Sex With Emily - New Podcast, Who Dis? with Jordan Harbinger

Episode Date: April 6, 2018

On today’s show, Emily is joined by her OG podcast friend Jordan Harbinger, host of The Jordan Harbinger Show to talk about all aspects of relationships – intimate and otherwise. They talk about w...hy keeping “score” in relationships is an unhealthy practice, how to maintain your relationships in life and work, ways to stay motivated when you’re going through a devastating break-up, and why it’s natural for the grass to feel greener outside of a relationship and what to do about it. Thank you for supporting our sponsors who help keep the show FREE: Promescent, JO Stimulants, Hello Fresh, UVee & Magic Wand Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Thanks for listening to Sex with Emily. On today's show, I'm hosting my OG podcast friend Jordan Harbinger, host of the Jordan Harbinger Show. We're talking all aspects of relationships. Topics include, why keeping score in relationships is an unhealthy practice. Tips for maintaining relationships in life and work. How to keep motivated when you're going through a devastating breakup, the importance of men learning to be vulnerable in all areas of their life, not just the intimate ones, and why it's totally natural to feel the grass is always greener and what to do about it. All this and more, thanks for listening. They're the eyes of a man obsessed by sex. Eyes that mock our sacred institutions. Betrubized, they call them in a fight on me.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Hey, Evelyn, you got a boyfriend? Because my man E here, he just got his heart broken. He thinks you're kind of cute. The girls got a hair standard. Oh my! The women know about shrinkage. Isn't it common knowledge? What do you mean, like laundry?
Starting point is 00:01:01 It's shrink? Can we not talk about sex so much? Are you kidding me? Oh my god, I'm off here so, so, so, so. Being bad feels pretty good. You know Emily's not the kind of girl you just play with. You're listening to Sex with Emily. We're talking about sex relationships and everything in between.
Starting point is 00:01:20 For more information, check out everything we've going on at sexwithemily.com. Cause there's a lot. Right Jamie? Jamie's here to tell you about it because she makes it all happen. Yes, there is a lot going on. She's a man. She's a doll. We've got a lot of great writers on the site.
Starting point is 00:01:34 Go ahead. We have a lot of great writers. We have people in house. We have some people that are just part of the team. We also have been revamping our YouTube page. So you should definitely go to youtube.com.com slash sex with Emily and subscribe because actually a video that just came out with Zoe Ligon on the show recently.
Starting point is 00:01:54 That was a fun show. It was great. They were hilarious together, both from Michigan, but they did an extra video. So we have a video coming up on things to unlearn from porn. And it is as hilarious as it is informative True that nothing wrong with porn love a good porn every now and then but there's a lot of stuff in there Shouldn't be doing yes, and we tell you about it, but yeah, so that's on YouTube Check it out learn a lot go down a rabbit hole. We all know how people like to do that
Starting point is 00:02:21 I think our blogs are awesome right now. Are you me on YouTube? Are you sure? You can go down a rabbit hole on our site. No, I think our site is amazing too. I think that we have so many great people working with us and writing interesting blogs that you guys will actually like and learn from. And if you ever have a question that you want to get answered literally, you can go to our site
Starting point is 00:02:40 and search, mismatched libidos, and podcasts and blogs will come up with all of this information. If you wanna know how to rock woman on top, for example. There's literally a blog called Exactly. Cauts. How'd you rock the woman on top? Cause I get it, it's challenging. Not every woman wants to be on top every time or man.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Sometimes you just don't want to be moving around on the top or you don't have the confidence or not sure how to do it. We can help you with a lot of these things. So even before you were saying, before you're going all the effort of writing the question, we might have answered it. Exactly. Especially when you DM me, which I love your DMs.
Starting point is 00:03:12 We read them all. But sometimes that's another great place to look at if we've already answered it. Yes, exactly. Exactly. And don't be discouraged if you don't get replied to right away. Emily, you just get to lot. Here's the other thing I want to say. I so appreciate when you guys all subscribe and comment
Starting point is 00:03:27 and itunes. It really helps us when you subscribe to the podcast. I read all your comments. I love them. And this week's review is from Rush to Danger. Emily is the kind of host you immediately fall in love with. Her caring and thoughtful insight into human sexuality is broad and up to date.
Starting point is 00:03:42 Emily keeps up with the latest trends in sexual behavior and dating habits. No subject is taboo. From anal sex to BDSM, sex with Emily knows it all. I'm both a fan and a student. This is one podcast everyone needs to listen to. Seriously, the world would be a better counter place if we were all having better sex. That's awesome. Thank you Russia Danger and he's so not on the payroll, but maybe we should hire him because he's my biggest fan. Thank you for that. You guys, it also really, I do read them all and I appreciate it and I appreciate you. Also, Santa for our weekly newsletter. It's awesome. I do give great newsletter. I've heard. I don't want to brag.
Starting point is 00:04:15 If you really like it, follow me on social media. It's all at Sex with Emily on Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, and Twitter. And we're always posting, you know, we have new episodes, everything is happening in the office. Let's nip it behind the scenes. Jamie and I, trying Clitoral gel live, you can watch that on Instagram if you missed it. That was fun. We should repost that every week. We should try every week another something live.
Starting point is 00:04:39 Yeah, they have, first of all, we think we're like a cam girl. We're not gonna get naked. Yeah, it's gonna be very like, you know, safe for work. Safe for work instructional. But still sexy at the same time. What does that mean? You'll have to watch.
Starting point is 00:04:55 You'll have a safe sexy work. I think you actually are a lot more productive too. When you have a little safe sexy fun in the middle of the day, I've heard that. Yes, I'm study. You'll also be more productive if you use Clitoral Gel if you're a person. I tell you, that Clitoral Gel is like, Clitoral.
Starting point is 00:05:10 It's like Adderall for your Clitoris. But like in a good way. Yeah, without the hot full space. Without the calm down. And you know what it is about the Clitoral Gel? We're talking about Joe's Clitoral Gel, which I'm obsessed with. They have like atomic and spicy.
Starting point is 00:05:23 Spicy. It was spicy, buzzy. No, warm buzzies, what we tried. Spicy is the super hot one, and then there's like atomic is like super cold. And here's the thing, and it gives you this little buzzy sensation. It felt great, Termion. I got home, and my clitoris still felt very much alive.
Starting point is 00:05:38 Not so much warm and buzzy, but just like, hey, I'm here, and I felt much more attached and connected to it. We're actually talking about Joe's warm and buzzy, which you can check out at sexwithemley.com slash Joe, because I'm sure you want to know what the hell we're talking about. Hey, I hope you enjoyed this interview with Jordan. We had a lot of fun, and I know you're going to learn a lot.
Starting point is 00:05:58 Thanks for listening. I'm really excited for my friend Jordan, Arbonne Jordan, to be on the show right now. I can't say his last name, but we've been friends for a really long time, and it's been a while, like we were the OG podcasters. That's right. When I started my show in 2006,
Starting point is 00:06:13 I remember your show being in the category that I joined, which I think was like self-help or something. On iTunes. Yeah, in iTunes. And you're the only show that I know that still exists from those days at all. Right, we're talking what, 11, how many years ago? It's 11 and a half, almost 12 years,
Starting point is 00:06:28 because we were before Corolla, before Rogan, before... We were like just too long people sitting out there on iTunes podcast, and you remember you did dig to find podcasts on iTunes? Yeah, there's all text navigations. You had to click like podcasts, dash health, dash self-help, and that was like a text list. It's like sex with Emily, and then a bunch of other people
Starting point is 00:06:46 that don't exist. Exactly. And now it's us. We are the last men and women's standing from the old days. So I'm so glad that you're here and visiting. Likewise. And you have a new podcast. It's called the Jordan Harbinger Show.
Starting point is 00:06:59 Because I'm really creative with naming things. So I just decided to use my own name. Right, that's good. No, that makes sense. Sex has become my name. I didn't know that. I was okay with Emily Morris, and then when you started sex with Emily,
Starting point is 00:07:12 and now we go like, oh, you're the sex girl. Hey, sex. And when you're at and about, I think there'd be such a thing. To be in a spot, you know, and they're like, oh, you're the sex. Yeah, which is hard though.
Starting point is 00:07:21 I like it sometimes, and they're like, oh my God, you sex with Emily. However, when I'm like at a restaurant or at a bar and there's a cute guy, my friends like, oh, come meet him. This is sex with Emily. What's he gonna think at the time?
Starting point is 00:07:32 Right? It already starts with like, oh, cool. I'm gonna learn something. Yeah, I'm gonna do a lot of bangers because of that, but you don't have to worry about that with Jordan. No, nobody wants it. Because you require adaptation.
Starting point is 00:07:40 Tell me about your new show. So I take high performers or interesting folks, like CIA agent, we'll teach us how to read people. I'm having Larry King on to talk about the art of conversation, or I'll have somebody on to teach us like, I'll have a general on, how do you make tough decisions that involve people's lives? And I get these practical tips and I make work sheets for the listeners so that they can do, it's like nerd stuff, right?
Starting point is 00:08:04 They can do homework because everybody loves a little homework and they can learn these practical takeaways and apply them right away. So that's what the show's about. To being better performers and all, yeah, pretty much anything. But let's talk about the relationship thing because people don't really understand the philosophy that you have behind building relationships,
Starting point is 00:08:20 keeping relationships, keeping it strong. I mean, I've always been about my friends and keeping up networks. Like I always like this, like I've never burned any bridges. I'm friends with mean, I've always been about my friends and keeping up networks. Like, I've never burned any bridges. I'm friends with most people I've ever worked for. I've worked for me. I don't know. I was just like this innate thing.
Starting point is 00:08:31 And I love, I think I can't handle anxiety and stress around relationships. So I try to- You have anxiety and stress around other things. Exactly, but not relationship. I have it around myself. But what I'm saying is you actually teach that people, the importance of maintaining and valuing the people in your life your life and that's a strong currency. It is important
Starting point is 00:08:49 You weren't you doing political stuff a million years ago? I was in politics Yeah, I forgot about that and then I said Francisco where you're living now. That's right We were talking about this that I actually okay, so we're gonna go back to what you do you will yeah We'll get there Oh my god, I'm hot. So getting naked. That's happening already, huh? Leave mine on for now. Cause I wanted to go.
Starting point is 00:09:15 Jordan. There's no way. Please tell you leave all this stuff in, right? Oh yeah, totally. But he said, okay, good. Cause I'm like, I'll be a little breakdowns that I have. I like to leave in too. Well, I said, okay, good. I think I'll be a little breakdowns that I have. I like to leave it into. Well, I do sometimes, so with you, I can.
Starting point is 00:09:27 But what I was gonna say is that I love that I moved here, you were to Los Angeles from San Francisco. And now you're in San Francisco, I'm, well, San Jose. Do you not say San Francisco? You're like, I'm proudly in San Jose. Yeah, sometimes I do when people are, when I'm out of state, especially. But if it's in California, I don't say San Francisco, because then people go, great when I'm out of state especially, but if it's in California I don't say San Francisco because then people go great. I'm there tomorrow
Starting point is 00:09:47 Let's have lunch and I'm like I'm not gonna drive it there for you good points It's actually to keep all these important relationships away from you right all the So you actually don't really want the right you want to network but on your time right just lip service only Right, hey, let's meet up. No, I'm just saying this. I really have no intention of following through. Right, exactly. So don't do as he, don't do as I say, not as I do. Exactly, exactly. No, I love meeting up with people,
Starting point is 00:10:12 but I will say that lunches are like the biggest time suck. I always say let's do breakfast and then people go, nah, I'm good. And then you look like, okay, well, at least I tried, because people don't wanna do breakfast because they don't wanna get up early. And I'm like, well, it's obviously not that important. I'll do dinner too on a weekend, but it's so hard.
Starting point is 00:10:34 Lunch, you go, all right, let's get a quick bite, but then you have three hours in the middle of the day. I'm already, I'm just getting, I'm just finally focused by 11. If I have to leave for lunch at noon, forget it, my whole day is gone. The whole day is gone. But I have to leave for a lunch at noon, forget it. My old day is gone. The whole day is gone. The whole day is gone.
Starting point is 00:10:46 But I was going to say that you're wherever you are now. We won't tell. We don't actually tell your exact location. Camel, California, 9.5, 0, 0, 0. Everybody wants to hang out with Jordan. But the last time I saw you came to my little guest house that was just filled with sex toys. So the house had a bunch because you were doing your candles.
Starting point is 00:11:03 Yes, Mike. That was the deal. That was, Mike. That was the deal. I don't have any more about correct. Right. I love them. So we don't have to talk about the candles. Nope. But they were good at the time for other reasons.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And then you're like, oh, hey, I want to give you some stuff. So we walked back to like, was it a storage unit? It was my garage. The garage, right. And we opened the garage and I'm like, wow, a car won't fit in here because there's like cases of lube and condoms that may or may not be expired, but you're like, hey, use all these in the next week because there's a 20 million in there. And then it was like things that inflate, things that deflate, things that inflate other things,
Starting point is 00:11:36 if you know what I mean. And like pumps and various. I think I gave you some liberators, I gave you a spider bar. Yeah, and I went back and I was like, who you got to try out this? You were in a Vegas, I think. I gave you a Vegas care package. Yeah, and I went back and I was like, we gotta try out this. You were in a Vegas, I think. I gave you a Vegas care package because you would just start dating your now wife. Yes, that's right.
Starting point is 00:11:50 And I really wanted to be a special time. And we were like, oh, we're gonna make a video. And then we used all of a sudden where we cannot be on a video with all of this stuff. I think you promised me content and reviews if I gave you all that stuff. Totally chickened out. You still owe me content and reviews.
Starting point is 00:12:03 Still feel bad about it. So now that we're caught up, that was gonna say that's the last time we saw each other. Now you're in the Bay Area wherever you are. And I haven't been avoiding you just because I didn't make the video, but it's probably a subconscious thing where I was like, I didn't make that video.
Starting point is 00:12:15 And I feel guilty about it. But can we talk, okay, so let's go back to relationships, managing relationships, because like I said, I've always tried to keep up relationships. I don't like burning bridges. But let's talk about it as a like, because there are things that come my head, I think, oh, I didn't email that person back
Starting point is 00:12:30 or I wonder if they've got, I make up stories. Yeah. They're just happy to hear from me. Like, I hadn't heard from you in a while. I'm like, I have nothing weird. I wasn't like, I'll answer his call, but where's the review about the spread of our Jordan? I was happy to hear from you.
Starting point is 00:12:42 Right, we do make up stories in our own head about relationships. And now I've got systems in place where I don't have to worry about that anymore. Right, we do make up stories in our own head about relationships. And now I've got systems in place where I don't have to worry about that anymore. So, if you ever heard of contactually, it's like this piece of software that plugs into Gmail, it goes through all your contacts and you do this little bucket game
Starting point is 00:12:57 where it's like the name flow spider, it's like Emily Morris and it's like push W for 90 days, push X for 10 days, push G for six months, and then every allotted time that you put the person in the bucket, it'll remind you and send you an email and be like, you haven't talked to them for three months,
Starting point is 00:13:13 you should reach out and you're like, oh, okay. And a lot of people say, oh, that's cheating, but I'm like, look, if you know a thousand people in your like sex and broadcasting and showbiz in LA, you can't be expected to remember all these people. It's not realistic. So I don't even try.
Starting point is 00:13:27 I just use this system so that I can think of stuff in real time. And then I call that systematic network maintenance, right? But I also use something called Opportunistic Network Maintenance, where it's like, I'm on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram. If you pop across my feed and it's like, Emily Morris is doing a live show in LA about something.
Starting point is 00:13:45 I'll go, oh, instead of just clicking the heart, I'll send an email or a text instead, because that reminded me to engage. Because if someone clicks the like, you're not like, let me see all 4,000 people who like this. Oh, Jordan, hey, you just don't pay attention. But we have friends that have babies, they get married, and their stuff shows up in Facebook,
Starting point is 00:14:03 and all we do is click like, are we right? Like congrats in a comment, and nobody ever thinks about that again. But if you look at that opportunity and you call or you email somebody or you text them, it's so much more engaging, and Facebook does all the work for you, or Instagram does all the work for you. And so, contactually, we'll remind me on a set amount of time, and then social media will remind me on, like, seemingly random amounts of time, and then social media will remind me on seemingly random amounts of time, and usually with big news, right?
Starting point is 00:14:27 Because if someone has a baby, it gets like a thousand likes, or if they get married, it's like a thousand. So instead of just joining that pool of people clicking like or commenting, I will engage more deeply with like a text, email, or phone call. So why is this important though? Relationships are important. Because a lot of people think,
Starting point is 00:14:43 oh, I know so many people that could help with this thing, or I know so many people that I need to get in touch with, but I don't have time. And then when they need something, they're like, say they're launching a line of books or something or candles, just hypothetically, right? Then they have to call people and go, all right, I have this thing that I need,
Starting point is 00:14:58 and I don't mind doing that for my friends because I'm in business and you're in business, it's like not a big deal. But for some people, they're like, well, I haven't heard from you in three years. So why should I do this? You only call me, or maybe you called them five times, they never called you back.
Starting point is 00:15:11 And then when they need something, and you know how you feel about those people, you're like, oh, this is just like a user. Right. So if you keep in regular touch with people, then it's not awkward to reach out and ask for something because you've been in touch with them for a long time. So whenever people go, oh, Jordan, you have to restart your show,
Starting point is 00:15:29 you're rebooting your business or something, is it embarrassing to reach out to people that you haven't talked to? And it's like, well, no, because the longest period I haven't talked with somebody is probably like six months or a year at most. Except for me, but that was because it's the sex that you felt bad. No, it's not the real reason. No, we're always, I get it, but I do have that excuse that with people.
Starting point is 00:15:48 There's a lot of people that I love, that I care for, business, and personally, but I'm like, oh, but there's no time. I don't really have a commute. When can I call them? When can I touch with them? So I think men are a little more equipped at like women. We get on the phone.
Starting point is 00:15:59 We talk for hours. Yeah, guys need systems, especially, I think. Maybe women do too, and I'm just, it's a different type of thing. But for me, I love talking on women do too, and I'm just, it's a different type of thing. But for me, I love talking on the phone too, and I love catching up with people. But before I had my systems, it was always totally random. So one of the reasons that I probably hadn't reached out
Starting point is 00:16:14 in a while was because I didn't have my stuff in place until the last few years, and then it was like, oh, I didn't have a bucket or whatever. So now whenever I meet or talk to old friends or see them on Facebook, I'm like, oh, I gotta have this person. or whatever. So now whenever I meet or talk to old friends or see them on Facebook, I'm like, oh, I gotta add this person. So my whole to-do list is like Emily Morse, 90 days. And it's like- So they're from you 90 days.
Starting point is 00:16:32 Or more often, hopefully. But yeah, I would love it. Okay, so Jordan, we talked because you were with the Art of Charm. Yeah, I started the Art of Charm. And the Art of Charm podcast was a show I hosted for 11 years. And then I left in like a crazy dramatic,
Starting point is 00:16:48 unnecessarily dramatic, I should say, split with the old company, very sudden, totally not what we had worked out originally. And I'm like, oh my God, I'm totally screwed. I have to start over now with the Jordan Harbinger show. I don't know what I'm gonna do. And then I was like, all right, I can either give up or cry about it,
Starting point is 00:17:08 or I can just try to get back on my feet and realize that. I'm 11 years into like a 30 plus, or if I'm Larry King, like 85 year career and broadcasting. I always think this, but your biggest challenges are going to make you stronger. You've been through a lot lately, you know? I put that so people say, but in the moment it totally sucks. No, but you're gonna look back on this.
Starting point is 00:17:25 Oh, remember that time that that whole thing happened with articharm and then you're like kicking ass and you're like, I would not be where I am had I not gone through that. I mean, I feel that way we were talking about when I put this behind a paywall prematurely in 2011. Like I thought it was a mistake, 2010. My life was over, people never come back.
Starting point is 00:17:42 I'm so glad I tried and failed, tried and failed so many things because that's how I, you know, I've learned just like you. But aren't you excited for that time when the mistake consequences are over and all the good stuff is already started? Exactly, you're not there yet, but I already see it. Right, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I guess you need them, they're so much nicer when they happen to other people than I learn from them though. Instead of having it in me and I have a problem with them. What's humbling though, how do you feel now? Do you feel like?
Starting point is 00:18:06 I feel good about it. I'll tell you what, there's been several big gifts that have come from, I guess, failing hard or like being smacked hard and getting knocked off the mountain top, so to speak. One, my compassion for other people is off the charts. So I was watching this documentary on Netflix about this guy who he'd run like a shady payday loan
Starting point is 00:18:27 business and he was facing a life sentence. And I was like, yeah, shady business, but like really harsh sentence. And I actually felt bad for that guy. And I felt, I know. And as a guy, I'm like, what is this feeling where I feel sympathy feelings for other people that are not babies or animals, I don't understand.
Starting point is 00:18:44 Yeah, good for you. Evolving. I. Yeah. Yeah. Good for you. Yeah. Evolving. I know. Here's my question for you, Jordan. So when I met you, whatever, how many, 12 years ago, you were doing more of the art of charm, which was more coming after Neil Strauss's game. Yeah. You were more of a pickup or Neil Strauss's game. I'll have you know. Okay. Thank you for clarifying. So you're helping men pick up women, how to approach, build their confidence, how to be better men in certain ways or how to get women. It was how to get women in the industry.
Starting point is 00:19:11 We're talking 13 years, it's okay. Yeah, I was like, what's a blow job? I wasn't the expert at the beginning. I knew it would have blow jobs. Lots of practice. I didn't do sex party, for example, or had a threesome. So then you moved your show into more of helping, it was more feel like it was more of men being better men,
Starting point is 00:19:25 learning the skills to better communicators, learning relationships, being high performers and whatever business they're in, but also teaching them more about what would you say are the main core skills that you've been in your evolution that you've been teaching men, and then now you're actually had to put them
Starting point is 00:19:40 into practice. Into practice. Yeah, let's talk about that. Yeah, so I started losing interest in all the dating stuff because it just got super played out. And it's like how many times can I talk about starting a conversation where it's and I'm not just repeating the same things.
Starting point is 00:19:52 I gotcha. So I started to get really sick of that. My business partners and other people in the organization were like, no, stick with this. This is what our customers are buying. And I was kind of like, cool. I'm gonna jump off the roof of my garage because I don't wanna talk about this stuff anymore.
Starting point is 00:20:06 So I started getting bigger and bigger guests and like CEOs and business people and military people and I was getting really interested in that stuff and our core audience was shifting. So we were getting a lot of email from women that was like, hey, what the hell is the deal? You only have these programs for men, but I listened to your show.
Starting point is 00:20:24 And a lot of folks were like, hey, can you change the name of your show? Because every time I tell my friends to listen, they always laugh at me or they're like, they don't want to learn. Oh, because Articharm. Because Articharm's name was really cheesy in my opinion, or their opinion, I should say,
Starting point is 00:20:35 and then later on in my opinion, it was like, with, it was so nice. So not you, it was like, your high school photo kept popping up. Yeah, it was like your high school. It's like, I don't have anymore. Your high school yearbook photo, right? And I remember having dialogue inside my company, I mean, like, we should change this, but in the end of the day, it was like your head. I don't even have anymore. Your high school yearbook photo, right? And I remember having dialogue inside my company, I mean, like, we should change this, but in the end of the day,
Starting point is 00:20:48 it was my face, and it was kind of like, I saw it as my decision, and my business partners were at a different vision for the business. So I wanted to split off and do my own thing. And so that's what I'm doing now. And so now I'm teaching very unisex skills of learning relationship development, networking, keeping relationships in your life,
Starting point is 00:21:06 making strong friendships and connections. And that's so much more interesting to me than like, cool, to keep her interested at the bar, you gotta do these five things. Right, great. When I'm married now, you know, like soon, Jen's gonna be popping up some kids at some point. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:21 Hopefully soon, you know. I gotcha, but you know what's interesting about all that, because I think it's actually a deeper level conversation we can have here, because a lot of people listening to my show, they still want to know, I'm so anxious, for men and for women, I can't approach a woman or a man at the bar, I don't know how to talk, I don't, and a lot of the advice I give is,
Starting point is 00:21:37 be the best version of yourself. You don't want to be attracted, you know, people think like, I want someone who can complete me, and I think when you're a fullest version of yourself, that's when you're gonna track someone, not that you feel like it's gonna complete you in other ways. So what you teach is really like, it's the other side of it, which I think is just as important
Starting point is 00:21:55 because once you build your relationships, your social networks, you feel really good about your career, your life, your relationship, then you're not even gonna have to think about talking to people because it's gonna be part of who you are. Exactly. And you incorporate it. So it's sort of like the deeper level of work that people do rather than, here's a great
Starting point is 00:22:10 pick up line, Nager at the bar and he's a negative social sleeper through that. Yeah, exactly. And furthermore, if you're bringing in a ton of relationships that are platonic, you're gonna start to meet so many more people that the numbers game involved in meeting the right person is gonna be a different thing. You're gonna run across them and throughout the course of your life rather than like, okay, tonight we're gonna go out
Starting point is 00:22:30 and try to troll for chicks or dudes or whatever at the bar. And this is important because a lot of people go, ah, you know, I never have, a lot of high quality people say I never have time to go out. So they go out once a month and they're like, I just feel so stupid doing this and they don't want to do it. So do you have a better chance of meeting someone throughout your daily life doing what you're doing best, bringing
Starting point is 00:22:52 relationships in your life, practicing what you've preached and really like you said, being the best version of yourself or the one night at the bar where they go out because their friend finally made them go out and then their shy too. It's like two needles in a haystack trying to find each other. It's like what are you no wonder people don't meet their wife at the bar 99% of the time. They meet it through a significant other through a social circle and the way to do that is to continually grow that circle. So those are the skills that I'm focused on now and not just like here's this cool thing you can do to have with your light up belt buckle like at some outing.
Starting point is 00:23:27 Although that is kind of cool. That can work if you have for 25. So what are, I mean, you're right, because as you move through life, people always say, oh, they're like the people who complain and you've probably heard this now in the Bay Area and I hear it here, and in New York, everywhere that people live, they think they live
Starting point is 00:23:40 in the very worst time of the day. They're like, there's no one here. And I believe that if, you know, whoever you go, there you are. And also that the richer, fuller life you have, if you're personal interests, if you're working out with your friends, with your work, you're out in the world doing things you're going to fund that person. And that's how I've always met people not on the apps, not that apps are bad. But just, so what are the things that you teach people to start off They're going, yeah, but I work so much. I'm so busy.
Starting point is 00:24:06 I have no time. What are your core components? Yeah, I schedule my relationship development stuff as like a business meeting, as a business meeting. So when I look through contactually or when I look through my contact list, every morning I wake up, I scroll to the bottom of my texts and all the, you know how the bottom is like the person you texted a year and a half ago and about, hey, where are we gonna meet for lunch?
Starting point is 00:24:29 And you're like, oh, that person. So if you scroll to the bottom of your text and you write something- From a year ago. Or I don't know, let's do it right now. I'm gonna look at the bottom of my texts. I think it's the very bottom now. You just do one of these. One of you scroll, oh, not like that.
Starting point is 00:24:43 But you scroll, I'm swiping accidentally. So you scroll, yeah, and you go way down. Oh god, what is it? It's the one I slap, okay, that's it. Then you're out of luck. You literally go all the way to the bottom. So the bottom one is my friend's wife, and then there's an unknown number.
Starting point is 00:24:55 And then I'm like, all right, but if I look at this one, here's a friend of mine from the UK. So I could text him and say, hey, it's been a long time. How are you? Haven't spoken with you in a minute. And let's see, what's the last time I spoke with this person?
Starting point is 00:25:08 May 22nd, 2016 is this guy. Might go back to 2012. That's a long time ago. Yeah, but like at this point, okay, so I want to go back up. So my thing is, I'll do that and they'll be great. Let's get together. Let's do something. That's always the next thing.
Starting point is 00:25:23 And I don't have time to see everybody. So what do you do? I don't say anything that might result in another obligation for them or me. This is making me anxious. It's not even back to it, but I'm different from you. You can do it another time. And not everyone has to do this.
Starting point is 00:25:38 If it's making you anxious, it just makes you feel like you have more work to do. So I'll do that pretty much every morning. And I'll say something like, hey man, last we spoke, we were in Vegas and you just flown in, I wanna hear what's going on. I know you got a new dog, that was literally like a year ago, what's been happening with you.
Starting point is 00:25:55 And they'll usually write back, oh my gosh, it's been forever or something like that. And you can chat for a little bit, but the way that I like to end the first message to not result in great now I'm texting with somebody and I have to go to work, which is where most people are. All right. Last I heard from you, you were doing really well.
Starting point is 00:26:11 I hope you're still doing really well. Just thinking of you wanted to make sure everything was all good in your world. No need to respond if you don't have time. Half the time people don't reply, or they reply like a month later via email. Has everyone's going to the bottom of their text? Oh, okay, but you kept it going. Yeah, but it doesn't have to be like, let's do lunch. Right, and if someone says, let's get together sometime,
Starting point is 00:26:32 you can say, sure, would love to catch up at some point, but I don't know, I'm really busy rebuilding my stuff. Like, you don't have to blow them off or anything, but you should definitely not say, yeah, that'd be great and then never do it. I hate when people do that. What, what, let's do it in the half? Yeah, let'd be great and then never do it. I hate when people do that. What? What, let's do it in the bathroom.
Starting point is 00:26:46 Yeah, let's do it and then never schedule it. Right. So if he, let's say my friend from the UK was like, yeah, I'm gonna be in San Francisco next week. Let's hang out. I might say something like, well, if I can, great. But I like to group people together too, to catch up in person.
Starting point is 00:27:00 So sometimes I'll say, Oh, that's smart. Have like a dinner party. Yeah, like a dinner party. I'm gonna be for cocktail, right? Yes, or cocktails or dinner party. I'm like, I've never packed it right. Yes, or cocktails or something like that. That way, they have a chance to meet other people, and it's not like you're going on weird platonic dates
Starting point is 00:27:12 with people you texted a year ago, because then you'll just run out of time. So, okay, that makes sense, that's all helpful. You just started to change the direction of your podcast, how many years ago now, from the pickup to the now? Yeah, probably three or four years ago. Okay, because you were like, I'm gonna jump off my roof, I think, doing it.
Starting point is 00:27:29 So tell me how I'm sure you've changed, it's affected your personal and professional life. Yeah, so I just, I just, You were on the show, and I remember, you're always awesome, I think. You were kind of a little more like, doucheier. Yeah, definitely.
Starting point is 00:27:42 Yeah. And now you seem like, I don't know, I'm a grown up now. You, yeah, you seem grown up. You got your wife here, definitely. Totally admittedly. And now you seem like, I don't know. I'm a grown up now. Yeah, you seem grown up. You got your wife here who's adorable and great. You got, you seem solid. So tell me how doing this podcast and do you think it's through that?
Starting point is 00:27:53 You've learned it. Tell me what you've learned and stuff. Yeah, I've learned a bunch of that, but the other reason. I never thought you were doucheier. You come off as doucheier, but I know you're still in your heart. Well, we were friends, so couldn't have been that bad.
Starting point is 00:28:01 Right, I can have been that bad. No, no, I'm just saying that was more of your vibe. Although I have met some of the guys you dated too, so maybe- That was a mistake was one dude. Okay, fine. Who asked if you'd meet them? Oh, you don't even know.
Starting point is 00:28:11 I don't want to mention that. Probably San Francisco, you've come across. Probably there's a few. Maybe there's a few. Okay. But we're still friends so it doesn't matter, right? Scoreboard totally fine. Totally fine.
Starting point is 00:28:19 I started to learn things from the guests on the show too, but I also realized that one of the reasons, like you said, I was coming across in this sort of bro-ish way. Yeah. One of the reasons that it got so tiring was because when you're 24, you can be like this bro pick up chicks guy because that's who 24-year-old guys are, 80% of the time.
Starting point is 00:28:38 But then when I got to be like 33, I started to realize, okay, if I'm gonna be that person, I have to lay it on a little bit thicker because naturally I'm not really like that. And so, as I got older and started to learn more and grow up more, I realized that the whole, like, go out every night thing was more of a performance that I didn't like doing.
Starting point is 00:28:57 It would be like if you were a standup comedian, but you hated all of your jokes, and they were so old, you just wanted to stab your eyes out every time you told one. So that's how I started to feel about doing the old show. So then I was just like, I'm gonna let this go. I'm just not even gonna try to shoehorn dating into the show,
Starting point is 00:29:13 but the problem was the name was still the art of charm. So there was this tension between me and my business partner's about like, where's the show going versus like, where's my head at? Right. And so that was the difference in vision that eventually split the company in my opinion. What do you think are the skills that men still really need to learn?
Starting point is 00:29:28 I've heard in personal relationships. I've heard that I was affected your, like, men have to have a hard time with vulnerability, with communication, with empathy. You're just men and women understanding each other. Totally understand that. Yeah. Well, let me give you a real life example. Please.
Starting point is 00:29:42 So when the company split, I found myself sort of on the outside, not sort of. I found myself on the outside of the articharm. We did not follow through it into the negotiated deals. I basically had nothing, but my whole team came with me. That was really cool. And that was a huge vote of confidence. And then I thought, okay, I can either reach out to no one and pretend like none of this happened and kind of keep it quiet
Starting point is 00:30:06 and maybe I'll recover in like three to five years or I can reach out to everyone and be like, I got terminated, my team left with me, we're trying to rebuild from the ground up when you'd all the help we can get. And it'll be a little bit like, maybe humble pies not the right word, but maybe it is. But I don't think anyone's gonna be like,
Starting point is 00:30:24 ha, sucks to be you, jerk fate. Like that's not like what happened. No, you haven't realized by reaching out that everyone really does want to be there for you. Like just like, remember, you know what you feel when you're watching the commercials? Can you feel empathy and compassion? Oh yeah, the Netflix documentary.
Starting point is 00:30:37 Yeah, whatever it is, you know, you start to, you realize that people actually feel that towards you. Yeah, and I was worried that that wouldn't happen because of course, when you hear about tragic dissolution stories or like from athletes, they go, yeah, you're gonna find out who your friends are,
Starting point is 00:30:50 and they don't mean you're gonna be so pleasantly surprised at how many friends you have. They're, you know, MC hammers like you're gonna find out who your friends are while I'm selling cassette tapes out of the trunk of my car in 1995. Right, that's what they mean by that. They don't mean you're gonna be so heartwarmingly enthralled and like glad that this happened.
Starting point is 00:31:09 That's not what that means. So I was worried about that. So what I did is I realized I was gonna have a shorter recovery period by getting all the help I could for my friends and like reaching out and just telling people what happened and not trying to hide the ball. The other thing is I also knew that if I got totally
Starting point is 00:31:24 body slammed by people being like, no, and it sucks to be you, like whatever sort of weird rejection fantasy or nightmare situation, I had in my head that it would be really tough and it would make it would add insult to injury. So I made a list of like 20 people that I knew were really going to be like, of course, yeah, and you're on that list, like other close friends of mine are on that list, and I was like, they're not gonna be like, you know what, I hate you, I'm not helping you, right? So I knew that the risk was low. Right, because that was on your third tier
Starting point is 00:31:50 that you circled back to every 90 days. Yeah, third tier, fourth tier, fourth and a half tier. Fourth and a half tier. Fourth, third, but you call me like, I loved it. Yes, come on, man. But I just, I knew that you weren't gonna be like, an uncarrying person, you're gonna lend a sympathetic ear. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:03 And all this stuff. So I was like, okay, if these people, like my friends Emily and John, and all these, if they're, when they say sure or at least they're sympathetic, then I'm not gonna be scared about reaching out to like 80, 100 other people to try to get back on my feet over the course of the next year. So I sort of stack the deck in my own favor in that way.
Starting point is 00:32:21 And I think guys can learn a lot about vulnerability. Guys and girls for that matter. By just trying it with somebody who's gonna be safer for us. So if you have like a rocky relationship with your sister, don't be like, all right, here we go, Angela, we've had a rocky relationship. No, like they might not be ready for it. And then you're like, wow.
Starting point is 00:32:38 You might not be able to get in, you were your absolute. Terrible idea. But if you call another friend who maybe has reached out to you before on this and you kind of weren't comfortable and then you go back and go, hey look, totally realize that I've been emotionally unavailable and you're my closest friend and I wanna change that. They might be like great and then you get this positive
Starting point is 00:32:57 experience of feeling good about vulnerability and then if you do that enough times and then you try things with your estranged sister and then she's like, sorry not equipped for this. you don't go, this is me, I'm broken, I can't connect with people, you go, yep, this didn't work with her, but it worked with these other eight people and that's because it's not me, it's her. And that's important for people because especially guys, when we're vulnerable and it doesn't work for us, we're like never doing that shit again.
Starting point is 00:33:23 Never opening up exactly and you could be shut down for life. Yeah, for life. You take like some moment, and like pry your heart open, kind of like try and try. Well, you know this more than anybody probably do the line of work that you're in, when guys or women for that matter get cheated on or something, and then they're like,
Starting point is 00:33:38 I don't know how I can ever date again. Yeah. You don't go, no, it's cool. Let's go meet some total like D-bag dudes at a bar or like get on Tinder and hook up with guys and everything. Everyone's go meet some total, like, D-bag dudes at a bar or like, get on Tinder and hook up with guys and everything. I was gonna shoot on you and you were framed that. Have you had therapy and stuff?
Starting point is 00:33:50 Have you worked through stuff in a clinical setting? I have, but not this stuff. I just, I, in the past, yeah. And it was super useful. And I totally resisted it because those like therapies for crazy people. Yeah, you're insane. Someone will think you're insane.
Starting point is 00:34:01 You can find out. But so many close friends of mine were like, no, I love therapy, this is really good. And here's somebody who should go to, and I went to a therapist just to find out like, oh, I'm not crazy. No. Other people are fine and I'm not crazy.
Starting point is 00:34:14 And this is this weird thing that I put myself in. And so it resulted in me being like overworked, which resulted in me feeling stressed out and sad. And that's not how your whole life is supposed to be. And I needed this woman therapist to just tell me this. Right, you didn't just feel like you're okay. That's kind of what a lot of things that I do on the show is really about who I know am I normal? Is it okay that I'm feeling this giving support?
Starting point is 00:34:35 And I also give advice about good sex and stuff. Of course. So what are the core personality traits, the core traits that you think that meant we have vulnerability? What are some of the other things that you think that men, we have vulnerability. Like, what are some of the other things that you think help men be better men right now that you talk about a lot of different?
Starting point is 00:34:50 Yeah, I think the vulnerability thing is, of course, key. I also advise. Personal and professional lives, you know? Yeah, absolutely. I think that there's something to be gained by talking with your boss and saying, look, sometimes when I work on these projects, I don't feel like I'm really wowing everyone. And you might have a boss and saying, look, sometimes when I work on these projects, I don't feel like I'm really wowing everyone.
Starting point is 00:35:07 And you might have a boss that goes, nope, that's ridiculous, you're way too hard on yourself and everyone knows it. And this is just another example of that. Or you might go, here she might say, yeah, well, I was going to bring this up in a performance review, but man, now's as good of a time as any. Sometimes people feel like you're a loof and checked out or whatever. I mean, you can get feedback from people by asking for it. Here's what a lot of men and women don't realize.
Starting point is 00:35:31 You're that feedback, that feeling of maybe your boss's, yeah, you're a luffin checked out, that feeling exists whether you ask about it or not. So you might as well get the feedback early and be able to improve, because I think in our heads, we kind of realize, well, as long as I don't know about it, it doesn't exist. So as long as I don't ask for negative feedback,
Starting point is 00:35:52 I won't get it, which means I'm doing a great job. And of course, now that when I articulate it like that, that's ridiculous. So people are thinking, well, I don't want to ask how my relationship with this woman is going, because if she has a problem with it, then it becomes a problem. No, the problem is already there.
Starting point is 00:36:09 You can only solve it if you actually know about it. So people are afraid to be vulnerable because they feel like they're opening a box. But if there's an explosive in a box, it's gonna cause it to be damaged. It's gonna expand anyway. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:21 The sooner the better that you talk about. Exactly. Guys, just we're not, we don't mean so much of I talk about yeah, we don't we don't vacation is lubrication. We don't Oh, it's up there. Oh, no, yeah communication. Yeah, you like that you can borrow it Communication is lubrication. Yeah, don't you feel like the better like how's your you know your personal life to talk about That's yeah, you are almost set you almost went and then you were like I'm gonna real it back 1% because that what because my wife's in there
Starting point is 00:36:44 You were like, oh, no, I love that you. Cause my wife's in there, you were like, I know, I love that you're married. It's good, I like it, but I'll tell you. You're flipped over too when you met Iron Man. That's true, that's why we were still flipped. That's so good. Still flipping. I love it.
Starting point is 00:36:56 Right, Jen? You seem happy. She's like, yeah, you just couldn't hear it on the microphone. She was like really, really, really excited. So tell me what... Do you think you'll ever get married? Like, do you want to? Oh, good. I've never had a goal of getting married. It's
Starting point is 00:37:12 ever been like my... What about your mom? She has that goal for you. She doesn't. No, she gave that a long time. Oh, she gave my mom's a great... My mom's always been like, I just want you to be happy. So, it was just... I was very masculine though and a lot of what I was doing I feel like I've been very like, I have to make my. So I was very masculine though, and a lot of what I was doing, I feel like I've been very like, I have to make my career, I have to make a living,
Starting point is 00:37:29 I can't focus on men, even though I'm studying sex and relationships, and this is my life. I didn't know how to make space for a relationship and for building a career that came out of nowhere. So I've been working at Workaholic the last 13 years. I can identify with you. But now, yes, exactly. So, and I think, and I was like,
Starting point is 00:37:48 well, until I, you know, my mom also raised me very much like don't ever rely on a man to take care of you or anyone. If I'm going to be working all the time and I'm gonna maybe eventually I'll find someone but I can't take time out and give a man everything that he needs until I'm solid and I can support myself and pay the rent and all this stuff. So that was, I don't know time out and give a man everything that he needs until I'm solid and I can support myself
Starting point is 00:38:05 and pay the rent and all this stuff. So that was, I don't know. So now, I mean, you're solid now. You have all these cool team members. I know, so now I'm in a really good place. Your excuses are all like falling away. I know, and so now I'm dating someone actually that I'm going much like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:20 So, but I don't know about marriage, but I like them. That's good. It's working. Yeah, I guess you don't need to get married. I mean, it's up to you. No, but I was't know about marriage, but I like them. That's good. It's working. Yeah, I guess you don't need to, like, get married. I mean, it's up to you. No, but I was interested in the kids thing either, but I'm interested, I feel like I'm more like giving, my career feels like, and I'm so loved to what I do.
Starting point is 00:38:34 You're giving birth to your show. I've given birth to sex with them, and I feel like it's been my thing, and I love growing in and doing some more, like, going out and talking to people more, going out in the world. Yeah. Are you doing some speaking?
Starting point is 00:38:43 I am, and I like it too. I don't know about giving birth though, the recovery period on that too. No, exactly, it's actually right. Yeah, I don't want everything to be. No, but I feel like relationships are important, and of course I've dated over the years, but marriage was not the goal.
Starting point is 00:38:55 Boom, no, I think people put too much pressure on the goals for their relationships, just as they put too much pressure on certain business goals, I think. And guys that maybe are even more guilty of this because we're so competitive by nature, I think, on the whole. I don't know if that's a good generalization because of the circumstances.
Starting point is 00:39:10 No, you are, definitely. Because a lot of guys I know are like, I can't date anyone until I'm in the right financial place. And when I... This is what I have, for some reason, I have that same thing, I get it, I don't know. But guys, and guys too, and maybe even youth, they think like they can't go on a date
Starting point is 00:39:28 until they have a private jet or some crap like that. It makes no sense. Oh, I need to be in a good place financially. What does that even mean? And then you ask them and they don't even know. They're like, oh, I wanna have seven figures in annual revenue. And I'm like, that is the dumbest thing in the world.
Starting point is 00:39:41 No, it is. And for me, I understand why men think they'll because men are so connected to, they feel very masculated if they don't have the career of the money, like if men lose a job or they're anxious that I'm glad you're married and have support right now. Because if you had gone through this alone, like it would have been hard.
Starting point is 00:39:57 Oh, God, I came to men. No, it's true. So when men feel challenged around money, work, job, they don't have sex, they have challenges in their relationships, like because it's so tied into our, your biology, it's an evolutionary psychology, you can't go out and you can't like, you know, drag the one back to the cave, you can't kill the,
Starting point is 00:40:13 the bores. That's right, if you can't provide as a guy, you feel super immasculated. And I, for me, it was more like, I'm just, it takes me a long time to get things done and focus, and I just like, there's a lot going on and I think I can't. It was financial, but it was also like, I got to get all these pieces together, which I have now. But I understand. I get that way.
Starting point is 00:40:31 And I think for a lot of people, they don't really enumerate their goals to the point where they need to be sort of affixed. And what I mean by that is, if you think, I can't do this until this happens, I can't do that until that happens, like I can't date until I can provide, you have to define what those things mean because otherwise you will kick the ball down the court to butcher this metaphor. You'll kick it down so far that you will never do the other things because you'll start building fear around, well, I don't know, am I there yet? I don't know. I don't know. And you'll never feel like you're there. And you will just keep moving the goalposts until there's no possibility.
Starting point is 00:41:06 It's very true. So how do you, because that is such so true. And even though I've studied this for years, like meditation, 25 years ago, when I started that, it's like the whole Buddhist principle too, is like you can't think like once I get the car, the job, the home, the wife, the thing,
Starting point is 00:41:21 then I'll be happy, then I'll be content. Right. But we all do set up those goalposts and keep moving them. We keep raising the bar higher and higher, which I'll be happy, then I'll be content. But we all do set up those goal posts and keep moving them. We keep raising the bar higher and higher, which I'm sure this is very pop, you know, something that a lot of business people go through. So how have you worked through that? What's your advice for that? For setting goals that are realistic and keep moving forward?
Starting point is 00:41:37 It's less about setting the realistic goals than it is about digging the well before your thirsty. So like, with relationships, for example, you have to have those in place before you need them, just like if you decide that you're gonna, if you suddenly and erroneously decide that you're gonna be happy when you have a million dollars a year in revenue, you realize, wait a minute, maybe this is never gonna happen,
Starting point is 00:41:57 these goal posts are gonna continually move. So the awareness of that idea lets you go, well, wait a minute, that's not what I should, I can be happy before that and still hustle and still work. But if you wait and you make yourself miserable until you've achieved these moving goalposts, you will literally never actually be able to do that.
Starting point is 00:42:15 And you'll never allow yourself to be happy and content. And I think a lot of people are afraid to let themselves be happy because they feel like it's gonna cut off their motivation. But really, you don't need to motivate yourself by making yourself miserable. It's just the way that we're mostly used to doing it, especially us growing up in Michigan where our parents are probably workaholics. We're like, oh, they were miserable until they retired.
Starting point is 00:42:36 That's how it's supposed to be. Exactly. I had another friend on the show from Michigan the other day, or I was on their show, but she was saying, to say that Michigan mentality that you have to keep working, working, working, or it's gonna fall apart exactly, is that drive? But also, I realize that I'm doing that with anxiety and stress.
Starting point is 00:42:53 It's like, if I don't stress about things and get anxious, it won't be successful. Or if it isn't really hard, it won't be successful. When you're focusing on, yeah, and I've been focusing on things being more effortless because actually I've been doing this a long time, but there's a certain mentality that you have to keep going and it,
Starting point is 00:43:08 you're right, it doesn't work. Yeah, you'll drive yourself crazy or beyond crazy, or you'll have anxiety. I mean, I remember staying up online and gents, like, what's the problem? What are you worried about? I'm like, I don't even know. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:43:20 I just feel like I have to worry because then when I worry, it means that I'm making this so bad that this is the path I'm supposed to take. It's supposed to be really worry, it means that I'm making this so bad that it's this is the path I'm supposed to take is supposed to be really hard and really shitty and I'm supposed to hate it. Right. So how have you been able to switch that to think having a partner? Having a partner to keep your grounded for sure helps. The other thing is realizing that you are You are able to set your own. This sounds like metaphysical and I hate stuff like that, but you're able to set up your own level of success
Starting point is 00:43:48 and what it means to be happy for you doesn't have to compete with the idea of being successful and that took me like a decade and changed to internal success. Say it again. So you don't, being successful and being happy does not have to mean that you're no longer motivated to keep moving forward.
Starting point is 00:44:02 And a lot of people think they have to stay motivated by specifically making themselves miserable or beating themselves up or having unrealistic expectations. Yeah, or not celebrating any victories at all. And I'm still guilty of this. People are like, oh, cool. 1.4 million downloads for your show in the first month. And I'm like, no, I need like five times more than that to be happy. And I'm like, why? And I'm like, I don't know. You, I was looking, I'm so proud of you. I was thinking that too, but I get it. It's very, very hard to celebrate the small wins.
Starting point is 00:44:31 And I think that I've even just glossed over that. And people are like, congratulations, Emily. You've done your so successful. And I, it's really hard to take it in. It's hard to feel it. You're like, I, because I saw your show a while ago in the top one, not, not a while ago, like weeks ago, after we had just talked and you were in the top 100 and I was like,
Starting point is 00:44:48 wow, after 11 and a half years, you're still popping in 13 years. Sorry, that was me, 11 and a half years. You're around before that 13 years. You're still popping in the top 50, the top 100. That's like impossible. You know, you're beating Corolla half the time. But I'm scared of the exciting. I sit back and I'm like, hey, it's Friday, guys. Let's have margaritas. Then it'll just plummet to, you know, and're beating Corolla half the time. But I'm scared, but I'm excited. I sit back and I'm like, hey, it's Friday, guys. Let's have Margaritas, then it'll just plummet to, you know, and no one will ever listen to you. Because everyone knows that relaxing on Friday
Starting point is 00:45:10 afternoons is what determines your iTunes rank. Right, exactly. So, okay, so my list is, if I decide that when Jordan say we're gonna whip out some alcohol and have, would you guys still go support the show and write it's a really good review and when you go subscribe to Jordan's new podcast. Cause they're gonna love it. I hope so. It's more like a heading nerdy thing So if you like learning and you're like you're heading nerdy, but you're but you you can listen to you
Starting point is 00:45:32 But yeah, but you're I don't I think you're really good interviewer. Thank you. I appreciate you and you bring good guess You know I do so I wouldn't say heading I'd say it's like life skills I want to have you give advice on my show at some point, because people ask me stuff. It's not going to be sex stuff most likely, because I think people are embarrassed to write that stuff to me. And they know I just have no chance of giving them good sex advice.
Starting point is 00:45:53 But I can. But you can. But I think relationship advice and things like that that people write in with. Of course, I would love to do that. Yeah. That would be fun. Like we used to do in my garage, you said.
Starting point is 00:46:02 That's right. In your garage. Sex is what you said, you came over and we recorded spots. We did. Yeah, we did a lot of that. And you know, this wouldn't be a complete show if you didn't have some kind of sex paraphernalia with a penis logo on the table. This is a wet head.
Starting point is 00:46:14 So this is, I actually I'm going to give you some of this. Sure. So it's dry mouth spray that you spray. Oh, it goes in your mouth. Yeah. So you don't. That was not what I thought that was for. Yeah. So make sure you don't have any that. Can I I thought that was for. Yeah, so make sure you don't have any of that.
Starting point is 00:46:26 Can I try that? Please do, strawberry. Is this one of your sponsors? No, I wish they were Doc Johnson, but we love them. I like everyone in this industry. They are not a sponsor, but they should be. Okay, I just sprayed it in there. I was waiting for you to go like,
Starting point is 00:46:38 just kidding, it's a loob. You got your silver eyes, Jordan. Wait till you see what you're gonna, I'm gonna give you today. How is your sex life? Do you guys want anything fun? Anything you've been needing? You've probably not done it.
Starting point is 00:46:47 Jen, what do we need? Why is Jen so quiet? Jen. She probably ran away the first time she thought I was gonna put her on the microphone. Okay, well then I'm gonna ask you some questions. I'm gonna ask you my five quicky questions that I ask every guest.
Starting point is 00:46:57 I was doing. Your biggest turn on. Biggest turn on, ooh. These aren't that quick, are they? Biggest turn on is, I like people who are really positive and happy. Okay, biggest turn off. Oh, complaining, I hate it, which is funny
Starting point is 00:47:15 because I totally do that all the time. But I'm like, other people, other people that do that, shame on them. Right, crazy place you've had sex. In college, there's these little library places where nerds can read books. Oh, it's Michigan. Oh, the stacks. The stacks.
Starting point is 00:47:31 Yeah. You had sex in the stacks. Everybody wanted to. And I was like, I'm going to do this for you. I started the law library. You did? Yeah. Where in the law library?
Starting point is 00:47:40 I did have sex in the law library. Oh. Oh, okay. And then you went to law school. You went to undergrad and graduate at Michigan. Right, that's what I was like. Where in the law library did you do that and not get caught?
Starting point is 00:47:48 Those vending machines downstairs, I don't know, I'm trying to think of, I didn't have sex down there, but I met some nice guys. Okay, so what is it, what does it mean to be? It means being able to back to the vulnerability thing, being able to share the things that you think
Starting point is 00:47:59 make you look bad and still not worrying about the other person judging you about that. You've got to let a lot of that go. Yeah, you've got to let that stuff go. Because I think a lot of guys in relationships, they say things like, I'm afraid to tell my wife this and it's like this totally none. So, let's talk really quickly though, because this is mostly, we're going to answer some emails now, you guys are going to answer your questions.
Starting point is 00:48:23 But people are so, I mean, this is the big thing in a relationship. We're so afraid to talk to our partners about just about everything that they're going to judge us. They're going to leave us. And I just feel like there's so much freedom in saying the things that you think you cannot say. Even if it comes out in a way that you think, oh, it wasn't the most articulate, but I don't even think you've learned.
Starting point is 00:48:41 I think everything. And you have to do that because everybody has these little things that these vulnerabilities. If you don't share yours, the other person might feel like they can't share theirs because either you don't have them or they think, oh, well, he doesn't share that with me so I shouldn't share that with him. And you end up with a little wall
Starting point is 00:48:59 inside your relationship and it's really unhealthy. And you probably get so much closer when you do. Definitely. I love it. Okay, we're going to give a shout out to our sponsors, which we love our sponsors. Jordan loves them too. We're too see what you're going to get when you leave here
Starting point is 00:49:14 and we'll be right back. Okay, Jordan, tell them how to reach out to us. You can do whatever you want, improv. Yeah, just improv. This thing, pause, smiley face, smiley face. Now we're on to emails, like that. Yeah. Okay, but I can do it again.
Starting point is 00:49:35 Do you know what I mean? No, I love it. Okay. Do it yourself. However, you feel good. Now we're on to the emails. Have a question you'd like Emily to answer on the show. She obviously loves that. And we've made it super easy to ask Have a question you'd like Emily to answer on the show? She obviously loves
Starting point is 00:49:45 that. And we've made it super easy to ask Emily a question. Use the option that's easiest for you. You can text, so save this in your phone right now, just text, ask Emily all one word to 7979, 7979. That's ask Emily all one word to 79, 79, 79. And you'll receive a short form where you can enter your question, you can enter your contact details. And if you'd like Emily to call you during a future caller show, please indicate yes on the form. Talking to you about your question. It's one of Emily's most lots of space between that. You're doing well, you're doing well.
Starting point is 00:50:21 Talking to you about your question is one of Emily's most favorite things. Oh. Also, you can submit a question from the sexwithemily.com website via the Ask Emily tab. And if you can't figure that out, you're probably not smart enough to submit a question. As always, Emily loves it when you include information that will help us help you, like your gender, your age, where you live, how you listen to the show, et cetera. That's it.
Starting point is 00:50:44 Can't wait to hear from you. Good job. Thanks for having me. You're welcome. Okay, this is Oliver 25 from Alberta, Canada. Hello, Emily. I have a common law relationship and I really like it. My partner and I have been together for three years.
Starting point is 00:50:55 I love my partner and we just found out that she's pregnant. The issue is, I have a recurring desire to have more experiences with other women. I haven't cheated, but I can't stop thinking about being with someone else. She's my third relationship and the baby wasn't really planned, but I want to keep it. I can't think about an option without cheating. Should I find professional help about this desire that I have? Am I sick for thinking about being with someone else? Thanks for help, and I love your show. Oliver. I don't think Oliver is sick at all. I think this is normal for pretty much every guy in the world. He's a man. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:26 And I don't think it's just his level of an experience, because if he says, oh, it's my third relationship. So maybe he's got some stuff that he would have rather have gotten out of his system. However, I know guys that have been with like a Jillian different girls and they find the right one and they get married and they're like, I'm so happy. And they're still like, you still have that urge for variety.
Starting point is 00:51:45 It doesn't mean that. It's variety. That's what it is. It's not going to go away. It really doesn't go away. So there's nothing wrong with him, but he has this reoccurring desire. So I would say that now she's pregnant, so the sex is going to be on hold for a while. What I would tell Oliver is, well, men don't realize this, you're going to have that desire,
Starting point is 00:52:00 but what you can't do with that desire, you're like, I really want to cheat or I want to go watch porn for another hour, you can go, hmm, another option is to turn all this energy and feeling back towards my partner, turn it towards your relationship, lean into your relationship, and think about what you can do to make that even sexier and hotter, what kind of communication, what are you, what are you not getting from it sexually, because there's always ways to improve sexually or to improve your communication. So you are being more fulfilled. It's not going to be a different body, but it could actually be enhanced sexual experience.
Starting point is 00:52:30 The other thing that I would say, I agree with 100% of that, is I remember in college and things being like, variety, and then going out and doing that and then being like, that was equally slash not as good as the last. Because you're like empty, right? Yeah. So if you have a girlfriend or somebody that you care about, I think all of these things that exist in our head
Starting point is 00:52:50 as guys, it's always idealized. It's like this is gonna be so much better. I need this variety and then you do it and you're like, nope, but the risk is so much higher now because he's got this pregnant girlfriend. And they're keeping it. And they're keeping it. So it's like, okay, so you can run your entire relationship
Starting point is 00:53:04 and then find out that you just didn't care about it, but he doesn't have that reference point of getting the variety and then either regretting it or not caring about it. So just tell him, let him know that. So many men. Right, right, like because he's like, oh, I've only had three relationships.
Starting point is 00:53:18 I know guys that have what had one relationship, I guarantee you they're equally as happy as somebody who's had like 50 relationships with 50 supermodels and then married one and still has the desire for a variety or somebody who's still playing the field. You're all equally happy. You just think that the grass is greener because we're wired in this way to like keep spreading our DNA everywhere and it's just a freaking illusion.
Starting point is 00:53:39 You're wired that way. It's the same exact thing and it's so true. It's not like you're ever done with chocolate, for example. Like I've had enough chocolate for my like daily air desserts, dating is the same exact thing and it's so true. It's not like you're ever done with chocolate, for example. Like I've had enough chocolate for my like, daily air desserts, dating is the same way. I don't think and women too feel this way. I don't think we're ever like,
Starting point is 00:53:51 I'm fully satiated. That whole get it out of your system thing. Yeah, it's an illusion. It's an illusion that doesn't really exist nor does it satisfy anybody. Good call on the chocolate. You know when you eat dessert and you're like, okay, I'm not eating sweet stuff again
Starting point is 00:54:03 because this made me feel like crap. And then a week later you're like, housing ice cream and you're like, okay, I'm not eating sweet stuff again because this made me feel like crap. And then a week later, you're like housing ice cream. And you're like, wait a minute, I wasn't gonna do this because it's all just an emotional decision. Right. So all the things Oliver's feelings, straight up just emotional decisions, that your brain, your lizard brain,
Starting point is 00:54:18 is like spread that DNA. So if he's really feeling like, oh my God, I gotta have variety, just go like a whack at her something man. Get it done, whack it out. Exactly. Or have your girlfriend deal with that, which you might need. You guys can whack it together, watch some porn together. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:34 I'm really into porn watching together. Do you guys ever do that? Yeah. It's good times. Less so now, but we definitely had before. Maybe tonight. There you go. Are you guys staying in hotel?
Starting point is 00:54:44 No, we're going home tonight. I'm back. Yeah. Okay, because vacation sex. Getting outside your house sex. I'm telling you vacation, you're onto something with vacation sex. Yeah. Last time I saw you were going on vacation,
Starting point is 00:54:53 that's when we housed up your car with the. That's right, we had it like, we couldn't even fit it all in the truck. No, it was amazing. Trevor 22 Wisconsin. Hey Emily, I love the show. My ex slash girlfriend, I know, not a super clean situation.
Starting point is 00:55:05 And I've dated for roughly five plus years long distance on and off. Mostly on. I just graduated college and moved back home and our dynamic has changed. Things have gotten weird. We've both messed up in our own separate ways since living near each other again. She's further with another guy around me and I got caught snooping through her social media. We both know we've messed up and are sorry about it, but it's tough to forgive these things. I just don't know how to proceed since we both have at our parents' houses that dynamic is tough. Ideally, I want things to work out for us, but I know life isn't a romantic movie. Do you have any advice on how to proceed to, at the very least, make amends? Keep up the great work with the show.
Starting point is 00:55:44 I mean, he just has a lack of trust because they've had a long distance relationship. And so since she flirted with this other guy around him, whatever that means, I wonder if she would agree that she flirted with another guy. She probably not. She's probably like, you mean when I said thanks and then took the grocery is from the bagway? I used to always get accused in my 20. I would always get accused of flirting and I was not.
Starting point is 00:56:04 He's like, I saw you looked at the waiter, I already... It's such a weird, there's no concrete definition. But here's what there is a concrete definition of, looking through someone's phone. Yeah. So I think we both messed up is kind of a weird code for. I don't trust her and I'm acting out because of that. And so I did something that was kind of shitty,
Starting point is 00:56:22 but she did something that was kind of in my head because I don't wanna be the only person who has a trust issue in this relationship. That's a good interpretation, although she might have, she might have done more, but I like her interpretation. But we don't know. I think they both messed up five years the world living back in Wisconsin after five years together.
Starting point is 00:56:40 And all I'm saying is Trevor, I know we just talked about, sometimes it's an illusion that you need to date other people and go out and do other things. But five years I'm from 17 to 22. There might need to be a little bit of break too. I think that that's really, really healthy that you're already in this back and forth. And there's so much drama and we changed so much from age 17 to 22. And so rebuilding trust in a relationship is takes work. It's not just like, oh, I forgive you. Like you probably went deep into social media. You saw her liking
Starting point is 00:57:12 other people sending DMs at dick pics that you can never forget. I don't know what you saw, but it's not just like I forgiven forget. It's like couples have to go back to therapy and they have to repair and they have to talk about everything that went on so they can rebuild trust. It's a process. So if you guys are already on this train, you might need some work to go ahead and get into therapy or take a clean break where you literally don't talk, don't see each other for a while
Starting point is 00:57:36 until you both figure out what you really want. Because it sounds like there's just some unhealthy back and forth here. Yeah, I agree with you. From 17 to 22, you have had exactly zero mature relationships in your adult life. You need to go and just figure out, because he doesn't even know what he doesn't want and what he does want in a woman,
Starting point is 00:57:53 because he's never actually dated a woman probably. He's only had like this high school relationship that is kind of evolved with it. And they're both trying to pretend that they didn't outgrow each other because it's sad or something. Right. They're the first love so it's like right. I get that it's hard. And it's like he kind of gets that right life's not a romantic movie. You can take a break from somebody like that and then get back together with later. Exactly. It does
Starting point is 00:58:16 happen. It does happen. It does happen. So I'm so glad that you wrote here Trevor and um just um I want you to have less stress so try to go in talk to where you guys can listen to this together you know a lot of couples love listening to this show because then they don't want you to have less stress. So try to go in, talk to where you guys can listen to this together. A lot of couples love listening to this show because then they don't actually have to have the conversation. Like Emily said, and then you guys can heal this. Let me know how it goes. Thank you Trevor for emailing.
Starting point is 00:58:36 Thank you everybody for your emailing. Thank you Jordan Harbinger for being here. The Jordan Harbinger show. Yeah, the Jordan Harbinger show or Harbinger, whatever, you know, is on TV. Harbinger? Harbinger Show. Yeah, the Jordan Harbinger Show or Harbinger, whatever, you know, is on TV. Harbinger, Harbinger, yeah. Yeah, hold on, what do I say here? You can't end the show with, um, yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:52 I'm not gonna end it that way. Okay. Jordan Harbinger, check out his podcast and iTunes. It's everywhere and it's your website. It's all at Jordan Harbinger. On social media. On social media. You're really gonna like it. You're gonna like his guests
Starting point is 00:59:05 You're gonna like Jordan. He's a good time and if you don't I love you being I love this manly side of you Thank you being mature adult. Yeah, grow to where you say if you don't like it if you don't like Jordan You said you like Jordan and I was gonna say in a timely way and if you don't there's probably something wrong with you But now it's not funny because I the moment has passed I hate when that happens So now I'm just now I just sound like he's usually funny his comedic timing is usually on sometimes sometimes And he's an old friend and I'm glad you're here and thanks for reaching out and I look forward to hearing from you when I circle up on your social media Again soon You're awesome. Okay. Thanks everyone for listening
Starting point is 00:59:38 Thanks to my amazing team look at my team. I love you all I'm very very lucky. Thank you to Ken, Jamie, our volunteers Shannon, Sarah, Jenny, producer, Lark, and Michael. Thanks everyone for scrubbing on iTunes and for reviewing the show. Don't you love people do that? Help when they subscribe. They review. Of course. How do you inspire people to do that? I just say, look, if you don't review the show, I'm just going to think you all hated and not do it anymore. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:05 Well, that's good. Okay. No, that's the stick. I like the carrot of you are supporting us. You are supporting us, but you're... And I read all of them and it means something. I do read all of them. See?
Starting point is 01:00:15 There you go. Okay, so thank you for that. Thank you, Jordan. And let me know, was it good for you? Text Ask Emily to 7979.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.