I have five quickie questions.
Starting point is 01:06:05 We ask all of our guests and they're quick. It can be one answer, one sentence. We can just go back and forth. Okay, ready? What is your biggest turn on? By turn on, what do you mean? It could mean just even like, you know, eating chocolate. It could be when John says hello.
Starting point is 01:06:24 When John looks you in the eyes, you know, it could be hearing my favorite song. Gets you in the mood to feel alive. Okay, listening to blues, blues music. Love it, love it. Love it. John, what about you? My biggest turn on, really taking a walk with Julie and our puppy.
Starting point is 01:06:55 You have a puppy too? Okay. I love it. Biggest turn off. Just like, nope, I'm not in the mood for any happiness or joy right now, or pleasure. I'm not in the mood for any happiness or joy right now, or pleasure. Watching a TV show where men are being violent against women.
Starting point is 01:07:16 Yeah, that'd be mine too. Okay. What makes good sex? Really a feeling emotionally connected and safe. Just being with Julie. Oh, something you would tell your younger self about sex and relationships. Don't give yourself away so easily. It'll happen. Don't give yourself away so easily. It'll happen.
Starting point is 01:07:47 Don't worry. Oh, and it happened. Okay. What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex? There's huge variation. Everything is acceptable. That. Okay.
Starting point is 01:08:03 I love that. Except hurting the other person when they haven't consented to it. I think for me it's really that it's not rocket science. Sex isn't so difficult. And it's really about affection and caring and emotional connection and that becoming physical connection as well. Great. I love it. Thank you both for being here so much. This is such an honor. This was a wonderful interview. And I just thank you for all the work that you do.
Starting point is 01:08:39 I appreciate you so much. Yeah, this was great. You're a wonderful interviewer. Oh, thank you. That's it for today's episode. Thanks so much for listening to Sex with Emily. If you love the show, please like, subscribe, and leave a review wherever you get your podcasts. And hey, share this with a friend or partner.
Starting point is 01:08:59 It just might spark something. You can find me on Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, TikTok and X. It's all at sex with Emily. And I've been told I give really good email. So sign up at sexemily.com for free guides, articles and more ways to prioritize your pleasure. Have a question about sex dating or relationships? Call my hotline 559 talk sex that's 559-825-5739, or leave a message at sexwithemily.com slash ask. And hey, was it good for you? Email me anytime at feedback at sexwithemily.com. I'd love to hear what you're thinking.

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