Sex With Emily - Will I Ever Stop Thinking About My Ex?
Episode Date: November 13, 2020What if I told you that the best sex of your life was on the other side of your fear? We all have them - fear of rejection, fear of asking for what you want, fear of commitment, and fear of being our ...authentic selves. Today, we discuss the most common roadblocks to more pleasure and how to let them go once and for all.I take calls and answer questions about taking too long to orgasm, period sex, sexual triggers, and performance anxiety in the bedroom. I help you recognize and release what’s holding you back.For even more sex advice, tips, and tricks visit sexwithemily.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Why don't we not give ourselves any slack when it comes to sex?
We're all perfectionists, right?
We all think sex should be this cookie cutter experience of every time it should be beautiful
and perfect with rainbows and flowers and sunshine every time.
That is not a reality. does not look like that for anybody. Look into his eyes.
They're the eyes of a man obsessed by sex.
Eyes that mock our secret institutions.
Betrubize they call them in a fight on days.
You're listening to Sex with Emily.
I'm Dr. Emily, and I'm here to help you prioritize your pleasure
and liberate the conversation around sex.
Today I want to talk about fear.
Here we go. I know you're like, well that's not sexy.
Oh, but it is. Once you figure out how fear plays out in your relationship
and then further in the bedroom, then you can learn how to let it go.
So you can even have more incredible sex with better communication.
See, fear takes many forms. It's kind of sneaky.
You know, maybe you're afraid to tell someone how you feel about them.
Maybe you're worried about asking your partner to try something new.
Whatever those fears are, I'm telling you, it gets in the way of you expressing yourself,
asking for what you want, and living your authentic sexual life.
Now I get it.
It's vulnerable, we're afraid of rejection, we're afraid of judgment from our partners.
We worry that we're going to offend them if we're honest about our desires.
We're going to start a fight.
Well today we're going to take the first step towards facing our fears by actually talking
about them.
I take calls about period sex.
This is a big fear for a lot of people.
Fear of rejection.
Worries about penis size.
And we talk a lot about body and misfears in this episode too.
There's so much we cover here.
I hope you enjoyed the show.
Intentions with Emily.
Join me in setting an intention for the show.
So when you're listening,
what do you wanna get out of this episode?
How could it help you?
It could be, yeah, I'm like,
I've got this fantasy and I really wanna learn
how to discuss it with my partner,
even though I've never told anyone before.
My intention is to help you identify your sexual
road box so they no longer hold you back.
All right, enjoy the show. What are some things when you think about sex,
that's still scary, you know,
what are the things that you still have fears around?
When I think about what I do here,
my job and in talking to all of you,
a big part of it is breaking through those
fears around sex that hold us back. A lot of it is just that we're afraid of getting rejected,
we're afraid of asking for what we want. And when I really started to think about,
what are we scared? What are we so afraid of? Right? Like, we're sex. We could just break
through, we're our own worst enemies. We're so afraid of talking about sex. We're so afraid of being vulnerable. Maybe we're afraid of
being naked with a partner because they're all wild. Once they see it's naked, they're never going
to want to go through with this, right? We have to, or once they see my penis, it'll be over.
Once I show who I authentically am to my partner, they're going to break up with me. I really want to talk dirty, but what if I sound stupid?
I'm afraid, you know, afraid, afraid, afraid, fear, fear, fear, fear. It's all fear. It's all fear.
So I thought, let's break through the things that scare us. Let's break through our fears.
Because I'm telling you, remember fear, false evidence appearing real. It's our false evidence.
What do they say?
We're the judge and the juror.
We make up the rules around things that we're going to be afraid of.
And then we abide by them.
We're like, oh, well, this will be awful.
I mean, I can never tell my partner I want to be spanked.
I can never make a noise during sex.
I'm so afraid that they're going to think I sound weird and we are holding
ourselves back from actually having the sex that we deserve and that we want.
So I want to know from you what is holding you back sexually? What are you still afraid of?
And how can I help you break through it? Even just the next step. Believe me,
break through it. Even just the next step. Believe me, there's a lot of power in just stating it out loud, saying, oh, this is something that kind of gives me a lot of anxiety when
it comes to sex. You'll realize the power it holds of you and then we're going to wipe
it out this week. Okay, we're going to wipe it out, get rid of your fears. Some people,
including myself, historically in the past, I was afraid of period sex. What if I got my period,
what if I bled, what if something happened? Sydney, 20th, California is calling about this very
thing almost on cue. Hi, Sydney, thanks for calling. How can I help?
Hi. Oh my God. I'm actually answered. Yes, it's so perfect. I was like, yes, that is one of the things we're so afraid if we get our period, right?
Yeah, definitely.
So I just started dating my partner recently, like within the past few months, and I actually
have a really bad period.
I guess you could say I get my period almost twice a month sometimes.
Okay, and I tried birth control before and the birth control actually somehow made it worse.
Yeah, that happens. I'm not on it any, yeah, so I'm not on it any more. So of course I do get my period a lot. And I've been reading a lot of stuff on like period sex, like how it's supposedly magical, like the period blood
and all this stuff.
Sounds a little weird, but I've really been wanting to try it.
And my partner has also been wanting to try it,
but I just like, I've heard so many scary stories
about period sex and like the blood getting everywhere.
Like I just want to know like first how to calm down my anxiety and get
how to prepare for it, I guess.
Sydney, this is such a great question.
I can't tell you so many of us can relate to this.
So first, let me tell you this one thing is that there's no, there's no rules around it.
There's some women who think it feels amazing.
They're like, oh, God, period sex.
I'm really horny and it feels really good.
And then some women feel like it's more painful.
You know, so really you just have to try it out
and see how it feels to you.
That's one thing.
The other thing is, I mean, how, yeah,
blood can get everywhere and how you prepare for it
is you just throw down a towel.
Throw it down two towels.
Throw down the towels that you can wash
or the ones, you know, the beach towels
or things you don't care about.
And if you think you're gonna get it,
just keep it, I always keep a towel by my bed. Just in
case, I've got a towel, like right next to my bed, I actually have this sex towel. Someone
just like a sex sheet, someone sent me. But you could use any towel and then just bleach
it because, you know, when I've loved your 20 years old, because I wish I knew this at
20 that it really wasn't a big deal. Because I'm going to tell you, like, for me, if I'm
the first two days of my period, I get cramp,
I've bad cramps, so I don't actually want to have sex.
But then a few days in, I just tell my partner, I'm like, oh, my period, and we just throw
down a towel.
So I think that's how you prepare for it, and you go slow.
And you just see how it feels.
But I don't think there's anything to be shameful about.
And I think that some people might think it feels amazing.
And I do believe that women's menstruation is magical.
You know, we give life.
It's where the power source is.
It's the creative force of life.
So I do think there's some truth to that.
But I think that it really gets a bad rap
because women have been shamed for it.
What I love is to, you're gonna be able to change
a narrative because so many women are grossed out
because they think their partners are.
But if you're like, yeah, I'm with a partner, but let's bring it on.
I got my period.
You'll realize that it's not a big deal at all because we all bleed, right?
So I mean, that's how I would prepare for it.
I would just go slow and see how it feels.
And I think you'll get to figure out your rhythm.
You know, we actually did a podcast with a woman named Alisa Vidi and she talked all about
it. And it might be really relevant for you now, Cindy.
I'm really glad you got off the pill.
When did you get off of it, Cindy?
So I, I've been on and off of it in high school
with my first time taking it.
I was on acutane.
It's like an acime medication.
And I had to be on birth control for it.
And like before that, my period wasn't like, as bad as it is now. It was just like
once I started the birth control in high school, it's just like, God worse and worse. So I was only
on it for like six months. I went off of it for quite a few years and I just started calling it
a couple of years ago. I think about a year ago was when I started the pill again, but I was only
on it for like six months
and I kept telling myself like, it's gonna get better, it's gonna get better, your period's gonna go away and it never did.
So what's the opposite now?
Well, Siddy, you might want to get her book. It's called Flow Living and or just check out the podcast because what I love is
there's all these women right now who are truly warriors and they figured out that
and also we did another one with Joe her name is Joleen Brighton. Her book is Beyond the Pill
and so what we're finding now Sydney is that the pill has a lot of side effects for women
and we used to just think it was this benign pill just take a pill doesn't really count
but what happens is you could go on and even just for a few months or a few years and then when
you go off of it for many women their period is never the same again because it really
messes with our hormones.
And so if you read up on it or even if you download her app that if you get educated or
you get interested in your flow and your cycle and you take some of these tips, a lot of
it has to do with diet, avoiding caffeine certain times a month, avoiding certain foods, not having coffee
when you first wake up in the morning.
And she healed her own hormonal imbalance
with food and exercise and diet.
And before the pill, women didn't have these kind of problems.
And now we're finding there's a lot of side effects.
So what might have happened is that you became dysregulated,
right?
And your body was never able to catch up
because when we go on the pill,
we're actually suppressing our immune system,
we're suppressing our normal ovulation cycle.
And we can't just snap our fingers
and our body gets back to how it was before.
And then you were on the acutane.
And so you will get it back on track.
There's nothing wrong with you,
but I don't like that you are having periods
twice a month and they're really heavy.
But I wish I knew this at your age, Sydney, that I could take matters into my own hands.
So I would recommend just kind of reading up on it and just seeing what you could do,
and there could just maybe, maybe there's some supplements you could take, because you're
young, and I don't want you to go back on the pill to solve it, because if that won't work,
I think that's part of the problem.
So anyway, that's yeah.
And so I think, does that answer your question
about period sex?
Because really, it's just blood.
It's blood.
It's just a little bloodier.
But I don't actually find it that different, to be honest,
but maybe some other women do.
Like I said, sometimes it's really painful for me.
So that is before, so that's a week before my period,
like when I'm ovulating, it hurts a little bit
because your cervix drops.
And so I realized over the years,
I never knew what that was.
So that can kind of happen,
but again, every woman's different.
Yeah, definitely.
Does that help?
So much.
Of course.
Yeah.
I'm majoring in sociology,
and I wanted to pursue a career in criminology,
but I started listening to your podcast a couple months ago,
and it's really making me want to change my career path. So thank you.
Of course, Sydney, keeping touch. I'm here for you. Okay. I'm so glad to hear it. We need more
smart sex educators, more young women out there doing this work. Thanks, honey. Have a good night.
Thanks for calling by Sydney. I love that there's so many young people now who are in college and actually looking at a career in sex education because our social work, there really wasn't as many people
doing this.
Definitely not when I started 15 years ago and now there's a lot more people who are
finding interest in it.
So I love that.
We're here to help you too.
Figure it out.
Fears, fears, fears.
What do you guys, any fears that you guys have here on my Zoom,
a colon or OV?
Do you guys have any things that you think are still holding you back,
sexually?
I think the fear of rejection is something that I often fall into.
I don't know.
There's honestly so many.
Right?
Fear of rejection, like making a move and being rejected?
Yeah, I think that it's something where I'm usually less
interested than my partner is just because of past issues
with, I don't know, I think I have a fear that something
is too good to be true a lot of the times, even with work
and stuff like that, I'll be like, oh,
if I really like something, then it's usually
going to get taken away, just based off
of past childhood experiences.
So kind of having to reassure myself
that that's not the case and that it's like all in my head.
Yeah, there you go.
And how you break through it, I guess,
is putting yourself out there enough to realize
that that's just, you might get rejected.
Sometimes we all get rejected,
but then you also might not.
Something that I kind of thought through myself
was that if someone rejects you is might not. Something that I kind of like thought through myself was that like if someone rejects you
it's usually not personal.
They might be like going through their own thing
or like it's just a lot of the time
which people always like think that it has to do with them
but like most of the time other people
are focusing on themselves so much
that it's not really about you.
It's never what you think.
It's very wise.
That is true.
I mean, telling you what I can tell you
I have years of evidence of that, is that it's
never what you think.
It's the things that we worry about.
That's why it's fear is false evidence appearing real.
It's just, it's not people are sort of obsessed with themselves.
They might reject you, but it's not for what you think.
It might be, it's not for what you think.
It might be, it's usually where they're at in their lives.
If you think about it, usually what we judge in others, we fear in ourselves.
Usually we've reaction to things based on our history.
It's like when you are dating somebody, you're showing up with your whole history of, you
know, attachment and they're showing up with, there's almost like there's four people
in every relationship. There's like your parents and their parents, right?
Coming out, there's like whatever, six. It's like their parents are on the way to
to tip and your parents. I mean, what were your issues that you grew up with or your
styles of, you know, fear of maybe, yeah, when you were younger, maybe you're, you got
excited for things that didn't happen, OV. So you're like, well, I cannot be excited
for anything. But it's so wise that you know that at your age too, you know, because it's just, uh,
I don't know, it's constantly a little, yeah, I always say all day every day,
bringing yourself back to the present moment, checking in with yourself, checking your own facts.
Is this true? Does it serve me?
I would have been calling from a man. What do you get? Anything that's fearful that's held you back?
What do you call in from a man? What do you get anything that's fearful that's held you back?
Yeah, this is kind of a different view of the question,
but I get just in the moment,
just right in the moment of like right before having sex,
I get scared of how long it's gonna take.
I get like,
oh, do we really have enough time for this?
Before I wanna go to bed.
Really? Because you're asleep.
You feel like I need eight hours.
Yeah, I just have this thing in my head about, I was just going to take so much effort and
so much time, even though it's going to be really fun.
That's so funny.
I mean, is it, are you afraid that it's going to take you a while to jack later your wife
or just in general?
And I love this your wife because you still get it.
We don't, things don't go away, right?
Yeah, both, both me taking a long time and her and just honestly, it's just nice saying
it out loud to you.
I feel like just saying it out loud, like shows me how ridiculous of a fear it is.
It's real though, right?
It's real.
And then what if you could now that you've set out loud the next time you're with or you
could be like, well, you'll be like, oh, how long?
And you're like, oh, wait, I'm super psyched.
I get to the sex right now.
And that's it's trading your brain.
It's this exact moment.
See, there is power.
Listen, if you just call up and tell me right now you're afraid of, I'm telling you, it
will no longer have the same hold on you.
So let's talk to Joey 38 in New York.
Hi, Joey. what's going on
thanks for calling. Hey Emily I don't know if you remember but I called like
previously like I wanted to share my fed-ish with my girlfriend. Yes you're
familiar tell me what happened. So I told her about it and she really embraced it. She's really into it and it worked out really well.
Jolly, I'm so glad.
Tell me what was your fetish again, just so we can share with the listeners.
Oh, it was spandex.
Like I really love when you were.
Nice.
I'm so glad.
So what happened?
So you called in because you wanted to know if you should share it with her.
You were maybe afraid to share it.
And then you shared it and she was like, cool.
I would love that. I'm like, I'll let me give you some, I like hunts, Bandex.
This is it. You face to fear.
And now you're getting your fetish, your fantasy taken care of.
Yeah.
What does it look like? Are you buying her things or do you guys go shopping for
Bandex? Is she wear it in the bedroom? I'm just curious now. Well, it's like it's really great because like she loves wearing it for me all the time.
She knows how turned on I get from it and like we go shopping and all and like buy it
for her and it's just like really adds to our sex life and really enhances everything.
Yeah, that's what happens.
Joey, I'm so glad that that has worked out for you.
It must be a relief and it must be pretty exciting right now to not be living with that
secret.
Yeah, like I'm really going and I took your advice and took the lead and put myself out
there.
Me too, Joey, right?
You see how it's really enhanced your sex life by stating your truth in a healthy way.
Joey, I'm so glad you made my night.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah, I love it.
Thank you.
I'm thank you for sharing that with me.
Anything else we need to know?
It's about it.
Just really happy.
Just want to thank you for your great advice.
Mm.
Joey, I'm here for you.
I'm so glad you called back in and keep me posted.
I think that's such a great, you know,
how long had you had this fetish without telling somebody?
Like forever.
It's like you're 38, so 20 years.
Yeah, I mean, look at that.
I think that that's what we forget,
right, that our partners want to please us.
If we love our partners, are we care?
We want to be great lovers and say, okay,
I'll wear something, Spandex.
That's really cool, Joey.
Yeah, I think that's what we call about, so.
It is all about that.
And now you can continue to grow together
and figure out what she's into and love it.
Thanks, Joey.
I'm so happy.
It's perfect that you called in tonight, too.
No more fear.
Have a good night, Joey.
Think about it, you guys.
Joey, I didn't even tell him to call.
I didn't ask Joey to call and say that he faced a fear.
And hopefully this is a wake-up call for you.
Whatever you are holding on to right now and whatever you really want to try with your
partner and you're not trying, I mean, he's third.
I can just imagine if it's a fetish meaning like he's had it a fetish means
It's actually a requirement for you to be your most aroused. That's like a fantasy
Like oh it would be nice to have a threesome or be nice if my girlfriend wore spandex
It's like he has linked up
Spandex with his arousal his arousal's linked to spandex and so for 20 plus years
Joey's holding on to it afraid of rejection afraid that someone wouldn't be down with it.
Maybe he was afraid people would make fun of him or they would leave him, but nope, he
brought it up and she's like, great, I'm down.
Let's go shopping and then she gets off because he's excited about it.
And do you guys see that?
That is what happens nine out of 10 times.
I would even say, and this showed 10 out of 10 times because if your partner rejects you
for what you're truly into, then you get to ask yourself, is this
really my person? And that's okay too. We all deserve pleasure. We'll be right back.
Let's talk about things that scare us in the bedroom that scare us, actually.
What fears do you have?
What anxieties do you have that are holding you back right now?
How can we help you confront them and let them go?
The funny thing is, some things that came up, Colin, was saying that he sometimes worries
when these back to sex, let's go take too long.
Like, oh, God, we've time.
Is it going to take too long?
And then Amanda at the break said
that she has those same concerns too with her boyfriend.
So, you first of all, you're not alone with the fears,
but something about just stating it out loud
and saying, this is where I'm at.
We're gonna take the charge away, take the power away.
Let's talk to Melissa 32 in North Carolina.
Hey, Melissa.
Hey there. Hey, how you doing? How can I help?
Well, kind of a morbid story. I hate to do that to you, but it's okay. We all in our
future. Yeah, I'm in a relationship with my wonderful fiancee and we're actually
expecting our first child and we're very excited about that. But recently I've had a lot of issues with him
wanting to have sex in the middle of the night like he'll wake up from a dream just turned on,
he'll come over and try and initiate sex. And he did that once and I had this massive flashback
of a really terrifying event and I started going to counseling and we
were doing a specialized therapy and found out that you know this was me relieving sexual
abuse that I had gone through as a child.
Wow.
And so now I'm just terrified of you know he likes to do things at night and I'm afraid
I'm going to have another flashback and I don't want it to affect our relationship.
Yeah wow okay well Melissa I'm so glad you called in and congratulations on being pregnant and
expecting your first child and I'm really glad you went to therapy for that.
And so, first off, I love that it's out in the open.
And if you've had a sexual assault and you've had something scary happen, it would make
sense that when someone startles you and makes you up in the middle of the night, that that would be really hard. So, I'm sorry. Is it something?
Now you said you went to a specialized therapy because what I was going to suggest is EMDR therapy.
I movement. That's exactly it. Oh, you did it. Okay. A great. So how long go did you do it?
And how often?
I've been doing it for probably around eight months now.
I was going every week, and now we've
backed off to maybe once a month, just because as of lately,
I've found out that I'm having a little girl.
And of course, now I'm starting to have worries about OK,
now that the girl am I going to have issues that she's going through her developmental house films and it's kind of made me shut
up my own worries and start worrying about her, even though I'm not worried about my
fiance whatsoever.
Right, right, right.
Well, that makes sense.
I mean, and you said you're still in the therapy, when you were going more regularly to
the therapy, did you feel it helped you with some of these fears
and some of these anxieties?
Absolutely, I mean, it helped because I was starting
to remember things.
I had absolutely no idea that this happened.
I had suppressed it for so long,
and now that I remember things are making a lot of sense.
But of course, the more I remembered,
the more flashbacks I started having,
and it was very difficult to almost train my fiance
to know what to happen if he experienced one of those
and how to kind of talk me out of it.
And so that's why we took a little break
because it was becoming very often that that was happening.
Wow, I'm sorry, you're going through this,
but, Melissa, I'm really glad that you're actually
tackling all of this at 32, with your first child coming.
I would recommend maybe some more therapy if you can go back and see your therapist.
I was able to do my EMDR on Zoom during the quarantine.
There's some kind of system you could use on the computer, but do ever do any like mindful practices because it sounds like there's a lot going on
So of course you're having flashbacks and then you know being pregnant with your first child
Also can if you're if you naturally are more worried about things
That it would be heightened and so I'm wondering if you've any coping skills around helping your anxiety like for me
Meditation really really helps.
I just have to learn it to sit and breathe through something
and then get really present.
Because when you're present with worry,
it can't, presents, cancels that worry.
Presence cancels that anxiety.
And the more you can get yourself in that state,
there's some great apps right now,
like free meditation apps.
I love Insight Timer.
It might just help you if you do it like 10
minutes a day. It's a practice. It's got like exercise for your brain. And I maybe we'll get back
into therapy. You know, it's such a good time to go because you have a huge, you know, change coming
up and transition, you know, having a child. What do you do? I'm doing the end of January. Okay.
I would try to see what you could do for some self-care right now.
If you have time, I would start a meditation practice.
Are you exercising or moving your body at all?
That really helps too.
Yeah, actually, that was, I mean, there's both layers.
That was my coping mechanism before I used to run Spartan races.
I was a Zoom instructor.
Of course, I can't be as active as I was a year ago because I'm carrying around all
this extra baggage now.
But I still try and remain active.
I'm a healthcare provider during the pandemic.
So it's just go, go, go.
You've been going at it.
Well, I mean, if you can, in terms of we need each other to, you know, women, like you probably know what to do, but I'm going to tell you right now that if
you can maybe get back into therapy once a week, you know, sometimes I taper off and go
to once a month and then I go back every other week because I just think it's a really,
you know, important part of my of my mental health and well-being and then a little bit of
meditation, you know, like I said, at insight time where you can even just sort by, you know,
meditations for anxiety and if it's you don't have to just sit there and breathe, it's
sometimes they just have a 10 minute calming exercise because the more you do it, in the
moment when you're having worrying thoughts, you'll know, oh, I can go back to this moment
and breathe. I can go back and feel my body on my feet on the floor. I can breathe. I
can, you know, so I mean, that's what I would recommend.
I mean, you're doing all the right things.
Maybe you want to get another EMDR therapist if you feel, unless she's working for you,
that's great.
Sometimes it's good to mix things up, but I would say, you know, I love that you're so self-aware
and that you're actually able to name it and say this is what it's happening and it's
happening in the middle of the night and it's happening, you know, thinking about my
daughter.
So, I would just say, do the things that you're already doing, but kind of step it up and I would still try to move
your body and exercise if you can and breathe and just don't be hard on yourself because it's a
lifelong process, you know, but I think that you can get better at managing it. We can all improve,
you know? Yeah, and that's you're right. I mean, I know a lot of the things that do for myself.
It's more so I guess trying to convince him
that it's not him.
He's getting very self-conscious.
And is it me?
Is this why it is that it's not you?
I promise you it's not you.
It's so common.
I have to tell you that this is such a big thing.
This is why we don't often talk about sex
because we often feel so rejected by our partners. Whenever they don't want sex. We assume it's us. That's
our problem. And so I think that just letting him know, you could even say that we talked,
you could say, you know, I want you to know it has nothing to do with you. I'm working
on it. I love you. I'm attracted to you. Let's try to have sex on, you know, Saturday
mornings instead of Saturday night just for now. But I think I understand that too, you know,
since we can't imagine, like, how could it not be me?
You know, somewhere in this messed up zero sex education
we get, we somehow link up when our part of it
doesn't want sex with us that we did something wrong.
But that's very rarely is that the case.
I mean, maybe for a fight or, you know, they cheated
and we haven't built trust up again.
And we resent our partner for not helping on the how things build up
So and I would think just your husband you guys could listen to some of these shows together a lot of couples listen to sex with them
Lee together either on series or on my podcast
Sometimes our partners just need a little bit more education or they need to hear it from someone else
So it's not them so however you think your husband will be able to learn hear the message and
Feel safe and you can just keep reinforcing and give yourself love
and compassion for what you're going through.
And then also reassure him that it's not about him
and find other ways he needs to be loved and supported right now.
But take care of yourself.
You're carrying a little life in you.
So.
Yeah.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Of course.
I would care if I had to call and speak about this,
but I know that there's probably many,
many people out there in a similar situation.
So it's good for them to know they're not alone
and it's okay to speak up.
Yeah, Melissa, thank you so much.
I am telling you this helped so many people listening.
I know it. We're all nodding our heads here too.
We're like, oh, and sending you lots of love.
Thank you. Thank you.
And thanks for calling. I appreciate it. Have a great night, Melissa sending you lots of love. Thank you. Thank you. And thanks for calling.
I appreciate it.
Have a great night, Melissa.
Take care of yourself.
That's what we're saying here.
It is a little bit scary calling into a radio station.
I get it.
You're like, oh God, I start talking.
But what I've found in 15 years of doing this,
that once you call in and just that first moment,
you just kind of sink into it.
And then you realize that by stating those things
that we think we can't say
and the things that we're so afraid of,
it takes away its power.
It takes away the charge by saying it out loud.
And not only that much like what Melissa said,
it also helps others.
I'm sure there's a lot of other people listening right now
who also have fears around you know trauma around sex
and hopefully that you know will allow people to take this next steps in their healing journey as well.
Let's talk to Julie Forty in California.
Hi Dr. Emily.
Hello. How can I help you? What's going on?
Okay, let me give you a little bit of a backstory. I met this guy 17 years ago,
was my first true love, first mind-blowing orgasm, sex was amazing because of financial
difficulties, our relationship didn't last. We both went our separate ways,
goal piece, our relationship to Emma. We both went our separate ways, I'm still in contact with his sister. You know, I've had other relationships, but it's been 15 years out, we've
been broken up, and I don't remember about him, but when I do, it's because something
has happened to him. The first time he got into a car accident a few years later or so
he broke his nose and just reached that he was quarantined for COVID and in that time his brother had passed away
and so my question is how do I stop? I think it's a weird connection.
We actually talked just recently, and it was a good talk,
but now I can get a hint out of my mind.
Everything reminds me of him.
And I don't know if that's good for me.
I don't know.
It's just very crazy.
Yeah, no, Julie, it sounds like it. Have you seen
him in 15 years or you just talked to him on the phone? No, like I said, I'm Francis
assistant, so I may have seen pictures of family events and he may have been in
them. Okay, I got it. But since we broke up, I have not had one word with him up until
like a week or two ago
and how did you know that these things happen to him when you had a dream about
him i would ask his sister to feel k
and she would just kind of
she would just write
yeah you think you feel connected to now we need here's a thing i i feel like it's
funny that you're not funny,
but interesting you're calling about this
because a lot of people email me and call about sex
or dreaming about the rest, not necessarily.
Sometimes sex with the rest, but what I will,
well, my belief is that when we dream about an ex,
it's oftentimes because it's reminiscent of a time
in our life, that relationship represents a part of our self that maybe we are
Feeling really connected to and maybe it's your youth or it was really young love and so we want that
Thrill again, we want that excitement, but I don't believe that it's necessarily that you should be with him and
So if you can somehow get peace that there's some kind of maybe
soulful connection you have,
you had your first loves.
I always think that my love,
when I had in my early 20s was just,
it was so pure and so writhe,
never loved that much as an adult.
And so I don't think it's about him,
per se, but it was about me at that time
and learning to love and being away from home.
So I don't know what it is for you, but unless you want to see him again, or you, but even
then I actually just don't think it means what we'd like to think it means.
I mean, are you asking me like, does it mean you should be with him or just I, you know,
I don't even know that.
I just think it's like, how do I stop thinking about him now because we haven't had a conversation in years and well how come?
Did you ever have like a text conversation?
Would you ever want to talk to him on the phone?
We didn't have a phone conversation.
Okay, how was that?
It was good.
It was just like we talked about the good.
We talked about the bad. So, you know, we had some laugh and I shed a couple of tears, you know, talking about
our relationship and the possibility of a fight didn't work out.
Well, why don't you see it? Would you ever want to see him? Would you ever want to just
get coffee with him or me I mean, what's preventing me? I would but I would however
He's very person like you're no no no no no
if you're an extra and
And he's like I don't know why I'm talking to you, but I am you know, yeah
I mean we were both at fault in the relationship. There was no cheating. It was just
15 years ago, you were 25.
You were 25.
Yeah, I mean, come on.
I mean, I can't even, yeah, there are things in our, I mean, you're a whole different person
right now.
So, well, do you want to see him or do you not, because there's a few ways to go here.
You could just call him and say, I think we should meet up and see, you know, see if there's
a connection.
If he's not in a relationship and you're not in a relationship, and it wasn't an abusive or toxic, who knows?
You hear things like that all the time that people go to their high school reunion 30
years later and fall in love with their, you know, high school sweetheart again.
That could happen.
But if you're telling me you don't want to do that, then I would start a practice of every
time you think about him, let's think of a thought that you could replace it with.
Like I am deserving of great love and passion.
Or I will find my love, you know, my partner,
or something like that that you could replace it with
because then eventually you can retrain your brain.
But if you also think, well,
maybe I should just meet him up and see what happens,
you know, you could try that as well.
So decide which way you wanna go with it.
Yeah. Yeah.
And that's the thing I brought that up to him and he hasn't responded to that.
Oh, okay.
Well, it sounds like you want to meet up with him.
So I would just, you've nothing to lose here.
I mean, yeah, maybe he could reject you.
Maybe you won't even be attracted to him.
But to me, if you're both single and you had talked on the phone for a few hours,
maybe he's fearful too. Maybe he has, who knows, maybe he really is in a relationship and we don't know.
But it could be helping you face your fear.
I would just push it. I don't, maybe he didn't really think you wanted to.
Maybe he's got something she's shameful of.
But it sounds like you guys are still connected in a way.
I mean, I would love to have coffee with my ex
from 15 years ago.
I think it would be a blast.
So not even because I want to be with them,
I just think it's part of our history,
which is why we often never forget our exes
because we bonded, we loved, we connected.
You share so much with people that you love.
And so I think it says a lot that they just don't go away,
right? But sometimes, you know, we a lot that they just don't go away, right?
But sometimes, you know, we attach to meaning
when we don't have to.
So I say you've got nothing to lose.
You're a grown woman and see what happens.
What?
Hopefully you want to move on.
Let me know.
I'm pleased.
Please.
Please do.
I'm here for it.
We are all going to wait to hear back from you, OK?
Take care of yourself, Julie. I'm really glad you called. I really do. I can here for it. We are all gonna wait to hear back from you, okay? Take care of yourself, Julie.
I'm really glad you called.
I really do, I can't wait to hear.
I love when you guys call me back and tell me
what happened, that's what I want.
I live for it, I mean no pressure, but honestly,
talk to a lot of you the last two years.
What has happened since?
I'm gonna take a quick break,
there'll be more sex with the family.
Thanks everyone for supporting our sponsors.
You know, we only work with sponsors that we enjoy ourselves and I hope you do too.
What fears do you have that are holding you back sexually, intimately, romantically with a partner?
Because I think once you state your fear out loud,
it takes away the power, right? We're only as sick as your secrets. You ever hear that saying?
I think it's from like, it's kind of an AA thing. We're only as sick as our secrets, meaning the
more secrets we have, they actually make us sick. Whatever we hold on to, right? You're holding on
to sharing a fantasy with a partner. You hold
on to, you know, your fear that you're going to look bad in the bedroom or you're going to do
something wrong. So then you just keep worrying and worrying and then that worry compound itself.
And then next thing you know, you can no longer be intimate with anybody because you're so afraid of it.
You know, and I was thinking and thinking about this show tonight, I was thinking like, what are
the fears that I've had? And I know that I definitely had fears around talking about sex.
I think I didn't even know that it was okay to ask a partner for what I wanted or to
tell them to do something different because number one, I didn't know what I wanted.
So I knew if I said to a partner, you know, you have partners who say, does this, oh,
Emily, does this feel good?
And I would just say, yeah, whatever you're doing feels great.
Because I knew if I said no, they'd say, well, what else?
And I didn't know what was on the menu.
So I just wouldn't say anything.
And even now, it's not my favorite thing
to tell my partner what I want.
It's not my favorite thing to ask for,
but it still can be challenging.
But now that I know what to do, I know how to do it.
And I think I had fears about not being good enough
in the bedroom and fears around intimacy
and I had fears around showing who I really was
to a partner and being vulnerable.
I definitely have fears around vulnerability.
I got a wall built up.
I didn't want to be the first one to make a move.
I didn't want to be the first one
to express my feelings with fear of being hurt.
And then once you realize that that's your fear, then I then I've realized that once I
start putting myself out there, and I never really saw that man either put yourself out
there.
I was like, Oh God, that sounds awful.
But once you do, and you say, you know what?
I have feelings for you or I want to take this to another level or I want to try to sing
in the bedroom, whatever it is, you realize that you're being your best advocate.
And then if it's something you truly want in USport, and then your partner says, nah, I'm
not into that.
Oh, I would never do that.
Or they make you feel bad about it.
Well, then you have more, then you have useful information.
And then you know, doesn't mean you're a bad person.
It means that you are actually, if you look at it this way, you're closer to getting your
needs met.
You're closer to finding a partner who is interested in fulfilling your needs and being
a good lover to you.
So I think you actually win.
You are able to be the architect of a life that you actually want when you face your fears
and everywhere of your life and every asking your boss for something that you want to
raise or having a confrontation with a friend,
setting boundaries is really scary, but when you set boundaries, it's just a game changer.
But all those things are really scary because we don't have a lot of practice, especially
if our primary caregivers didn't practice boundaries or practice fulfilling our needs.
So we're all on this journey learning.
We asked this question to our Instagram audience, sex with Emily. What scares you know, we're all in this journey learning. We asked this question to our Instagram
audience, sex with Emily. What scares you in the bedroom? Farting. I can't wait for people to get
over that one. So what? Everyone farts. Keep going. Not a big deal. Napping good enough. If I enjoyed
swinging, and my wife would enjoy a bigger penis over mine, that's a huge
swinging fear.
I just wish that I could get this into all of your heads.
All the guys, can you get this into your little head that you are more obsessed with your
penis than your partner is?
I promise you that.
I promise you that your partner, if she's going to agree to swing, it's not because she's
like on the hunt for a bigger penis.
That just doesn't happen.
If someone's going to leave you, it will not be because of your penis. I promise you. She won't like how my come taste on a certain day. I get that,
I get that fear, but also that's why our healthy diet is so important. And also so what? You know
what? We are what we eat and sometimes you know, things taste differently, but I don't think it
means the world's going to end. So why do we not give ourselves any slack when it comes to sex?
We're all perfectionists, right?
We all think sex should be this cookie cutter experience and every time it should be beautiful
and perfect with rainbows and flowers and sunshine every time.
That is not a reality.
Sex does not look like that for anybody.
Maybe in the movies, maybe in porn, no one's farting and no one's
spitting out your splooge
because it tastes the best.
Like, that shit doesn't happen.
I never say splooge.
I can't help it, but that's what happened.
Okay. Him being turned off by my body because I have no booty.
A lot of us are worried about how we look in the bedroom, right?
Once we accept ourselves, really, I swear to God, once you love your body or even like your body, you won't be thinking
about these things anymore. It's a practice. Hemorrhoids, sometimes after anal idol on my
part to see, I get that, just use a lot of lube. You can avoid hemorrhoids if you breathe and
go slow and use lube, being completely honest about what I want. Starting something new
after divorce of 18 years of marriage.
Yeah, I understand that fear. That is really scary.
That is scary, but take baby steps.
Baby steps, you know, it's a muscle dating,
it's a muscle if you haven't dated an 18 years,
it's gonna be scary, do it anyway.
That I won't come, it's a common one.
Unintentional body noises, I know it's natural,
but it still feels so cringy every time. I get that.
Again, I'm telling you, you get past that. I don't know. I think you do. You just ignore it. Not a big deal.
Laugh. Keep going.
I kind of love our Instagram audits. This is really good. That he'll get bored or doesn't like it.
That's also why I tend to put myself last, but I'm working on it. Yeah, we're all working on it.
Nobody wants you to put yourself last either,
if you think about it.
They just take advantage of the fact
that you have put yourself last.
And if you put yourself last,
guess who else is gonna put you last?
Everyone, literally everybody.
Because if we don't become our best advocates,
why would anyone else?
We show people how we want to be treated.
We model that to other people.
Just remember that.
So how you treat yourself is how others are going to treat you.
You're giving them the instruction manual.
Not being able to get hard with a new person is also a fear.
Happen two times right now.
Yeah, I know.
It's happening a lot.
This is my fear around that too, is that there's so many more men I'm hearing from who
can't get hard once or twice and then they keep not able to get hard.
I think we talk about this a lot, but just go perform on your partner for a minute.
Your erectional come back.
Or talk about it with your partner, and then you'll realize it's not a big deal.
Also, a lot of erectile dysfunction is about blood flow.
It really helps to be in shape, exercise, watch what you eat,
get the blood flowing everywhere. It's all blood flow. Same with your clitoris too.
Not being able to find my sexual partner, that's also a fear. I get that. You will. The
more you become your best sexual partner, isn't it crazy? This is so true though. The more
you become your best sexual partner to yourself, you're more likely to find
your partner. You know that whole thing like you complete me or you're looking for someone to
complete you or be your better half. I never liked that saying because that's assuming that you're
showing up as a half person and that you are deficit in some way. But if you find somebody when
you're feeling whole, you're more likely to find the right match.
That's such good advice.
It's true.
How do you think you can actually do that,
but what are the steps that someone should take
if they want that to happen?
To become a full person.
Does that mean you can become yourself?
It's a lifelong journey.
And I think the first thing is recognizing
that you don't feel complete without a partner.
A lot of people feel that way.
I think that's another thing that happens with society.
Whenever you're single, everyone wants to know when you're going to settle down and you're
going to find somebody, it's never okay to say I'm single.
I think that's part society pressure and part really truly authentically being comfortable in your skin, being alone,
having a full-life, having a rich life and, you know, with friends and doing things that interest you
and living life on your own terms. I believe when you have that and you could take or leave a
relationship truly and authentically is when you find one. I can tell you that from experience
is when you find one. I can tell you that from experience and from talking to thousands of people. And so if you're finding yourself feeling broken or walking around, feeling
like you are incomplete without a partner, so to answer your question over, that's the
first step is identifying it and thinking, thinking, I'm totally a complete person and
I'm going to work on feeling okay. Because then you're showing up as like needy and you're less, not always needy, but you're
showing up even if it's semliminal, even if it's, I got to find someone, I got to find
someone to feel complete.
It's just you're putting that out there that I'm not enough.
Let's talk to Kenny and Arizona.
He had some thoughts on sex fears as well.
Hi Kenny.
Hi Emily.
It's been a while. I've called in. I don't know if you remember me. I'm the one
who used to who was writing down the stories and everything and it might be in my wife for playing
them out and everything. Yes. Oh my God Kenny. Of course we talk about you all the time.
About the piano. Did you wrote a rhodica for her? Yes. Yes. That is since kind of died down and we just have a really good sex life.
That happens maybe once a month or a date night or something.
That's what's a month is better than that.
That's amazing, Kenny.
Yeah.
I love it.
So what about people just going in and just, I know it's hard to change through having a fear,
but what about just trying to be
you know maybe you're playing a role of someone who's fearless
and that helps you
become
fearless
in general
there's just there's times where
i would never have thought in a million years where
like my wife and i would end up having sex in the closet
in the morning
our daughter strapped into her high chair
and we just knock out a quickie real quick
just out of the spur of the moment.
That's all.
And everything.
And it's, yeah.
And I mean, she could literally happen today
as why they'd be kind of think of the list of you.
And she called me.
She's like, I can't stop thinking about that and of course i'm a truck driver so i
left
of the home tomorrow
and now she's like
i'm gonna run she wants to write her own erotic
uh...
play it out this weekend
and i'm like
what did what did i do that you know that yeah
really good monster
i mean i love your story can he and he really do see that's really beautiful. How long have you guys been together?
It'll be 10 years in December. This is gonna be our 10 year anniversary. Oh happy anniversary. I
Love this. I love that you you I mean just to tell everyone that you you actually wrote her story
Erotica of what your fantasy was and you left it for her and then you came home and she had totally acted out the fantasy
She was wearing the thing the black lacy thing I believe and by the piano. I mean, I still I was like I was there
Something but Kenny. I think it's really inspiring because I think that it shows that you guys are putting effort into your sex life
And it's as a result of that 10 years in it's still going strong you it's sex in the pantry
and it's as a result of that, 10 years in, it's still going strong, you're it's sex in the pantry.
Yeah, and we, like I never would have expected to like do anything like this
by light.
Oh, what's the three, if you manifest it?
Oh, meditate, masturbate manifest.
Yes, thank you.
That's why you're the doctor.
Yes, it's true.
I mean, what else, because if we don't manifest what we want,
then we are, then we live in anxiety and fear. And then that happens. But if we're like,
this will happen, this is what I want, this is what I feel, and then we meditate on it and master
being on it, that shit's going to happen. This works. Exactly. It works. And you brought up that word,
fear. You're fearless in any type of relationship,
but I've told friends this, if you're fearless,
you know what, turn off your mind in role play.
Be somebody else.
Be somebody else.
That's a really good point.
Going back to your earlier point, yes.
I think you're right.
That's why role playing is so powerful for so many people
is that if you can suspend belief in a firm moment
and you could, you just think,
okay, you know what, I can't be this fearless person,
but I'm afraid, I'm just gonna go in,
and I'm gonna be my alter ego.
I'm gonna go in as a strong confident man.
It's amazing what can happen.
You're like, I'm not myself right now,
and I think that's why a lot of couples love role playing too,
because you can just kind of take away the blame
that's what we love acting or improv.
It's just like be something else.
Show up as somebody who is confident.
You know, it's like that fake it so you make it or, you know,
act the part.
You're an inspiration, Kenny.
You're an inspiration.
Can you please tell me?
I will talk to you guys later.
Okay, bye.
Have a good night, Kenny.
Thanks.
All right.
All right, that's it for today's episode.
I'll see you on Tuesday.
And thanks for listening to Sex with Emily.
Be sure to like, subscribe, give us a review, you know, reviews help us.
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