We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Restart Your Sex Life with Dr. Lori Brotto
Episode Date: June 16, 20221. Answers to fascinating sex questions from Pod Squaders–including how to get real in the bedroom after regularly faking orgasm. 2. Concrete mindfulness strategies to get out of your head and into ...your body, which have been proven to increase arousal and satisfaction. 3. Busting the myth about how long it should take to orgasm. 4. Why talking about sex (including fantasies!) before having sex leads to more satisfying intimacy–and why that feels fun for Abby and impossible to Glennon and Amanda. 5. Where to start if you’ve never discussed pleasure with a partner–and Dr. Brotto’s advice to Glennon for retiring her reign as Silent Sex Queen. About Dr. Brotto Dr. Lori Brotto is a Professor in the UBC Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, where she holds a Canada Research Chair in Women’s Sexual Health. She is also the Executive Director for the Women’s Health Research Institute—one of only three institutes in Canada devoted to advancing research in women’s health, and maintains an active practice as a Registered Psychologist. Dr. Brotto was recently featured in the Netflix series The Principles of Pleasure, and is the author of Better Sex through Mindfulness: How Women Can Cultivate Desire and forthcoming The Better Sex through Mindfulness Workbook: A Guide to Cultivating Desire. TW: @DrLoriBrotto To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Well, hello everybody. Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things since we have Dr.
Brotto, Dr. Laurie Brotto back with us today, to talk to us about sex. I am not going to waste your time talking about anything else.
Okay, so let's jump in. Hi, Abby, hi, sister. Hi, Dr. Brotto. Hi, Laurie.
Hi, hi, hello, hello. Let's talk about sex space. Somebody had to do it. Everybody had
that was coming. Sorry. Okay. No, no, no, babe. We love you. We love you. Never never gets old.
Does it though? Does it? Okay. I want to just recap. Everyone must go back if you haven't
and listen to the first episode where we talked about sexual dysfunction, mostly in women,
and how so much of it is caused by many things,
one being our beliefs about sex and our conditioning
about sex from our culture, which shames us
into fleeing our bodies early.
The political climate right now,
and stress of all kinds how stress in our in our in our
minds makes us not able to be in our bodies during sex. Can you Dr. Prado give us a better
description of it than I just gave us of how stress keeps us from having good sex?
Yeah for sure let's define stress, first of all.
Like, we can think about things that are stressful,
like a big event that we don't want to attend,
or a big event that we have to plan for.
And then there's the day-to-day stress,
the never-ending to-do lists, the daily grind,
the having to get groceries at the end of the day because the
fridge is empty.
And it does turn out that the day-to-day stressors, that kind of perpetual to-do list, do more damage
to our brain than single big life event stressors.
And it's because of their chronic nature.
So our brains were evolved to deal with stressors in the moment, right?
We encounter the saber-toothed tiger.
We have this big fight or flight response, and we either take off, or we fight the saber-toothed
tiger, but that would be stupid.
So we didn't have evolved over time.
So we run.
So our stress response system hasn't evolved over millennia. It has not evolved.
It does the same thing. So when we encounter the day-to-day stress, like, oh my gosh,
I'm late for picking up my kid from school, we've launched that full body response as if
we're going into the den with the saber-toothed tiger. When that happens on a chronic level,
our brain can't turn that off.
And so we actually have this kind of chronic state of stress.
And we see it show up in cortisol levels, which is the main stress hormone.
So normally we wake up with high cortisol in the morning.
It kind of gives us that zest to start the day.
And then over the course of the day, it comes down.
When we are chronically stressed, it stays high the whole time
and it, it malfunctions. It actually doesn't help us to cope. It does the opposite and can be linked
to depression in the long term. How does that affect us in the bed? Yeah, so that's stress.
Chronic high cortisol levels, they interfere with some of the hormones that are involved in sexual response,
but they can also directly affect the brain in a way that makes the brain unable
to process sexual triggers, right? So we might see something that in the past used to turn us on
Maybe it's some seen something erotic in a film or reading something erotic or having a sexual fantasy stress can actually disrupt that entire system and it happens on a brain level.
That's one of the ways, but then there's also all of the physical side effects of that
like carrying tension in our body and we're carrying muscle tension in our body.
It's not the good kind of tension that would be pro-sexual.
It actually backfires and makes it a lot harder to get sexually aroused
and reach orgasms. So stress is a major culprit for a lot of the sexual concerns that we see,
not just low desire, but even pain with sex, problems reaching orgasm, and not feeling pleasure.
Stress is not going to say the number one reason, but it's definitely in the top three that
should be investigated. So why does stress not? Because in our first episode, we talked about how
one of the issues that gets in the way of good sex for us for women, especially, is our conditioning
and our shaming over time. Women have that in different measure than men, so it makes sense that
we would, that would be a bigger issue for us with sex.
Why doesn't stress get in the way of men feeling desire?
I assume they have some stress also, right?
So why does stress break our mind body connection and not their mind body connection?
Because what I'm hearing here is a lot of themes that we've been discussing all along
and we can do hard things. The overwhelm episode with sister discussing the mental load
that women carry of running our families is often different than what men carry. That would
make sense that we would have more stress because of that. So are they stressed and are stressed
and why isn't it getting the way of sex for them?
Yeah, it's a big question and fortunately we don't have the perfect science to answer it. What we've got are a lot of good guesses and hypotheses. First of all, we know that stress can
actually drive sexual arousal in men. So we've got lots of examples of men while stressed
getting erections and we did talk in the last episode about the
body's response and the mind's response in males, tending to be more in sync with each
other.
So sometimes stress can be more pro-sexual.
So we think about a stressful day, right?
At work.
Or even a conflict or even a violent encounter can actually be
pro-sexual in men and in women has the opposite effect.
There's also all sorts of different interactions with hormones in men.
Then there is in women that also explain some of the differences that we see
in the effects of stress on sexual response.
Interesting. Yes.
It's like men ejaculating.
It's like, I gotta get the stress out of me.
I've gotta like, there's like this body's response,
really in my mind.
And the fact that they can actually see their erection
is like for me real proof,
because so many women have never even looked
at their own vaginas.
Right. It's like this hidden secret, this hidden mystery.
So for men to be able to actually see their actual erections, it's pretty obvious that
they're sexually stimulated in those moments.
Yeah, exactly.
One of the things that I loved about our first episode is that when we discussed how do
we know if we are having healthy sex lives. And by the way, who care,
with a partner, with two partners, with 10 partners, with no partners, whatever, who cares,
right? That doesn't matter. Are we experiencing pleasure? You said would be not frequency, not
partners, not just the question, am I experiencing pleasure within sex is an excellent
barometer, and I love that.
I have had experiences in my life where my pleasure
wasn't a factor in any way before my current marriage.
Thanks, babe.
Yes.
What does a person who,
because really, if a woman's not experiencing pleasure in bed with her partner,
and her partner is not making any effort to change that,
or even care about it, or even talk about it,
is it dysfunction that she has no desire, effort to change that or even care about it or even talk about it.
Is it dysfunction that she has no desire or is it just totally effing logical? Yeah, it's adaptive. What is the script? How does a
person who has never discussed pleasure with their partner? Who
this is like a frontier for her? Like she wants to be able to
have pleasure in her sex life. How does she even begin?
Right, because also it might not even be the partners fault. Like plenty of people, and we get questions all the time from people who maybe they've been
faking orgasm because that's what they've been doing since they were 15.
So the other person might not even know, or the other person might want to know, and you might not, I mean, I can't,
I can't talk during sex, I can't talk,
I'm, I am, I'm, I can't do it.
My mouth's not open.
Like what do, maybe the person wants to know,
but you just can't start, how do you start using words?
Yeah.
We're gonna change that. Okay.'re going to change that for you. Let's start,
first of all, not in that sexual encounter. First of all, let's make sure that this person
feels permission, feels empowered to know her own body, to touch her own body, to know what feels
good, to know what kinds of stimulation work best for her in different
scenarios.
Let's make sure she has a great quality lubricant.
Yes, lubricant for 20-year-olds and 30-year-olds, not just for postmenopausal vaginas.
Every woman should have a lubricant.
And let's make sure that she has the time and the space and the privacy to know her body.
That's commandment number one. Let's make sure everyone knows needs a lubricant of her own.
You're saying go ahead or subscription because when it runs out you need to make sure that there's
another one on its way. Excellent. And I recognize when I say that, that there's all sorts of barriers that are coming up,
there's all sorts of negative beliefs and oppositions to that, right? Because essentially
what I'm saying is we want to not just normalize, but encourage self-exploration and masturbation
in women, right? In the same way we talked in the last episode about that young boy in the bath, feeling the
bath water, and it's normalized, and the penis is growing, and masturbation in young boys
becomes normalized over time as a right of passage.
So for a woman to know what feels good, she has to know her own body first and foremost.
And we have to recognize also that with first, first and foremost. And we have
to recognize also that with age, with changes in hormones, and I know you've covered this fabulously
with my dear friend, Dr. Jen Gunter, the impact of the paramanopause and menopause and changing
hormones on sexual response. And so we need to also accept that what felt good at an earlier time
in my life or with a different partner might feel different and that's okay and that's normal.
So this kind of process of knowing your body and knowing what pleasure isn't how to get
it, continues throughout her life.
Okay, so that's rule number one.
That has to be in place.
So masturbate is number one.
Masturbate is number one.
No, thyself.
No, thyself.
Okay.
And I think masturbating during different periods of your life, it's like, I think that
that was really important for me to hear.
Thank you for saying that.
Yeah.
Okay.
So now we're going to fast forward your an expert in knowing your own body and what what
elicits pleasure for you.
For a lot of a lot of people, let's just assume people who haven't started having sex
with each other yet, they don't take the time
to have a conversation at the outset
about their preferences, what they like, what they don't like,
what they wanna try with that person,
it's an opportunity to have some fantasies
about what you might wanna do.
By the way, you can even do this in a long-term relationship
if you haven't done it before.
You can say, oh, I heard this fabulous podcast episode
on We Can Do Hard Things.
And they talked about the pro-relationship effects
of having a conversation about fantasy.
Oh, God.
Right?
OK.
Hold on a second.
All right.
At least I ain't.
She's been trying to get me
to talk about this for a few minutes.
Okay.
Let's go.
I have a question.
I don't want to derail us because I do
want to talk about how a woman who,
that sounds like varsity to me.
Like I just sitting down and being like,
let's talk about what we might try in our fantasies.
Like that, I want to be that person.
Okay, but I want to talk about starting smaller.
I'm confused about fantasy in general because if we're supposed to be being mindful of what's
happening in the room and in our bodies, and we're supposed to be paying attention.
All of a sudden, you got a unicorn in there with you.
Exactly.
So I'm supposed to be, I thought,
I'm supposed to be out of my mind and in my body,
which by the way, I don't understand why it's called
mindfulness, that pisses me off.
It should be called mindlessness.
We're trying to get less full of mind, right?
But anyway, that's fine.
But are we supposed both then fantasy comes?
Doesn't that make us get lost in our mind again and not in the present moment?
Yeah, yeah. Great. I'm glad you put your finger on that paradox. So fantasy is not mindfulness.
Fantasy is deliberately going to a sexual place that excites you. That's what fantasy is.
So I often talk about fantasy as a tool,
right? Fantasy is something you can do, say in the lead up to a planned sexual encounter.
We talked in the last episode about foreplay extending from the time the last sexual episode ends
until the start of the next one. Fantasy might be a way to kind of lubricate that, right?
Lubricate that foreplay. Sometimes people can use fantasy
during a sexual encounter to heighten the response.
There's a fabulous book called,
tell me what you want by my colleague Justin Lemiller,
surveyed thousands of people,
and documented literally thousands of different fantasies
that people have.
And fantasy doesn't have to be what you actually want to do or
What you are doing in your life. So all fantasy is is sexual imagery, but it's not mindfulness, right?
So but I want to go back to what I was talking about in that conversation when you're not in the in the band
Or wherever you decide to have sex because people don't just have sex and beds and bedrooms
There's lots of other places that people can have sex and should have sex
So the fantasy conversation there is about what would you like to do in this blank
canvas? What do you want to do together? And we can start with what we actually will do.
And then we can get kind of fun and playful and talk about some of the really
way out there and crazy things that we know will never do,
but is a fun kind of exercise to do regardless in terms of kindling that interest and kindling
that desire. Right? So all of this boils down to having a conversation about sex before sex
starts. That's what this boils down to. Wow. It's so fascinating because that feels so terrifying to me and it's just proof that in
our culture we are so much more comfortable with actually being physically intimate before
we are even emotionally or intellectually intimate with each other.
Because it's less terrifying.
It's so much more intimate.
Exactly.
It is.
It feels way more intimate to talk about sex than to just have it.
And that's sad because that's how I have been conditioned over time.
That like it's less close to just do it.
Well, it's almost like one of the another tool that Dr. Brato has talked about.
Like it's this four-play mechanism that can be part of the entire sexual experience, sitting
down and having a conversation about the what to expect.
I know.
A future fantasy.
Like, to me, I haven't had as much issue talking about sex or wanting to have these discussions
as Glennon.
And so it's kind of difficult in our relationship and our sexual relationship, how I am capable or wanting to,
and she's a little more hesitant.
So I'm sure so many people listening to this
are either me or Glenin in this way.
What do you recommend to those of us
who are more capable of having this conversation
and those of us who are left?
Yeah, talk to us about the sensei focus thing.
Because isn't that a way of like touching and talking before?
Yes, yes.
Because clearly people like me are like, I will, I'm, it is easier for me to let you into
my vagina than into my mind.
Hahaha.
Oh my God, please let this be the video that goes on I do.
Right there. You know, we're all sort of aghast, but that represents right people,
people's bodies have sex, but their mind and their emotion and their heart does not.
Right.
So first of all, let me just set the record straight that when I say fantasy,
because in the same way
when I, in the last episode, we talked about erotica and porn, it conjures up a very specific
image that people might have of hardcore and, you know, penis in vagina and no one wants
it and people are unhappy.
And I think similarly with fantasy people are imagining having sex with everyone else besides
your own partner. All fantasy is sexual imagery. So it might even be creating a scene in your own mind of what you
want to do sexually with your own partner. That's a fantasy. Okay. So I just want to create lots and
lots of space for the contents of the fantasy. We'll be talking about fantasy, but no doubt about it.
It can be a really important tool that we use.
And in fact, in my own race, I do pair it with mindfulness.
And we've done this across hundreds of women in the groups that we run, where we'll invite
her to go home, engage in a fantasy.
And then we send her a little recording of my voice guiding her through a mindfulness.
And then she does the mindfulness practice. And inevitably what they'll say is that by first turning the
mind on and having it a bit sexually excited, it allows them to tune more into those erotic
sensations in their body that they otherwise miss. Yeah, that they don't know is there. So
that's a way to bring fantasy and mindfulness together. Okay, you asked about sense-ate focus.
This is an old sex therapy practice.
It's been around since the 1960s, Masters and Johnson developed it.
And at the time, their theory was that anxiety is at the root of all sexual problems, right?
So guys who can't get erections, due to anxiety,
women who can't have penetration
when the muscles tense up, it's because of anxiety,
low desires because of anxiety.
So their exercise of senseate focus,
which requires a couple, requires two people,
and involves person number one,
touching, person number two, head to toe, excluding the chest
and the genitals.
And person number two, who's receiving the touch, is tuning in, is relaxing into the touch,
and is giving some gentle feedback, either verbal feedback, like that feels good, keep
going, or nonverbal feedback, maybe a smile, or some other gesture of liking it.
That continues for about 15 minutes, and then they swap. Now the giver of the touch becomes a receiver,
the receiver becomes the giver. And the idea is that you repeat this a number of times before you then
move on to the next stage, and the next stage includes breast and genital touch. But the goal is not to create a rousal or orgasm. The goal is relaxation, tuning in, and
that kind of communication. So here's what we know about Sensei focus. First of all, anxiety
is not the reason for all sexual problems. There's lots and lots of, I think we can say
patriarchy is the reason for all sexual problems in women, but anxiety is not the universal contributor for all sexual
problems in people. But we do know that sensei focus is probably useful for most sexual problems,
or most sexual struggles in a couple, because we can always stand to learn something about how the
other person wants to be touched, about what happens when we say penetration is no go.
And this is just about experiencing what comes up in the moment, right?
So sex is actually off the table with sense eight focus, even if they're really aroused
and want to go on and do something more sexual at the end. We say, nope, that day, no sex, schedule it for another day.
So when you suddenly remove that, it allows you to just fully immerse yourself into the
current experience.
And you suddenly have people who've been in relationships for, you know, 20, 30, 40
years saying, oh my God, I never knew that this little quadrant on my lower back was so responsive.
I had no idea until we did this exercise.
Well, guess what you just learned.
You just learned another erotic zone that can be stimulated during sexual pleasure.
Cool.
Right.
So it's a fabulous exercise, highly recommended.
And the practicing communicating, it reminds me of everything else that we're supposed to do
in relationships with therapy.
Like we learn to talk to each other.
We practice conflict before we're in it.
We practice so that when we're in it,
we already have the tools to communicate with each other.
Is that the same idea of sensei-d focus
is that we're practicing before we're in it.
So we're not learning on the job.
Yeah, don't learn on the job.
Well, it's not working for us, so we'll try the Sensei Focus.
I'm Jonathan Menevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class. My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it. That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat? You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore. You'll hear from people who told me awkward,
embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she
knows that you're wealthy? You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios. Available now. Wherever you get your podcasts.
Before we move on to our podcast, water cues, because I'm very excited about them. What is the first thing a person should do?
Should say to her partner.
She's masturbated all the way from here to Kalamazoo.
She knows what she likes.
She has done all of the things.
She has her lubricant subscription
What should she say to her partner? Can you just give us a sentence?
Asking for a friend plenon
Just like if she wants to start the journey of
Them both exploring her own pleasure instead of just his
ejaculation. Yeah, there's so much nuance because it depends on the relationship dynamic and how
receptive partner is. But I think a safe way to start is, you know, for the most part, I love
our sex life. I love the things that we do. And
I want to try something different. Right. And so the framing is about opportunity rather
than, um, I dislike and this is broken. We need to change it. Unless, of course, it is broken.
Right. Right. Right. Unless, of course, it is painful. Because one in five women do have
painful sex. That's not normal. But again because one in five women do have painful sex.
That's not normal.
But again, we're just assuming that along with the lubricant subscription that the sex
for the most part is pretty good.
And it's about how do we now focus on her pleasure and make that the center point?
Okay.
So we're going to do the complement sandwich.
We learned in third grade.
We're going to say something nice first. And we're going to do an and both.
Not it sucked.
So, but, and we're going to try something new.
Awesome.
OK, should we move on to our pod squadron, Dr. Brato Q's?
They need some Dr. Brato in their lives.
We all do.
We all do.
We all do.
Can we start with Lindsay?
Hi, this is Lindsay. And I have kind of an embarrassing question. I think some people can
probably relate to I have to admit that I am a big faker in bed. I have turned this into
an art form, lots of owning, marital creeps in the bedroom, but I am struggling because
I'm finally with a great partner who would probably be
very understanding and would actually want to please me and help me you know get there. But
I've already been faking it for a very long time in our relationship and now I don't know what to do.
How do I unfake in the bedroom? How do I just use out of that?
Hope you guys can help and love you guys.
Keep doing what you're doing.
Oh my God, I love Lindsay too.
So much.
And also you can sense the hope in her that she's like,
this might be someone who actually wants to be genuine
and I want to be genuine with them.
How do I on fake?
No good. First of all, Lindsay, thank you.
Lindsay represents 60% of women.
Wow, really?
National study done out of the Kinsey Institute
a few years ago that essentially asked women,
have you ever faked a orgasm?
And are you still faking orgasms?
And if you've stopped faking them, why have you stopped?
So 60% of women will say on numerous occasions that they have faked an orgasm. And the number
one reason, I mean, do we even have to take a guess? It's, please a partner, right? It sort of
feeds into that same, I should reach an orgasm.m orgasm is a critical part of my sexual
partners happiness. And the kinds of shoulds that lead women to fake an orgasm have nothing
to do with her and her needs and it has everything to do with her expectations. So among
the women that do eventually stop faking orgasms,
something really shifted in that encounter
and that relationship and she realized
that actually no one is benefiting from this.
It's actually driving a wedge between our sexual satisfaction.
And in fact, we actually do know that
that the science shows us in the long-term women
who do continue to fake their orgasms
have less sexual satisfaction.
Maybe that's a no-brainer because, you know, faking orgasms doesn't happen in a vacuum. It goes
along with all the patriarchal views and the the shooting and the negative sex messaging and the
poor education to that extent, Lindsay's in good company. I think one thing that I would really empower Lindsay and others to do is
to not accept an easing out of it rather than a just stop. Like today, today we're going to
stop. We're going to stop because the sexual encounters have become stressful because she's
going into it. She's now spectatoring, right? She's monitoring. Am I getting closer? Is it getting there? She realizes she's not,
so she starts moaning. Then she watches herself moan, and then she might say, is that the right kind
of moan or is that a too much pornographic moan? Right? And suddenly she is not having sex anymore. She is watching from the side of the room with a stock watch, waiting for herself to reach orgasm.
And then her partner hears the moaning and says, oh, are we getting closer?
Are you almost there? I'm almost there too.
Can we go at the same time?
Another false myth that needs to be debunked, which is simultaneous orgasm,
you know, is the root of
sexual happiness and a relationship. It is not. It is not whatsoever. So you can see how this pattern
continues over time and how it happens to 60% of women. So yeah, the first thing to do is just
to completely stop and realize that it's actually getting in the way of allowing you to feel orgasm more naturally.
So stop, completely stop.
Whether you choose to tell a partner
that you have been faking it,
and that can be a catalyst
for a really great conversation about sex and a relationship,
or it could go the other way,
and a partner might feel betrayed.
And what else have you been lying to me about?
So it can go in not just to is can go a multitude of ways.
If a person chooses to tell a partner,
I don't think you have to tell a partner.
So we do want to make sure that Lindsey knows how to reach orgasm
and knows what orgasm feels like on her own.
And really this is where mindfulness comes in, right?
It's about staying with the body,
staying with the sensations in the moment,
telling herself that sexual pleasure
is not wrapped up in orgasm,
that's wrapped up in being very present
and being in sync and feeling good with vulnerability,
and that if orgasm happens on its own, great. That maybe is the icing on
the cake or maybe it's totally irrelevant. So there's a number of things that Lindsey can do in
the moment with a partner, but there's a whole lot that she can do outside of the bedroom
to unhinge those really patriarchal views about what orgasm really means.
Cool. It's interesting that Lindsay now has a partner that she feels might be
trustworthy, might be worthy, capable of having this conversation and it might be
a really interesting test to try. I mean I told Abby I've never not faked an
orgasm before our relationship. That's all I did my entire life. I mean, I told Abby, I've never not faked an orgasm before our relationship.
That's all I did my entire life. I just thought that's just what we do. I just get the job
done. And honestly, I felt like we were all complicit in it. Like, I always wonder
about this because I never felt like if I had told my partner that I was faking, that
they would have been all that surprised.
I don't think I was that good of an actor.
I just felt like there was a situation set up where women are supposed to do it and
men are supposed to act like they think that it happened and that there's not a lot of
care.
Like, plausible tonight.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
I've always had an issue. I've always felt like it just takes me too long.
It takes me too long.
And it's, have you ever used a stopwatch?
It doesn't, it doesn't take you too long.
Right.
That's my point is feeling like it's taking too long is feeding into these societal
views or notions, which is it should take X number of minutes.
And so if you're outside of that window of time, there's something wrong with you.
Yeah, and it's just an example of women thinking, I'm too much. I'm not enough. I'm too much. I'm not
enough. Like, there's no actual amount that is perfect for a woman. Like, if I'm too much,
there, what amount am I supposed to be?
And it's the same with orgasm.
It's like where did we get all of these ideas
that there's a certain amount of time that is correct?
Abby asked, is there a certain amount of time?
And there isn't.
And it's because the research that has asked
that question has been so all over the map
that they can't put their finger on a single number.
And in fact, I would argue,
you want orgasms to take a long time,
because that means arousal is prolonged.
It means there's this sort of very natural waxing
and waning of the sexual response building.
Maybe you take a pause and chit chat, right?
So this idea that faster is better is really dangerous.
Really dangerous.
I have a follow up question because I think that this could help a lot of folks.
When you are in that moment, because it's happened, I think, to probably all women who've been
in sexual encounters, is just taking too long. What do you suggest
for a woman in that moment to do to get back into her body and out of her mind?
I mean, it's wrapped up in your question, Abby, and that is you get back into your body.
You ask yourself, where do I feel the vibration? Where is the tension? Where is the heat? Where is the warmth?
Where is the coolness? Where is the wetness? That's what you do. You literally anchor yourself
in physical sensations. And we can't do both at the same time, the same way that we can't multitask.
You can't be processing all of these judgmental thoughts and be fully riding on the evolving sensations in your body
at the same time. So it's a beautiful anchor to bring you back to the present.
Is there a way to engage with your partner and communicate some of this like mind that's coming
into play and kind of getting in between you and your body in the moment. Like do we have like a safe word or whatever it's called?
Yeah, yeah.
So when couples ask me that, I'll often say,
well, what works best for the two of you?
Is it, do you want partner to ask you?
Like do you want partner to say,
what are you feeling right now and where do you feel it?
Or do you want to be the person to say,
that's safe word or that whatever single word it is?
So there's some dynamics there
that we need to figure out what it is,
but definitely it is something
that both partners can be engaged in.
So one way to be mindful with a partner at the same time
is open your eyes.
Now for some people that really creeps them out, right?
The sort of looking deep into each other's eyes, but when you get past all the psychological
hang-ups about and discomfort that come about with looking into someone's eyes, then you
can really focus on the color, the shape, the eyelashes, the distance between the two
eyes, and it can be a really pretty easy and effective way of bringing you both into the present moment at the same time.
God, it's so good.
I want to throw in one other piece of advice for Lindsay and that is if she feels comfortable
and I would really empower her to do this is ask her partner to watch her masturbate.
Just silence. Just silence from the whole weekend without this.
We're all sort of imagining that play out.
Well, it's because sometimes partners
don't know what really stimulates the other, right?
And I think seeing that it's not just for eroticism's sake. It's like actual
for functionalities say instruction. It's a didactic teaching session. It's really good.
Oh, Lindsay. Do you care to join me for a didactic teaching session at 1015 after we put the
kids down? Lindsay, we need you to report back after your didactic teaching session.
And let us know how it went.
Godspeed Lindsay, you can do hard things.
I love it so much.
I love it so much. I love it so much.
I love it so much.
I love it so much.
Okay, let's hear from Zoe.
Hi, Glennon, sister and auntie. This is Zoe. I recently started dating a woman and she is just
amazing, really top-notch, good human. And I have a lot, a lot of love for her. And I care about her,
a lot. There's something missing.
She's the first woman I've been with in any way,
and the romance I'm having a really hard time with.
And some of the physical intimacy.
And I just, I really don't want to let her go,
but I feel like I don't know if I'll be able to get there,
but it just, I just, I don't know.
I'm just lost. And I would really like to hear
more of your thoughts. This is Zoe's first relationship with another woman and it sounds like
things are going well, but she's not feeling a whole lot of sexual desire or sexual attraction
for her partner. I'm just sort of clarifying what I heard
because she mentioned romance,
but I think she, by romance,
she might have been referring to sex.
That's what's missing.
So the romance is great,
the connection is good, communication is good,
but the sexual energy or the sexual desire,
that's where the big question mark is.
So, you know, first of all, we wanna take a step back and I'll come back to our conversation from the last episode,
which is love is not the same thing as desire.
They can be very separate. Love is something that grows and builds over time.
Desire similarly can also be cultivated, right? It's not something that is just automatic and
spontaneous and there. And so I wonder if what Zoe is feeling is kind of what a lot of people feel,
which is motivation, but not necessarily desire for sex. So I want to normalize that first of all.
And then I would encourage Zoe to think about
what's in it for me, what's in it for us, if we were to go into this sexual encounter.
Right. So we're normalizing neutrality and we're giving her tons of permission and creativity
to think about why have sex. Maybe it's to do something totally new with a partner,
you know, a same sex partner that I've never done anything with. Maybe it's an opportunity to learn something about myself
from a same sex partner. So really to give yourself time to think about the reasons.
And if that leads her to consent and wanting, again, doesn't have to be desire, then she can
go ahead in all of the same ways
that we've been talking, asking for permission,
showing partner what she likes, being open that a rousal can
give way to desire, recognizing that orgasm does not have
to happen.
And sort of treat this as, I mean, she almost wants to treat
this as her first ever sexual encounter.
Right?
Imagine, like, let's erase all your past.
In fact, every new sexual encounter is a brand new.
It's almost like sex for the first time.
Right.
And so that's where some of the danger is is she might be comparing this to her feelings
in past relationships.
The current partner might be doing less soliciting, right? Less inviting.
And if it is a woman, again, it's very gender. There's probably less of that kind of pressuring
into having sex that maybe she did experience from men. So there's a lot that makes this different
and different doesn't mean broken. Different means an opportunity to be creative and be open. And please, please, please communicate, right?
Communicate. Let's go back to fantasy. What do you want to do? What can we do? Never done this before. Show me. Teach me. I'm open to walk me through. Let me watch you. So think slow, simmering, smoldering fire rather than a big,
bursting flame all at once. And that can be super sexy. So this is a wonderful
opportunity for Zoe. Interesting. So you're even suggesting that she continues
this trying and cultivating is because she is experiencing pleasure in this relationship.
Right. She's experiencing pleasure through emotional, through, she's reported there's so much goodness there. And it's just this physical. But because for me, I'm thinking, look at her and I'm thinking,
that's how I used to feel about with guys. Like, right? So is there, how do you know?
I just, this is dangerous territory.
So I'm trying to, I'm trying to ask this in like,
but I know the listener's gonna be thinking this.
So I'm like, how do you know when it's just maybe
that's not your sexuality?
Or can choice be involved in that?
Is because I've always felt like there's some measure of choice involved.
Can we allow for that?
Or are we supposed to say, well, sister, maybe you are just not gay?
Okay, there's a lot in that.
And I think your trepidation around this is warranted.
We're not talking about just doing it for the sake of doing it, even if it's not consensual.
Right?
That's not what we're talking about.
I'm going into this with a lot of assumptions that Zoe and her partner have a strong emotional
and romantic bond.
She wants to be sexual because I think I heard her say that she wants to, but she's just
not sensing it there.
And what is jumping out to me is she's comparing this in an unfair way to past sexual encounters
that have been with men.
Okay.
Yeah.
And she's saying, I'm not able to get there. And I think when when you
were talking to us, Dr. Bato about the one of the most important things about our
sexual pleasure or dysfunction is the beliefs we bring in were born with a
heteronormative message mandate through our whole lives. And it could be that Zoe is bringing into that pictures and stories in her head
about how this is not right.
This is unnatural.
This is whatever it is.
And just because it's coming from her doesn't mean it's of her.
Yeah.
You know, it could be needing to say,
to look at those things and say, what is this block?
What story am I telling myself that is taking me out of my head
and not letting me go there with this person?
Right. Right. Yeah. I'm so glad that you brought that up because is this for Zoe also
creating questions of who am I? Right. So because I'm attracted to a woman, does this mean
I'm a lesbian? And what does this mean for my understanding of myself
for the last, however old she is 30 years, 40 years, rather than saying, I'm attracted to this person,
right? It's not about our gender and whether we fit into this category or that category, rather
it's about my love and admiration and attraction for this person. And so that is a really important conversation
because if she did grow up with messages
that have been denigrating towards same-sex sexualities,
she's gonna be caring those with her,
whether she knows them or not,
they are gonna be making their way
into her psyche and into her bedroom.
And it's also possible that they're just friends, you know, like it really is. It's all like
her the love that she has inside of her might just be more friendship love total. But you know,
I'm always going to say go for it. So I'm pro gay over here. So
Okay, so we good luck sister. Let's hear from Sarah.
Okay, so we good luck sister. Let's hear from Sarah. Hi, good morning, my sister. Hi Abby. My question is this. I'm a little over two weeks
over. Yay. And I haven't had sober sex yet. I'm really scared. I haven't had sex
sober in years. And I just don't know how to do it. I'm scared of being so present. Just wondered if
you had any tips. I guess that's it. Love you so much. Mrs. Sarah, thanks. Bye. I feel this one.
I feel this one. Well, kudos to you Sarah for this period of sobriety. There's a lot we know about the effects of alcohol and sex and
and for a lot of people, alcohol, numbs, negative sex messages in a way that allows them to engage in sex.
Right. So all the inhibitions that we carry, whether they're external and patriarchal, or they're rooted in the present relationship, right?
Like you're not good enough,
the only way for this to work is for us to have
a certain frequency and type of sex, et cetera.
So all those messages can be numbed through sex.
It is a coping mechanism that, quote,
allows a person to engage in sex,
but obviously in a really unhealthy way
because it means that she's actually having sex
in spite of some of these important messages
that are being numbed through alcohol.
Now, at the same time, alcohol is a depressant
and has a direct effect on the nerves,
on the blood vessels,
on the neurotransmitters, on the sexual system in the body.
It's been an area of intense research study.
They'll set up an experiment where they bring
usually college kids into a lab and protect them
and watch them and make them sign a waiver
that they're gonna stay in the lab for six hours
until the alcohol is left their blood.
But what it's allowed us to
learn is the impact of increasing doses of alcohol on sexual response. And it kicks in pretty fast.
So for say, and quote, average build of woman, whatever average is, after a drink,
the impact of alcohol on her sexual response starts to take its toll. Like in a negative way.
In a negative way.
Yeah.
So it interferes with arousal and because arousal is necessary for orgasm, it can be a major
reason why women are not reaching orgasm when they're drinking at the same time.
So on the one hand, you have the quote, benefits of not having all the negative messages,
but on the other hand, your body is going the opposite way
and not feeling and not feeling a rousal or orgasm.
So now Sarah is starting to come out of that, right?
So the good news, she's going to start to feel her body.
She's going to start to feel the early signs of a rousal.
And I'd encourage
Sarah to really tune into that. I mean, she's depending on how long she's been drinking for.
Maybe she has no idea what a rousal even feels. So this is an amazing opportunity for her to learn
maybe for the first time. What are the early signs of a rousal? Can I build it? Can I watch it?
Does arousal travel through my body and use this as a, again, a time to be really excited
about that?
On the other hand, she's now going to be faced with all the negative messages that were
blunted with alcohol.
So having tools in place to be able to address that, depending on the nature of what the negative messages were
and how strong they were, this might be an opportunity
to work with a professional psychologist, a sex therapist,
someone trained in helping you manage
what the negative beliefs are, or if they're
on the kind of milder scale, maybe it is something
that Sarah can do on her own.
If there has been any past history of unwanted sex,
sexual assault, rape, for a lot of women,
alcohol does become a way of numbing
and tuning out those past messages.
So if that is part of her history,
it really advocate that she reach out
to a skilled healthcare provider to help,
help encounter those memories again,
because they might come back pretty fiercely.
I want to, I live a message for Sarah about so sobriety,
but can you tell me, do so many women have been our survivors
of sexual assault of all kinds?
Is there a hopeful message
as you can give us about that?
Do people recover?
Or is it, it's not recovering, is it?
Is it just living with it and finding ways to,
can they still have pleasure in doing sex
with their partners and how?
Yeah, absolutely.
And Glen and I'm assuming that you're talking about
when it comes to sex, right?
So there are the other ways that the remnants play themselves.
So yeah, it's been an area of huge research study.
In fact, I was just at a conference
over the weekend in Chicago, where this was a major theme
that came up, which was what happens to those women
who experienced sexual assault or rape either as an adult
and adolescent, as a child, and what happens
to their sexuality as they grow.
And the good news is about half of them are able to really fully move past it
and don't see any impact on their sexuality or their sexual desire.
They're able to engage in consensual ways and feel pleasure and a rousal.
And the bad news is have to not.
and feel pleasure and arousal. And the bad news is have to not. That, of course, can be mitigated with a good qualified trusting healthcare provider who knows how to manage
not just sexual assault, but if there's any any PTSD post traumatic stress symptoms and
how that shows up during sex. Because sometimes what I see in my practice
is we do a lot of good work around working through
the trauma, but then it surfaces in the bedroom
when she starts to feel aroused
because arousal is a trigger.
Sure.
Right?
So that's what I mean about making sure
that you're working with a qualified
and well trained person in this area.
So there is definitely reason for hope, and I would say even if you think this has not had any lasting impact on you,
do consider talking to someone. Okay, no shame there, no shame in talking to someone. Is there any book that they can order?
Because there's so many people who can't.
I just always think about the person.
People can't find therapists or they can't find the time or they can't find the money
or their insurance as in pay for it.
Is there like a freaking website or what do people do that can't find the time or they can't find the money or their insurance isn't paid for it. Is there like a freaking website or what do people do that can't find a therapist?
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There's a variety of books that talk about history of sexual assault and
how it affects sexuality. Certainly in my book, Better Sex Remindfulness, I have a chapter on it.
Emily Nagoski's book, Come As You Are, Reviews the Science that I've just summarized and again paints this hopeful picture while at the same time empowering women to get help becoming glitter it is another one by Lori Mints, which is about knowing your body and also knowing about what gets in the way of knowing your body and sexual assault is one of them. So thank you. I do recognize that to be able to access therapy is a privilege
that a lot of people, probably most people don't have either financially or geographically
or that sort of thing. So thankfully there are some really good books out there.
Can we just take a moment to realize that the statistic that you just shared
just take a moment to realize that the statistic that you just shared means that one in six women in this country have their ability and their human right to access pleasure through
sex robbed of them over their lifetime because of this country's unwillingness and inability
to do anything about the epidemic of sexual assaults against women.
One in six women cannot access their sexual pleasure because we as a country have decided that no accountability
for sexual assault is going to be the rule in this country. Yeah. Yeah, it's it's jarring, isn't it?
And we are talking about one of multiple instances of, you know, stripping away of rights towards women. So when you start adding up all of the other ways where there's lack of accountability
or an outright taking away of what women are entitled to, suddenly that one in six
number starts to jump up pretty quick.
And then you start to say, well,
it's no wonder so many people have problems sexually.
And it has nothing to do with the horrors or their biology.
It's the system that they are marinated in.
And I'm amazed by this.
I mean, I'm just gonna try to say this and make sense of it.
But I'm amazed that more women are not just constantly enraged at their husbands. Okay. And I say this
with lesbian privilege now. Okay. I understand. I have lesbian privilege. But it reminds me of
we did an episode with our dear friend,. Yababley, okay, and she
was talking to us about the ridiculousness of the word ally and how white people are always
coming to her to say, what should I do?
What should I do to help you?
Like what?
Or doing nothing while black people's rights are ignored,
while violence is happening where they're being murdered
and her thought and her insistence was like,
do whatever you do if your people were being killed
in the streets, you wouldn't have to be taught by us.
You would just know what to do and you would do it.
And so I guess I just, I think a lot about how,
you know, the statistics that you just said that one in six women have their sexual
pleasure, stolen from them, that our rights are being taken by the Supreme Court now that
on and on and on.
And then we look at our partners who are men and many of them are not doing shit about
it.
But then they want our bodies in bed.
And I know it's not all that simple,
but I just, I wonder why men aren't out there fighting
and marching and demanding accountability
for sexual predators like their own lives depend on it.
It must be because their own lives don't depend on it. It's because
but their partners lives depend on it. So why aren't their asses out there every day fighting
for their families? And why does that not create a break between men and women much like
the break in trust between white women and black women.
Right.
It does.
I mean, John and I have been working through some
a lot of stuff lately and like really digging in.
And he finally told me, he said ever since November 8th,
2016, the night the Trump was elected,
there has been a hardness and a meanness to you
that was not there before
Wow
The night that the leak of the overturning of row came out and I just walked right in our bedroom
And through my computer on the bed and said it must be nice to be a person who's never been treated by your country as a second-class citizen
And just went to bed and he was he was so upset because he was like be nice to be a person who's never been treated by your country as a second-class citizen.
And just went to bed.
And he was so upset because he was like, you're clumping me with them.
These whole people that do who are doing this and oppressing you.
And I said, no, I'm not.
I'm stating a fact that is very real and will forever divide us, which is that you don't know what it's like to be a person
that your country values so little that it conscripts your organs and your future in a government
mandate. You will never know that. You will never understand that. And so my question to you is,
would there be able to be less hardness in you if there were more hardness in him? Would there be able to be less hardness in you if there were more hardness in him?
Would there be a less of a divide?
If husbands were sitting around saying, well, I don't know what to do.
If they were just figuring it out, if they were allowing us, if they were allowing women
to process, to feel, to rage and not have to be the ones leading the organizing leading all of it because of their asses
we're out there doing it.
Yeah, I mean, if, if, yeah, yes, okay.
All right, you want to see him get angry.
Yes.
And you want to do something you want to get angry, right?
And stop acting like they don't know how to do it.
They're already running the fucking world. Do what you always do. Pretend it's a startup. Like get organized.
Or at least, yes, and at least understand that there is no compartmentalizing.
If you, if you really want intimacy with your person, which is what you're purporting to want,
when you ask them to lie down in bed with you, if you really want intimacy, then you cannot
pretend that the person that is lying next to you is bringing the intimacy of the understanding
that her body has been divorced from herself,
which you are asking to come here and be whole.
Like, and you're either fighting for her or you're not.
Right.
Let's hear from our last Potsquater.
Hi, my name is Christine.
I was calling actually for two reasons.
I just listened to your episode on Sexual Desire and was sad to
know that I had never heard drive by Melissa Farrick, even though I'm a lesbian. So I immediately
listened and, yes, I'm gay. So that's kind of cracking me up. My second reason I'm calling
is because I don't know if you ever take nominations for Pod Squadder of the week, but I wanted to just give a shout out to my dear friend, Erica. She introduced me to your podcast
a few months ago and it has changed my world in so many wonderful ways and I just wanted to think
her for introducing me to the conversations and just lift her up because she's an amazing person
and an amazing friend and I don't know what I would do without her.
So thank you so much.
Keep up the amazing community and I can't wait to keep listening.
Have a wonderful day.
Yay.
Thank you, Christine.
Thank you, Christine.
Thank you, Christine.
Also, that is a good, next right thing
for our friend who's trying to figure out
how to want to make out with her new girlfriend.
Listen to Drive by Melissa Theric, okay?
So, let me test.
Dr. Brado, Laura, Laura, thank you so much for,
I've just, just personally, I just needed you this week.
So, thank you. I think we I just needed you this week. So thank you.
We all need it each other this week. And I'm in Canada, we are not immune to this.
We stand beside you and we are just as fucking freaked out as you all are as well.
So we are in solidarity with you. I don't think that, I mean, what more important,
where could you be doing right now? Just helping women be in their bodies, access their pleasure, demand pleasure, no matter
what is revolutionary work right now. And thank you for doing it. And I know we've talked
a lot about the ways that it makes it harder. How is it possible to be this divorce from your body by your government and
still need to be president in it, but we also
just remembering that that is our birthright and that that is our active resistance is that the more
they try to take over our bodies, the more we need to double down on taking ownership of them
and our birthright and our pleasure and our joy in our own goddamn bodies.
So this is what we're doing now and I think for the next right thing, better sex through mindfulness
by Dr. Boone Rotto. It's all about the practice of mindfulness that is about non-judgmental present moment awareness of all those thoughts,
all of those judgments of yourselves,
all of those critiques of your body,
and the, am I doing it right?
The good news and bad news is
that we gotta let all that go.
It keeps coming back to this thing.
We're gonna have to feel it all or miss it all.
That's right.
So let's just let those thoughts come.
It has been proven by the good doctor to result in increased sexual arousal desire and
pleasure, improved intensity of orgasm.
And I just want to say one thing, Glenn, and do you want to go on a Sensei focused date
with me tonight?
Oh, Jesus.
Oh, does that seem is that similar to the
didactic training? Yes. So yeah, so I just want to formally invite my wife on a Sensei focused date
tonight. I'm saying it out. Okay. What do you say? Okay, baby. Next right thing. Next right thing.
I'll do it. She said, you heard it here, folks. We will report back.
We'll see you next week.
We love you.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
Bye.
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