Sex With Emily - Am I The Asshole? I Wanted More Sex, So I Ended It
Episode Date: September 12, 2023Welcome to "Am I The Asshole?" for sex and relationships! New to Sex With Emily, we weigh in on your AITA questions. First up: their marriage is on the rocks, but he wants a threesome. Is she the assh...ole for shutting it down? Next, his partner says she’s in pain during sex. Is he the asshole for not believing her? After that, she’s not into anal…but her partner really wants it. Is she the asshole for refusing? Next: mom just revealed she’s in a 24-hour BDSM relationship with dad. Is their daughter the asshole for freaking out? I answer these questions and more today with my producer, Erica. Send us your AITA questions for the chance to have yours featured on the show at sexwithemily.com/aita.See the full show notes at sexwithemily.com.Show Notes:5 Hot, Consensual Ways to Practice VoyeurismVIIA Hemp Co’s High Love Libido Gummies (code EMILY for 15% sitewide + Free CBD Gummies Sample)SHOP WITH EMILY! (free shipping on orders over $69)The only sex book you’ll ever need: Smart Sex: How to Boost Your Sex IQ and Own Your PleasureWant more? Sex With Emily: HomeLet’s get social: Instagram | Twitter | Facebook | TikTok Let’s text: Sign Up HereWant me to slide into your inbox? Sign Up Here for sex tips on the regular. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You don't do a threesome to fix your relationship, to spice up your sex life, to make it harder,
to make it better.
Threesome are particularly for couples who have a really great sex life already.
Their boundaries are set, they've disgusted a lot, they know why they want to do it, and
the reason does not include to make our relationship better.
You're listening to Sex with Emily. I'm Dr. Emily and I'm here to help you prioritize your pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex. You may have seen that MI the asshole
trend online before where people post scenarios for the public to judge whether they were in the right
or in the wrong. Well, today my producer, Eric and I are bringing back this trend for an M.I.V.S.
hole episode, Sex, Dating and Relationships Edition.
If you are currently in a scenario where you're wondering, am I the S.H.H.H.H.H.H.H.H.H.H.
submit your stories at sexathamely.com slash AITA.
Please rate and review Sex Family wherever you listen to the show, my new article,
Five Hot Concentral Ways to Practice Voyeurism is up on Sex with Emily.com.
All right, everyone. Enjoy this episode.
That's Salesforce. We're all about asking more of AI.
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All right, this is from Serica.
Am I the asshole for not wanting a threesome with my husband?
Backstory.
I've had and been open to threesome with a few people in the past.
They were flings.
Nothing serious and just having fun.
My husband and I have been together for four years married for eight months.
We recently separated a few months ago and are living in separate homes.
We're working on it.
Be going to marriage counseling.
Plus he mentions it in the past
that he feels like previous men in my life
have had better sexual experiences,
three sums with me,
and I've given them more than I give him.
I explained to him that under certain circumstances,
I would be comfortable with a random person,
one night, stand situation.
Not anybody we know personally.
I really love him
and just wouldn't feel comfortable doing that with him
I don't really want to share my husband with anybody
I feel like we're committed to each other and that's something I did with less committed individuals
I'm not entirely shutting it down either. I just have an encounter situation that I would be down with apparently
This really bothers him. Am I the asshole? Is he the asshole? All right, this is a complex one.
A very complex one.
Yeah, and it's common.
So first let me say, a lot of things come up here.
First, it's really common for us to be in a relationship
where we've shared everything with our partners.
In this case, our husband and they tend to reflect
on the past and think, well, you did that in the past.
You should do it with me.
Like, why did someone else have it better than we're having it?
And it's really hard when we share our past sexual history
with a partner for them not to think about it.
That is so true.
I wish that couples can have more open communication
about their past sex lives,
because I think it's important.
But I do feel like it often rears its ugly head.
Like sometimes the past is just
left in the past.
Absolutely.
Sometimes I say more mystery, less history.
Oh, I love that.
And so I think for some couples,
it's better to leave the past, the past.
It's a case by case basis in every relationship situation.
But in this case, we're finding that he just can't forget it.
And I've seen this a lot where we tell our partners how and when he'll we slept with,
right? We share that number. Since our partners can't get that number out of our head, so we
have to be really selective. I think the rule of thumb here is, why am I sharing it? And
my sharing this because in a way, I want my partner to see the cool history I had is
because I'm revealing information that I think could be really hot for us to experience in the future together.
I think we really have to think long and hard before we share information because this
usually comes up where they're like, you did this in the past or you know what you did
in the past.
I'm judging you.
So again, before you share anything, take a moment and think, why am I sharing this?
Okay.
So she might have had a moment in hindsight.
She could have thought, I'm not sure I want to do this again, I'm going to keep this to myself,
but that's neither here nor there. That's just our little educational moment for everyone.
Right. Right.
But going forward, listen, I do not think that she is an asshole at all for not one to do what
she did in the patch of the month. Does not. There's no way. Plus, they're mirrored on the rocks right now.
I was just gonna say, you guys are living in separate homes,
and now you want a threesome?
Yeah.
And you always say that threesome should only happen
if you have done all the communication,
the ins, the outs, the, are they sleeping over?
They're already having trouble communicating.
Now you wanna add a th-semin to the mix?
It is not a good time to do that.
You don't do a three-semin to fix your relationship,
to spice up your sex life, to make it harder,
to make it better.
Three-sems are particularly for couples
who have a really great sex life already.
Their boundaries are set, they've disgusted a lot.
They know why they wanna do it,
and the reason does not include to make our relationship better.
So in this case, you're not an asshole at all, and I think that you are very, very clear
here.
You did it in the past with less committed individuals, which I can relate to.
A lot of my hot threesomes when I was in relationships with people that were less committed, it was
a little bit more fun, a little bit more playful. And then there's certain relationships
where like I'm just not there yet.
What I also think is important is that you said
that you're not shutting it down completely,
but right now where you're at with your husband,
you're in a repair estate and you're feeling like
he's just not the guy you'd want to do it,
not a threesome with.
So you're being really clear what probably needs to happen
is your husband needs to get his head around.
The fact that it's something that's in your past, perhaps you can propose to him. You're being really clear what probably needs to happen is your husband needs to get his head around.
The fact that it's something that's in your past, perhaps you can propose to him.
If you do stay together, this will be a really good time to find out what is hot for us.
Like what would be on the threesome spectrum that would still make him feel connected to
some sort of kink or something a little bit more alternative that's not a threesome. Cause it sounds like he's just wanting
some of your freer, playful, open self,
and he's feeling like he's not getting that.
Right.
That mean.
You get to ask him what that means.
If threesome's off the table for now,
what might make it hot and exciting
if you guys do decide to stay together?
Exactly.
Especially if this is kind of a new request that he has now that things are a little bit
rocky in the relationship.
Like, what is the push to have a threesome now?
Yeah.
I'm confused.
Maybe he wants to tap into like her past self,
but she's not in the past.
She just wants to invest in the present in the future
with her husband.
You have to look at where you guys are right now.
What your relationship is about.
Remember, this is no good comparing it to the past because every time you're with someone,
the two of you are creating a new dynamic that is special to your relationship.
So your sex life, the experiences you've had, and what you both want right now at this point in your life
is how you should be making decisions moving forward.
So it sounds like there are some other really rich, important conversations
to have about your own turn-ons and desires. So if you decide to stay together, you kind
of have a blueprint going forward for the future, what you might try, but you can just let
them know that the threesomes off the table for now, but you're really open to exploring
what might be had for both of you.
Mm-hmm. So I think we can pretty much say, no, you are not the asshole.
You're not the asshole.
But she does ask at the end, is he the asshole?
I think that neither of you are assholes.
I think that's the common thing we have to point out here
is that when we do share our past with our partners,
not only might they think it's hot,
but their brain, a lot of times goes to,
well, I'm gonna be better than that one.
I'm gonna be your best lover ever.
I'm gonna be the next level lover.
So what he is is a common typical partner
who wants to be the best ever
and thinks that having a threesome
would bring out this past that you've had
and he would be able to top it, perhaps,
or he just wants to have a threesome on his own,
but I do not think that it all makes him an asshole.
I agree.
All right, this is from not so happy, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
Am I the asshole for not believing my girlfriend's discomfort during sex?
Pretty much says it in the title. Whenever I initiate sex with my girlfriend, she wins
his in pain and says it's uncomfortable.
Yet, whenever she's up for it, there seems to be no pain issue at all.
Last night, we were fooling around and I got it orgasm through foreplay.
Cero issues her pain.
I was pretty into it and initiated sex instantly.
She was uncomfortable.
Despite me slowing down the pace,
finally after one thrust, she yelled out in pain,
pretty much directly in my face,
which was the final straw for me.
This has been happening for so long now
that she never does anything about it.
And to be honest, I doubt there is any pain. And if there is, then she seems to be exaggerating it way out of
a portion. I know that people will say no vagina, no opinion, but I know for a fact that I wasn't
being forceful or rough, so to downright scream in my face was totally unnecessary. She has no other
symptoms or discomfort aside from this. And like I said,
if she initiates, then miraculously there's no problem. It's not a loop thing either. Trust me,
I've tried that too. I guess the reason I'm asking is because last night we kind of had a big fight
about it. I lost my cool and I told her how it's a huge turn off to see her face screwed up and
pain all the time and how I didn't think the pain was as bad as she was making out.
I told her that the sex was becoming really boring, and I could pretty much predict how
it would go each time.
I also said the only solution at this point was to not have sex.
She called me an asshole and went on the offensive, said that I have two moves, and yet I
expected to be like a porn star.
So am I the asshole?
Or should there be more give and take in this scenario?
Can I insist that she get a medical check?
All right. Wow. Okay. Okay. Well, this is what I'm hearing from a sex doctor. Right.
She has some pain during penetration. That is so common that women at pain during penetration
and she might feel some shame around it.
She might not be able to explain what it is.
She might feel like something is wrong with her that she has pain.
But what I'm hearing here is a case of she's got something called vaginismus or vulvidinia.
Mostly it's vaginismus when anything is inserted into her vagina.
She is excruciating pain.
And she's not able to articulate it.
And the reason why she might have been able to have
for play orgasm is because he was stimulating or externally and that's what's going on here.
And when they have vaginismus, it doesn't matter how slow you're going or how big or small,
it's like even a finger or a tampon can be painful. Right. So yeah, she's not sharing with you what's
going on. It doesn't say how long you've been together,
but I doubt that she is faking her pain.
I doubt it.
She's just not being clear to you
of what she's actually experiencing,
and I think that this is a great moment
for you to talk to her and just kind of get curious about it.
I understand why you are getting frustrated,
but get curious about it.
Let her know that you want to understand her pain.
And yeah, I think you can insist she gets a medical check
and I would recommend that she goes to see
a pelvic floor physical therapist
as a great place to start for women who have pain.
And remember, a lot of women do this kind of pain
and they don't know where to go
because no one talks about it.
And it's confusing without the information out there.
I completely understand how that would be frustrated.
And she should go to the doctor.
She should go to pelvic floor physical therapists, As you said, at the same time, I do feel like it's
a little asshole behavior to be saying that her face screwed up and pain is a turn off. It's like
maybe that can be a moment to stop, ask her what about it. Like, again, it really doesn't matter
how slow or how rough you're being.
If it's painful, it's painful. And also shaming her for her face. There's lots of women who feel
that they can't make a weird face. They have to always look hot during sex. And so that keeps a lot
of women from having orgasms, having pleasure because they're afraid of their o-face. And so that
shaming around her pain face is certainly reminiscent of that concern that a lot of
women have.
I guess I can see both sides of it.
I understand why he's saying this though because he's had this time with her where it feels
like it's definitely not in his terms.
It's only in her terms.
And he's not getting his needs met.
But again, pain trumps everything else.
When you are in pain during sex, you have to stop the pain.
And it does not sound in any way that she is faking her pain.
It just sounds like she probably doesn't have understanding of the pain.
And maybe she's hoping it goes away.
But listen, when you have serious pain during penetration, it usually does not go away
without seeing a medical doctor and specifically for a many pelvic floor physical
therapists.
The good news here is that a lot of women who do have vaginal pain are able to work it
through with the right help.
This is what I'm recommending here.
Inside note, we can also be a great pain reliever for sex.
For many people, we'd work taking an edible, like via hem company has these amazing edibles that I just love and they also help with desire
and a rousal and help your anxieties melt away
but can also help with pain.
Cannabis is definitely a great pain really for us.
Yeah, for sure.
You have to remember that.
Bottom line you're an asshole-ish
but here's the problem, Erica.
You know me.
I'm going to have a really hard time
calling anyone a complete asshole.
I know.
Because I can see both sides of every situation
and I see a world where we don't have enough information about sex. a really hard time calling anyone a complete asshole. Because I can see both sides of every situation
and I see a world where we don't have enough information
about sex, we don't talk about sex enough,
and as a result of that, a lot of us act like assholes.
Because we can't communicate and we do an information.
Yeah, yeah, and I think it's more like,
do you have asshole tendencies?
I think we all have asshole tendencies
to say am I an asshole, period?
That's tough.
We probably won't be doing that
on sex with Emily.
Exactly.
But we're gonna let you know when you're dabbling.
Dabbling an asshole to your brain.
You're dabbling an ass with territory.
You wanna point to me the mic, too.
And not the good kind.
Exactly.
Not the good kind of asshole, dabble.
Speaking of dabble.
Speaking of dabble.
Should we jump to the anal one?
Let's jump to anal.
Okay.
The one time we're gonna go from zero to anal.
We're gonna go from zero to anal real quickly here.
Okay, this is from throwaway 939678.
Am I the asshole for not wanting to have anal sex
with my boyfriend?
Here's the backstory.
I've been with my boyfriend for a year.
I'm very vanilla and prudish.
My boyfriend is to be frank, kinky.
We started having sex.
He asked if I had anything I would refuse to do during sex.
I told him that anal was a huge no-go and thought that was it.
I've tried anal once.
The guy I was with used a lot of lube.
It's still hurt.
And when I told him to stop, he didn't.
He knows this.
Now we started begging me to be anal sex with him.
I've told him that was a firm no. That there is a lot I might be willing to do during sex,
but anal is a boundary I don't want to cross. Now he wants a bothering me about it.
We should try this or that. It doesn't hurt if you use lube. Please, I promise it won't hurt.
And it's favorite, but you've never tried it with me. I don't care that I've never tried it with you.
I don't enjoy it.
Have about history with it.
I've tried compromising with you, but you refuse.
He's called me an asshole and asked me why I'm such a prude.
I'm seriously considering ending the relationship.
So Reddit, who's the asshole?
Wow.
Wow. Wow.
Okay.
There isn't edit here that says she decided she'll be breaking up with him in a few hours.
Wow.
I think she did decide that he was an asshole.
I mean, I don't have to agree.
Well, again, it's hard to call someone an asshole.
It's hard to say.
100%.
Exactly.
Okay.
So on the surface, yes, anybody who pressures
their partner to do something, they don't want to do sexually, isn't cool in my book.
And maybe they're an asshole. You don't want to ever pressure your partner. Do something
that's a hard no. It's a hard no. Okay. So yeah, to make her feel guilty and to bring it
up all the time when she's told you she had a very bad experience that kind of makes you an asshole.
It does in the universal sense of asshole. However, I can't help but have an educational moment here to remind all of you that
her story is very very familiar and in fact, there's a lot of anal not happening in the world because people had a very bad first-time experience
where someone shoved it in.
There was no loob. There was no prep.
And as a result of that, they have totally turned in their anal card and said,
I'm never doing it.
Again, this goes to the fact that we don't have anal education.
And that just because you had a bad time first experience does not mean that the next time
won't be better. And in fact, we've heard from so many listeners
who've turned that around.
They learned that you need a consensual partner
that you gotta go slow, that you gotta roll into Lou,
that you gotta try with some external play first,
use a finger, all the things that we talk about all the time
to show.
99.9% of the world don't know this.
And so yes, he's an asshole for pressuring her,
sounds like she already decided to dump him. But I wanna say that there might be room for anal in your future. If you're with a consenting
partner, because there's so many wonderful nerve endings and a lot of love owners actually do
learn to love anal. I think that the key to enjoying anal penetration is that it's a really
collaborative experience. Your partner knows to go slow, to start with a finger, apply lots of lube.
But if they're the ones telling you,
oh, it's not gonna be painful,
but they're not open to receiving anal penetration themselves,
they really have no leg to stand on.
Because anal, yeah, it can feel amazing.
And it also requires a lot of prep,
a lot of knowing what you're doing.
Like it's not just a, let's do it randomly type of thing.
So unless he's open to receiving it himself,
I don't think he has any ground to stand on pressuring you
when saying it's NBD.
It's NBD.
She should also say to him like,
let me try again.
Yeah, okay, it's no big deal.
You try it first.
Really, we all have assholes
and they all feel great when they're integrated
with the right partner.
And he has a prostate. And you have a prostate.
He's got a prostate.
There's a lot they could do here for more fun,
but that's a great way to throw back at them.
I agree.
Anel sounds amazing.
Let's start with you.
You have the problem is the way I call all this
just takes a little bit of education.
Like if all these people just listen to a few episodes,
did some research, they'd understand that.
They could find more pleasure,
but I think again, without information, when you are just pushing your partner, pushing your partner,
that's never going to work. So we're seeing your partner threatening them and bringing it up every
day, it's just going to make your situation worse. So I would say there's some ash hole list.
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This is by Queenie Kitty Snake. Am I the asshole for kink shaming my mom?
I'm not going to pull the it's not what
it sounds like card. This is exactly what it says on the tin. I personally think I was justified
doing so, but I'm willing to tear people out if I wasn't. My mom, 55 year old female,
has this pretty necklace that she wears all the time. I, 20 year old female, would always
admire it when I was a kid. Nobody else has a necklace like it.
It's metal and wraps around her neck like a ring.
She never took it off and always told me it was a gift for my dad whenever I asked about
it.
Last week, she sat me down to tell me something.
She told me that she's a 24-7 BDSM relationship with my dad.
The necklace is not actually a necklace, but a fucking collar that he is the key to.
I couldn't handle it.
This necklace that I always loved as a kid is actually for her kink that she was shoving
in my face for my entire life, now I worry thinking all of her behaviors and all of the
ways that she got me involved in her goddamn kink.
I told her this was disgusting and stormed out.
Now she's blowing up my phone, accusing me of being prude and a kink shamer.
My dad's getting in at it too and swearing that this shit is healthy.
I just don't know what to do.
Currently, I can't even think of forgiving her
for telling me this.
So, Reddit, am I the asshole?
Poof, wow.
There's a lot there.
You're definitely not an asshole.
This can be very, very shocking to hear
about our parents' sexual history
and what's going on with them.
I mean, look at our culture. Nobody talks to their parents about sex. Nobody wants to hear about our parents' sexual history and what's going on with them. I mean, look at our culture.
Nobody talks to their parents about sex.
Nobody wants to hear their parents talk about sex.
And when I say nobody, it's rare that we have healthy, productive, effective conversations,
parents and children around sex.
It just doesn't happen.
And so when we do hear something about sex and there's been this kink going on, she probably
doesn't understand it.
What do you mean by that?
And it's very, very confusing.
Listen, if you're a best friend told you she was in a kink relationship like this, it
might be confusing.
So understanding like BDSM, you know, wearing a key-line your neck and your partner owns
it.
And what does that mean for your sexuality and your relationship?
And everyone who's in these kind of relationships gets to make their own rules. And so for the
first time, it's held her daughter in this way that what she thought you were seeing isn't true.
The necklace really isn't about that. And then she actually goes into this Reddit and says that
now that it's revealed she's having repressed memories of hearing her parents over hearing them fighting
with her dad calling the mom dirty and awful names.
And hearing the mom, you'll doubt and kiss his feet.
Now, that's really, really confusing for a small child.
And so I think that she muses the word trauma
that she's traumatized.
I think it makes sense.
I think the mom didn't have enough information
and she wasn't responsible in telling her daughter.
When we go to somebody with a kink
or to have a really serious sexual conversation,
we have to remember that we have to really have
this conversation in a very thoughtful way.
So how the mom could do it is make sure
the daughter was open to it
and then let her know what this kink meant
and how it went down and like say I'm available to answer any
questions you have about it and to make it like an ongoing conversation. But first the question
would be, are you open to hearing this? I just think that maybe at 20 years old, sounds like
her daughter wasn't and giving her daughter an option and saying, I think that might have been
the best way to go. Like would you be open to hearing something rather than dropping it all on her,
walking away and then she's having all these memories come up. It doesn't sound like it was healthy. way to go. Like, would you be open to hearing something rather than dropping it all on or walking
away and then she's having a lot of these memories come up? It doesn't sound like it was healthy.
I don't think so either. And some of the comments are saying even if her parents were having,
like quote, straightforward vanilla sacks, the kid probably shouldn't hear about that either. But
I'm curious what your take is on that. Because I do think there are healthy conversations that
people can have with their parents. But do you think that should ever involve like what their parents like, even if it's
not kinky?
Or just kind of the information that they need?
It's a great question because you know in the world that I want to live in, we are very
open about sex.
Right.
I think that's important for parents to let kids know that they have special time where they're intimate.
And it doesn't include the kids, and it's adult time.
You start calling it adult time when they're kids.
And then eventually, in households where sex is discussed, perhaps something more organic
would come up.
But no, I don't think as a practice starting to share with your kids, what kind of sex
you're having is really helpful,
especially given how much the lack of sex
education that we have, especially in America.
I think it's okay for parents again to let them know
that we set time aside for each other
and that if you over here anything,
maybe to let them know we were having time together,
we were being intimate time,
I think could be helpful for kids
so they're not getting off in their own heads
about what did it mean, what I just heard. So that's important to let kids know that mommy and daddy of time
together are mommy and mommy, but I think this is a little bit too specific. Yeah, and again, I am
not kink shaming the mom at all. The mom and dad can do whatever they want. I just don't know if
you need to tell your kids
about that personally.
Yeah, I think this is too much.
I'm with you.
If the mom is feeling like I can't believe your kinkshame me,
the mom is not handling this mom.
Yeah, I think she's got some work to do about it.
Around that.
The mom's got a lot of work to do here.
The mom is just like, you're a kinkshame me,
you're not accepting us.
What does she think?
She's probably never talked to her daughter about sex
in 20 years and she drops this bomb under her.
And then she's blaming the child.
So there's a lot more relational skills
that need to go on here, a lot more discussions,
a lot more compassion and empathy for her daughter.
And I don't really, I'm not seeing that here at all.
Yeah, I'm not seeing that.
And not giving her space to process this like,
major information.
Now the mom is getting angry at her.
I don't know. That's kind of assholes. That. I don't know. That's kind of assholes.
That's kind of assholes.
That's on the assholes spectrum.
That's on the assholes spectrum and sounds like someone who needs to do a lot of work on themselves.
And probably both of them.
Remember, therapy is great for everybody.
Yeah. Thanks.
Queenie Kitty's name.
Thank you so much for that.
This is from It's Not Me.
Am I the asshole for breaking up with my girlfriend because we didn't have
enough sex? We met five months ago and we fell in love fast, but after a while she told me she was
a virgin and wasn't ready to have sex. I told her it's okay and we'll walk through it together,
but it was so long and it took everything for me. After we actually did it for the first time,
she told me she's not going to do it again.
She felt so much shame and regret.
I was understanding at first and tried to convince her that I need sex in the relationship
because that's how I can feel close to you.
After basically begging for sex, she came out as a sexual and told me that she doesn't want
sex ever.
I was calm and went home and thought about it and the next day I told her, I want to break
up.
She asked if this was because she's asexual,
and I couldn't say yes.
I told her that I'm not ready to be in a relationship
right now, and it's going really fast.
Edit.
I didn't pressure at all.
I said, first sex is very important.
She agreed that she wanted sex,
but I have to be slow and make her comfortable,
which I did.
Then after the first time she told me
that she didn't feel comfortable,
oh my God, there's 3,000 comments on this.
Oh my God.
This sounded like a little bit of a younger couple.
Yeah.
And I think, listen, she was expressing that she tried to have sex.
She wasn't ready for it.
You're pressuring because you really want to have sex,
which I understand people in relationships have sex
to see if they're compatible.
And then she said, she's asexual.
We need to understand what asexuality is.
Asexual means like, you actually, you might want affection, you might want connection,
you might want some kind of touch, but you actually aren't interested in sex.
And so where I think the, where there could be some work here is that, once she said that,
it would have been okay for him to say, well
then I think this relationship isn't going to work because I'm somebody who prioritizes
sex. Sex is important to me. So I don't think you're an asshole for breaking up. I think
that it's assholeish to not be honest. Thank you so much for being real to me that you
are actually not into sex. Young GLAB that's was able to make you realize that you are a sexual. I'm somebody who wants to be in a relationship with someone who wants to have sex.
So, let's just part ways here.
And I think it was just a misunderstanding.
And he was probably thinking he was doing the right thing by saying, no, no, it's not
about that.
I don't want to hurt your feelings.
I don't want to judge you for being a sexual.
But the truth is, remember, if our partner doesn't share our kinks and they never want
to come around to it, if our partner doesn't prioritize sex, it doesn't have a growth mindset around sex,
doesn't ever want to have sex, doesn't like the same kind of sex we had, and we've really tried
to make it work through all the things we talk about on the show, and you guys are still not on
the same page. It's okay to end the relationship on the grounds of not wanting the same kind of
sex or wanting sex at all. Mm-hmm. I think there's so many other ways that we measure compatibility and we don't often
value sexual compatibility.
And if you're someone who values sex in a relationship and your partner does not desire
sex, then that's...
That is ground.
People always ask is it okay to end a relationship because the bad sex or not great
sex?
I mean, I think if you've really worked on and done everything you can do.
And also because it's so early in the relationship,
I feel like they're still getting information
about each other in general.
I think it might be a different scenario
if you're like 20 years down the line.
You know, the relationship has turned sexless.
There's some work that can be done there.
Versus here, it's like, it's five months.
Yeah, it's five months.
It's five months, five months in.
Listen. And if they're young,
they've got a whole life of relationships to have and... Expans. And what I love about this,
though, is that if you're 5 months into a relationship for everybody, I think it's important to understand
if you are sexually compatible. By this point, if you're having sex, everyone should pretty much know
that because what we often see is that if you begin to relationships, they look back at the beginning and they knew it wasn't so great and they weren't compatible,
but they stayed in the relationship, thinking it was going to change, thinking their partner
was going to come around and it doesn't.
And then they're in the 20 year relationship wondering what went wrong with our sex life
when really the information was there in the beginning, usually is.
So this is your sign to have conversations about sex right now, no matter what stage of the relationship you're in
So you can make better decisions going forward. And listen, we have an article up right now
You should check out seven signs of sexual compatibility. We'll link that in the show notes
Just looking at all these comments here. I think there's a lot of misunderstanding of the scenario
It sounds like he was very gracious during her sexual debut going slow.
You don't sound like an asshole to me.
You really don't sound like it.
So you just sound like someone who's like,
wants to have sex with a partner
and then she brings a sexual on you,
which is confusing.
You know, studies have shown that only one percent
of the population is actually asexual.
So it's not like we come across that all the time.
Right, and that's what I'm thinking about to not to,
you know, judge or devalue
anyone's sexuality. But if this was her first time having sex and she has a lot of shame
around it, I'm like, is it truly asexuality or is it? I think that she's probably too
soon to say that she's asexual. I think that that's an easy label to slap on ourselves
when we have shame and when we're uncertain about sex.
If we go up an environment where sex is shameful, that's the only message we receive.
We have to take some time to really figure out, is that true?
Does that work for me anymore?
So it might have been convenient for her to say, I'm asexual.
And not really understanding completely what it means to be asexual. And not really understanding completely
what it means to be asexual.
It actually takes some work being out in the world
to understand that.
Although I'm sure there are younger people
who are certain they're asexual,
but typically what I've seen, if you grow up with shame,
it sounds like there's a lot of other things going on.
She might need to do a little bit more exploring,
but not necessarily in this relationship.
This is from Starboy67.
Am I an asshole for telling that my friend had three swims in college in a drinking
game in front of her new boyfriend?
For the new years, a bunch of old friends came to my parent's house for dinner.
We're all pretty close, and my friend Maria brought her new boyfriend of eight months.
For what it's worth, I'm no Maria my entire life.
I know she's always been proud of her sexuality, and said if a guy judges me for my past, he doesn't have my values and I don't want him.
So yeah, we were all talking and people shared embarrassing and definitely personal stories
about each other.
Then I don't know how it came up, but I brought up how Maria would have three sums with
her boyfriend and girls from her Indian dance team.
I don't know, we were all laughing, then 10 minutes later Maria Marie and her boyfriend both left. Turns out, now, he broke up with her. I don't know the details,
but long story short, he felt kind of bad that she was so much more sexual with other
guys than she was with him. I don't see how it was the asshole in the situation. I don't
even see how it's that bad. Was I wrong here? Or was this just an unfortunate situation?
Oh, a starboy.
Starboy.
Starboy.
So I'm not wrong either.
This is a little bit tricky, Starboy,
because here's the thing.
I know you guys have been friends for a really long time,
but this is the area where no matter how comfortable
our friends are, and there's new people in the room,
and it's about your friend's sex life,
you should really allow them to have that conversation.
We wouldn't talk about our partner's money history,
we wouldn't talk about their sex history.
It is really, really personal,
and since sex is a charged subject,
I think that it wasn't great to break it up,
and that would be something that we have to let her do
at her own time, and it's a new partner,
and even though it's fun,
you guys have joked about it a lot.
Listen, we also change.
She might have said in the past,
she hasn't wanted to be with anyone,
it doesn't share her values.
And the way he heard this, it just went wrong.
Maybe she would have told him when she was ready,
but this clearly jumped the gun here.
Yeah.
It wasn't pretty.
Yeah, I would say long story short,
this was kind of an asshole move.
I don't think it was intentional at all, but just yeah, I think other people's sex
labs are not your stories to share. Like I could see maybe if they were together for like 10 years
and you knew that they had already talked about this before. Yeah. Maybe, but even that, unless she was
the type of person to tell all her friends, like she's very open about her sexual before. Yeah. Maybe, but even then, unless she was the type of person
to tell all her friends, like,
she's very open about her sexual history.
Yeah, I don't think that's your call to me.
It's really never your call to make,
and it's a new partner,
and we should all just know,
like someone brings a new partner,
especially even friends,
you've seen her in different scenarios
with different partners and different relationships.
We can't assume that someone's new partner
is someone that's gonna be around.
We don't really know about their personality.
So I just think that we always err on the side of caution.
When you are revealing something personal about anybody
and someone's secret no matter how comfortable
you are with a friend,
I think we always have to be careful.
Err on the side of, does this make me a good friend? Have this person entrusted secrets in me that I
just cannot share? It was her story to tell. But I also understand why you did
it because you have all this history with her and she's pretty cool and outspoken.
We never know what's going on in any relationship and how people are going to
respond, especially when it comes to sex. Particularly, three-sums.
Yeah. Always a point of contention. And as we discuss, people want to have to respond, especially when it comes to sex, particularly threesomes.
Yeah.
Always a point of contention.
And as we discuss, people want to have threesomes with their
partners or they have judgments around threesomes and it just
isn't great party conversation unless she brought it up.
Mm-hmm.
So.
Thanks, Starboy.
We'll do better next time.
Yeah, exactly.
What a great learning opportunity for Starboy and for everyone list. Yeah. Thanks, Starboy. We'll do better next time. Yeah, exactly. What a great learning opportunity.
For Starboy and for everyone.
Yeah.
Thanks, everyone.
OK.
Thanks.
Thanks.
That's it for today's episode.
See you on Friday.
Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily.
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