We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - SILENT SEX QUEEN: Why aren’t we talking about sex more?
Episode Date: August 3, 20211. Glennon, Amanda, and Abby discuss their sex origin stories and how that shapes their current sex fears. 2. Glennon’s high-pressure situation of sex with Abby for the first time—and how it didn�...��t go quite as you’d expect. 3. The biggest sex challenges in Glennon, Abby, and Amanda’s marriages now. 4. What Amanda regrets about her past sex life—and how she’s already worried about what she’s going to regret when she’s eighty. 5. How Pod Squaders taught Glennon and Abby about “lesbian deathbed.” 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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Hi everybody. You are in for a... well, I was going to say a treat but I don't know you're in for an
experience today and the experience is going to be that you are going to listen to
my sister Amanda Abby and I talk about sex. Our hard thing today that we're
discussing is sex and what I want you to know is that we're feeling really vulnerable about this episode.
It was a hard episode for us to do.
But a really important one, I think.
I absolutely loved this conversation.
I hope you do too.
Let's go.
Hi, you guys.
Here we are! Here we are to talk about sex. Sex? I just would notice that I forgot
to put on deodorant this morning and I just feel like this is the worst possible day to not put on deodorant
because I'm already sweating. This topic is a little sweaty for me. How are you all feeling? As we begin
this, what is sure to be an incredibly enlightening discussion about sex?
Well, I just asked Sister how she feels about Amanda, how she feels about becoming a sex
podcast star. How do you feel, Sister? I feel like this is as close as I'm ever going to come
to being a sex star. I feel like I am here. I have a clipboard. I literally have a clipboard.
I'm going to be taking a lot of notes. I feel like I'm coming with a student's mind.
Just what I'm saying. But it's so sister to bring a clipboard to sex.
Do you actually bring a clipboard to sex?
Because it feels like something you would do.
Actually, that's important.
That's like really, Glenn, and how are you approaching
this conversation?
Because I'm just like, I'm right here.
Yeah, you're right.
I got nothing.
Well, I'm praying.
I'm breathing deeply.
And sister has a clipboard. Okay. That's very indicative of our Well, I'm praying, I'm breathing deeply. And sister has a clipboard.
OK, so that's very indicative of our personalities, I think.
I'm a stranger mode.
I'm in service mode.
And I'm in service mode, because this is not easy for me
to talk about sex.
And it's not, but so many people, so much of the Pad Squad
asked us to do an episode about sex.
So here we are.
And it feels important important because it's something
that's such a huge part of all of our lives
in one way or another.
And the whole world gets to talk about it
everywhere you look.
There's some company capitalizing off of women's bodies
and sex.
And then the women ourselves, we find ourselves feeling very
alone, I think,
because we don't talk about it enough with each other.
So here we are, Abbi's actually recording in a closet.
Ha, ha, ha, ha.
I am in a basement bathroom.
I'm not sure what that says about me.
But here we go, ready or not.
We're doing it.
So that's funny that you say that it's really hard But here we go, ready or not. We're doing it.
So that's funny that you say that it's really hard for you to talk about because I feel like
you've probably written 200 pages of books about it.
So what part is hard for you and can you take us back to, when you told me you were doing this episode, I was thinking about the early days of sex,
like the origin story of sex for me and how that informed everything.
So if it's cool with you, we should go back there, I think, because I think a lot of that
is informed how we feel now.
Yeah.
And might I just, like, interrupt, like, I'm just going to have just gonna have like a big old ill about what comes next
Right, I know
I mean, so we've been talking so much this week
Preparation for this and we've been negotiating like lovingly like what is it because what is okay to talk about what is not okay to talk about
What is just ours what can we share what can you stand me saying about my past and vice versa?
Like nothing, but I'm being really brave and mature right now. I know. I know. That's your grown-up.
Well, I, you say yes. You have written so many pages about sex, and I would say that I'm always
writing about what I don't understand, but desperately want to. That's basically all that I write.
I really want to. That's basically all that I write.
Most of my early writing in Carrie Ann Warrior and Love Warrior was about like, what is this
sex situation and why don't I grasp it?
I just have never in my life felt how I thought I was supposed to feel about sex when I looked
at the world and how other people were talking about how they felt,
about sex.
So the first time I had sex, I was,
or sex what the world calls sex, right?
I was in, I think my sophomore year of high school,
I was dating a senior boy.
He was a bit of a slut, I guess you call them.
Like he had sex with a lot of people.
So I knew I was going to be expected to have sex with him one
day after school.
We had sex.
And it just, I remember just laying there and being like,
this is it.
Like, I remember walking around the bedroom, like looking at
posts trying to read.
This is this is just reading every poster,
reading, every just reading, reading, get me out of this world and experience and let me read.
It's basically my life mantra. So that's what I remember from that moment. And then it being over
and being like, okay, I guess that was like nothingness. Nothingness, no feeling, no anything.
like nothingness, nothingness, no feeling, no anything.
And then I remember over time, the we would have sex and after school or whenever, but his parents were always home, so we would have sex in the basement laundry room on a cement floor.
Oh my gosh.
Sexy.
Yeah.
And that was it.
Like, that was the whole thing.
And so what I can tell you about my relationship from sex from that moment and on until, well,
until I'm at Abby was that I always felt like sex was something that I had to do to make
the boy or man I was with happy, satisfied.
Like it was like this maintenance thing.
Like if you want to have a car and you want the car to get you around and function the way
it's supposed to, you have to have an oil change.
Everyone's not all right, we'll break down.
That's how I felt about sex.
Like it was this thing that I had to do to keep a relationship flowing and to keep the guy happy.
But I always felt like it was very impersonal to me.
Like I could have been anyone.
Like I was a scratching post for a cat, right?
That I was just like this thing being used as a means to an end.
So good times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Anyone else have a better story about sex. I feel like it's funny because I feel like I talk to a lot of people who kind of have regret about having sex with too many people or feeling like they were kind of giving themselves away to too many folks, it seems like maybe you might be describing
that you weren't getting any value out of that exchange, but it seems like in all of
the context, it's this idea of exchange of value.
Like as if sex is this currency and we are exchanging things for it, so you were bartering
this idea of like keeping them around.
This is something
you had to do. For me, I feel like I had the exact same paradigm, except for my reaction to
that value structure was the opposite. And it even comes through in the way we talk about
sex. Save yourself for marriage. Right? Like, like, there is this account that you are either saving up.
Giving up.
Spending.
Yes, giving it up.
Yes, you're saving it or you're spending it.
And for me, I feel like my regret when I look back is I should have had more sex.
That's awesome.
I mean, like when I think about it, if I hadn't, I placed like,
as if I was spending myself and losing my value.
Like if I didn't have sex with people,
I got to preserve A, I wouldn't be able to,
like I super remember in 7th or 8th grade,
hanging out with this group of guys,
they were talking about this girl
that one of them had made out with, and she had, they were talking about this girl that one of them had made out with and she had, they
were talking about she had hair on her nipples.
Okay.
Like on her breasts, which I have that 100% well.
Okay.
Same.
I'm the I'm the harriest mammal in the history of my life.
I'm like a freaking the answer thought like or whatever those cut like the chin, the I
mean Abby walks over and pulls
chin hairs out. That's what a good partner does. Yeah, if you can't see it then somebody's gotta be able to
Okay, sorry sister. Nipple hair. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no I remember being so mortified and thinking, oh, I get it.
Like if you spend yourself in that situation,
you are now just like exchanged on the market.
Like you, everyone gets to say whatever they want about you.
That's what happens.
And then, and then also, like you're stuck.
Like a bunch of guys talking about the value
of this particular.
Yes, that's what's been created. And you can do damage to it by what you say. Yeah, your
Correct, and if you withhold it then it's like that, you know
Supply and demand situation where it's like the higher value you are and so I as a result of that I kind of had this idea of
I, as a result of that, I kind of had this idea of not that I, that I could make myself unbronorable and keep my value high by not doing that.
And I look back and I just think like that sucks because there were people that like, I
actually loved that I didn't have sex with.
I mean, loved in like the, sure, senior year of high school way,
but I, and I think like, well, that's a damn shame.
I also think this, this idea of like what we think about,
like we're supposed to have,
we're supposed to like when we get married
in our relationships with our partners,
have this like, be Picasso's at sex,
like figuring out what all things and doing it.
And then we're also supposed to have these experiences
of like using our paintbrushes a couple times before that.
And like how the hell is that supposed to happen?
I don't, I think I could have gotten a lot
of nice practice with some safe people.
Yeah, and like I wasn't even a paintbrush.
I was just a canvas.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But I think what's interesting is you guys are both talking about, I think it's hilarious
that we can bring in economics and the metaphor of finance to sex, you know, commodities,
women, what our bodies are worth.
And you both kind of chose different paths, but I think it's really interesting.
It's like the grass is sometimes looks greener on the other side,
but it's not always the case, you know?
I mean, sister, I think it's so interesting
that you wish you had more sex.
And gladden, do you wish you had less sex?
Okay, no, but I, okay, I swear to you
that I don't think I can answer this question in front of you.
I think, I mean, no, I do not...
Do you want to...
Let me ask you this.
We'll get into the...
Okay.
And you can not answer if you feel uncomfortable.
Do you wish you had been with women before me?
I do...
Okay, I'm not going to say I wish I had been sweating so freaking much right now.
Okay, I don't but I first of all I want to say that I love you.
Whatever happens in this podcast, I don't want it to be used again to be later.
Stay in the prime.
Maybe we should phrase it like this.
Do you wish your paintbrush had been able to practice?
Yes, here's the beautiful art.
I think I would have perhaps hated sex less
if I were not having sex with completely the wrong gender
my entire life.
I mean, that is right.
OK.
That is completely right.
But I also think that while my situation might be,
I mean, the first time, while it might be a little unusual
in some ways because of my later in life, I mean, the first time, well, it might be a little unusual in some ways because of
my later in life lesbian experience. I also think it's sort of universal in lots of ways.
Like when I talk to my friends who are not gay, a lot of them have the exact same situation
and the exact same feelings that I do of feeling kind of used during sex,
of feeling like the object, during sex, not the subject, of feeling like a scratching post
of it feeling impersonal. So, you know, the first time that I saw you, Abby,
and I think of it, you know, for a long time, I thought of it as love at first sight.
But like, what the hell does that mean? That's kind of like weird and woo-woo. And what I think of it, you know, for a long time, I thought of it as love at first sight. But like, what the hell does that mean?
That's kind of like weird and woo, woo,
and what I think what I really felt was true desire
for the first time, right?
Like I wouldn't have not known
how to put that into words at the time,
but I felt like holy shit.
Like I felt like magnetized.
I felt lit up inside.
I felt tingly in like certain places.
I felt like very like what is happening.
And of course, to me, that felt like a mystical experience
because I hadn't had that before, right?
So after having felt lit up for the first time, feeling desire, feeling alive,
having on top of that struggled with sex for so long, I started putting all of this together,
right? And as you know, or is in untamed, I sat down with a long time trusted therapist that had
been Cragonized Marriage Therapist for a very long time. So knew all of the struggle, and I sat down with a long time trusted therapist that had been Cragonized Marriage Therapist for a very long time.
So knew all of the struggle and I sat down and I basically burst into tears and I said,
here's the deal, I feel so dead during sex.
I feel used every time.
I feel like I'm just abandoning myself.
I feel rage after all the infidelity.
I feel angry during sex.
I feel and now I'm having this experience of feeling
desire for this woman. And I'm wondering if it's all just starting to make sense, you
know. And she looked at me and said, okay, all of these feelings are, there's nothing,
none of this is real. So the first thing she said, none of this is real. And I said, wait,
but are you sure? And, you know, if I can't be with this other person, then I know that
at least I can never have sex with my husband again. And she said, okay, well, have you considered
giving blow jobs? A lot of women consider blow jobs to be less intimate. So maybe you could handle that.
I mean, what kind of, this person needs to be fired from the,
the world of therapy, a, and then be a lot of people don't consider blow jobs
to be less intimate. Listen.
I know, but, but babe, I needed that moment looking back on it.
Like I needed something that dramatic to wake me up
to the fact that the whole world is constantly
just telling women, your feelings aren't real,
shut up and just keep giving the frickin' blow jobs
in one way or another because all of it,
not just sex but all of it,
but we can get back to sex, is really just about
keeping him happy,
whatever happy means.
Powered.
Your job is just to not rock the boat,
to not assert your own desire,
to not assert any of it,
and just keep things running smoothly,
keep status quo, right?
And I needed that.
I needed to see it that clearly.
And I mean, my life, not just my sex philosophy,
but my life philosophy since that moment has been
as God as my witness, I will never give a blowjob again.
I'm not at work.
Not at work.
Not in bed, not in a relationship, not in politics,
like never again.
Every time someone pats me on the head and says, just keep giving blow jobs.
That's my, well, I mean, let's be, let's be real.
Like that is for sure.
Yeah, literally it's for sure.
Abby's like cosine, cosine, also in a sex positive way.
Clearly, this is also a metaphor.
Glendon is also never going to give blow jobs, but if that's your partner,
there's nothing wrong with a good old fashioned blow job.
Oh, I have a dear friend who loves,
I have a dear friend who loves giving blow jobs.
I was stunned.
Yeah.
I thought she was lying.
I thought she was oppressed and needed to be saved.
Like I looked at it episode of Handmaid's Tale.
And she was like, no, I swear to you.
Yeah, I do not begrudge your blowjob.
No, but you should not do what you don't want to do.
That's right. That's right.
That's right. That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
I just want to affirm those.
I think that with this therapist, I think that, I remember when you called me Glennon
and you told me what she said.
And I remember feeling like, oh, well, this is unbelievable.
But what you did with this information, first of all,
know your therapist and know if they are good at their jobs
because they are telling you literally how to live your life
and know when bad information is being handed to you, right?
Yeah, as a person who loves therapy.
We love therapy.
And this can be dangerous.
It can be dangerous.
Yeah, but here's the thing.
What I think is so cool about this,
this is, I think in some ways,
what really sparked untamed.
Mm-hmm.
Like, this was like, it was like a real awakening for you.
And quite honestly, it was the,
it was the craziest shit I had ever heard.
And I think that allowed you to feel like we could go down this path together
because it was like this was such horrible information.
Anyways, I agree with you.
It was so clarifying. It was so clarifying to me.
And you know, then a lot happened.
We had a lot of things to walk through before the first time you and I had sex.
Yep.
And that day I flew to LA from Florida and came to a hotel room where you were.
Oh my god, are you okay right now?
Yeah, I'm just getting a little embarrassed.
Yeah, my little cheeks are like,
I know you're sweet little cheeks,
but what I will say we talked about
whether or not we could talk about this, okay?
And we're telling this story vaguely
for an important reason because that moment
of walking into that hotel room knowing
we were gonna have sex for the first
time.
By the way, I had never even kissed a girl before and we had just like dismantled our entire
lives for this moment.
So it would have really sucked if it didn't go well.
You knew we were gonna have sex.
Oh, stop.
We've been talking about it every freaking hour.
Okay.
That's a high pressure situation.
Like, what if that, oh, God.
We hadn't been in the same room.
We hadn't even touched.
She has never kissed a girl.
I'm like, there's a lot of, a lot of things that are like
on the riding on the line for this.
Right. And also, there was this thing where,
and I don't think, I haven't talked to anybody about this.
Okay. You and I, Abby, have talked about it.
Okay, I'm like, ah!
No, no, no, no, no, she got down this road, then.
No.
So, there was this vibe in our early relationship, which was,
Abby had been used to like freaking being the sex tutor for
straight girls.
Okay.
I'm sorry, is that wrong?
Did I say that wrong?
Yeah, I mean,
you say it's certainly that it's correct.
Yes.
A lot of women have,
a lot of straight women feel confused by me
because I'm telling you, this is true.
I know it.
Listen, do you think I don't know?
Yeah, a lot of straight women have come to me and they're like, hmm, I feel confused by
you because I'm very attracted to you.
And you're also a woman and I've never had that before.
And so.
Okay, Jizette still happened because I need to go stab a bunch of people.
Is that still happening?
No, I have sending energy now, so it's fine.
Okay.
Yeah, so that's how I say it.
So I, for me, having this sexual awakening, feeling sexual and
desiring, not just worrying about being desired, but feeling
desiring for the first time was really important to me. And so
the way I want to say this is it was important to me to to to
walk into that hotel room and be not the object of that
sexual experience but be the subject of that sexual experience. So that was a surprise to me.
That was a surprise for sure. I did not know that was going to happen.
Right. So Abby thought I think she figured because of the way things are usually structured in like lesbian culture, which there's like, well, I mean, look at us.
Like I am more masculine.
I'm what, in the lesbian world, what you would call butch, you're more feminine.
And so like two plus two equals four, right?
Like people would assume that you walk into this room and that I would do all the business.
And that's how it would happen.
But that is not how it would end down.
Not what happened sister.
That is not what happened.
We're here to tell you first.
We're here to tell you first.
It's very important for me to be untamed in that moment for me.
I wanted to like take over, not just like, but I wanted to for myself, but also for Abby, you know?
I wanted her to know that like, that I, that I would desire to her.
And it was, that means I think it was the, the, the moment that everything changed for
me sexually, because for the first time I felt like I wasn't just acting.
You were a sexual actor instead of acting.
Yes. And I wasn't like trying to recreate some freaking
scene I'd seen in a movie a million times. I wasn't saying the script that women are supposed to
say from porn culture. I wasn't arching my back the way I was. Is this what it looks like in the movie?
Like I wasn't playing a role. I was actually there. Just responding. However, my body, any emotions
Wanted to respond and I know that a lot of people out there who are listening
Have their roles in their sexual identity their sexual lives their sexual relationships
They vary right like you have you have folks that are
What did you call it, the pillow princesses?
pillow princess.
We learned this in the comments on our Instagram
when we asked about people wanting to know about sex.
And I think what was really interesting
about this first moment for us is that I didn't know
that I needed to feel like I could be
and for lack of a better word handled
and taking care of in a sexual way rather than being the one that always takes care of. Like I I don't know I just felt like oh this is so different you know
and so special um and I didn't expect to want that you know because the way that not only the
way that the world would assume or perceive the way I am sexually, but like, it just felt good to like be taking care of and, I don't know.
Yeah, and it felt good to be like an amazingly powerful sex queen as I was in that. Oh my god.
There we go. We got the title of this episode. Next, sex queen.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, I'll give you that.
I'll say it.
I'll be the first to say it.
Sex queen.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
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.
Okay, so what is, what do you attribute the differences?
Because there's, as you said,
so many people have had that experience you had growing up,
even if they're not like, oh, I'm gay later on.
What, how do you attribute the differences between like,
being with the woman versus being with a man
in terms of how the whole sexual ecosystem works?
the whole sexual ecosystem works.
Okay, so you know how sometimes when you're in a conversation with a man and the man just like keeps talking,
like really you just have to,
if you're with like a mansplainer, right?
And really in order to make it through the conversation,
all you really have to do is like nod, smile,
not offer anything because they're not going to listen anyway, just make him feel good about himself by making your
face look like you're interested, but it requires nothing from you, so you can basically
go dead inside.
Okay, so that's my 80% of my conversations with men.
And then when you're talking to a woman who's really emotionally,
has a high emotional IQ and it's high social IQ,
and you are in a conversation
and then she's asking you questions.
And it's intense and making you think
and growing you, and it requires all of you.
And it's awesome, but also exhausting, right?
Those are the differences of sex.
And it's like sex with a guy,
you really just have to keep smiling, make them sub feel,
this is like such a horrific generalization.
Can the listener just stay with me?
Because it's my-
Well, this is what I was just gonna say.
Disclaimer, this is your experience.
My experience.
Yeah.
Right, right, right.
And then with the woman, it's with Abby,
obviously she's the only woman I've ever been with.
It's like a very, it's a conversation
that requires a lot of you.
And it's, it grows me and it's deeper
and it's like transformative
and it requires a lot more of me.
It's exhausting.
Yeah.
Okay, so some people probably think,
okay, this is like before and after,
this is it sucked and now it's this idyllic world.
But do you still, you must still have like sex challenges
and dealing with things?
I mean, you're a couple. Oh my a couple years in. So what are those?
And do you think they're universal?
Okay.
To men and women.
I'm going to let you answer first so that I know where we're going with this before.
I think that our biggest challenge is two parts.
challenge is two parts. One, I think that frequency is the challenge, but actually I think our bigger challenge is the worrying about the frequency. So Glenin is new
to lesbian culture. And actually she taught me at the comments since you asked for what
people wanted to hear on this episode. You have taught me this thing called
lesbian deathbed. Yeah yeah yeah yeah it's so they can you tell the people. Yes if
if our podcast listener you guys you are teaching us so much okay. Yes. So we
just sit and we read every single one of your comments
and we read aloud to each other all the emails you send
and we listen to every single voice mail together
because we learned so much from you all.
It's better. It's been a busy and deathbed.
It's like lesbians meet and then they fall deeply,
deeply in love in four minutes
and then they have so much sex for like two weeks.
And then the lesbian bed is where sex goes to die.
Like nobody ever makes that again.
And it's because, like imagine in a male-female relationship,
it's again, a generalization, but the male is usually
the one who wants to have sex.
Yeah, it's poking the bear. Like, hey, can we do this?
Yeah, we have no poker.
Yeah.
Like, we are both like, let's just snuggle.
Literally and figuratively, you have no poker.
Okay, I know why this is you guys.
I know this because this is a thing for, okay, so for, for, in my relationship, I never
am an initiator of sex. Like, John's like, let's have sex. And then I'm always like,
and then we have sex. And I say, I literally say, that was a good idea. Yeah, great idea. So it's it is. It is, but there's
a thing. Okay, so there's a thing called spontaneous desire. And then there's a thing called
responsive desire. And and spontaneous desire is when your desire starts in your mind and then goes to physical. Okay, and 75% of men have primary spontaneous desire.
So they're literally thinking about it,
then they get the physical desire
and that's when they're like,
boom, boom, hey, wanna make out?
Women on the other hand, only 15% of women
have primary spontaneous desire. So that is 85% of women have primary spontaneous desire.
So that is 85% of women are responsive desire,
meaning I'm not thinking about it.
I don't have a mind to physical.
I have physical to mind.
So you need the initiator to get you to the physical space
to even have the desire.
So if neither of you are getting there, you're quite literally not getting there.
That's totally normal.
That's what we get to lesbian deathbed.
This is like when the love hormone wears off in our brain, this is why that like spontaneous
urge just goes away and then maybe it just never is because that's how we're built. Yeah it's so interesting does the does the the
spontaneous person does have to be a person is my question like I'm thinking
about writing a erotic novel yeah I love to write about things that I have no
freaking sex queen sex queen I'm a sex freaking queen so I want to write about things that I have no freaking sex queen sex queen. I'm a sex freaking queen
So I want to write like a lesbian clear
Like 50 shades of gay situation. Oh my god amazing, but
It can what I'm saying is can the impetus can the poking be if you don't have a man. It could maybe be a book
Yeah, but so is that correct like is there could that get people going? It's what I'm asking be, if you don't have a man, it could maybe be a book. Okay.
So is that correct? Like, is there, could that get people going?
It's what I'm asking.
So there's two separate things.
There is the desire, the way that your desire manifests.
That's in the spontaneous or responsive.
Like what, what gets you to the place of basically arousal?
Was does it start mind and then go to physical or physical and then
the mind. But then you have your whole to answer your question. You have this whole structure in your
brain that is a dual control model that that regulates your desire. And that has accelerators
and it has breaks.
So basically any input you're getting around you,
if it smells, like you said a book, totally,
if it's just like physical things,
is if things you're imagining, those are accelerators,
though any of those can be accelerators,
but also any of those can be breaks.
So that's why when you're in bed at night at the end of the day and you're
staring at your to-do list, you have to do before you go to bed and you're staring at 14 piles
of unfolded laundry, you might have a lot of the accelerators going on, but your breaks are stronger
than that. So they're both always happening at the same time. Also why, what's the best sex?
Everyone say it with me. Hotel sex, right? Because you're in a hotel. There's literally nothing around you to
remind you of all the shit you have to do of all of the... So it's your breaks are off and that's why you can be more responsive to the accelerator.
Everyone has both, and it's literally how our brains work.
And it's also why women going back to our caretaker episode, if the woman is the carrier
in the mind of the emotional mental load of the family, the constant caretaker going, that is why a lot of times we will have
more breaks than the partner.
And it goes, sorry, go, go, go, go, go.
No, I was just going to say it also goes back to the economic model because there's evolutionary
reasons why women in heterosexual situations have way more breaks than men.
I mean, when you think about it, men had an entirely
no-risk high-profit situation with their accelerators. Their breaks are not going at all because
they have evolutionary reasons. They're going to reproduce. They're going to have guaranteed
orgasm because that's how sex is defined. Women have all of the risk because of complications with pregnancy,
bearing children, potential death, all the things evolutionarily, right?
And we also have low profit, right?
Because socially, there's all that stigma attached to women with having of the sex. So our breaks are evolutionarily, socially, and also with the construct of our lives are
structured constantly on, right?
Yeah, I think that just to go back to the frequency a little bit, because sister, I think
what you just shared is so intense and true and real.
But one thing that Glenn and I talk about,
probably the most are like, mostly is like,
are we having enough sex?
Like what is enough sex?
And it's not even like the actual frequency,
but Glenn and you coming from a heteronormative life,
a marriage that you would do this for as it was an oil change to make sure that the guy doesn't, you know, stray or make sure that you're you're you're keeping in good faith with him.
And for women, it's like I'm not as worried about it, I think, as you are because I've been in a lesbian life and culture for longer and also I feel like there are
seasons to sex, you know, I think that of course
never not once have had sex with you and been like
gosh that wasn't worth it.
What a waste of business.
No, never. Every single time sister, I'm like, you know, like that was a good idea.
Yeah, we should do that more. Yeah. You know, but I also think like we're
in the midst of like teenage years and work and we've got something.
And then at night, you, I see what you do all day long.
And I look over and like, I know that we're both exhausted.
But that's a difference. That's a difference.
I never was in a relationship with a human being before you,
who would look at me and think,
that woman is so tired,
and what she wants more than anything is to close her little eyes,
sleep or to sleep.
And so the last thing I'm going to do is bother her.
Require something.
That's a difference between us.
What I want to say to you about men and women, right?
That's huge because it also goes back
to the whole idea of like, at the worst of times, right?
At the worst of times, it feels like,
are you freaking serious?
Like, you see me, right?
Like, you see dead.
I'm almost dead.
I have literally
Crawled my way into this bed and I have not shown myself one ounce of affection
But here you are with your hands. Why don't you just ask me to pour out a little more like I mean
It is it does feel like they're and you just feel like I don't even I don't even know what planet you're living on but it's not mine
All right, well, let's let's finish this we got to define what is sex? What do you define sex as Glennon and Amanda?
Okay, this is hard, but it feels like important in terms of so much of what
we talk about on this podcast is that all of our problems are because of the picture
in our mind of how things are supposed to be. Right? So we allow culture to define what something is for us,
right? Whether it's like body love or family or gender or beauty or sex. And then we compare
what we have in our real lives to that arbitrary cultural standard, which is almost always based on commerce and power.
So, I do think that while I'm not going to nail this answer, that it is a super important
question for us to begin to ask ourselves, what is sex for us?
Because I can tell you that the cultural definition of sex, which is penetration, ejaculation, like I don't know exactly what orgasm for a male man, it never
felt to me. The reason why I didn't understand it is because nothing magical was happening
for me there. Right, there was no transcendence, no magic, no... So what I would say is that,
you know, Abby often says that sex is something that happens
all day, that like when I bring her coffee in the morning, that's sex to her.
Okay.
For me, that is not sex because that's like an act of service, right?
And that's something that I could do for anyone.
I could bring anyone coffee, right?
For me, sex is like this place that my mind and body
and whatever the spirit is, like goes to visits.
Like I can tell when I'm there, okay?
And for me, it does happen sometimes,
like when, almost always, when we're in bed,
doing sexual things.
Eventually we get, I get to this place
where I'm completely
surrendered, where I'm like completely defenseless, where I'm not acting, where
I'm all fully present, right? And then I can tell you are too. And it's like
this mutual surrender where we could totally annihilate each other because we
have no defenses up. And it's something that only happens between the two of us.
But there are also these moments.
So like every once in a while, you're in the kitchen
and you're cooking.
And I like walk by trying to look busy
because when you're cooking, I try to look busy
because I feel guilty that you're cooking,
but I also don't want to help, okay?
So I just like walk around a lot.
And you will stop.
And if there's like music on,
sometimes you'll stop and look at me in this way
that is very, you look serious
and you look a little bit like predatory.
And it's like immediately all of me
is like right there in that sex place.
It feels like, lul and I, it's sex.
I don't know, it's like,
and the thing is that I would never allow any moment
like that to happen with another human being.
So I think like the sex is, for me,
has a lot to do with exclusivity, right?
It has to do with, I will only allow myself
to go to this place
with you. Good talking. Good job on talking, just saying like all of that. That was really good.
Well done sister. What about you? What a sex to you.
I feel like it's important to say and because I feel like a lot of this conversation has been
framed and a lot of the way that I feel like my friends and I talked to each other about sex is how do you?
Oh my gosh, it's always so tired. I don't want to have sex and how do I deal with this and he always wants to or whatever it is. And I just feel like there is,
no one ever talks about the opposite problem, which is when you feel like you're,
when you have been sexually abandoned by your partner
and it's a very, I think it's probably one
of the loneliest places to be because when your, which is what happened to me in my first marriage, that my husband did not want to have sex with me. this whole way of being in the world when you're a woman, your job is to be like
pursued and that the person you're with always wants to have sex with you and that you just have
to work it into your life. But no one ever talks about the woman who does want to have sex and
to have a partner that doesn't want to sleep with you and be in a world
in which everyone else is talking about how much of a hassle it is to have to navigate
their husband's desire for them to admit that you have a husband who has no desire for
you is a very, very lonely, doubly, lonely place to be. And so I just want to say that, even
though it's a little bit embarrassing to say, but because I just have been there and it's
very lonely and hard. And I think that it's important to recognize for there. If you
are listening to this and you are in that place,
that I was also in that place
and it is very hard to feel like there isn't something
very, very wrong with you when you think
that you're, it's a special slice of hell
to be in a marriage when the person doesn't want you.
It's much, much, be having been in both places.
It is much, much easier and more socially acceptable to be a
woman who doesn't want to have sex with her husband, then to be
wife whose husband doesn't want to have sex with them.
So that, I just want to say that that that I think I wonder if it's
happening to a lot of people, but it is lonely and no one talks about it. Well, thank you for talking
about it. But I think what I'm trying to figure out is just what are my sexual values, because I
feel like I have grown up and I assigned this this values to sex that I don't think work for me and are working
for my life going forward about like it's this you know this worth thing that is transferred and go
and you know I just want to live in a world where it's like,
you know, we just talked a few days, a few weeks ago,
about in the body episode,
about the worst thing that a woman could do
is let herself go, like, don't let yourself go,
don't let yourself go.
And then, and then in sex, we're like,
why can't you let yourself go, just let yourself grow?
So, so we're living in this, in this world
where we're constantly expected to do both things.
Yes, it's like the control yourself,
control yourself, control yourself.
Women, you control your hair, control your voice,
control your anger, control your,
and then all of a sudden, let go of control and bed.
Be wild.
Like that idea of, well, I want a lady in the streets
and a devil in the sheets.
Like, can't do all that.
Can't do all that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I like that thing sister where it's like the credit card machine.
Well, that stresses me out every time where it's like, do not remove card, do not remove
card, do not remove card, remove card, remove card, remove card.
Right, think it now.
No.
It's just that change of what my value is as a woman.
It's one thing outside the bedroom, and then it has to be because something completely
different inside of it.
Well, I kind of disagree with you guys in this.
I mean, good.
Yeah, for me, I think that sex is happening all day long, for me.
That's unfortunate to hear.
No.
I'm never letting you do that. How many times a week?
She's like how many times a day? It's happening between me and you all day long. Okay, good,
good, good. So all day long, right? Like the beginning of the day, like when you, the reason
why I think like when you hand me that coffee in the morning, I don't let people do things for me.
That's true. I do things for myself. So when I let people do things for me. That's true. I do things for myself. So when
I let you do something for me, it's because I do know that I want to be taken care of
on some level. And that is the beginning. So when you talk about the Venn diagram, I just
think that my Venn diagram is a little bit bigger of that spot of intimacy that we kind of talk about sex. So it's
This might sound so weird and I'm sure people have this fetish
but like when you take a bite of the food that I've made you and you
Tell me how you like it. I love that like that is like that makes my brain light up
You know when you hand me the coffee and when we have a day
and we come back together and we talk about the thing
that happened in the day, those are things that for playwise
that are getting my brain to remember
that we don't have to be lesbian deathbeds.
We don't have to operate in that way.
So it's connection to you.
It's a sort of real connection.
Because I believe that the pinnacle is this place that you talk of, gee, like the pinnacle
to get to the act of sex is this other realm, right? But the conversation that has to happen
from morning until that moment of the act. That is very real and very
sex to me as well.
I love it.
Well, I want to ask Sister one more question and then we'll get to our next
straight thing. I want to ask you. I talked about, well we talked about, you know,
our sex challenge, which I would say is we are, you talked about, well we talked about, you know, our sex
challenge, which I would say is we are, I am constantly worried that we're not
having enough sex. When I told Abby about lesbian deathbed, she said, I've never
heard of that before. That's so interesting, and I explained it, and she said
these words. Oh, I guess I just didn't know that that was called lesbian deathbed,
because I just thought that was life. That's literally what she said to me.
So true.
But honestly, I mean, we were at a, at a, like this retreat thing and there was a sex
therapist there and every, she, the sex therapist, I talked to, she said, the first
thing everyone asks her is, what's enough?
What's, what's enough?
Am I in trouble?
Is this in trouble?
Like, what's the number?
What's the number?
So I have no answers for that.
I just know everybody's worried about it.
But can you tell us like what are your sex challenges? Like when you think about you're in
John or whatever, what do you think, what do you worry about? I mean, I think I, I think I before
I read Nagasaki's book, Come As You Are, which everyone I think should read when she's the one you talked about the dual control and the
Responsiveness and stuff before I learned about the responsive desire I was
Thinking there was something seriously wrong with me that I didn't have that kind of spontaneous
Oh, I can't wait to jump in the sheets thing.
Um, I sowed that.
I thought, why am I not initiating like half the time and would,
is that a problem?
Is that a lack of general desire?
Is that, so I think the frequency is a situation too.
Like I think everyone is pretty worried about of it.
Like what is the, am I having enough sex?
What does this indicate about relationships?
I think on the like letting yourself go thing,
I just don't, same as I look back on growing up
and like what I feel like I should have done differently,
I'm wondering what is 80 year old me
gonna look back on now and be like,
why the hell didn't you? You know, like,
like if I really could just let myself go, like what part of the universe am I missing because of me?
Like I actually have a very generous ridiculous awesome partner like praise be to God. I like having sex with him very much.
But like this whole idea of like, I can't talk during sex.
I can't. Oh my God. Oh my God. Me neither.
I am like, I don't know.
I am the mode I can talk to anyone on the street.
I can tell you exactly how I feel.
I'm given directions and tell give I'm like commanding the ship all day.
What is that?
So I'm just like, I'm asking like why?
I don't know.
Drives Abby Crazy.
Tell the truth that does drive you crazy.
Well, I just don't understand it.
Like we trust each other the most and we're doing the most intimate thing and then you
just go silent.
And we're both professional speakers.
Well, I mean, if you like to talk,
we, like, our whole relationship is talking.
Except then we get into sex and you don't say a word.
I can't even, like, I can't even respond.
No.
I'm just like,
ugh.
No, I'm like every once in a while,
I say to my own brain, okay,
I feel like you should moan or something right now
And then I'll be like, uh
No, see that makes me feel sick
I'm doing something I know that's requiring a moan. This is vulnerable. No, I know, but like why do like here's the thing
I don't understand this like I this is no judgment because I'm sure
that there's layers and layers upon why this is the case.
But I feel like there is a lack of trust with yourself.
And that makes me feel like you don't trust me.
That like there's something missing.
I think it's an inhibition.
I think and it is a level of vulnerability
and just discomfort that really doesn't have
to do with the other person.
It has to do with like, you know,
it's like a mind body connection
and I've gotten to the place where I can like make myself totally vulnerable in body
and as you said, I'm like, give up that and like actually reach this place where I come
outside of my brain, which is the only time where I can come outside of my brain in my entire
life.
But then the idea of reactivating my brain and bringing it to that spot,
I'm like, I don't even know how to,
I literally don't know how to do that.
I've just disconnected my brain for the first time
since the last time we had sex,
and now I'm supposed to fuse them back together or something.
To remember sentences and say them,
and by the way, I only know a couple sentences about sex
You know what else is there? It's like that feels good. Keep going
That's all I got like I don't have a bunch of of script ideas
But even saying those words you just said like I am she does
I am sweating.
I have the idea.
She doesn't say that.
She thinks that maybe.
I think that feels good.
I've said that several times.
I remember each time I was very proud of myself.
Oh God.
I don't know.
Can someone tell us what that's about?
I don't understand how powerful assertive people,
I don't need that.
Don't.
It's like the most intimate thing that you can do and to not have the ability, I mean,
I think that, look, I love you both so much. Yes, you do.
You guys are allowed to be however you are in your sexual experiences. But I think it would
be really, I think it's a control thing. Yeah, deep down there, like a need to, a vulnerability to like stay, to not be,
maybe it's embarrassing.
Yeah, maybe it's embarrassing.
It's maybe it's embarrassing.
No, but you know what's the way it's embarrassing.
No, no, no, do you know what feels a little bit embarrassing?
It's for the, your partner to be doing sexual activity on you. No, but you know something. No, no, no, do you know what feels a little bit embarrassing?
Is for the your partner to be doing sexual activity on you and there to be no
response That's also that's also embarrassing
This subtitle this this this is episode is sex queen.
Sex is embarrassing.
The silent, I didn't say I was allowed queen.
Okay, silent sex queen.
Silent sex queen is the name of this new novel that I'm working on.
Silent sex queen embarrasses her partner.
But also, you know, it's important to have things to work on.
And this is the
category that we're not perfect. We're not, we're not perfect. Okay, let's go on to
the next right thing. We have so many amazing sex questions that we're going to save them
all until the next episode and I'm saving ourselves dying to hear our answers. Our next right thing is this. We want everybody to think about what is sex.
Okay? Because we really believe that the distance between our real-life experience and our real-life
desires and what the world holds up as what sex is and should be, that the distance between our real life experience and our real life desires and what the world
holds up as what sex is and should be, that the distance between those two is where all
of our pain is.
So I want everybody to think about if you weren't, if it wasn't based on like pleasing someone else or it wasn't based on servicing
your relationship, if it had only to do with yourself, what is sex to you?
And also, I think maybe they, yeah, I think also maybe they should have this conversation
with the person that they might be in a sexual relationship with at some point.
I love that idea.
I mean, isn't it amazing that we can be in sexual relationships with people for decades?
I'd never sit down and talk about this.
Yeah.
Like, what is sex?
What makes you come alive in that way?
What makes you go dead?
What takes you to that place? What are your accelerators? What is sex to you? What are your breaks? Yeah, yeah, yeah
So let's think about this week that this week. I would like to end this episode by saying
that if we can do what we just did Amanda and Abby
We can do anything
Okay, we can do hard things, which actually suddenly sounds very sexual to me and I'm going to try to unthink about that forever.
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