The School of Greatness - 1070 Create Intimacy & Upgrade Your Sex Life w/Dr. Emily Morse
Episode Date: February 10, 2021“When we heal ourselves sexually, we will heal so many other parts of our life.”Today's guest is Emily Morse, who is a Doctor of Human Sexuality, host of the longest running sexual wellness podcas...t, Sex with Emily, and author of Hot Sex: Over 200 Things You Can Try Tonight.She is recognized as one of today’s most insightful sex educators challenging cultural taboos, misinformation and awkward sex talks to create a future where people can deeply connect and shamelessly embrace pleasure.This conversation covers mature content with the intent to educate you all and start a conversation with yourself and others.For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1070Check out Emily’s website: www.sexwithemily.com The Power of Erotic Intelligence with Esther Perel: https://link.chtbl.com/732-podFind Lasting Love with Matthew Hussey: https://link.chtbl.com/811-pod
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is episode number 1070 with Emily Morris.
Pleasure is your birthright, and we all deserve to have pleasure.
And we prioritize so many other things, work, family, home, and usually we put ourselves last.
I believe that when we heal ourselves sexually, we will heal so many other parts of our life.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Journalist Franklin P. Jones said, love doesn't make the world go around love is what makes the
ride worthwhile and therapist esther perel said love is a verb not a permanent statement of
enthusiasm my guest today is emily morse who is a doctor of human sexuality host of the longest
running sexual wellness podcast,
Sex with Emily, and author of Hot Sex,
Over 200 Things You Can Try Tonight.
She is recognized as one of today's
most insightful sex educators,
challenging cultural taboos, misinformation,
and awkward sex talks to create a future
where people can deeply connect
and shamelessly embrace pleasure.
And just a quick disclaimer, this conversation covers mature content with the intent to educate
you all and start a conversation with yourself and others.
And in this episode, we discuss the number one thing that keeps people from thriving
in their sexual relationships, how to simplify our feelings about our desires, what men and
women need to understand about each other
in order to thrive in a sexual relationship, how to hack your sex life, what you should
do if you and your partner are struggling with intimacy, who cheats in relationships
more and why that happens, what conversations should we be having about sex with a new relationship,
and so much more.
Make sure to share this with someone you think would be inspired by it.
Just send them to lewishouse.com slash 1070 or copy and paste the link wherever you're
listening to this.
And a quick reminder, if this is your first time here, welcome to the School of Greatness.
Please click that subscribe button over on Apple Podcasts right now so you can be notified
of all of the other great content we have here, as well as giving us a rating and review, letting us know what
you enjoyed most about this episode.
Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Emily Morse.
Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest today.
Emily Morse is in the house.
Hi, Lewis.
Good to see you.
Good to see you, too.
It's been a while.
We met 10 years ago at the Museum of Sex.
I don't know if you remember.
I remember exactly the place we met, when it was.
I was living in New York City, and I got wrangled in to do this Bravo reality show about three
women who were relationship experts, but were struggling to
find love in their own life. Right. That was the concept. Exactly. Right. Do we practice what we
preach? Exactly. And a friend of mine was like, oh, just come out tonight. We're going to be like
hanging out. They might be filming, but just come and hang out as my friend. And right away,
she's like, oh, you should meet this girl,-huh and then she tried to like set me up right
away and i was like what am i getting into and then the producer was like yeah you're doing this
and then i was like what i thought she's coming to hang right and then and then it became a thing
and they're like we want you on the show and i was like i don't want to be on this show but you
became a whole subject line and then i used to say because i love lewis lewis you became a whole
like thread in the reality show it was not my intention i don't know if i would do a reality
show again but it was worth the experience it is it's television it's all that was my book
launch at the museum of sex it was that night yeah and so that's when i met you you've had an
incredible journey over the last decade of helping people understand sex sex with emily is your
whole thing that's it man it's been 15 years I started. This is my 15th anniversary of the podcast.
I started in 2005.
You were like, oh, OG.
OG, OG.
Definitely the first sex podcast.
And I just, yeah, 15th.
This is our 15th.
With 15 years of experience in doing this,
obviously more experience before that,
but 15 years of being in this space,
what's the number one thing that ruins relationships from keeping a thriving,
desirable sex life? What would you say you hear all the time?
The number one thing that keeps people from thriving with their sexual relationship is
communication. If couples do not talk about sex and they don't prioritize their sex life
and they just assume
it's always going to be how it was during the honeymoon phase, which is not realistic,
it's going to fall apart. What if it's uncomfortable to talk about? Well, that's the point. It's always
uncomfortable. See, here's why I will always have a job. People are always going to listen to the
podcast and call in with questions is because it's not comfortable for anyone to talk about sex
because we don't have role models of people talking about sex.
We had zero sex education.
Most people I speak to after 15 years had,
and if they did, it was inaccurate.
And we feel we somehow, there's all these,
there's all these things that we've learned about sex
that are untrue.
And one of those is like, if you have to talk about sex,
it means that there is a problem.
And that's when you should just call it quits because we get attached to those early phases
of the relationship. Or it's just like this explosion and fire connection. Yeah, it should
always be fireworks. It's never always fireworks. So everything, and if we don't talk about, and so
yes, it's always uncomfortable, but that's why I always talk about, I mean, a lot of what I do is
teach communication around sex. I mean, yes yes I can give you all the tips and all
the positions and all the things we could be here for 16 hours but at the
end of the day how you even have that conversation that's terrifying and hard
and uncomfortable and how does a woman who's been married for five plus years
to their husband have the conversation when the sex life is dying
or about to be dead.
So how does the woman approach it?
Okay, so I'll tell you my three T's,
timing, tone, and turf.
Tone is everything.
Tone is everything.
For women also.
For everyone.
Because here's the thing, let's start with tone.
You never initiate sex.
You never wanna have sex with me.
How come you don't, you know, go down on me?
Why don't you do all the, and so,
the second anyone does that, whether it's a business,
it's a business in the boardroom or the bedroom,
you're gonna get a defensive reaction.
So your tone has to be curious and open
and light and collaborative.
Like, you know know so our tone
is hey I realize we you know we talked about our intimate life our sex life
lately and I just really never talked about it babe so let's just you know
what are some things that I'm working for you whatnot and so that's part of it
I can circle back to the we can actually do a conversation so that's the tone the
tone is never aggressive, hostile, blaming.
Then you have the turf.
Now, this might surprise you because most people think that you should talk about it
when you're in the bedroom.
They're like, well, I just had sex and we're already in the bedroom.
But the bedroom, I believe, is sleeping and sex.
Not to have deep conversations, but we usually think, well, if sex is in my mind right now,
we should talk about it.
Like, wait till it's removed
so then you can actually have a productive conversation.
Because most people I talk to, I say,
they call in my show and they're like,
I've got this problem.
I'm like, okay, have you talked about it?
Yeah, I did.
I let her know that I want, where were you?
And it was after sex.
They don't remember our minds are in an altered state.
No, like because of the hormones and the chemicals that happen with arousal and orgasm. Where were you? It was after sex. They don't remember. Our minds are in an altered state. No.
Like because of the hormones and the chemicals that happen with arousal and orgasm.
So outside the bedroom in a place, here's some tips for this.
It's like you want to do it in a place where you are, maybe you're having dinner or you're having a glass of wine.
You are going, here's the other thing.
Since it's so awkward, do it when you're going for a walk.
Because this way, this is a great cheat.
You're not staring at each other, you're looking for.
Your eyes, yeah, you're not looking at each other
or in the car on a road trip.
I won't even make you look in your partner's eyes
at this moment, but then you can be like,
so babe, I realize we haven't talked about our sex life.
Right, so that's timing, tone, turf.
That's what you got, right, did I hit them all?
Timing is.
Oh, timing, no, I missed timing.
That was turf, yeah, yeah.
I got excited. Timing is, Oh, timing, no, I missed timing. That was Turk, yeah, yeah. I got excited.
Timing is, here's an easy way to remember.
Don't do it when you're halt, hungry, angry,
lonely, or tired.
You are chilling, you're hanging out,
you're in a really good space.
That's why being outside in nature,
you're going on a road trip, you're in a good place.
You're having dinner, you're having a meal,
the kids are sleeping. And I also want to tell people it is not a one-time conversation. You know, another one of
the myths around sex is like, oh, I had the, I had the sex talk. Like it's a, no. And now we all of
a sudden understand. Nothing. We know nothing. So that might be your first conversation is, you know
what I realized after these 10 years, five years we've been together, we haven't talked about it. And, and I, it's so, you know, as you hope you can agree,
it's, it's important. And I realized lately, I feel you, the, I feel, I feel that we haven't
made a lot of time for it. I'm not sure why, you know, I'm thinking, you know, I've been listening
to a lot of people like, I'm like, always always like blame me say you were listening to this podcast you know I was listening to sex with Emily and she said maybe we should
schedule sex and I can get into that too but like we should or maybe we should just you know I don't
want to be the only one driving this so tell me what could be a great solution or why do you think
we're not having sex I think it's because I've been we've been real I've been really tired I'm
overworked you know what do you think it is andworked. You know, what do you think it is?
And then you can problem solve.
But what do you think we could do?
We could schedule sex, we could plan things,
we could, you know, and then the challenge is
a lot of things could come up from there.
Well, you haven't been listening to me, you know.
So it's, this is why it's not a one-time conversation.
And then you say, you go from there.
What is the main reason that
men stop having sex with their partner after a long period of time and why is
the main reason that women would want to stop having sex with their partner after
a long period of time you know what's interesting Lewis is that we always want
to split this by gender and it would be so much easier if we could men do it
because of this and women do it because of this and what i found out is that there is there's you cannot divide this on gender lines
same thing same exact reasons yep so what's the reason so the reasons are i mean i could tell you
that there's some male skewing things for example you know somebody there is some truth to probably
what you're thinking is that you know men want variety or that it just gets to be sort of stale and it's not exciting anymore.
But I hear that from women all the time.
Really?
Yeah.
That they just sort of get bored with it.
But typically they stop having sex because it gets boring and then resentments build too.
So usually there's an underlying resentment.
Something's happened.
They've built up contempt.
Once you get to contempt, that's a really hard place to come back from.
But there's resentments.
Maybe it's, you know, they thought because one time they told their partner they wanted to initiate more and their partner didn't.
Well, then they hold that against them.
They use sex as a weapon.
They withhold it from their partner.
I'm not gonna, you know, we're not gonna have sex.
So there's the, there's the resentments.
There's the, just you get bored.
Cause you don't talk, you don't mix it up.
And you don't do different things.
It's also because some of the top reasons
why they're not having sex is lower, you know,
there's always a high desire partner in every relationship and a lower desire partner.
Someone who desires sex more?
There's always someone who wants more
and someone who wants less.
And unfortunately, those people never match up.
Really?
Mm-hmm.
So what do you mean?
I mean, that's why it's so hard.
You can't just like say,
there's a lot of different,
because there's always, it could be hormone.
Here's the thing.
Let me look back to that.
So you're saying there's always someone
who wants it more than someone else. at the same level no and that can switch
you're like i really wanted it but then i got really stressed so another reason why we don't
want sex typically doesn't even have to do with our partner it could be because we're really
stressed out with work what i hear a lot from men is when men are really so i'll give you some gender
things here when men are really stressed about money or finances they're worried about you know
work it's like they've been like castrated, honestly, because you think about
the masculine in many cases, I don't want to be, they're like, oh, I have to make a living. I have
to be the man. And then if you are, you got laid off from work, you don't know how you're going to
pay the mortgage. Sex is a lot, you are shut down. Sex could be the last thing on your mind.
You don't feel sexually charged. You don't desire yourself.
Well, a lot of it has to do with the reason why.
Okay, so another reason why we don't want sex is because we're not feeling good about
ourselves.
So if you look at it holistically, yeah, it could be about an emotional reason, a psychological.
It could be physiological, biological, your hormones.
You know, for women, our hormones change over time after childbirth.
If you're on certain medications,
that could also be a reason why we don't want sex.
So whenever I dig deeper,
it's typically not even about your partner per se.
There's just always so many factors.
It's like saying, you know, when you,
why are, you know, do you feel healthy right now?
I mean, it's the same thing.
Like, oh, well, my exercise is great, but my diet isn't.
Or I'm really working out, but I'm not lifting weights or, you know, so it's like sex.
It's like a, it's a puzzle that you have to look at all the elements. It's really hard.
How do we simplify? How do we just relax and allow the desire to flow for the rest of our life?
I think that's a great question. And I think how we simplify it is we keep talking about it.
We keep checking up on it. We keep saying, so where are we at now? And you set realistic
expectations. So I'll give you an example. Like when a woman gives, let's talk, I'm sure a lot
of your listeners have children or they've gone through this or women in perimenopause or just
hormonal things. So let's say you wanted sex all the time before you got pregnant. Then you have a baby. And for many
women, their desire doesn't come back. Now they go, they go to the doctor, they come home from
the hospital and the doctor typically says, oh, you'll be fine. You can have sex in six weeks.
So much of the medical system of how we treat women and women's health is so inaccurate. You
come in six weeks. Yeah. Maybe you'll feel a little bit better physically, but your hormones are all over the place. You're exhausted. You just birthed a human
out of your vagina and you're supposed to get all sexy and slinky and want sex. It's just,
so that could be a thing. So then even setting expectations. So I think another important thing
is you talk about it, but you also set expectations like right now, babe, I am not, I'm not feeling it.
Let's just say that I'm not gonna,
it's not gonna be as frequent.
But also people, the way we define sex is through intercourse
like PVSEC, I'm talking about heterosexual couples.
Penis goes into vagina.
But sometimes we dismiss intimacy with our partner.
So sometimes it could be, let's just, you know,
let's cuddle, like I'll give you a background for 20 minutes
and you'll give me a background for 20 minutes
and then we'll see where it goes.
Or we take sex off the table for a week
and we're like, we just sort of do it
like we did in high school.
We kind of bring back that energy and that connection.
So it doesn't always flow.
And I think the problem is it will never flow just like your health,
just like nutrition, your spiritual practice, your religious practice.
It is the same exact thing. And so the bill of goods that we are sold that this perfect sex life
looks a certain way. And it's you're always hot, you're always turned on, you're always want to
rip your partner's clothes off, doesn't exist anywhere for anybody on the planet,
not even me. And I've been studying this for 15 years. And I started this because I was like,
I don't ever want to be in a relationship where the sex, it just seems horrible to be with someone that you don't want to have sex with. And I thought, how do I unpack? How do I figure that
out? And so now I know what to do when I'm in a relationship, but I still sometimes don't
want it all the time. So let's just knock down that. Let's just say to think
that it's always going to be in flow and you're always going to want to have sex with your partner
at the same rate, the same time, the same positions. Your desires are going to be the
same as your partner. It's just setting yourself up for failure. Never going to happen. Never.
So it's learning to be flexible, understanding, having greater communication with your partner,
not having this fixed mindset that it's got gotta be a certain way all the time.
Right.
Otherwise you're gonna let yourself down.
Yeah, set yourself free.
Do you think, is sex more physical,
psychological, or spiritual in your mind?
I think it's all of those.
And when we think it's only one thing,
that's another way we get into trouble
because we don't, I mean, yes, it's physical,
but for many people, it's a spiritual experience. It's all about connection. And here's the other thing. When we talk about
communication, I don't just mean like, hey, let's talk about sex. Why aren't we having it? It's like,
what are your desires? What turned you on? What are you into? What's the most, you know,
great place for couples to start is what's the most, the three most memorable times we've had
sex? I'll write it down and then you write it down not with other people because that gets messy but in our relationship five years ago in
that car with that other girl so hot that girl went down he was crazy oh my god you're like oh
that wasn't you that's bad but once you start to kind of unpack maybe i said i had a woman call
into my show a few weeks ago and she said to me it was very similar i was married for 15 years and we
don't have sex we have kids i mean this is literally the question so i'm glad we're talking
about this and she said when i asked her i said well what's the most memorable time you had sex
she said it was like in 2000 it was new year's eve and we were on the dance floor and we had
we had sex on the dance floor and she was like are we i'm? I'm like, that's hot. I'm like, okay.
Wait, with other people around?
Yeah, they were like, Pete was like, you know,
New Year's Eve and busy, packed, people couldn't see.
Yeah, that's hot.
You're probably not gonna match that with three kids
like living in Ohio.
Like that's not gonna happen again.
However, what I got from that,
and this is just scratching the surface was,
oh, so you like the unexpected.
Maybe you have a little bit of a voyeur thing in you, or you like people to watch you, or you like to be watched.
Or to not almost be caught or something. Yes, to be caught. The fear of being caught is a big one
for people. Really? So even just those kernels of the three most memorable, maybe it's for a lot
of people, it's on vacation. Well, it's not, you know, that's why we all love vacation sex. So
our like sexual DNA,, all the different sex things
that we've done, that will tell us,
or just telling what those sex acts is like,
the DNA of your sex life.
It's like what's worked, what hasn't.
And the challenge is that typically,
we don't often match with our partner.
And this is why I would love for people
to have all of these conversations about sex
before you commit, or before you,
before you commit would be ideal,
before you get married.
Because you're like, oh, I want penetration.
I want more, I'm kinkier.
I want, you know, so the three things are, you know,
some people want more romantic, connected sex.
Like, you know, maybe your partner says
the best sex we ever had was when we were staring into each other's eyes
and we did that tantric breathing together.
And then you're like,
I liked it when I, from behind,
when the lights were on, you know,
and when we were watching porn together.
And neither, there's no right answer here.
But then how do people with disparate sexual desires
and needs come together?
It's so hard.
It's possible.
It's very possible. It's very hard. It's possible. It's very possible, it's very hard.
It's just very hard.
It's almost like there's a lot of people
that get into a relationship through attraction,
they have this instant connection,
and they realize after six months
that they have different love languages.
Yes, the love languages are huge.
The thing you love to create,
maybe you like to share words of affirmation,
but your partner doesn't do that in return,
and you don't feel the love in return after a period of time
when things kind of wear off in the honeymoon phase,
you start to be resentful or whatever it may be
because they're not giving you what you want.
And it's not their come from.
It's not their normal way of being.
Right.
So that's hard.
But then you're in a relationship, and you love each other,
and you try to make it work.
It sounds like you've got to understand each other's sex sex. Yes. So let's talk about that for a minute
So I think every couple a great thing is to do take the love language quiz first
Also, I have something on my site called it's at sex with Emily calm. It's the yes. No, maybe list
This is a game changer
So I think it's you take the love language quiz because usually we give love the way we want. We give love the way we want to receive it. And then that can get messy.
It's a list that has literally like 80 sex, sex options. So it goes from kissing to cuddling,
to spanking, to watching porn, to mutual masturbation, just everything that you've
thought of sexually down this list. And it's a game. fill it out is it a yes for you is it a no or is it a maybe what a great converse because i
always try to have hacks for people so they can sort of because the conversation's so awkward i
always have all these exercises for couples so just do this together and then you're like oh
you want to be spanked i didn't know that i wanted that as well or you like to cuddle we haven't been
cuddling you know what are your yeses Let's start with all the yeses. Okay.
Let's do more of the yeses. You know, what are your, your maybes? Well, let's just talk about
the maybe here for a minute. How, why is it a maybe? And it just gets the conversation going.
And then you have it all laid out and you see like, where can we at least align? And then where
can we negotiate? Right. what about the nose what if
someone's yeses or someone else's nose that that's gonna take a lot of work it's like the love
language it's some of them are easier than others but if your partner's like acts of service or time
some things are just hard you're like oh god acts of service can't i just pay someone to do this
my girl loves acts of service i don't say that's hard for her. I guess I'm speaking for, yes.
It's so much time and energy
to make you feel loved through an act
when I normally would never do this myself for anything.
I wouldn't do it for myself.
Exactly.
I don't even wash my car or whatever,
fill the tank with gas, whatever.
But I learned the hack from like hiring people
to do certain things.
Hire people to do things.
But it's just, and that works,
but it's still like, man, it's a full-time job.
It is a full-time job.
Help being there for someone's love language if it's not the same thing. Yeah, it's still like man it's a it's a full-time job it's a full-time job help being
there for someone's love language if it's not the same thing yeah it's hard well how great when you
match up at least one of them because usually we have two yeah we have one and then a primary one
so hopefully there's one we have a lot of we have a lot of mutual things also but it's like
if you have a your yeses or someone else's nose that's gonna be really hard yeah does everyone
your listeners you talked about the loving just before because it's such a no's, that's going to be really hard. Yeah. Your listeners, you've talked about the love languages before.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
It's such a great, no, it is.
It's great.
And that's a great starting point for couples, too,
because for couples who have never,
like, let me tell you something, Lewis.
The majority of couples that I hear from,
and even individuals,
they've never talked about their sex life.
Not only that, but they've never even thought about love languages.
They're at a standstill. They've never had therapy. And so I think taking a love language quiz, figuring that
out can be a great place just to start and peel back a layer and be like, oh, you want compliments.
Okay. What's the conversation starter that any person should have with their partner within the
first couple of months about sex? Okay. Maybe you've had sex a few times already. Maybe you're
about to have sex.
In order to see if this is actually gonna work.
To give you a chance of being great.
God in my world.
What's a conversation that's uncomfortable but needed?
Well, you should always talk about protection
and if you're safe and you've been tested,
you should do that before you have sex.
Just have that conversation.
And right now with like COVID,
it's like we're all talking about tested.
Why don't you just talk about,
have you gotten tested?
Oh great, you don't have COVID and how about STDs?
So that's one thing.
And then I think it's just about how important is,
here's a great question.
How important is sex to you?
I'm someone who really wants to prioritize pleasure.
It's really important to me to stay connected to my partner.
I love touch.
My love language is touch.
Yeah, me too.
How are you?
Yeah, and that's a hard one.
If your partner isn't touched, that's another one that's super challenging.
Really hard.
Because I'm like, if you were not touching often and all the time.
You're not going to feel loved.
You're going to be resentful.
It's not going to work.
Yeah.
They could be buying me gifts and they could be doing extra service.
I don't give a shit, but touch me, hold me.
So that's hard. But just to say they're like, oh, service. I don't give a, but touch me, hold me. So that's hard, but just to say they're like,
oh no, I don't really like, so if they say,
oh, sex is, yeah, pleasure, what do you mean by that?
Or God, and then they get really uncomfortable,
or maybe they shame you for talking about it,
or they make you feel bad, or like, what do you mean?
I believe that if you have to talk about sex,
the relationship's not gonna work.
And I'm not saying you run away from that person,
because let me just, I can't say this enough, Louis, that most people haven't even talked about it or thought about it. A lot of
times it's because they, the people don't have a lot of education or they haven't done research.
So maybe their partner says, well, I've heard if we have to talk about it, there's a problem.
Lots of people think that it's just simply not true. So if you're somebody who's with someone
and you really like them, but that, then you could say, okay, well, I listen, a lot of people listen to my show together,
they'll listen to my podcast or give them some literature, however they learn and say,
the truth is couples who communicate about sex are actually a lot more satisfied. And when the
most couples who don't, the sex is going to go down the tubes. Really? If they don't talk about
it. Yeah. So the more free or the more comfortable you are talking about it, the more comfortable you
are. Listen, the couples who are not having it, the better it's gonna be probably.
Listen, the couples who are not having a problem with sex,
they're doing great, but when it becomes a problem,
which it will if you never talk about it,
it takes over the entire relationship.
It's kind of like the 80-20 rule for sex.
Like if it's a problem, it takes over.
I don't know, is that sort of, you know?
It's like the elephant in the room
that no one's talking about,
and it's why isn't our connection good,
and intimacy's not good.
But no one's willing to talk about it.
No one's willing to talk about it
because they don't know where to start.
They don't actually know the problem.
And a lot of us, and I actually do hear this
from vulva owners or women more often,
is that when there's a problem with sex, we blame ourselves.
So we think he hasn't initiated sex lately.
Oh, I gained weight. He saw my stretch
marks. I'm not sexy. He's with somebody else. There's something wrong with me. And so therefore
I need to fix it. When if she did, when if I just said, you know, to the partner or someone's other
partner, so what lately I feel like we haven't been having sex as much. Is there anything going
on? Cause I still deserve, Oh babe, I'm glad you brought it up. I've been so stressed with work.
I mean like, let's just solve it that way.
But we're so afraid of talking about it that we're going to be confirmed what we believe is true, that we are not lovable, which is ultimately the greatest fear on earth is that we will not be loved and abandoned.
So we don't bring it up.
And then we also have shame.
Like, I should always be having sex all the time and something's wrong with me.
And then we also don't have a model of people talking about it.
So we don't know what to do.
Yeah, it's not really talked about that much at all.
Except for you.
Except for me.
A few people.
A few people.
I hope more people are.
I know.
Who cheats more in relationships, men or women?
Honestly, I used to think men, all the things.
But it's fairly close right now.
I think that they're like neck and neck, 50-50.
I think Esther Perel said that just as many women
she's hearing in her work are cheating on their husbands
as much as men are.
Yeah, and in my unscientific opinion...
They just don't get caught.
It's women don't get caught.
How is that?
Because we're just better at it.
How do you sneak?
How do you lie?
How do you hold back the lie, the guilt, the...
How do you not... Some people... I just How do you hold back the lie, the guilt? How do you not?
I just think that women are, I don't know.
That is a great question.
It's almost like women can always tell when their man's not.
Always.
We have that women's intuition.
But men are maybe sloppier.
I don't know.
This is just my, I don't know how, and women, I don't know if they get away with it, but women, they kind of do. We just cover our tracks. I don't know how, and women, I don't know that they get away with it, but women,
they kind of do. We just cover our tracks. I don't know. But I often, I know a lot of women,
this is again, just friends or listeners, but it is 50-50 and I can't answer why men get caught
more than women. This is again, I'd love to see a study on this, but this is my hunch that men maybe, it's always about the phone these days.
Although, I was watching, what's it called, the show that was in the 50s about advertising?
Oh, my God.
Mad Men.
Mad Men.
And I remember there was a scene where he was cheating, and she got the phone bill, like back in the 50s, and it was like all these numbers.
So it's always been the phone. But now the phone can pop up on in the 50s, and it was like all these numbers she didn't know. So it's always been the phone.
But now the phone can pop up on the iPad and the messages and all the things.
Maybe the man's not checking the woman's phone as much
as the woman's checking the man's phone.
Yeah, I'm trying to think of what it is.
I honestly think that women, okay, again, there are men like this too,
all genders, but women are really good at like reading.
We can read your facial expressions. Or we're intuitive intuitive or what do you mean you didn't come up or what oh you're
i don't know we're like we're like the scientists questioning it yeah and i think that that it does
show a little bit that you know and there's also these are also i don't know how conclusive these
studies are but women when women cheat like women leave the relationship they're more likely to
already have someone.
That men don't often leave until their female partner pushes it to end, like in a marriage or something.
Yeah, I just, I hate to talk in like stereotypes like this because I think it's a case-by-case basis. But I do think that cheating is, yeah, common for everybody.
And it's not necessarily because the sex isn't great.
Again, there's a lot of other reasons why people cheat.
And what I talk about a lot is what I would love to see is,
I think monogamy works for so many people.
Monogamy is great.
Till death do us part, great.
We're together forever.
But for many people, it just isn't.
And I know, and people think, oh, that's so crazy.
If my partner was sleeping with someone else, I'd insane well it's not for you but for some people they they they don't think
it's okay or they don't know how it would work but I know a lot of people in really long-term
open relationships and it doesn't mean just go bang someone honey I'm not coming home tonight
I met someone really great at the bar it doesn't work like that it's like okay so these are my
because okay let's go back to the yes no
maybe maybe i really want to be spanked or tied up and you're just you're like i don't feel great
about that i grew up in a home where there was a lot of i'm like okay how would you feel if once a
week or once a month once a quarter like i think everyone needs a sex we'll talk about that business
plan for your sex life but once a quarter i went out and i did this thing and then what do you want fulfilled and you just sort of have a and the people I know in open relationships
And there's all there's like swingers and there's threesomes, and there's just all different things
They practice this rigorous communication and really talk about everything and they don't sure they get jealous
But then they sort of learn to sort of transcend that because something happens called compersion.
Compersion, what's that?
Compersion is when I actually get pleasure because I love you so much that you had pleasure.
No way.
Really?
Absolutely.
This is what happens.
So it's like transcending jealousy into compersion.
Compersion.
I've never heard of that.
Your pleasure.
I love you so much and I trust you and I'm glad you went and got spanked tonight.
I'm glad you went and, you know.
That's like a whole other elevated human right there.
Not even, yeah.
How does someone, I mean, I feel like on both sides, men and women, it'd be hard for men to allow that to happen to their female partner.
men to allow that to happen to their female partner. And I think the fear of, I won't speak in every woman, but I think the fear of abandonment for a lot of women is high. And if you're going to
go off and have this crazy wild experience with some younger, hotter, whatever girl,
like, will you still want to be with me? Is it safe and secure?
That happens for many people. But I should also clarify that when these open relationships work, they don't start open.
You are on a really solid place.
I have so many people call into my show and say, we've been together 10 years and we've opened it up.
In the last five years, we've been swinging.
Most people that I know or that call in, my listeners, they had a really solid foundation.
And they talked about it for months.
They have rules, they have boundaries.
Like there's no kissing, there's no sleepovers.
If you're with somebody, it's only once.
And since you, and you have a contract essentially.
Is that the way it works for most?
No, there's no most.
I hear everything.
Some people want the person that they want,
the same person.
Really?
Some people don't, they want,
it can't be anyone in our town. It can only be when when you're traveling it can only be our neighbor and nobody else it can only
there's no kissing you can never sleep over you can only sleep over but then don't come home
because you know i mean it's wow but you get to be you might and when you start at an open
relationship journey you and you get to um just like it can be messy at the beginning but you're
like oh that didn't feel good to me but you you are, like I said, you're practicing, you both want this for whatever reason
you came to, because we want more variety or actually turns me on to see you with another
person. Like a lot of, and you'd be surprised, probably your neighbors. There's people that
you wouldn't believe likely are into it. A lot of men like watching their female partners with
another, so many Lewis.
And I'll bet you
a lot of your listeners
are like,
yeah,
I'm into it.
It's called cuckolding.
It's called cuckolding
and it's,
and it's way,
I mean,
I'm telling you,
people all over the country,
they call it to my show
and Midwest
and all over.
Yep.
I mean,
I'm from Michigan.
I know I have a lot
of listeners like we,
cuckolding is the act
of a man,
typically a man,
who gets his primary turn on
or one of his main turn ons
is watching his wife
or his partner
have sex with another man.
I know.
Not for me either.
Not for you.
It's in their DNA.
It's like,
this is a turn on for me.
It's crazy.
There's a lot of different reasons.
So I hear it all.
And I,
you know, the thing about my show is like, no, zero judgment.
I've heard everything, I'm open,
as long as it's safe and consensual.
But I think that, so going back to why we cheat,
it's like, maybe we have a deep desire
and either we're too afraid to bring it up
or we brought it up and our partner was like,
no, I will never-
Allow that.
I will never allow it.
And then you're like, well, this is a part of my core erotic blueprint this is my my erotic theme this is what
this is a really main source of my arousal and you're saying no you're shutting it down it's
really hard and then so how do you live with that if you want to be with someone you love this person
you want to create a family and a life together. You want to live by, you want to make them happy, but you also want to make yourself
happy.
How do you do both?
Well, there's so many different pieces of the puzzle.
Is it okay to shut down a desire?
Yes.
If you're okay with it.
To be with someone else and you say, okay, I'm going to accept this.
It's not acceptable in this relationship.
All the time.
So I'm going to kill this part of me.
Is it a kill or it's like a let go like you know this desire yeah yeah no
because that kill is like oh it was a deep part of me but if it's like you
know what if I never have sex with another person outdoors right I could
probably live with that because this person is all these other things but
it's usually black that black and white.
Yeah, the riches of the connection and the love.
And the relationship and what we've created.
It's not worth ruining.
It's not worth ruining.
For this fantasy once a year or something, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Interesting.
But things can work if we, I just want people to know what is possible.
And again, none of this is for everybody, but it's not prescriptive, but monogamy isn't for everybody.
That's why half the people cheat.
That's why half the marriages end in divorce.
Even though we're delaying marriage and getting married later.
And sex is often an underlying, like if you don't still have that connection and chemistry, even couples, and couples are going to go through it.
Like I think as long as you're, you know, it's not always going to be great.
Relationships look like this, especially long-term relationships, but the couples I know that make
it work, they always come back to, they have, they still are having sex. Like they're really,
cause typically maybe sometimes there's one person who doesn't want it as, you know, like I said, but
they make it happen or they don't want to have as much sex, but they, they figure it out because
they know that that is the glue. And people will tell you differently,
like, oh, we're best friends.
We've decided we never need to have sex again.
And we're just gonna be,
we love our family, love our house.
If they're not having sex,
eventually that will catch up with them
and they will be miserable.
Or one person will want that desire.
Yeah. Something like that.
They'll want it.
We have to, we are sexual beings.
You people having sex, I mean,
I have like an 80 year old call me
in the show the other night,
and he's got three women and who she grew up.
I mean, it's a different world right now.
You know, my mother watched my masterclass
and she's 77 and she's like,
you know, Emily, watching your masterclass,
I was really inspired.
I actually shaved my leg.
She's been my stepdad for 35 years.
She's like, I realized I've been kind of lazy during quarantine and I shaved my legs. I'm like, mom, I'm so glad you were
inspired because we always need to remember that that's, you know, they're very happy. They have a
wonderful relationship, but you know, he's 85, she's 70, but it still is important because then
otherwise we're roommates. What's the craziest story you've heard
in the last 15 years of doing this work?
Where you were just, it shocked you.
You're like, no, this is, like you've heard everything,
nothing's off limits, you're welcoming people,
sharing crazy stuff all the time
to make it more normalized.
So what is the one or two things that come to mind that was like,
wow, I get asked this question. And then whenever I get asked it, I say, I really need a better
answer for it because to me, nothing is crazy, but I can tell you something that happened. And
again, I usually, this happened recently. Um, do you mean like a crazy sex act or like, well,
here's something. Okay. So there's a couple, this woman called into my show and she said,
thing okay so there's a couple this woman called into my show and she said she had a crush because a lot what i love about what i do is because i people can call in and then they call back and
like well hey this worked this didn't work so like we're all like the community we're all in it
together sort of helping each other so she called and she said i don't know what to do i have a
crush on my this is kind of we're gonna to, on my ex-husband's wife.
A woman on the woman.
She's like,
I just,
we have this connection.
We spend a lot of time together
because she's essentially
raising my kids.
She's been with my husband
for years.
we're at the park together
with my kids.
We're this.
Yeah,
and I think she feels it too.
That is crazy.
And she said,
and I even told my husband,
because she's remarried.
She's like, I even told my husband that we have a thing and he said, and I even told my husband, because she's remarried.
She's like, I even told my husband that we have a thing.
And he said, you know, he was kind of okay, but like thought it would be, you know.
So then she calls back a few months later.
Oh, so then, yeah, she calls back a few months later and says, you'll never believe what's happening.
And this happened during quarantine.
She said.
Don't tell me they both got divorced.
We're in a throuple the wife
the girlfriend left her ex left her husband her ex-husband and now the three of them the husband the the wife and then the ex-wife because she said to me on the first call she said the ex-husband's
wife left the husband to go for his ex-wife so the two ex-wives are now together and the husband and it was this might sound like the new So the two ex-wives are now together. And the husband.
And it was, this might sound like.
The new husband, not the ex-husband.
Yes, the new husband.
The ex-husband's alone and sad.
Oh my gosh.
He's alone and sad.
No way.
And the other crazy thing is that the woman was like, I feel this woman that I have a crush on, she's married to my ex.
And this is a whole nother show, but she's like the same.
My ex-husband is an asshole, or a jerk,
you know, everyone thinks that,
but he's doing the same things to her.
They're almost bonded together
because of the experience, the shared experience.
Right, it's like trauma bonding.
Because people do, listen,
we're all gonna repeat patterns
if we don't work on ourselves.
We don't heal it.
We don't heal it, you gotta heal the trauma,
that's just gonna keep going.
So he was controlling, he was OCD, judgmental, all the things.
So she would complain to the other girl about what the ex-husband was doing to her.
And they were like, yeah, he did that to me.
And they were connecting.
And they were like, oh.
It was over a period of, yeah, exactly.
Or just, yeah, it was over a period of a few years.
So, I mean, at the end, I'm like, yeah, then the ex-husband needs to go do some work, you know?
Anyway, that was a pretty entertaining,
that was a pretty unique scenario.
And the new husband was cool with the throuple.
Yeah, see, this is what I'm telling you, Lewis,
that people are more open to things that you think.
Were the women having a relationship by themselves?
No, the man sometimes joins,
but they all have an arrangement.
They sleep in the same bed.
This is crazy.
This is not the first call I've gotten.
Not about the throuple as a whole you know anything wow yeah i mean i know it sounds yeah that was
pretty like oh but we're like following along with her journey and i'm like she called back six months
later and this is what happened so i think of what i hear that's but to me lewis everything is like
i've heard everything.
I don't think that any people, what I love is that people feel safe to call me.
And it's like, it's all okay as long as it's, you know, people have certain, okay, so here's someone called in.
This isn't crazy, but you just might find this interesting.
This was last night.
Her husband has a haircutting fetish.
A fetish is something different than a fantasy or a kink that's required for arousal.
Like people have a latex fetish or a foot fetish.
Like it's almost like.
So you need the fetish in order to be aroused.
But you won't be sexually aroused without it?
I will not be at my best arousal state
unless there is, I can't, I can't massage your feet.
I gotta massage your feet.
They have to be somehow involved in our arousal.
Otherwise, maybe you'll be turned on, but not fully turned on.
Not fully turned on.
That's a fetish.
That's like a, and you can be like, oh, I kind of like feet.
Sometimes we do that.
So that's the difference.
So this woman called in, she's been with her husband for 17 years.
I believe she was in Ohio.
And she said- Yeah, L.A. l.h yeah i know right from michigan
right exactly so she said um haircut fetish and the problem is we're in quarantine and i'm not
getting my haircut as much and my hair was really short and now it's growing and i like it and my
sisters like it but i love my husband so much what do i do and it was just
interesting i had i had heard that one once before but like she's like the hair she said but i see it
he cuts it he he well usually someone else cuts it but he comes and she goes and i see he's never as
turned on as he is when i'm getting a haircut oh my gosh so she can't grow her hair out she can't
grow her hair she's like what do you like buy wigs i said why don't you go buy a bunch of wigs and
you could also take it to the next place
and be like, not only am I blonde tonight
in this long hair,
but I'm also going to dress a part
and I'm going to become my alter ego.
Like, these are things that couples do
to like kind of,
it's kind of hot to wear a wig.
I once had a woman tell me
she was working at a department store.
I think I was like somewhere like in New York
buying something.
Because everybody, as you can imagine,
opens up when they hear what I do.
They're like, oh, let me tell you something.
And she was probably 65 years old in Bloomingdale's working the makeup counter,
and I was buying something, and I said, I'm going out to a conference or something.
She said, what do you do?
I said, oh, I'm a sex doctor, sex therapist.
She said, honey, I got the best advice for you.
I said, what, what?
Because I always wanted to know.
She's like, wear a wig.
And I was like, hmm.
And what she meant, what she was saying is,
we all crave variety.
We all want something different.
It's gonna happen after a while.
If I give you this chicken every single night for dinner,
you'd be like, can we please order a pizza?
And so if every night,
and then you just go to surprise your partner,
and you're wearing something different,
and you sort of plan to role play
and all this might sound kind of silly
or oh we would laugh, fine, laugh.
Sex is fun and funny and then you get into a different,
maybe you could, maybe some couples or people called in
and said yeah, I took your advice,
I dressed as something different
and I actually was able to channel
my insecurities that I usually have.
I felt different, I felt sexier,
I felt like I could take control because I wasn't me.
And my partner could sort of connect with me on a different level.
And so these are just, I have so many of these different hacks.
It's different for everyone.
But, you know, just don't give up on it, you know?
Don't give up.
What about if someone's struggling with orgasm?
How do we not force an orgasm?
Which gender?
Women or men?
Both.
What if both are like, I'm just not able to have an orgasm anymore.
It's harder and harder.
And no matter what I try, are they overthinking it?
I don't think that sex should be all about orgasm.
We place way too much emphasis on orgasm.
I mean, it's important.
But what I've found is there's a lot of different reasons why
we can't orgasm.
And that's also, there's like 20 different reasons.
It could be you're on medication, you're stressed out.
You only can orgasm when you're alone, but when with your partner, you haven't showed
them what you like yet.
You have pain for, for, there's a lot of different reasons.
You have shame.
You have shame.
You have pain and shame.
And so if you can't orgasm, which...
Now, can't orgasm or like... Okay, so it is different for the genders.
So we could break it down.
I mean, some women orgasm...
Like, I don't think there's anyone who can't have an orgasm.
I think we can always have an orgasm, but we just haven't gotten there yet.
But very few people can't have an orgasm. I think we can always have an orgasm, but we just haven't gotten there yet. But very few people can't anymore.
Maybe they can't during penetration,
but I have to say this every day,
and people are shocked that only 20% of women
orgasm during penetration.
That's crazy.
20%.
And it's because your penis is nowhere near clitoris,
and there's not enough arousal and foreplay,
and there's not enough touching,al and foreplay and there's not enough touching.
Or maybe my love language is words and I need you to tell me all these things about me and I need you to slowly kiss my neck and warm me up.
But when we just go right for penetration, no way will I have an orgasm.
And most women orgasm from mouths and fingers and hands and toys, not a penis.
So, and then for men who can't orgasm, it's typically other things.
It's usually, do you want me to go off on it all?
Sure.
Okay.
I mean, I think, you know, this is like, men can't orgasm because...
Is it loss of testosterone?
Is it stress?
Everything.
Testosterone, stress.
As men get older, they lose testosterone.
But it can also be because
they're used to masturbating to porn. So when they're alone, they use a certain grip.
If they don't have the same tension.
Yeah. Doesn't work.
Yeah. But you can figure it. There's hacks to everything, Lewis. You can hack your sex life.
What is mindful masturbation?
what is mindful masturbation mindful masturbation mindful masturbation is a great practice for discovery and learning to um slow everything down something you do yourself or with someone else you
could do it either way that's mutual i love mutual how about a mutual mindful masturbation
mutual masturbation is the next thing there you go um mindful masturbation mutual masturbation next thing there you go mindful masturbation what you said the fourth that was exactly right there you
go right down the so why I love about mindful masturbation is you actually go
into it with a goal of not orgasming the goal is to explore the goal is to take
time you take half hour whatever is, you lock the door,
you know, the kids aren't coming in your roommate and you just get curious and you set the atmosphere
like you're on a date with yourself, whatever it is that gets you in the mood. You light candles,
you play music and you're just like, I'm going to get curious about my body and what feels good to
me because we have so many nerve endings on our body
that we don't even, we all know the primary erogenous zones,
but there's like the nape of your neck,
you know, your inner thigh, your, you know,
just inner elbow, like for many women.
Like there's just, for men.
Yeah, like right here, like this part,
can feel really good to touch.
And then you just sort of get curious
and you breathe a lot, there's a lot of breath work and you breathe. I mean, breath and meditate,
breath and masturbation. That's why I say meditate, masturbate, manifest.
But there's a lot of things that are breathing that are so important with sex. You just kind
of breathe and you just sort of pay attention to all the sensations on your body. You essentially
tease yourself or edge yourself. And then you just sort of, the goal of it is to be mindful
and curious about what feels good to you. Now I'm cool if you've orgasms then you just sort of, the goal of it is to be mindful and curious
about what feels good to you.
Now, I'm cool if you have orgasms and you go for it.
But the great thing about it is
a lot of us just assume
that the way we orgasm now is the only way.
Like, I only had an orgasm this way
and I'm never going to try anything else.
And this is a great way to discover,
like, can I have a nipple orgasm?
How does it feel?
What's a nipple orgasm?
A nipple orgasm.
Very common.
But a lot of women don't even know they can have it.
It's just having, like, pleasure on the nipples.
Yeah.
And you have an orgasm.
Yeah.
Zero arousal, zero touching in the genital.
Yeah.
In fact, there's the sensory,
the same region of your brain,
it's called the sensory cortex, the genital, what is it called? Oh my God, my brain,
the something sensory cortex of your brain. So your clitoris and your nipple, we didn't even
say clitoris yet. Your clitoris and your nipples are both, they both send brainwave patterns to
the same part of the brain. So your arousal is stimulated this part of the brain.
So it is similar to, so the nipples and the clitoris.
So sometimes you could do both at the same time.
But women don't often, they think it's not possible.
They think they can only have one orgasm.
The majority of women can be multi-orgasmic.
Really?
Yeah.
How many other places can women have an orgasm?
Nipple?
Nipple?
Is this allowed for your show?
You're gonna cut this out?
We've never talked about this stuff, but where else?
Dude, well, this is good.
Yeah, opening up.
Listen, people need to know.
Listen, my whole mission is to get people
to prioritize their pleasure
and liberate the conversation around sex.
So, this is it.
We need more pleasure. let's talk about it
nipple orgasm yes i mean there's some women and they might even know this but then their partner
maybe they never explored on their own during mindful masturbation or and use some lube get
get just get curious about it and maybe after you already have an orgasm you can then your nipples
be more sensitive and then you can have another orgasm i mean i'm not saying it's for every woman but they're pretty
common there's a nipple orgasm there is an internal orgasm an external orgasm there are what's the
difference between internal external well some people call it the g-spot oh you mean in gotcha
internal sorry for men prostate the prostate is i'm telling you for men you can have an orgasm
through the prostate oh yeah oh my god very sensitive huh yes
no lewis it's like a lot of men like i know it's for exiting makes me gay like a sex act does not
make you gay what happens is the the prostate it's kind of like the the male g-spot and it's an
internal there's kind of like the same way you find the internal,
we could get back to the G-spot, but for many men using a finger, using a toy,
and just exploring there, they have the most intense orgasms.
Really?
Yes.
You didn't, oh, I should have brought you an anal toy.
Okay, there you go.
So, yeah, and so what I love is in the last 15 years like what i've seen is it
used to be like straight men were like nope nope and then now they're kind of like oh i hear what
you're saying yeah they can help men who have premature ejaculation or men who can't orgasm
like that's always going to do it and the men that i know that have experienced it
they're just like it's next level orgasm. It blows their mind.
So your partner can use a fit, yeah.
What's more of a challenge for most men from your understanding and your show and experience?
Premature ejaculation or unable to ejaculate or taste?
Delayed ejaculation.
Delayed ejaculation.
That's what we call it.
What happens?
What's more frequent?
I would say I hear about premature ejaculation more often what is premature is this
in a minute minute or less a minute or less yep i don't even know how you do that yeah good so this
isn't your problem yeah it's it's really hard especially with the same person for years no
i was with someone i i wonder if this is why i do what i do but when like a very long time ago 20 years
ago before i did this because i didn't this was my like second career i i was with somebody who's
like premature ejaculator for like two years yeah it's very common every couple minutes
less than two minutes shut up yeah every time for two years i know i was focused on other things i
wasn't as i wasn't where i'm not i mean i was like i didn't know yeah well so it's very common so what was your question about it why do you mean
oh is it why or how what is more common premature or delayed is more common really but i hear more
and more delayed lately too and delayed's trickier because they just don't know why but sometimes
they can when they're you can solve all of it you can get through all of it we can get into all of
it what's the strategy guides um the strategy of it if you want. What's the strategy?
The strategy for which one?
For premature, what's the strategy that a man and a woman could take on to support it delaying 5 to 10, 15 minutes?
Okay, there's a few things.
And we have a great downloadable on our site that's like a guide to this.
It's called Guide to Edging.
And this goes back to mindful masturbation for a minute.
Because for many men, to what I would tell men
who are premature ejaculators, I would say,
do some mindful masturbation, meaning you need to start
to understand your ejaculatory control.
So when you're masturbating,
because usually men who are premature ejaculators
don't have the same problem when they're alone.
So one thing I say is to edge yourself, meaning-
When you feel it, hold it back.
Hold it back. You get to a 10. So 10 is orgasm. One is I'm sleeping, whatever. Then you get to an
eight and then you bring it back down. And then you keep doing that. So you get to sort of start
to understand...
It's like training for your orgasm.
Training. It's literally training. Men could do strains in their pelvic floor. Men can also do
their kegels. If you do come too quickly or you can't get there before your partner,
you know, a lot of times it's anxiety.
It's a pattern.
So you know everything is patterning in our life,
like how we go through life, our reactions to things, our traumas.
It's all patterns.
The same thing happens with your ejaculation.
So if you're a guy who maybe it was just one time,
it was the first time you had sex, you got there too quick.
It might now, you're so nervous the next time you have sex, it keeps happening, we've got to break the pattern.
Or it's the other way.
You hold it for an hour.
You have delayed ejaculation.
Because you're embarrassed or whatever.
Yeah.
You're afraid someone's going to walk in and you don't ejaculate.
So this is all also work dealing with your anxiety, working on like what is it?
Are you on medications?
You know, what's happening?
But if you do come to circle back to that too quickly,
just take the attention off yourself and give it to your partner.
I'm sure like if you're with a woman, she'd love you to go down on her.
Yeah, focus on her.
But when we take it off of ourselves and we can kind of, we're giving,
then you're like, oh, I can go again or, you know.
Right.
What's the biggest challenge you've faced in the last 15 years sexually that you've had to overcome? For me, oh, I can go again, or, you know. Right. What's the biggest challenge you've faced
in the last 15 years sexually that you've had to overcome?
From me?
What have I?
Personally.
The thing you've had to overcome the most
that you struggle with sexually.
Oh, God, I struggle with everything.
No, I didn't.
I was like, okay, I'll tell you.
How much time do we have, Lewis?
You know they say research is me-search?
Research is me-search.
Like, you, I believe that we get into, like you've started this podcast, right?
To learn from people, right?
Of course, yeah.
Of course.
And I found myself not that satisfied with sex.
Very like confused.
I was like, everyone's always saying when you have sex, it's going to be amazing.
And I thought everyone was having orgasms all the time and I wasn't.
And so when I started the podcast, I was not a sex expert.
I just was curious and I invited a bunch of so when I started the podcast, I was not a sex expert.
I just was curious and I invited a bunch of people over
and interviewed them about their sex life.
And I came to find out
that most women weren't orgasming
during penetration
and there was like, you know, all this stuff.
So what have I learned is
I've learned how to,
I have multiple orgasms.
So these are like my challenge.
I could have so many orgasms.
It was before you couldn't.
I could have one. Right. But now you can have multiple. Yeah. So these are like my challenge. I could have so many orgasms. It was before you couldn't. I could have one.
Right.
But now you can have multiple.
Yeah.
I couldn't have, I never had one with a partner.
And now I still.
Never had one with a partner.
No, no, no.
Sorry.
I wasn't as much, maybe just a few times, but during penetration, it wasn't as easy.
Let's just say.
Sure.
It was, but now I know exactly what I need to do and how to communicate it.
It was, but now I know exactly what I need to do and how to communicate it.
So I think I got, what I've learned is I'm just, I'm better at everything, communicating with my partners.
I used to just think that sex was about pleasing men.
Like I thought it was about my partner's pleasure.
And if they were satisfied, it didn't matter if I was satisfied. And I've just, I've learned all about my body.
I've learned, I've done everything
that I tell people to do.
I've tried myself and I've worked through.
So just being more communicative,
more open, more experiential.
I won't yuck your yum, you know?
Someone won't yuck my yum.
Like that's what we say in sex a lot.
Like if I'm like, oh, I really like this.
If my partner's like, I really wanna be tied up,
I won't be like, ew.
You know, I'd be like, oh, okay, tell me more about that.
Because then we're just, we already have so much shame and maybe trauma going into sex that we have to just be supportive, loving partners.
So I think I'm a much better lover, like giver and receiver.
I just, I understand.
No one knows anatomy.
No one teaches us about anything.
You know, so I just.
You have to guess and figure it out along the way.
Right.
I mean, sex education in America, it's only 17, only 17 states require it to be medically
accurate if they teach it at all.
I think I saw like one video when I was in middle school or something and that was it.
Yeah.
And it was probably horrifying.
Like, don't get someone pregnant.
Don't get an STD.
Have a nice life.
Go have sex.
Yeah.
That's it. That's it. It's like, okay, figure it out. But what if they taught pleasure? horrifying like don't get someone pregnant don't get an std have a nice life yeah that's not that's
it it's like okay figure it out but what if they taught pleasure what if they taught consent wow
game changer how does a woman for women who maybe struggle having one orgasm yeah how do they have
multiple orgasms if they're thinking ah this is never going to happen for me never happened for
you but then you learn how to do it. What's the process? Is it psychological? Is it healing?
Sex is always everything. It's always like psychological and emotional and you need a
good space and hormones. What time of month is it? That's the other thing that we don't.
And I cover so much of this. I mean, I've done, as you know, probably like thousands and thousands
of podcasts on all of these subjects. But it's like, so multiple orgasms for women.
and thousands of podcasts on all of these subjects,
but it's like, so multiple orgasms for women.
Here's the great news,
is that women have the clitoris, right?
And the clitoris has 8,000 nerve endings,
twice that of a penis.
Okay?
So just take that in from it.
And the only reason it exists is for pleasure.
No.
Yes.
It doesn't exist for any other reason.
No other reason.
To be pleased. To be pleased.
To be pleased.
Well, maybe to give us an incentive.
Maybe it was like, you know, evolutionary speaking,
so we would be into sex, so we could have pleasure and an orgasm.
But also, the clitoris isn't just about the little, like,
bud at the opening of the vaginal opening.
It actually has legs called crua that extend behind the internally.
So they're sort of like where the labia is.
They're sort of behind the labia internally.
So for a woman to have an orgasm, typically it's external, right?
So they're going to use their fingers or they're going to use a toy or their partner is going to do something to them, go down on them.
And that's a great way to have a first orgasm.
And so our refractory period is a lot quicker than men.
Refractory period mean time that you can get up
and go again.
Like for many men, they ejaculate and they're like,
I'm out.
You're tired.
Out.
All the energy's gone.
Done.
Like tomorrow, 24 hour, like maybe Saturday.
For women, if we just, just knowing this,
I love this because I just love to give women permission
and nothing again, everyone's different,
but what I've found is that it's possible.
And so then maybe you have an orgasm,
whether you're with yourself or a partner,
and then you just continue to breathe.
And maybe you, for some women,
after they have an external clitoral orgasm,
they start to become,
their nerve endings inside,
it becomes more engorged, right?
More swollen.
They're with blood, they're labia,
they're clitoris.
Internally, we start to swell
because of the erectile tissues and everything
just starts to swell and you get more aroused.
But maybe it hurts to still cut.
You just want to need a beat.
So then you start to maybe this is when you go play with the nipples
or you start to play with your labia.
You know, use lube, use your fingers, use a toy.
There is nothing shameful about toys.
It's just amazing.
Think about it.
If you have 8,000 nerve endings, like why not, in all these pleasure zones on our body,
why not just play with temperature, hot, cold vibrations?
So anyway, maybe bringing in a toy
or touching yourself in a different area
because once you've kind of lit that match
of the clitoris, of the clitoraling,
everything else is more aroused, the blood's flowing,
you're like turned on and so maybe it's a matter
of like rubbing your labia, bringing in a toy, putting a finger inside.
And then you're just breathing.
You're breathing through the experience
and you're not already checked out
because we talk about patterning.
A lot of women assume like, I'm done, I'm out,
let's go to dinner.
But if you give yourself time and permission
to see what's possible, it's like a game changer.
Like I have people all the time,
I'd say everyone who's worked for me, like I game changer. Like I have people all the time. I'd say everyone who's worked for me,
like I've had so many interns and people over the years.
I'm having multiple orgasms.
Oh yeah, they still tell you,
guess what, I had a vaginal, yeah.
I mean, that's because I be like,
get 50 pounds of sex toys in the office too a week.
And I'm like, your job is to try this toy.
But they come in and they ask me questions.
I really want to empower women.
We don't talk, because we don't, well, well first off not only don't we talk to our partners about
it but we don't even talk to our friends about it women really women don't talk about it to each
other barely they're like i had sex i didn't have sex but now i think it's changing what i hope is
it's changing that more women are talking about masturbation but if you think about it like
american pie like all the movies growing up, men are masturbating.
It's like a thing that they do.
But women, good women, they don't.
Or we grew up in a religion where it was shamed.
You're not supposed to masturbate.
But masturbation is the key to figuring out your body, what feels good.
Like whether it's mindful or you hit it and quit it, I don't care how you do it.
But masturbation is just important
whether you're in a relationship
or out of a relationship.
So that's what I learned in 15 years.
I masturbated,
but I didn't really do the discovery process.
And now I just sort of,
I get it, I know.
We are all walking around
in these incredible bodies
with so much possibility
and we just scratch the surface.
We don't even know.
No one tells us.
Why do you think religions or parents have made masturbation a bad thing for kids and
people?
Religion, I don't even mean that's just because I think control over women's bodies
and energy and it should only be for, for procreation. And I mean, there's,
I mean, it goes back, I think so much about sex and religion are tied up and you would know more
than I would, cause I know you grew up in, I mean, I don't know what you're, I mean, I do,
I mean, I do know, I do know that it's just like, it's control. So saying that you can only have
sex in a way that it could have more kids that are going to benefit the church or that, you know,
that sex is sinful and wrong. And I think if you go back to like Adam and Eve,
like Eve was a temptress,
like she made him bite the apple
and that's her fault, right?
So I feel like a lot of it goes back to shaming women
and our bodies and the whole, the goddess.
And there's a lot of reasons why.
Now, parents though, I can talk about,
we don't have to get into religion,
but parents, what I can tell you,
is it's because they don't know either.
So here's the-
They don't understand it, so they're scared of it or they're-
They think it's wrong or,
oh God, my kids, when I try to talk to my 15 year old
about sex, they just go, oh mom, I don't wanna hear it.
But like, that's because we don't do it.
We don't ever talk about it, but there's only,
there's a few countries like in the Netherlands,
not many, where they,
they actually start teaching consent and sex added when kids are five,
they're not saying go out and have sex. Here's what you do. It's like your body, your temple consent. Here's the body parts.
They even teach them like in third grade,
if you start to get feelings for somebody of the opposite sex,
they talk about it. They talk about orgasm. They normalize it.
We don't normalize it. They normalize it. Yeah.
They don't normalize it.
They don't make it this scary thing.
We make it really scary.
And so our parents of kids,
they don't understand either.
But I've had a lot of great breakthroughs.
A lot of my listeners are like, I finally did it.
I talked to my daughter, I talked to my son.
It was weird.
Because it's okay for a parent to say, you know what?
My parents didn't talk to me about it.
This conversation is uncomfortable for me too.
And I'm still discovering and learning,
but I wanna tell you, like, here's how your body works.
Or I wanna listen to this podcast, read this book together.
Let's learn together.
It's not shameful.
You know, it just, we're setting kids up,
not for, we're not setting them up for success.
Yeah.
Sexcess.
Success. Success. not for six we're not setting them up for success yeah sex ss success success
what's one thing you wish men would understand about their female partner
more and one thing you wish women would understand about their if they're in a
female male relationship it's a good question that would help them thrive
better and be more compassionate and loving.
Such a good question.
Okay, one thing.
I think that men, I want to tell men that she comes first.
There's two things that popped in my head, I'll tell you.
Literally she comes first?
Literally she comes first.
There was a wonderful book written by Dr. Ian Kerner. I think it just had its 20-year anniversary and it's called she comes first because men are gonna orgasm and then they're done
they're done yeah women are so think of it this way women are slow cookers and
men are frying pants you get aroused you're ready to go women have more of a
responsive desire respond we respond we need to be warmed up.
You've got to heat us up.
Foreplay.
Foreplay is not just like a light suggestion.
It's actually a requirement for many women.
Again, we're all different, but we want to, whether it's even words or I needed a massage or a bath for us,
we have to take a while to get warmed up.
So I would say that figure out.
So that's just,
I mean she comes first because it's gonna come back to you.
Like the more that you understand her body,
it's gonna come back.
She's not gonna be like, oh I'm not gonna please you.
And I think just the way you look at,
this is where I can say that we are very different.
The way we get aroused is different for men and women.
So I would say the one thing I want you to know
is that you gotta focus on, you know,
on yourself.
Yeah.
I think I would, yeah.
I mean, that's, what else you gotta understand?
It makes things a lot better, yeah.
And just, yeah, focus on her first
and then find out, like, what turns her on
and talk about it.
Okay, so.
And then for women?
I think for women, what do men need from women?
What do men want and need more from women that you're hearing they're not getting?
I think that men need more attention.
They want you to, this is again, we're talking heterosexual relationships.
Yes.
They want to know that you're into sex.
They want you to initiate.
They want you to lead sometimes.
And they want you to be, you know, i guess i'm just thinking about men who come
to me usually it's about their penis they're worried about their penis size they're going
through all the things and then the pro yeah they're worried about they're so men worry so
much about their penis yes really yes and i'm telling you that women do not if you it's because
i remember what i said not about your penis if you're a good lover and you do all these things,
it's really not about that.
So I think that what men need is,
I think they want to know that their partner's into sex.
That she's not just doing it to get it over with,
that she's actually enthusiastic and that she cares
and she cares about his pleasure
and that sometimes maybe she'll initiate
or have ideas about it.
What do you think?
I'm trying to think.
It's a great question because mostly it's about men worried about themselves.
But they need attention from women and enthusiasm and participation.
I think so.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm trying to think.
I mean, I feel pretty good in my relationship right now.
I'm trying to think of past relationships that weren't working sexually maybe.
good in my relationship right now i'm trying to think of past relationships that weren't working sexually maybe but and i've also not been like married in a long term after you know a few
years in a relationship so i'm not sure what that looks like 10 years down the road once you've had
kids and what the needs are i feel like they're going to shift a lot of that yeah but that's why
i want people to get ahead of it because if sex talking about sex becomes just like you're talking
about where are we going on our summer vacation?
How are we going to raise our kids?
What religion?
What are our values?
Sex becomes part of it, so it's not awkward.
It's just like, oh, baby, we haven't had sex in a while.
Let's do this.
It just becomes part of everything.
Like when you're not feeling like you're taking care of yourself nutritionally,
you're like, I've got to get better.
I've got to eat more greens, you know?
So that's, I feel like we could get ahead of it if we covered it, we don't wait until there's a crisis.
Is there anything we shouldn't say
when we're courting someone
in the first few weeks of dating them?
Is there anything we should not talk about
when it comes to sex?
Should we not say in the first night,
you know, this is my sexual fantasy,
are you either in or you're out?
It depends on the partner.
I think that sometimes, okay,
so where we're at now and today in 2020, I think that since
I'm telling you that most people have never talked about sex and they probably have some
judgment around it and shame and it's hard for them or trauma, that if you just met someone
and you're out for a first date and you're like, I just want to be clear that this is
my fantasy and I'm really into bondage, are you down?
Now that might, okay, my fantasy and I'm really into bondage. Are you down now?
That might. Okay. So it could go two ways. You might, it might be great. Cause if you're with
someone who freaks out and she runs out the door, listen, she's saving you a lot of time. If you
brought it up, it's probably cause that's something you really need. But I think like everything,
it's like some people have like overshare they do too much i just
think baby steps is okay so i think it's okay to say you know are you someone that do you like
pleasure do you like sex do you you know but i don't know that you lead just like i don't think
on the first date i should get into all my like trauma my childhood stuff like let's get to it's
not like you know what i'm saying we want to be like everything. You gotta like get to know somebody.
But I don't know what it wouldn't be,
but I think mostly we don't even talk about it.
This is the problem is that we,
I don't know what you shouldn't say.
I hate to like tell people, I don't know, I think.
You gotta feel it out.
Be honest.
Feel it out, but don't wait too long.
I think that right when you have sex with someone
is the time to start talking about it.
So how was that?
What do you think?
Like what?
What do you like more of?
What do you not like?
Seemed like when we were having sex,
you were about to orgasm, but did you?
Tell me what feels good to you.
Did you like when I was doing that?
Not in the bedroom.
This is like the next morning at breakfast.
Not right afterwards.
How was that for you?
I thought it was so hot when you were doing this thing
and that felt like it felt good.
Did that feel good?
I mean, just...
But not in the bed, right?
At five minutes afterwards.
No, I prefer...
Someone's going to get hurt or emotional.
I think so.
I think they do.
They do.
I mean, I know so.
But I mean, it depends.
If you're in a long-term solid place,
you guys get to decide.
I'm just giving you what I've seen
has worked over all these years.
We've got an amazing show, Sex with Emily,
that talks about all these things
and has lots of great questions from listeners calling in.
You also have a masterclass.
Masterclass, yeah.
That just came out that people need to get.
So yeah, we have a couples course coming out in February.
What's it called?
It's called, I don't know what it's called yet,
but it's really like all these conversation starters
for couples, it's exercises for couples too.
Wherever you're at, it's a lot of things I'm talking about,
like to set the spark.
Like it's first uncovering your roadblocks.
Like what are the three areas where you're not communicating?
Clearing those out.
And then I walk you through how to communicate about sex.
It's just had all these different steps in it.
It's like my best stuff in there.
I'm very excited about it.
I don't know the title for you.
It is, it is.
But also on my site right now, which we have a bunch of downloadables.
Quizzes.
Quizzes.
Everything.
Great guides.
Tools.
Yeah.
All free.
Your stuff's free at your site.
Sexwithemily.com.
The podcast is Sex with Emily.
The master class.
What's the master class called?
It's called Emily Morris Teaches Sex and Communication.
Oh, let's bring it.
And then I have a show on SiriusXM
five nights a week,
which is separate.
You're a machine.
You're doing a lot.
I'm a fucking machine.
Five to seven p.m.
Monday through Friday.
It's the only call-in show
with about sex.
I mean, about anything.
LA drive-to.
And then you have a podcast
that's different.
Yeah.
Wow.
I'm busy.
Books, everything.
It might be different
when this comes up.
I mean, I don't know
when this comes up.
Who knows what'll happen, but yeah.
We negotiated my contracts up, so I'm like, who knows? Trying to figure it out, yeah. It might be different when this comes, I mean, I don't know when this comes out. Who knows what will happen, but yeah. We negotiated, my contract's up, so I'm like,
I don't know.
Trying to figure it out, yeah.
But lots of things over at sexwithemily.com,
you can get access to that.
I got a couple final questions for you.
Okay, and people can also email me with questions.
Feedback at sex, feedback at sex.
Can they get on your show by asking questions somewhere?
Yeah, they can call in.
They can call in.
So they call into my Sirius show,
and then now we also do it,
so just call in, or email me. They call into Sirius, and then we can also do it so just call in and or email me
they call into serious and then we can put that sometimes we put those into the podcast and they
just go to my website and you'll see how you do it but they can call or email or social media you
know i get hundreds of questions a day everywhere that's fun super fun that's fun uh i love my job
couple what do you wish more people asked you that they don't ask you?
About sex?
Uh-huh.
Huh.
That's a good question.
What do I wish? What's something people should be asking more of that they're not?
Oh, that's a great way to put it.
I think that people should be asking about, I wish that people got more curious.
Sometimes we just put, people always call in like my partner, blaming others.
And I wish that people got more curious.
You look in the mirror first.
Yeah.
I wish people got more curious about themselves
and they weren't trying to fix other people
but they were looking.
He won't do this.
She doesn't do this.
They don't do this.
It's like,
take a look in the mirror.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah,
I wish we started there
and I wish that people just thought more
about their own pleasure
because if we all understand our bodies,
we're much better lovers to each other.
That's good.
This question is called the three truths.
I ask everyone at the end this question.
So it's a hypothetical question.
Imagine it's your last day on earth many years away from now.
You get to live as long as you want to live,
but then at one point you've got to turn the lights out
and you've got to go to the next place.
And you've accomplished everything you want to live, but then at one point you've got to turn the lights out and you've got to go to the next place. And you've accomplished everything you want to accomplish. You've transformed millions of lives sexually and their relationships. You've done all the books,
the podcasts, everything you want to do, it's happened. But for whatever reason, you've got
to take all of your content with you. All of your written word, audio, video, it has to go to the
next place. So no one has access to any more of this information none of it it's gone
hypothetical okay okay but you get to leave behind three things you know to be
true from the lessons you've learned in life three lessons that you would share
with the world based on your experience what would you say about those three
things for you about my work the three things are just about life like three lessons you've learned life yeah what are those three things for you? About my work? The three things are? Just about life.
Like three lessons you've learned.
Oh, just in life?
Yeah.
What are the three biggest lessons you've learned that you would want to leave behind?
This is hard.
Wherever you go, there you are.
Can I give you things like that?
That's not my own.
Wait, is this about, wait, you're saying it's about me?
I just feel like that's a thing.
You kind of pull a geographic and move around that like lessons in your life,
like wherever you are,
we are the same, you know,
figure out your own stuff where you're at.
Mindfulness works.
Meditation works.
Like don't fuck around.
Just do it.
To me, that is a game changer.
And that so much,
if you,
your mind will control you
if you don't learn to understand your mind.
That's true. That's true.
That's powerful.
Okay, number three?
I would just be able to prioritize their pleasure, really.
Like pleasure is your birthright, and we all deserve to have pleasure.
And we prioritize so many other things, work, family, home,
and usually we put ourselves last.
That's a good one.
I've never heard that one, prioritize pleasure my mission statement yeah that's great
pleasure positive prioritize your pleasure I'm all about pleasure because
we don't especially now we need more pleasure and we were like well I'll get
to that once I finish this and what then I deserve sex or then I deserve it me to
give me pleasure however you look at it but I would say yeah prioritize your
pleasure and um yeah because it matters and I would say, prioritize your pleasure and yeah,
because it matters and if we don't have that,
then we're just working and dead.
We're just dead, we're dead.
But that's one should be first.
That should be the first one, yeah, yeah.
Well, don't you feel good when you're more pleasure
in your life, whatever that is?
Yeah.
Like what does that look like for you, you know?
Yeah, I think of just joy in general,
like having a joyful life is pleasure for me.
It doesn't have to be sexual, but that's nice too.
I'm not just talking about, because you said not just sex, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I could give you my three sex lessons, but those, I think I already did.
Sure.
This is great though.
One final question for you.
I mean, before I ask it, I want to acknowledge you for a moment for the mission you're on.
Before I ask it, I want to acknowledge you for a moment for the mission you're on.
I think so many people are suffering from a lack of sex education, a lack of sexual healing,
sexual shame, sexual misunderstanding, and just hurt and pain around sex. So much.
And the fact that you've dedicated your life to this for 15 years and you show up every week
for men and women and all human beings to help them solve this problem is such a massive
gift.
And so even though this isn't something that we talk about a lot on the podcast, I thought
it was necessary to have you here and really help people.
Even if this helps one person listening it's worth it
from unlocking their shame or their pain to having some type of healing i know there's a famous song
sexual healing but it's you know it's it's important for people that have been locked in a
prison of their sexual shame so i acknowledge you for making the uncomfortable more comfortable
right it wasn't so bad for yeah. For being able to communicate it in ways
that people can understand it,
for being able to create tools and trainings
and free things and podcasts and shows and classes
so people can consume it.
And I think it's great that you're doing it.
So I appreciate that.
Thank you, Lewis.
Of course, of course.
Thanks for having me.
I'm super proud about you and all the work you're doing too.
People love you.
You are inspiring so many people and you do the same exact stuff, but around everything. I love the way you interview too. It's just very listenable and you're patient. You're good at this stuff.
I appreciate it. I appreciate it.
together is that you just thought me about you were saying about hopefully this will help one person i'm gonna say that i think that since we don't look at this part i believe that when we
heal ourselves sexually whatever that looks like we will heal so many other parts of our life
sometimes we think that there's other things wrong but we are we are holding on to stuff
and once we kind of get into it and that's why the master class is great for that or my site
whatever podcast you'll realize that like
this was the problem all along,
but since no one's pointing it out,
they're like, I should change my diet, I should do that.
You're like, what about, what's your relationship
to yourself and your body and your self image?
And once you heal that, you know, more pleasure.
That's good, yeah.
Final question for you, what's your definition of greatness?
Oh, my definition of greatness is
be kind and work hard and stick with your beliefs,
surround yourself with good people,
communicate your mission, give as much as you receive.
In fact, give more than you receive.
That's a great, great greatness.
Good person.
There you go. Emily Morris, thank you so much. Appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
Appreciate it.
It's good to see you.
Thank you so, so much for listening to this episode. If you enjoyed it, make sure to share
it with a friend you think would be inspired by this. Just send them the link lewishouse.com
slash 1070 or copy and paste the link wherever you're listening to this and text someone,
post it on social media, or share it anywhere you think wherever you're listening to this and text someone, post it on social media,
or share it anywhere you think people would enjoy listening to this.
And if this is your first time here,
then welcome again to the School of Greatness.
Please click that subscribe button over on Apple Podcasts right now,
as well as leave us a rating and review.
Let us know what you enjoyed about this,
the thing that was the biggest takeaway for you,
and the big aha moment.
We'd love to see reviews,
and that also supports us in sharing this
message with more people over on Apple Podcasts. So please subscribe to Apple Podcasts or Spotify
if that's where you listen and leave us a rating and review. And if you want inspirational messages
sent to your phone every single week from me and other goodies and surprises, then make sure to you to text the word podcast right now to 614-350-3960. Again, text the word podcast to
614-350-3960. And I want to leave you with this quote from Ernest Hemingway, who said,
the most painful thing is losing yourself in the process of loving someone too much and forgetting
that you are special too. And I think this is an important reminder for all of us that sometimes we go so deep
into supporting someone else in a relationship
that we forget to support ourselves first,
which is always extremely important.
And I want to remind you,
if no one's told you lately that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter,
I'm so grateful for you today.
And you know what time it is.
It's time to go out there and do something great