With The Perrys - Best of WTP – What We Wish We Knew About Sex
Episode Date: July 22, 2024With the podcast tour this month, there will be a short break in recording new content, so let’s revisit some of the Perrys’ most popular episodes.What do you think about sex? It has serious physi...cal, social, emotional, and spiritual implications. It’s the closest physical bond two human beings can have. It can bring forth both life and destruction. We’ve seen sex misused and perverted, but there’s beauty to be explored, and the Perrys discuss that idea in this episode. Subscribe to the Perrys' newsletter: https://withtheperrys.myflodesk.com/zhfus4jx1s Join Preston's discipleship community for men: https://www.patreon.com/PrestonPerry/membership To support the work of the Perrys, donate via PayPal: https://paypal.me/withtheperrys Shop BOLD Apparel: boldapparel.shop Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
That was quite the conversation we had about sex.
It was pretty interesting.
That's one way to start an episode.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Get the people going.
Why don't you?
What do you think about it?
I think a lot of things about sex.
I mean, it's a very interesting activity that has physical, social, social, emotional, and spiritual implications.
Yeah, it's the closest physical bond that two human beings can have.
And so it's a big deal.
It brings forth life, but it also can bring forth destruction if you misuse it.
Yeah, I think the church talks about sex a lot.
I kind of do think that we're often appealing to the positive aspects of sex as a setup to just go in for 30, 40 minutes about the negative expressions of it.
And so I think it would be helpful for us to talk about, like talk about the beauty of it more than we talk about like the negative misuse.
You think that, though? You think that we talk about the ugliness of sex more than we talk about the beauty?
Yeah, I think we always are starting with Romans 1 instead of Genesis 1 or 2.
We're starting with like the deviations of God's original design and not giving as much energy to God's like.
Like, what is Genesis like? He knew his wife. Like what does that mean?
Why do you think that is? You think that is because we've seen sex misused so much?
It's everywhere. You turn on Netflix. You turn on Hulu. You turn on YouTube ads.
It's like I think we see the negativity more.
So it's just, it's just in us, you know what I'm saying?
But I think there's beauty to be explored.
It kind of reminds me just how people just present the gospel holistically.
Like I think a lot of times we present the gospel with the fall of man and not God,
creating his creation and then call it in good.
So I think even when we share the gospel, people need to know that, no, you were created by good God.
And then the bad news comes, right?
And so even when we think about sex, it's like, no, sex was originally created for God's glory, right?
for us to be fruitful and to multiply.
And so if we start there, people
will know the purpose of sex and I think that we can
have a good start around.
I wish I knew that.
Hmm.
It's the Saints and the Ains.
It's the Saints and the Ains.
You heard of a barado.
It's the Saints and the Ains.
If you keep opening our podcast like that, people are going to think.
It's the Saints and the Angels.
It's called The Saints and the Ain't and not 30 minutes with the paris.
How are you?
I'm doing good. How you doing?
I didn't have a comeback for that because I disagree, but I didn't have any language to talk about why I disagree.
How's your day going?
It was going good. I woke up with you and came here to record podcasts.
Did you ever think that when you got married, it would get like old to sleep with the same person in the same bed every day?
Like, what did you think that would be like to sleep in the same bed with the same person for the rest of your life?
Well, the first
The first year we were married
I was surprised that you slept
With the window open in the wintertime
I was like she's in her late 20s
Is she going to do menopause now?
We're already starting with the disrespect
I just didn't get it
I thought she was trying to kill me
So I thought
You know
Well I still don't understand
Because it's April
Right
I came in the house
Last week from Glory
And you had the fireplace on
That's what I don't understand
is that it's springtime and you somehow still need fire.
That doesn't, that doesn't compute to me.
So what you're not telling the people is.
Because what I think you need iron supplements.
What you're not telling the people was it was cold last week and you left the window in our closet open and I didn't know.
But this is where the room was freezing.
This is where the tension is that the way you define cold is differently than the way I define cold.
So you think 55, 56 deserves a fireplace.
So no, the way I just deserves another blanket.
The way I define cold is if it's, if it's snowing outside.
It's April.
The windows shouldn't be open.
It's April.
But in Chicago, you used to have the windows open when it was snowing outside.
Notice you didn't even answer my question.
Deflecting.
That's what I know how to do best.
So while we're here, today we're going to talk about sex.
But more specifically, some of the, I guess, messages around.
sex in marriage or and the messages we don't or should be receiving before marriage.
Is that a correct way to say it?
Yeah.
The unhealthy expectations I think our society and our culture kind of puts on people entering
into marriage making them think that, oh, my sex life is going to look like this or it has
to look like this.
Or if I've done X, Y, Z, I should expect X, Y, Z in marriage.
And it just doesn't look like that.
Is that your experience?
I think it was my experience.
I think nobody told me that me being a young Christian man who was fleeing lust,
like every woman not named wife was made of flames, right?
Is that a poem?
Yeah, yeah.
Got it.
It was a poem.
Because you just busted out with it like it was just like a thing.
Right.
Like that when I entered into marriage, I had this idea.
that man like my sex life should and it was going to look like how I how I wanted to look like
right and it just doesn't work like that yeah I think um I think of anything I think I assume the same thing
because one I didn't hear I heard about sex and sexuality typically in two contexts which is
sex is to be avoided so that you you know you don't go to hell
or you can have sex in marriage and it's going to be awesome.
Yeah.
Like,
which is two extremes.
And so I think I avoided it, did all the things I could to be pure, quote unquote.
And then when I got married and sex came with a bunch of baggage and work that I did not expect,
it was just deeply discouraging, especially because if you don't hear people talking about the nuance that sex and marriage can be,
then you think that you're the only one with the problem.
Absolutely.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Like that what is uniquely happening between you as a married couple ain't happening to everybody else.
But it is happening to everybody else.
They're just not talking about it.
Yeah.
And what I think we're not trying to do, we're not trying to paint the picture.
Like everybody's going to have the same, you know, testimony entering into marriage.
But what I am saying is that I think that we should give people different
perspectives and prepare people for what they might experience entering into a marriage so they
won't be distraught or highly disappointed when your sex life doesn't look like how you think it
should look like immediately. Okay, so for the male species, what is the, what are some of the
most predominant assumptions about sex? Let's address it. So here's the thing. I'd be really
wanted to help my brothers, you know what I'm saying, when I see them online,
because I think purity culture in a lot of ways
has affected a lot of people.
What is purity culture?
Purity culture is this, well, I don't want to try
to define purity culture and put it in a box.
So let me do it for you.
Okay, yeah, go.
So purity culture was a moment in time,
primarily within evangelical Christianity,
where there was all this messaging and messaging and books
like from Joshua Harris,
I kiss dating goodbye.
But basically this messaging around staying pure for marriage.
And so they would have like, you know, purity balls where you go and dance with your dad
and I guess commit to living a pure life.
And then you get like the purity ring, which was a sign of your situation.
And like when this was happening, this was like 90s primarily.
So that's why I think it was a moment in time because we weren't necessarily Christian nor
in evangelical culture.
during that.
But I think the problem, one of the problems with purity culture is what it was kind of a
version of a prosperity gospel, which said if you are pure, then your marriage is going to be good
and your sex life is going to be good out because you obey God all these years.
And that's just not a thing.
So go ahead.
And what I see now a lot of the times is I see these, I see these reels and I see these videos
of dudes on social media
talking about what they want in a marriage
and talking about when they come home,
what they want to expect.
And like they, and I get it.
Like, we're not married.
It's not all the way wrong to fantasize
or to dream about the ideal marriage that,
that we want.
I think the problem comes in.
I've tried to tell a couple of brothers this in person.
I think the problem comes in
is when you speak about a woman that you,
we haven't even met yet.
A complicated being, right?
A complex individual who probably God is going to connect you with or bring you together
with who has our own set of problems, have our own trauma, has a, you know what I mean?
And so like if you automatically think that your wife is just going, you know, out the gate, you know,
not come in the marriage with her own set of problems or, you know, whatever.
Like you might set yourself up for failure.
And I think a lot of dudes when they get into marriage, they'd be deeply disappointed.
Because, yeah, we're complex beings.
You know what's crazy, though, is that I think sometimes when people, primarily guys,
when they, you know, fantasize about the idea of woman, I want her to, you know, rub my feet.
I want her to have sex with me every time I ask.
I want, you know, lingerie on Thursday nights and Friday nights.
Like, just all of this stuff, I don't think they also see that there's the particular.
that the way you imagine sex in marriage is also a function of trauma.
Break that down.
Because what if these men have dealt with all kinds of rejection from their mother?
And so you really want a woman that will never reject you.
That's trauma.
That's not Bible.
That's why a lot of men watch porn.
But that's my thing.
Because that's a place where we're not rejected.
You think that your ideals about sexuality are actually right and biblical when they're actually not.
Yeah.
So not only is she dealing with her own trauma.
got to deal with yours. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I agree. And I think, I think for me,
um, entering into marriage, I just thought, man, like, not only was I entering into marriage
with my own set of traumas. I had this idea in my head that, man, God is going to honor me.
Yeah. Because I honored him with my body. And so he's going to let me, you know,
just, you know, have this wild and crazy sex life off jump. You know what I'm saying? And it was like,
no like what God showed me eventually is that no like I've called you to enter into a marriage
with a person for you to grow and learn how to satisfy this person and it's not just about
what you want you know what I'm saying and what you need and what you desire yeah it's
it's about it's about growing and um learning this person and I think that's I think that's one
of the things that I feel like the church can do a better job at teaching us, no, this is a union,
a marriage where you have your whole life to become comfortable with somebody. And that's
another thing. It's like when we marry someone, we don't even know them like that for real,
for real. No, right? We don't. I definitely didn't know you. Yeah. You know what I did? And so for
somebody to like, you ain't even know you. Hello? I didn't, yeah, I didn't even know me. And so
like you have to yeah I just feel like sometimes people just forget that it's a process of
learning and growing with one another yeah and I get it I think it's taking time for me and it's
going to continue to take time for me to understand the purpose of sex as it exists in a marriage
you know because I think especially when growing up in this like culture where pornography
and pornographic images are so easily accessible
it makes sex and sexuality a matter of comfort and convenience rather than a thing that exists
between two people in a covenant relationship so as to bring them closer together and intimate,
right?
And so it's not this convenient medicine, if you will, like this is to mimic the beauty and the intimacy
and the long-suffering and patience and eternality of the gospel and God's love for us.
And so, like, I think when you have that perspective, then you see,
no, like, in the same way that I'm getting to know your mind,
getting to know your quirks, your personality,
the same way I need to get to know your body and how your body functions
and what it likes and what it doesn't like.
And that takes time.
And I even said on Instagram the other day on Twitter,
I was like, even the fact that, like, if we're together 40, 50, 60 years,
you will always be changing and maturing.
You will become a different precedent,
not different in the sense of another Preston,
But 50-year-old Preston is not going to be 36-year-old Preston, right?
And so I'm actually going to have to change in a way.
Like, I'm going to have to, like, know what you need and what you expect and what you want as a 50-year-old.
I can't keep giving you the same thing that you expect that as 36-year-old.
I don't think that made any sense.
Yeah.
But it didn't make sense because we always are growing and change it.
Because if I can think about myself and just be honest, the way I thought about sex was such a narrow-minded, empty.
view of it entering into marriage because I didn't think about how no logic will tell you that the sex life that you want in year one, you're probably going to have in year eight or year nine, right? Because I've had the opportunity to learn what this person wants, to learn what this person, you know, desires, to learn how to woo this person, to learn what triggers this person. To learn what triggers this person.
and to learn that this person needs to feel like they have the autonomy to choose at times.
So what you're saying is, is that sex and marriage takes work.
It does.
And we don't want to take work.
Because our culture, our culture does not teach us that work and sex should go hand to hand.
So let me ask you this.
It teaches us that we should get it at the drop of a dime when whatever we feel the urge.
So I know you talk to, because you'll come home and talk to me about it.
There's a lot of men that you talk to who are married now and one of their primary frustration
in their marriage is that they have to work.
Yeah.
Right?
Like what is, when you counsel them, what do you say?
I tell them.
So, one thing I think we should talk about in this podcast is women who have been traumatized.
And men who, because that's, you know, I think you kind of gave some statistics about women, you know, being traumatized.
I think it's one and four women.
I have to confirm that.
One and four have been sexually abused.
Yeah.
And so.
Just a lot.
I, you know, after, you know, we got married, I started to meet other men who had been with women who had been sexually abused.
And it's kind of like this, oh, I get it, but, you know, I love her.
Give up the draws.
Trust God.
Yeah.
Obey.
Yes, you know what I mean?
And so I had to, by the grace of God, and I think God and His sovereignty sent me in my way for me to, to.
help them and to like share my experience with him.
You know what I'm saying?
Because what was your question again?
I completely forgot.
So when it comes to the dynamic of having a work for your intimacy,
that's frustrating for a lot of men.
Yeah, yeah.
I do think it's frustrating because let's just be honest.
Arousal is a thing.
And so I think when someone is aroused,
they want it right then and there.
You know, a man when it comes home and he sees his beautiful wife,
it's like man like I think a lot of times the urge is I want to I want to engage her physically right
but I think one thing that God has taught me is that I have to really search for a lot of humility
I have to really search for a lot of patience and I have to look to him to say man like it's not
always about what I want when I want it and the reason why is because you are a
complex,
nuance,
individual.
And so for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
for,
you're going to
want to
have sex
exactly when
I wanted.
When you have
your own set
of trauma that
you dealt with
before you even
met me,
it's just not
a realistic
expectation.
And so what I had to do is,
I had to,
uh,
people know that you have
experienced,
you know,
trauma and you've been abused,
you know,
sexually through your testimony,
whatever.
And so one of the things
that I had to do,
as a man to say, man, how can I humble myself, right?
And not always think about my needs when I want them,
but to make my wife feel like she has an autonomy to choose when we come together.
Which is major.
It's huge because when someone is sexually abused,
the fundamental thing that was taken from them is their rights.
Absolutely.
You know, like someone took my body and did with it whatever they pleased.
Right.
And so when you get into a marriage where a man feels like he has dominion over your body and you don't have any autonomy or freedom to say yes or no.
I think it makes whatever trauma you have worse.
And God forbid you start to see your spouse through the lens of your abuser.
You know what I'm saying?
And so I think it's huge for a man to be humble enough and for the conversations around the fact that like I need to have the freedom to say no without.
consequence. Right? Because there's some women who will say no, not right now. And the man,
you know, you had seasons of this where he'll say okay, but his whole body is dejected and he got
attitude. You're talking about me? Because it was me. He's not talking no more. And it's just like,
like to know that my no has a consequence doesn't feel like I actually have freedom in saying no.
I want to say no and still be loved. But from the man's perspective, and I think for the men who are
listening to this, I want to encourage them because I think what it can feel like, and this is just
from my own experience and talking to other men, right? It can feel like that no is going to be
for the remainder of your marriage. But it's like, no, like I think, like an eternal no. I think
what, I think what giving someone who has experienced trauma, the autonomy to say no or to say,
well, maybe Tuesday, right? Give, makes, makes, make, in it.
in the past, even now, I realized that it made you feel more comfortable.
Yeah, it felt safer where it didn't have to be like that all the time.
Yeah.
Like, as we grew together and your trust grew for me and your love grew for me and the more
you was able to disassociate me with the people who did traumatize you in the past,
it gets better.
You know what I'm saying?
And so I think that, yeah, our society, it doesn't paint this picture.
that work and sex should go hand-to-hand.
Like, we have sex at the tip of our fingertips.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
Like, porn is instant.
You know what I'm saying?
Even when we was in a world,
sometimes being around promiscuous people, sex was instant.
And it's like, no, like, God's probably calling you to somebody
who is going to sanctify you in a way that you never thought.
Got a question.
I can hear somebody listening to this podcast like, okay, that's doing too much.
Like if I got to do all that, then I'm actually, I need to be more picky about the kind of people I'm a date and I'm a marry, you know, because I can see how that doesn't sound fun or beautiful or good. And so why is working for intimacy even a good thing? Because I don't think it's our job to picking shoes how God chooses to sanctify us. Okay. And what I mean is I think we, as Christians, we say we want to be sanctified.
We say we want to, you know, we want to grow and we want to, we want to grow as men of God.
And we, you know, but a lot of times God uses the things that we want the most to be hard to help sanctify us and to grow us.
Like as a man and as a husband, I have so much more patience dealing with the things that we've dealt with in our marriage.
I have so much more knowledge and I have so much more wisdom to give to other men, you know what I'm saying, who experience.
the same type of thing.
For something, like, the thing, the thing that I realize now is that most of the beautiful
things that we experience in this world comes with work.
Yes.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, if it's hard, if God is bringing you through something that's hard, we have to
believe that on the other side, it's beauty.
You know what I'm saying?
And so, like, I love my marriage now.
And year three, I do.
Wow.
In year three, it was tough.
That's a good thing.
In year eight, it's way better.
And so, yeah, like, you have a lifetime, you know, to learn and to grow with somebody.
And so to experience, to want to experience.
Now, I'm saying, I'm not saying that, you know, in year one, your sex life ain't going to be bombed from jump.
Because people have their testimony.
Yeah.
But I just don't want people to have the expectation that it's going to be there.
that way. Yeah, I mean, I think there are some couples I know who, you know, starting off,
they did not have a problem with their sex life. And they had, they have problems with their,
you know, money or communication, but I always knew it was coming. It's going to come. One,
because we got a real devil. Two, because everything else that happens in the marriage affects
the bedroom. And so if there's problems with communication, it's going to affect the bedroom.
Yeah. If there's problems with trust is going to affect the bedroom. And so if there's problems with trust is going to
affect better. So when them butterflies go away at the end of the day, some going to happen
where now we have to work and pray and fight to get to know one another in a way that's trying.
So one of the things that we talked about is men, how the unhealthy expectations that men have,
what does some unhealthy expectations women have you feel like in this area or y'all just don't have
I'm sure we do.
I just don't know what they are.
It might be the same.
With purity culture?
No, that's what I'm saying.
I'm saying.
I think it's the same in a unique way.
I don't think the woman has this dominion ethic
where, you know, I'll be able to have sex whenever I want.
Whenever I pursue my wife, she's going to respond.
If anything, it may be I will want to have sex all the time and that I will enjoy it.
when statistically only 65, I think, percent of women climax, right?
And so there's a lot of men who, yeah, when the woman says, yes, they get they rocks off
while the woman is sitting there with her legs still.
So I think of anything, yeah, there are a lot of women who had the expectation that they
would have consistency in being pleased and they're not.
And they're fearful of sharing it with their spouse because they don't want him to
feel, you know, rejected and all of that type of stuff.
So it's like, man, that's a bummer.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is a part of the work.
Like, to have a better sex life, you have to actually text,
you have to have a conversation about what's bad so it could be better, you know?
And so stop faking all that noise and just tell this man, hey, bro, it ain't working for us.
So, so let me.
Not working out.
So have you ever talk to.
women. I'd rather watch TV. Who said they fake? Yeah. Like, really? Well, yeah. And some of it is,
I have to fake it so you can stop. Wow. So let me just like make this noise so you think you
doing something, which makes you excited so you can get up off me. Wow. And the sad,
that's how you know it's bad because he doesn't even, he's not even able to read your body language
to know the difference between when it's real and when it's fake.
And that's a problem.
And that's another thing.
I think, I think we need to.
You might as well do it to a man.
I think we need to start having real conversations in churches.
Yeah.
You know, and saying, man, you probably think, bro, you, you better than what you think you are.
Yeah.
And God forbid, like, your wife don't want to have sex because it's whack.
You're bad.
You're bad at it.
And so, like, man, like, I don't think, I think that we need to start teaching men.
to learn how to pay attention to a woman's body.
Yeah.
Like if you're doing something,
don't try to get creative.
Keep doing that.
Why did you shimmy?
I'm just saying,
keep doing that same thing you was doing
because she seemed like she was liking it.
You know what I'm saying?
I've had to have conversations with dudes.
We know people that, you know,
was like, yo, can Preston, can you help?
And I'm like, yo, if she learned,
learn how to pay attention to what a woman.
It's so hilarious how we're trying to keep this PG.
I'm just saying.
Well, you like, it's a lot of read between the lines happening.
Go ahead.
I'm saying.
If, if, you know what I'm saying?
Like, so I think a lot of men pride and our ego don't want to admit that like, no, like,
we have to, we have to grow.
Like, you can become good.
If you humble yourself and say, you know what, I'm not right now.
Yeah.
And that's, that's the, I think, the beauty of marriage.
Because in the tweet that I made, I said that I said that.
I really dislike the idea of people trying it before they buy it, you know, feeling like
you have to have sex before marriage so that you know what you're getting yourself into.
When that's literally the antithesis of what marriage is for.
Marriage, again, is for us to learn one another.
And so, like, even if you have experience with sex and sexuality outside of your spouse,
that doesn't mean that that will actually please your spouse.
Like your spouse is their own person.
So you have to learn this individual and that takes humility and it takes courage.
But it actually ends up working out in the long run.
But also, but I like, so I say this.
In our marriage, like I didn't have a lot of room to be bad at things because you are an extremely honest person.
Yeah.
And so when you don't like something, you're going to know.
I'm going to know.
You know what I'm saying?
which I kind of feel like, you know, yeah, whatever.
But.
Thank you for tempering your tongue.
Yeah, I see.
You saw that?
I did.
But can you speak to the women who are afraid to communicate to the husband?
I don't like this.
I mean, I did.
Just sit them down and share it respectfully and make it a wee conversation.
Because I always think it's, it's, it's, that kind of.
kind of truth is harder to receive when all of the blame is placed on the individual.
Instead of it being, you are bad, do this, do that, say, how can we work together to make
sure that we are both pleased, right? So it becomes a team conversation. Yeah, you got to
just like a blame conversation. You got to rub his ego. You can't just slap his ego.
No, you can't. Because that's, that's just, you know, men are very fragile. We're all fragile.
We are, but y'all are particularly fragile because you refuse to identify.
identify and own that you're fragile.
So it makes your fragility that much worse, actually.
You don't even want to cry in front of people.
That tells you how fragile you must be.
But that's another conversation for another day.
Oh, whatever.
We can't be attacking the dudes like this, you know what I'm saying?
I'm not.
I'm just trying to help.
This sex conversation has to be more common because it's a part of humanity.
And I hate that the world is always the one leading the way.
in this conversation when they should not be.
It really should be the church because we serve the God that created sex.
Yeah, and sex is great.
You know what I'm saying?
Sex is something that God is given us to enjoy, you know,
and I think I hear Christians all the time saying the world shouldn't enjoy sex,
you know, as much as Christians or the world shouldn't be the only ones that
enjoying sex and not Christians.
And I think it's some truth to that, but I think the problem comes in.
when we
don't teach
Christians
that it has
some level of work
into it
like you have to put
some work into it
you know what I'm saying
it's not going to be
this instant gratification
all of all of time
because that is straight up
pornography culture
yeah
that logic is pornographic
absolutely you know I'm saying
and pornography
it's fake
you know what I'm saying
here we go
it's not it's not real
you know I mean
and even when you
are in the world
and you're being
promiscuous, really you're just having sex with a whole bunch of broken people who don't even
know themselves, you know what I'm saying? And if they ever became whole, they probably have
issues with sex too. I'm saying? And so, yeah, like when two whole people come together and
they're aware of their emotional trauma and they're aware of their spiritual sinfulness, yeah,
some issues are going to come up. But as time goes on, it gets better, I promise. Yeah, we're going to
be 72
barely making it
getting it in
but doing it anyway
right knocking each other
hips out of place
ow
all right y'all
bye
30 minutes with the Perry's
is a production
of Ivy Media podcast
edited by Angie Elkins
video recording and audio production
by Kim Powell
artwork by hop
and music by swoop
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We are the paris.
Thank y'all for listening.
Now go with God.
