We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Sex Talk & That Night in Miami: Sex Therapy with Vanessa Marin
Episode Date: April 4, 2023Two silent sex queens & Abby invite sex therapist Vanessa Marin onto the pod and into their bedrooms to discuss: 1. Practical, concrete tips for how to get over your discomfort and talk about sex w...ith your partner – and how Vanessa’s advice is currently working for Glennon and Abby. 2. Why women tend to struggle receiving during sex – and how hustle culture shows up in the bedroom. 3. How to activate desire instead of shame when asking for more frequent or different sex. 4. A great tip for how to “post-game” about what you like and appreciate after sex. For the first “Silent Sex Queen” conversation, go way back and check out: Episode 14: SILENT SEX QUEEN: Why aren’t we talking about sex more? About Vanessa: Vanessa Marin is a sex therapist and instant New York Times Best Selling author of Sex Talks: The Five Conversations That Will Transform Your Love Life, co-written with her husband and partner-in-crime, Xander Marin. Vanessa is here to help you kick shame out of the bedroom so you can start feeling the connection, pleasure, and joy you deserve! Vanessa has been featured in various major publications and has written for The New York Times, Allure, and Lifehacker. TW: @VMTherapy IG: @vanessaandxander To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I chased desire, I made sure I got once money.
All right, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things today.
Everyone's small and I say, we can do hard things.
Someone says, that's what she said.
And it becomes sort of sexual, which I bring up today because today we are going to do
very hard things, which means we're going to talk about sex.
Since we are three people who, well, I'll speak for me in sister.
Since we are two people who don't know shit about sex and one who might, we have brought
in an expert today.
So don't worry, don't just turn the plot off right now.
We have someone who understands
So you're just implying then that I know about sex?
Well, I just thought no she said you might I'm sure he's still out. It's only been six years of America. Yeah
But I do want you to know that I got sexed up today. I have
Well fancy sweat pants on oh, okay. Yeah. I was very curious.
And I have lip gloss on.
Did you notice that I have lip gloss on?
I did, but I didn't know that that's what sexed up means to you.
Well, they need steps.
Yeah, I mean ironically to me lip gloss is sexed down.
That's right.
So, sexed down.
It's a blocker. See, this'm just. Sex down. All right.
It's a blocker.
See, this is how little I know.
These are the break scoops.
Vanessa Morin is a sex therapist
and instant New York Times best selling author
of sex talks, the five conversations
that will transform your love life,
which Abby Wombok and I have worked our way through Vanessa
because we do not recommend anything
to the pod squad unless we put it to the test first.
It was co-written with her husband and partner
in crime, Xander Morin.
Vanessa is here to help you kick shame out of the bedroom.
So you can start feeling the connection,
pleasure, enjoy, you deserve.
First of all, hi, Vanessa.
Hi.
I'm so excited to be here. Before you say anything scary,
I want to tell you why this conversation is so important to me right now. So I'm in this new
therapy time of my life where I'm having to fucking deconstruct everything. I'm at the point where
it's like everything's pulled out of the drawers. And now I'm like, I'm too tired to finish.
Can we just stop now?
Recently, I was having a challenge with a friend who I love, which is she was constantly
interrupting me.
We couldn't have a conversation really because her way of communication was to get really
excited when I started talking and then like asking me a question and then I would start and she would just
Bula and then I couldn't finish and I
Understood it was like a difference in how we two were approaching things
But it was a blockage completely for me because I kept just shutting down
So I talked to my therapist about it and I said I think I need to talk to her. I think I need to say this thing and
then She said well, yeah about it and I said, I think I need to talk to her. I think I need to say this thing. And then
she said, well, yeah, you do. And I said, but how do I know that I'm not just super sensitive?
Like, I'm going to tell her that she has to stop interrupting. What if I'm just the one who's
weird? And she said, Glennon, if ten of her other friends think that her interaction with them is perfect. And you don't.
You still get to say that.
You still get to express yourself
because it's blocking your relationship.
I waited till I was totally unactivated.
Usually I have to wait till I don't even want to talk to the person anymore about it
because I don't want to hurt the feelings and then it is the right time.
Talk to her, it went great.
We have a better communication between the two of us.
Now it's like this magical thing happened.
It made me think so much about sex because I tend to not express myself about things that
I might want, but because I think maybe they're weird or maybe they're too much or maybe they're whatever.
In the actual sex acts or like in general, I don't know.
You don't like talking about it.
Yeah, because it feels like, well, how do I even know that stuff's normal or okay?
But then because I don't express it, our communication is blocked with each other.
Like my therapist said, even if the thing is weird,
even if 10 other people would not need that thing
to orgasm or would not need whatever,
it is your duty in that relationship
and your privilege and the beautiful thing
to get to express it so that communication isn't blocked
because isn't sex, if anything, a place
where your real self can live
with the person that you trust the most.
And it's like a form of communication.
Right.
So, you're here with two silent sex queens and Abby.
Hi.
Hi.
You guys have no idea when I listened to those episodes.
I was crawling out of my skin like,
I want to talk to them.
I want to help them be talkative sex queens.
I mean, if miracles are possible, that will happen.
I think we can do it.
Yeah, I think we can.
Okay.
All right.
Let's do this.
So I loved your book.
I love the conversations.
I was, has it turned to about it?
But we did the conversations or are doing the
conversations. So just know when you walk us through this, we have some specific questions that
arose for us. Okay. Love it. The premise of your work is that there are several conversations you
can have with your partner or partners or self, even, that will make your sex life richer and better.
Is that fair? Yes, yeah. I think we all know that we should be talking about sex. When you're up
late at night googling your secret sex questions, like, why don't I ever want sex? Ms.
Mesh sex drives. You see that at the end of every article. Like just talk about it with your partner.
But the article's always end there.
And there's no advice for.
But what do I say?
How do I say it?
When do I say it?
And so I really wanted to create a very practical guide to walk couples
through these conversations.
Exactly what to say, how to say it, when to say it,
and really lead you through,
so you're not feeling lost.
Yes, it's cool. It's good.
So one of the things you said was to try to set a ground or a foundation before you start these conversations.
So in terms of asking the big questions, like, what is sex?
And what is even the point of a sex talk adventure for us?
So when we started asking each other those questions
Mm-hmm. We had some
Interesting things arise number one
Even the question what is sex?
That took us a freaking week
Yeah, when people ask you because before we go on the lesbian tangent, we understand
Pad Squad that most of you are not lesbians. But yet, I'm working as hard as I can. But we do
feel excited about centering the lesbian experience in this, because you can learn from us,
and also that's not always
the way the sex is presented. So when you ask people, Vanessa, and you work with couples,
and you ask them what is sex to them, do you get a lot of different interesting responses
that are not predictable? Most people respond the way you did. Like, I don't even know how to start to answer this question.
I think it's really fascinating that we all feel this pressure to have an amazing
sex life, to feel like we're keeping up with everybody else and we're so great in
bed. But a lot of us haven't taken the time to examine some of these very basic
questions of what does sex even look like for me?
And what does great sex look like for me? And what does great sex look
like for me? What is this goal that I'm even working towards? So that's why these questions
might seem deceptively simple. What does sex? Like, what do you mean? What does sex? But if
you really sit with them and the way that it sounds like you guys did, there's a lot of
interesting stuff that can come up from that. You talked about sex being a wider thing for you.
Yeah, for me. It's not just like laying in bed with you and doing the sex acts.
To me, when Glenn enhanced me coffee in the morning,
that is like the beginning of for play,
for possibly something that happened at some point during the day.
For her to be in tune with what I love,
what is really important to me,
and to deliver those things without me asking,
that to me is the beginning,
and so it's creating this feeling of like love and connection.
To me, I can't get into bed with you unless the connection has been
developed. And that takes sometimes days. And I'm like more emotional in that way. I don't
do it just for the orgasm. For me, it's the full experience. And so sometimes it takes
a while, a week or something before I feel that real drive, that real connection to actually
like be in the bed and do the thing.
And from my perspective, what is sex is that I'm getting in this point in my life where
I am trying to be in my body more and experience desire and joy and like juiciness and softness
more. and softness more, and I don't want sex for me to be about,
like, it's all about the end orgasm.
Like, I swear to God, Vanessa, I feel like I'm like
in hustle culture when I'm in bed.
Like, we gotta, we gotta, like, success is this orgasm thing.
It feels like a very masculine framing of the whole thing.
All I do once, we start is stressed about getting
to the end goal, which is this orgasm thing.
And so we just talked about sex being a lot wider
for us than that.
And I thought, well, oh, shoot, maybe that's just a lesbian thing.
And then I thought, no, I bet it's not.
I bet it's like a woman thing or an everybody thing.
Like, we don't wanna have these talks,
so we just orgasm more, but so we connect more
into our little packet of
the place we fall into that is just for the two of us.
I love both of these definitions. I mean, I love orgasms. Orgasms feel delightful.
They're great. But we absolutely can get into this hustle culture when that's the only goal
that we're aiming for. Or that's the only way that we define if it's been a satisfying experience.
So I do talk a lot with women about orgasm and not so many of us struggle to even receive.
A lot of women will tell me, well, it feels like I take too much for me to get there.
And I'll ask them, like, okay, realistically,
if we set a stopwatch when you started getting stimulation,
how much time do you honestly think goes by
before you start to worry that you're being too much
or taking too long?
And most women will respond like two minutes maybe.
So it's this real struggle to receive
and to be present in that experience
rather than so hyperfixated
on the one end goal and how bad of a job we're doing at getting to that one end goal.
So I always encourage people to have more of this type of description of sex that you guys
are sharing, you know, especially what Abbey was saying, this idea that sex can be all throughout
the day, that it can be this experience
that we share with each other throughout multiple days.
I mean, we're getting into conversation too a little bit,
what do we need to feel connected to each other?
So we're not crawling into bed at the end of the night
feeling like disconnected strangers
and thinking, ooh, I'm supposed to have sex with you now,
like what?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So conversation one is that idea of
acknowledging that sex is a thing and we would like to have it. Or
you'd like to have it. I mean, a lot of people are in different
places. A lot of people are in relationships where they're not
having sex. What is the statistic of relationships where they're
not having sex? Like a quarter of the partnerships haven't had
sex in like a year.
It's a real fun ominon that's happening.
So some people are coming to this because they wanted to get better.
Some are coming to it because it's like, oh, it's just the elephant in the room and we're
no longer talking about it because it's so awkward.
I like that idea of even just acknowledging that it's a thing because if you're in a partnership
and you want to be financially stable, You want to be raising your kids in
a certain way. There's no other world in which we just think those things are going to
spontaneously generate. You sit down to your conversations about budgets and about your
goals. You have conversations about your kids and what the struggles are going through.
And sex is the one thing that's like, no, if that was going to happen, it would just
happen. It would just happen. I know. Yeah, we wanted to start with this place that just felt a little
bit easier, felt like a way of easing into it because the mistake that most people make with sex
is we all have this belief that we shouldn't have to talk about it. It's a bad thing if we do.
And so we don't talk about it until things are really frustrating or bad or we're not having
sex.
And then it all comes spilling out.
We have a big fight.
It just makes sex feel like an even scarier, more intimidating topic of conversation.
So people retreat even more.
So instead of going right in with, here's what I need you to change.
Here's what I'm upset with.
Here's what's not working for me.
What if instead we started with just getting comfortable
with it as a topic of conversation,
not even necessarily addressing,
this is what sex looks like between the two of us,
but just can we get comfortable saying these words out loud?
Can we get comfortable talking about it?
So that's what that first conversation's all about.
And the specific ways that you suggest we do this is important.
We notice this because sometimes throughout our relationship, we will think, okay, we
should talk about sex like we haven't been having it enough, we should be having it more.
I just think it's crazy that we all do this.
It does such a disservice to all of us when we say we should be having more sex because that's
based on fucking what? Like, culture is telling us we should have it once a week. We should,
we should, we should, it's horrible because we have, we need to be talking about fulfillment.
What actually is fulfilling us and what is not fulfilling us. Yeah, and shudding is not fulfilling. Exactly.
Shudding all over ourselves. But the thing that I liked about the way you
recommended having this conversation is that I have noticed if either of us
says we need to talk about sex or immediately it's like icky like I feel like
I'm in trouble. I'm in trouble. Are we in trouble? Are we not doing, or like I will notice
that Abby will feel defensive.
So you recommend that the way this conversation starts
is by bringing up a good old sex time in your life
like with your partner.
Probably.
And that's gonna be important.
I think that will be important. I want to tell you about this great sex time I had life, like with your partner, probably. And that's gonna be important. I think that will be important.
I want to tell you about this great sex time I had with the boyfriend.
Good old sex time.
Three in front of you.
Yeah, I mean, you know, sex is supposed to be a joyful, pleasurable, connecting experience
for us, a way that we experience true intimacy with the person that we love the most in this
world.
And if the only time you're talking about it is in negative ways, we should be doing it more.
Why are we not having sex? It's not going to feel great. And of course, it's going to put both
of us on the defensive immediately, feeling like something's horribly wrong. It's broken. We have
to fix it. Rather than can we talk about the joys that sex brings us and what we want to work towards having more of in our lives.
It's revolutionary.
It worked.
It did because here's what would happen.
Glennon would say, do you think we're having sex?
I think we should have sex more.
And immediately because she's brought this to my attention, I go into, oh fuck, I'm not craving it enough.
I'm not actually initiating enough.
She's having a problem with me. So then psychologically, I go down this little rabbit hole and indifferent to this idea where
she'll bring up a fun time that we've had sex before. And I'm like, oh my gosh, yes. It's like,
it's like calling us into a higher self, like our highest, best self,
rather than...
It activates desire instead of shame.
Yes.
Exactly.
Yes.
Exactly. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward,
embarrassing, and strangely intimate things
about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, cute. Vanessa, I want to ask if this is just a weird situation that we have or if you've ever heard this before.
Oh, God.
Annoying thing I notice.
Annoying thing about both of us.
Okay.
When we start talking about sex, an old sex time, or whatever,
first of all, it'll be in the last 11 seconds
because then I can't take it, but I'm out.
The conversation.
Yeah, yes, yes.
Yes.
Yeah, and that was.
I'm clarification, that was.
Another time of life.
When I feel, this is a noise that shit out of me,
I feel like when we start talking about sex,
I go into this annoying baby voice.
Oh.
And Abby goes into this like frickin'
Pat say Jaguila Fortune.
No, no, no, no, no, boys.
It's like she's selling a car and I'm a baby suddenly.
What is that a thing and why?
This is the first time ever in the industry.
Oh, that's a thing.
It is.
That's a thing.
That's your discomfort.
So it sounds like you're able to do the 11 seconds
of conversation.
You can do it.
You're experiencing the positive benefits.
Well, there's great.
I love it.
It's working.
But then you're hitting the limits of your comfort zone.
Yeah.
And so that's when we start to go into the baby talk
or the car salesman over the time.
I do this myself too, don't worry.
Like there are times where I feel uncomfortable too.
And so that's just our way of trying to kind of protect ourselves.
We go more into a joky mode.
Like, oh, I'm not really being serious.
I'm just doing the baby to the cute little baby talk, boys.
So the task for you guys
is to see, can we extend the 11 seconds to 15 and then maybe to 20 and then maybe to 25 where you
can sit in that energy with each other for a little bit longer every time. I didn't know that I
went into car salesman. It does work. You're saying to your partner, hey, do you remember that time in
to car salesmen. It does work.
You're saying to your partner, hey, do you remember that time in Miami or whatever?
You just like say that thing.
I do remember that.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
And it's like not.
It's so different because when I think about when I would bring up sex to you, and I would
say, I think we should have sex more.
It's not like I was saying that or trying to have sex.
It wouldn't be in bed. It wouldn't be at night. It would be at 3 o'clock when the kids were there. So clearly, I'm not really trying. I'm just trying a box. I have done the audit of our life,
and this is area in which we're failing, and I want to be noted for the record.
And so that's really challenging for Abby to hear, because you're sharing it at a time where you guys can't really do anything about it
And you're sharing it in a way where you're not making a request
So she doesn't know
You know does Glennon want to be having more so is she trying to initiate right now?
And when we talk in terms of should it's like we bring in this whole audience of other random strangers and what everybody else is
doing, or comparing ourselves.
Oh, well, everybody else is having more sex in us, so we should be, right?
And then Glennon, for you, it's disconnecting you from your own wants and desires and
needs.
It's easy for us to say, oh, we should be, or is it bad that we're not?
And it takes a lot more work to turn inwards and ask ourselves, well, do I want to be?
Yeah.
And what is it that I want more of?
Yes.
Nasa has been talking to my therapist.
That claims a lot of responsibility in it.
That would be an interesting way
to start a conversation like, hey, I want to try this
or I want to, I want this.
She would say to me, Vanessa, so like,
are you feeling disconnected?
Are you, do you want, and I'd be like, no.
I'm awesome.
Everything's great.
I just feel a shudness from the world.
Okay. Wow.
And that's a really big thing for all of us to sort through, too.
We all feel like we should be having more sex.
We pulled, at this point, about 70,000 people have filled out this survey
that we created about how much sex are people really having.
And we looked at what are their satisfaction levels,
do they want to be having more sex?
Everybody across the board said, I feel like I should be having more sex.
Really? Regardless of their frequency.
Wow.
That's amazing.
But what's the why there?
Why should we be having more sex?
What is this idea that we all have of the more, more, more, more, more we do it, the better versus
again, that that turning inwards.
Like, what is it that actually feels good for me?
Sister, do you have anything to add as the token, Hedaro?
If I could go back, I would say that like starting this conversation
as in the same vein that you talk about,
do you want to have kids?
Are we going to go to a church,
just acknowledging it as a factor of life?
As like, what do you imagine and dream sex will look like
for us in our relationship?
Because I am very sensitive and defensive and insecure.
And so, even when people suggest,
it all aspects of my life.
When people make suggestions,
I take them as criticism.
That is the truth.
And so I find even like beautiful overtures of like
introduction of new things, I take as, oh, you must not have
been happy with before.
Whereas if there had been like the level setting
conversation of like, what we want sex to look like is
every evolving and trying new things and going on this journey
together of seeing what's possible, then that framing and taking that framing into your relationship,
then adding things and trying new things becomes a like, oh, look, this is consistent
with what we've said is our mission, no pun intended, to try this throughout life instead of like, oh gosh, this exciting new thing is exciting,
but I am taking it as a secret shame of my prior failure to satisfy or else you wouldn't need
this new thing. And I don't think it's ever too late to have that conversation. I'm actually
like excited to have it, but I think it sets a framework where you can get off the like, oh,
this is personally about my failing. Right. That we're doing this new thing.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And you're actually speaking to a very common dynamic
that comes up in hetero relationships,
where actually the man is the one that
takes on that perspective.
A lot of women say, I don't want to suggest
that he try anything new because he takes it as an insult
that he hasn't been doing a good job previously.
So that's definitely a dynamic that comes up.
But yeah, if we set this foundation of what is it that we want to experience together,
that we authentically, genuinely ourselves want to experience together, then that helps
reset all these other conversations down the line.
So that's why we start with this one.
And it also has the added benefit of these
conversations start to feel like flirtation. It does. It awakens that desire
and that energy because we're like, yeah, oh, you remember Miami? I mean the
second that you guys said that both of your faces. We remember Miami. Oh yeah.
I mean, they're so excited. I was almost remembering. Yeah. Oh, yeah, Miami.
That's not.
So it just it brings this lightness.
A lightness.
Yeah, like a zing.
And a reminder.
It's like a reminder.
Exactly.
So it brings it to the top of your mind.
Sometimes if you haven't done it for a while, like you forget, because you get busy.
Life is fun.
And it gets scary once you haven't done it for a while.
And there's questions in here. because you get busy. Why if it's for you? And it gets scary once you haven't done it for a while.
And there's questions in here.
You can ask each other what does great sex mean to you?
What's your absolute favorite part of sex?
And if you are bringing it up, it's scary because to take sister's example, if you've never
talked about finances and then suddenly you bring up finances, it feels like you're
pointing out something that's wrong.
So you can just like have an excuse and be like, my friend gave me this book so now we're gonna talk about with it,
right? You can just use that as an excuse. What do people do who have never had great sex with
their partner? Like, if there's no Miami, if we are missing Miami in our relationship,
if we have nowhere to point back to, how does one begin this conversation?
That's a great question. And I want to normalize that not all couples have that hot and heavy
stage at the beginning of a relationship, and not all couples have these incredible experiences
to look back to. So if that's the case for you, I just want to assure you, I'm a believer that great
chemistry can be created. It's something that we can actively work just want to assure you, I'm a believer that great chemistry can be created.
It's something that we can actively work on.
But what you can do is think about things,
smaller things that you enjoy that your partner does.
Maybe it's the way that they kiss you.
Maybe they just give really good hugs.
Maybe it's an outfit that they look very sexy in.
So you're still talking about it positively,
but we're just talking about smaller acts
rather than some amazing, incredible,
Miami sexual experience.
Oh my God.
And you have to give yourself grace.
Everything doesn't work, right?
So I've tried all your things.
You're a good student.
So I would like walk in the bathroom
and be like, you look great in that.
You did it yesterday. I put on a new suit bathroom and be like, you look great in that. You did it yesterday.
I put on a new suit and she was like, wow.
You look really good in that.
It actually touched me.
Really?
Yeah, I noticed I was like, huh, before this book,
you never, you were never talking about what I looked like.
And every single day I'd like comment on the way
that I like your beauty and the way that
you're doing something different. And so since reading this book, oh, I should wear that suit more.
Right. And that's complicated too. I'm not trying to. Because I don't necessarily feel like
that it makes me feel seen to have someone constantly comment on the way. It's not like I'm trying
to be mean back to you. I absolutely don't think that.
OK.
So Vanessa, we're going to need a private consultation.
So we'll talk about it afterwards.
OK.
OK.
I know we're still in conversation one, but I do think in some ways it's the hardest
one for people who haven't talked about sex before.
So can you tell us about the post game too, because this is a way of entering the sex conversation.
If you are a couple who already is having sex, but you want to talk about it more, you
can launch the conversation and something that you call the post game.
The post game.
Yes, Abby will be very familiar with these.
So we always recommend starting with talking about sex outside of the bedroom first.
Again, it's just setting that foundation like we've been talking about.
But then the next step is to start talking about sex closer to the act itself.
And I think the best starting point for that
is right after you've just had sex
because it's fresh on your mind
and it gives you specific things
that you can talk about, like specific data points.
So we don't need just to be a full, you know,
60 minutes, we're going through every single play
by play type of thing,
but it can be something as simple as,
that was really fun.
I liked that position that we did.
I liked the way that you touched me in this place of my body.
So it can start very, very simple, but you're just using that recent experience to keep
talking about the things that you liked, the things that you worked for you, and the things
that you appreciate about your partner.
Yeah, that one's harder.
How does that feel thinking about?
It feels sweating.
So can we start simple?
Like even if it's something as basic as that was really fun, I liked that.
I feel close to you right now.
We do those things.
It's the specificity that you're saying.
The way that's scary, the specificity that you know why that's scary the specificity.
Yeah.
So saying something like, I liked the way that you were touching me, something like that,
that feels scary.
No, I think I could get behind that.
I think I could, I think I could do that.
Okay.
I think it's just, maybe it's the, it's the during it that I, it's like shut down.
Someone has pushed the master power cord and I'm like, oh, and I can't.
But I can talk to sister about that.
Yeah, I feel like we need to figure this out.
Like why is this the case?
I just want you to talk to my sister about this because she says what the things, she is
out in the world saying the things.
She walks into a room. Everybody waits for her to say the things. She says all the things, she is out in the world, saying the things. She walks into a room.
Everybody waits for her to say the things.
She says all the things.
Why is she quiet?
Can you just talk to her Vanessa?
It's one of the most vulnerable times to be vocal.
And that's why we set these conversations up
in this order where first we're talking about sex,
totally separate from sex,
then we're talking about it right afterwards. And then we can work up to talking about it in
the moment. So I want to normalize that I'm a sex therapist and there are times that I catch myself.
Like I want to say something, but I don't know how to say it or I'm worried about being awkward or
it's going to come out wrong. This just happens. It feels very nerve-wracking, but it's an incredibly intimate experience to be in that moment with somebody and communicating with them.
Like it forces you to be very present in that moment, very connected to somebody.
So if we can sit with that feeling and get a little bit curious about it, if you picture yourself in the middle of sex and imagine trying, and let's, let's
again start with something simple, like that feels good. If you picture yourself saying
that, like what gets stirred up for you? I think that feels good is, feels like totally is like an affirmative endorsement.
That's what's going on.
The, the like, what do you want?
It or something like this fuels.
That's when I go mental lockdown.
What is the underlying thing for me
the most vulnerable thing is like I need you and can you do something for me?
And so it feels like the the most concentrated distillation of that is in this moment where it's like in the sex moment because then it's like, A, am I supposed to know what I want?
Why do I lack this, you know,
encyclopedic knowledge of the things you're supposed to want?
I don't even have the menu that you're talking about to know
and B, like, so I'm supposed to say it
and then what if it doesn't work and then what if,
like all of the...
No control over anything getting what you want.
Mm hmm.
Wow.
Okay.
There's so many things that get wrapped up in this question.
And actually in the book, I talk about how I think that what do you want is a bad question
for us to ask.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Really puts you on the spot.
I appreciate that.
And it gives this idea that there is supposed to be this super specific answer.
Like just circle my clitoris 10 times with your left index finger and I guarantee you that
I will have an orgasm immediately after that.
Yeah, it's an interesting thing.
Yeah, it's an implicit promise on delivery on my end.
It's not only that I can request? It's a request.
And it's all kind of made,
usually made without any vulnerability
but on the other person's side.
Like what do you want is like you say something super vulnerable.
But the person who's asking it
isn't saying anything vulnerable,
they're just requesting that you do.
Yeah, that's true.
So how do we fix this?
So instead of asking your partner what do you want, which puts all the mental load and effort onto their part, give them
options there and give them two options. Because I think when we have two options to choose
from, it narrows down the choice so much faster. So if I ask you, what do you want for dinner?
I mean, that's one of our least favorite questions, right? If I say, do you want Mexican or do
you want sushi? You're like sushi. Or actually, neither one of those sound good. What about Thai instead? It's
just easier for our brains to focus in that binary. So your partner can give you options
of what to do. And the other piece of this though is that when we think about it in this
way of like, oh, well, now I'm supposed to tell you something specific
and I'm supposed to guarantee that it works,
that's when we're getting into that very goal-oriented
hyperfixated on orgasm thing
that we were talking about earlier, right?
So rather than thinking about it as like,
what do I want?
What's gonna make me orgasm?
I like to think of it as what's something
that I'm curious about experiencing right now.
So maybe it's just, I would love for you to kiss me a little bit softer, or I would love
for us to pick up the pace a little bit.
So it's not about what's going to bring you the maximum level of pleasure in this moment.
It's just what's something that sounds kind of good right now.
And then one other piece that I have to mention too is I make this comparison
in the book that when we go into a restaurant, when I go order the chicken salad, I'm not telling
a waiter, I guarantee you that I'm going to love this chicken salad. It's going to be the best chicken
salad I ever had in my entire life. I promise you I will finish every single bite of it.
You will not regret delivering this chicken salad to me. What we're doing is I'm thinking,
this chicken salad sounds good.
I think it sounds good enough for me to give it a try,
but I don't know, maybe I am gonna like it,
maybe I'm not gonna like it.
And requests in the bedroom can be the exact same way.
I'm curious enough to try this.
I have a sense I'll probably like it,
but I don't know.
And let's see.
Let's see what that experience is in the moment.
It's so much less stressful.
Great.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it. I love it. I love it. I love it. I love it. So conversation too.
So excited for the rest of the day.
Is a question that you begin to have, which is what do we need to feel close to each
other?
Am I saying that right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's going back to what Abby was saying of, you know, sex starts with the coffee cup,
you know, that connection starts and we can
feel it throughout the day so that we're not feeling like strangers at the end of the
night, then trying to all of a sudden be intimate with each other. And this is something that
a lot of people really underestimate. We tend to compartmentalize sex. We think of it
as it's just this thing that we do in the bedroom with the lights off at the end of the night.
It just happens over here. But we can't compartmentalize our sex life. Like the level of connection that you feel
or don't feel with your partner all throughout the day is going to affect whether or not you want
to be intimate with them at the end of the night or whenever it is that you are having sex.
So this chapter is all about what do we need to experience that connection, that closeness,
so that intimacy
doesn't feel like that's huge leap.
Yeah, I have a couple questions about this conversation because you did make it very clear
that there seems to be people who need emotional connection first so that they want to have sex.
And then there's another type of person who wants to have sex so that they can have that emotional
connection.
And one of the things I think is cool, and you just took a stand in this chapter.
And you said, sorry, the deal is that the emotional connection first people win.
I did.
And that was hard for me to say because I am somebody who experiences connection and closeness
through physical intimacy.
My husband, Zander and I, we can be not in a great place, we can be feeling disconnected,
and I can still want to have sex with him and know that I'm going to feel closer to him afterwards.
And so I did not want the emotional intimacy people to win,
I wanted my thing to go first. And this was something that Zander and I had a lot of conflict
about in our own relationship
before I finally put words to it.
I kept feeling like, you know,
in teftimes in our relationship,
I kept feeling why doesn't he wanna have sex with me?
And what I eventually was able to realize
is that he was feeling so disconnected from me
that the idea of having sex didn't feel safe to him.
And so I realized this really does come down
to an issue of safety.
And it doesn't mean that emotional connection
is better than or more important than physical connection.
So I wanna be clear that any level of intimacy,
they're equally important, but it's that issue of safety.
If one partner doesn't feel safe,
having sex with another person, that's a problem.
So that's why I took a stand and I said,
I think we do need to focus on the emotional intimacy first.
That's such an important point to make
because I feel like there's very few things
in relationships that are quantifiable data points
as to if you're doing, quote unquote, well in your relationship or not. It's like, you can't
quantify, I just don't feel real close or I don't feel real safe or I feel like we're missing
each other. There's no like, check the box. Yes, that's going well or no, it's not where you can
support it, but you can say, well, we're still having sex.
But like not all sex is created equal, right? So you could be doing the thing where both of you feel radically distant,
but you're still having sex. So hey,
it's not like we've reached that point that a lot of relationships are going through where they're not even having sex.
That's why the question, What is sex is so important?
Yeah.
That's why because sex, it could be that sex, the act without the intimacy and safety is not sex at all.
And I think for Zander, I think that was so brave of him to say because I think a lot of people in his position,
they're not only like don't want to have sex, they're actually like mad
that you do because we both agree that we're distance from each other, but you want me to
hop in bed and pretend like we're not.
That can feel really insulting to people's souls to be like, how could I possibly do this
with you when we're not actually connecting at any other point in the day. So this dynamic in male-female relationships, Xander and I are actually the reverse of what I
usually see. It's usually the man who's wanting to experience like physical intimacy to create
that emotional intimacy. And so this can be really interesting because so many women will say exactly
that. Like it's insulting that you want to be intimate with me.
And it feels like I'm not even a person.
You don't even care about me.
You just want to have a release with me.
And it can create a lot of tension and relationship.
So one thing that I lay out in the book
is that for a lot of men, we talk so much about crappy socialization
that people of all genders receive.
But men are socialized that they're not
supposed to be emotional creatures. It's not safe. It's not acceptable for them. And a lot of men
will tell me, like sex is the only way that I feel comfortable being vulnerable with my partner
being truly intimate, being emotional. So I think it's really important for us to see that aspect of
it. But even if it feels to you like
I'm just a piece of meat. How could my partner want to have sex with me?
Can you imagine instead that those might be the only times that they allow themselves to be vulnerable and let down their walls and truly connect with you?
And maybe they're so desperate to connect with you. Like I am so desperate to connect with you.
And I agree with you that all these other times we're missing each other. And this is the one
place where I can be assured that we are. So like I need it even more because of that. Yeah.
Yeah. That's that's a really different way of looking at it. Before we end this conversation,
I want to ask if you are a person who is finding yourself wanting to say no a lot to sex in your relationship,
you call it the bristle effect, I get deeply understand the
bristle effect that every time your partner, not you,
past relationships that every time you're partner approaches,
you just feel like bristling and you can't even control it.
And you kind of wish you didn't, but you feel bristling.
You said, if you are finding yourself saying no to sex a lot,
maybe you're not saying no enough
in other areas of your relationship.
Oh my God.
Say things about that.
That's amazing.
Yeah, I find that if you have that knee jerk reaction
around sex and to be clear, we are all allowed to say
no sex whenever we want, however many times we want,
nobody should ever feel pressured or pressure themselves
to have sex that they don't want.
But I have found that when you feel
that knee jerk reaction and it feels like every single time
that's just the place that you go to immediately.
They're very well-made be some relationship issues,
some sexual issues for us to dig into as well.
And it may also be a sign that you don't feel the agency
to say no in other areas of your life.
And this feels like the one place that you can say no
so that the no comes out so much stronger in this, because it's that part of you that
is not being expressed in any other part of your life.
And when it gets a chance to come out, it really comes out.
Yeah.
Because maybe I wanted to say no to making dinner five times a night.
Maybe I wanted to say no to not being the only one who takes the kids everywhere.
Maybe I want to say no to ever.
And then now you want this?
No.
It makes a lot of sense to me that the buck stops here.
Exactly.
This is my body, which will not be given up for you.
Yes.
Yes.
When we come back, in episode two, we are going to start talking about desire. What do we need to get turned on?
Fuck. Okay. We're gonna do it. We're gonna do it. That's what she said. We will be back with Vanessa,
who is amazing. Don't you just think she said that? Yeah, I see you next time, Pod.
I'm saying, don't you just think she's saying it? Yeah, she's saying it.
I'll see you next time, Pod.
Spod.
I'm saying, don't you just think she's saying it?
Yeah, she's saying it.
I'll see you next time, Pod.
Spod. If this podcast means something to you,
it would mean so much to us.
If you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do each or all
of these three things.
First, can you please follow or subscribe
to We Can Do Hard Things?
Following the Pod helps you, because you'll
never miss an episode, and it helps us, because you'll never miss an episode. To do this,
just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey, or
wherever you listen to podcasts, and then just tap the plus sign in the upper right-hand
corner or click on Follow. This is the most important thing for the pod.
While you're there, if you'd be willing to give us a five-star rating and review
and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful.
We appreciate you very much.
We can do hard things, is produced in partnership with Keaton's 13 Studios.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle.
I walk through fire I came out the other side. I chased desire I made sure I got one's mind
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I want the mine
I want the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak So man, a final destination
You can fly, you stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been. And to be loved we need to be known.
We'll finally find our way back home. And through the joy and pain that our lives I hate rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreak's a map A final destination with light
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache This world finished her rose and heartbreak somewhere And the heart breaks on land We might get lost, but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things, yeah we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
you