E247: The No.1 Sex Expert: How To Have Great Sex EVERY Time! (And Fix Bad Sex) - Tracey Cox
You've written 17 books on the topic of sex.
Sorry, my first question.
How do we have the best sex of our lives?
That's the question that everybody wants to know.
The first thing is...
Tracy Cox!
The world's most celebrated sex expert.
She's got the answers to the questions you've always wanted to know
and has a secret to a great sex life.
There is a decline of sex, isn't there?
Yes, there's a sex recession.
If you haven't had sex for a year with your partner,
it is very unlikely you're gonna have sex again.
Oh, really? Are you hopeful that we can turn that around?
Yes, absolutely.
The key thing is...
Women's faith, they're orgasm.
We have known that women don't orgasm through penetrative sex
in skamma sutra.
And yet, most men will go...
Yeah, yeah.
I've heard about that.
Women aren't having very many orgasms during partner sex.
They always faith.
The way to solve the whole orgasm thing is...
How do we predict if someone's going to cheat on us?
Number one, being close doesn't actually protect you against infidelity.
You've become so close to your partner,
that you're best friend, you just don't see them as a sexual partner anymore.
If you understand how sex works,
and if you can make sex good with your partner,
affairs can be so preventable in so many different ways.
Women get bored way quicker than men.
Men don't get bored because they get the orgasm as a reward.
Who need to give women interesting erotic sex,
and then they'll be interested.
Otherwise, they're not gonna be interested.
I've noticed a trend that amongst my friendship group,
a startling amount of them are in sexless relationships.
Yeah.
What are some of the most important solutions?
If you want to have great sex, you need...
That's what you have to do if you want a good sex life.
I think that's phenomenal advice.
I have some breaking news.
And no, this is an emergency.
I've spent the last two years writing a book,
and I've written 33 laws for business, marketing and life
that I derive from all of these conversations I've had here.
I traveled the world to write this book.
I interviewed some of the most incredible people.
I did six months of extensive research
on scientific studies and principles
to cooperate everything that I wrote into these 33 laws.
And ladies and gentlemen,
that book called The Diary of a CEO,
The 33 Laws for Business, Marketing and Life,
is now available for pre-order.
And there are 5,000, only 5,000 signed copies
and it's first come first serve.
The link is in the bio right now.
So if you want that book,
honestly, it's the best book I've ever written.
It's the book I always should have written.
It's the book I also wish someone had written for me
when I was starting out in my career.
I'm really proud of it.
I'm really, really proud of it, really, really proud of it.
And I can't wait for all of you to get to read it.
It's out in August.
I couldn't be more excited about this
as you can probably tell.
I don't know what to say other than the words
I've said to emphasize my excitement,
because I think it's important
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Link in the description.
♪♪♪
Tracy, I reached out to my team
and I told my team that I wanted to have a conversation
with the individual in the world
that was best and most educated
and most engaging on the subject matter of sex
because I've noticed a bunch of things in my personal life
in the lives of my friends and those around me.
And I feel like people aren't having
the right types of conversation about sex.
I feel like we're avoiding it as a society
and I feel like sex is so intrinsically linked
to performance and well-being and business
and all the things I usually talk about.
So they found you and that's why you're here.
So my first question is, who are you and what do you do?
What is your mission?
Right, I'm not a trained sex therapist
which is what everybody thinks I am.
I'm a sex educator, which I think means
that what I do is I look at all the research
and look at all the sort of what's going on in the sex world
in sort of an academic sense.
And then I work out, okay, so that's all well and good
but what does this mean for you and I,
well not necessarily you and I, to go,
but people in the bedroom.
So I bring it down to a sort of level
that is more practical, that all my books
are very much like, right, so here's what we've now know
about sex, here's how this is gonna help you in bed.
So I think my job is to sort of get the research
and make it into something that, you know,
the average person can understand and make it work for them.
So I sort of, yeah, I'm a sex educator,
it's a better way to describe me.
You know, part of the reason I wanted to speak to you
as I said at the start of this conversation
is because I've noticed a trend,
I started to like smell it amongst my friendship group
where a startling amount of them
are in sexless relationships.
Yep.
And they're not, you know, your book here
says Great Sex Starts at 50.
My friends, the friends I'm talking about
are in their 30s.
Yes.
And I, and there's lots of things here,
there's lots of thoughts and I wanna figure out
which ones are true.
So I'm gonna say a bunch of things
which are inherently naive and I know they are.
So the first one is like,
why aren't they having sex more often
and is that a problem?
Are their partners to blame?
Because they seem to wanna have sex and their partners don't.
Is it wrong?
Are those relationships therefore broken
and should they break up with their partners
because they're not having that much sex?
So we'll go into all of that.
But let's start with this,
the point you raised about how lust and love
are not necessarily great bedfellows.
How does one, if they're in that situation
where they really love their partner,
they're really, really close to their partner,
but they're feeling like the intimacy has ran out the back door
because of that sexual intimacy has ran out the back door.
How do we create that balance?
You talk about something called otherness
which I thought was really compelling
in your new books.
Yes, yes.
Such a big question that is
because that's the question that everybody wants to know.
How do you keep desire going long term?
The otherness thing is all about,
the close couples kind of become like tweedle,
dumb and tweedle, they don't do anything separately.
But you need to have separateness from your partner.
And this is why during COVID, no one had sex at all.
In the beginning, it was like fantastic.
We can have sex at 11 o'clock in the morning.
And then it was like, oh, we can have sex any time we want.
How unappealing is that?
The more available something is the less we want it.
But you need to separate from your partner.
You need to be, you know,
have your own identity and your identity with your partner.
And that's the otherness that I talk about
is seeing your partner in the real world
and seeing them when you're not with them.
Like so many couples only ever see each other
at home in their house.
They never see each other out.
And if you go out, I remember once
very early on into the relationship with my husband, Miles,
he was walking through a restaurant and I'd arrived first.
And he hadn't seen me.
And I was, he was walking through the restaurant.
And I saw a couple of women look over at him
and I was like, shit, you know,
he's really attractive, well, I knew that.
But he's, you know, and if I don't, you know,
he's out there all the time, you know,
like people are going to be attracted to him.
So it sort of makes you lift your game with it.
So you need that.
If you see your partner at home and you know, hi, hi,
you only ever see them come through the front door.
They become too safe.
And I think when people say, oh, my partner
would never cheat on me.
I think how rude is that?
To think that your partner's never going to treat you on you
no matter what you do to them,
no matter how horrible you are, that's terrible.
That's like saying your partner, you know,
it's just a doormat that you can do whatever.
I like to think that, you know,
my partner's not going to cheat on me,
but you know, that makes me think that if I pledge monogamy,
I pledge that I'm going to sexually satisfy my partner.
I think you have an obligation to do that.
And I'm going to keep myself looking good
because love is, you know, kind, but it's not blind.
And I'm going to do all sorts of things.
I think it's a real insult.
If somebody, if Miles said to me,
I know you'd never cheat on me, I'd be like,
I don't take that as a compliment, would you?
I think it's important to know that
your partner will go and leave you if you drop the ball
in a variety of different ways.
And I think that one of the interesting points you raised there
is about like physical appearance or keeping yourself well
or keeping yourself attractive.
Do you think, and I've asked a few people this over time,
do you think we have an obligation to stay in shape,
attractive, whatever it might be for our partners?
Yes, absolutely.
I don't mean like you have to have faceloves or, you know,
anything like that, but you should keep yourself
as attractive as you can, each of you.
And I think, you know...
That's not just a physical thing I have to say.
It's a community intellectual thing.
Yes, exactly.
It's an intellectual thing as well because desire goes,
and especially, you know, the grumpy old man,
grumpy old woman thing.
When people age, I think that they become very set
in their ways and, you know, become quite, you know,
you don't want to be the bitter and twisted person.
You could look like, you know, a Greek god.
And if you're bitter and twisted,
your partner's still not going to want to sleep with you.
So yes, I do think we owe it to each other,
to say, you know, to look as good as you can
and to be as positive as you can.
There is nothing less sexy than being with somebody
who's miserable all the time, who's a negative person.
It's so interesting that some of the most attractive things
I find in my partner are when I look over
and see her doing her work and her thing.
Yes.
So actually, it's funny, she doesn't actually know this,
but last night I came home from work very, very late
because I was out, did some talks at the,
and I came home and I got in through the door
and my partner was sat at the kitchen table.
It was about 11 p.m. at night,
designing her new studio on her laptop with her headphones on.
And I just found that really, I took a photo.
And it's on my phone and I took a photo
because I'm like, I'm proud of her in one sense,
but it was really lovely that when I walked through the door,
it wasn't about me, she was busy doing her own thing.
I'm still doing her own stuff.
Yeah.
And I kind of like walk,
and I can almost see how some people might find that threatening.
I like, well, hey babe, give her a kiss.
Like, she kind of like kisses me back,
but then goes back to the laptop.
I'm like, this is nice.
And I went over and I sat on the sofa on my own
and just watched Manchester United,
but there was something really attractive about it.
Yeah, of course there is.
I mean, watching somebody at work doing what they love
is the moment when, yeah, that you're like,
wow, this person's amazing.
I mean, I would hate to be a person who,
you know, the partner's at home waiting for you.
Yeah.
And where are you?
And it's all about, so what have you done?
Nothing much, how was your day?
Yeah.
That's not healthy for a relationship.
That puts it too much on one person.
If you want to have great sex,
you need to have an interesting life.
You need to be doing interesting things.
You're not going to be having great sex
if you're boring and you do the same thing every single day
because you just end up doing the same boring sex.
You need stimulation all the time.
And that routineness is the enemy of the killer.
Yeah.
The killer for women, the killer for women.
Because women are the ones that find monogamy boring, not men.
If you say to men, right,
you could have the same sex,
pretty much do the same thing every single time,
three times a week for the rest of your life with this person.
Most men would go, all right, sounds right to me.
If you said that to women, she would go,
you have kidding me.
But this is what's happening.
Women get bored way quicker than men.
And they do so because our orgasm
is far more complicated than yours.
I mean, intercourse is usually the main event
for most couples sex.
Intercourse is the big bit that everyone aims for, right?
And that's great for men because intercourse
very successfully stimulates the penis.
You know, the penis wants to rub it in and out of something.
The vagina does a great job, fabulous.
For women, the clitoris is outside the vagina
that some of it is inside.
And, you know, because the clitoris isn't that little tip,
by the way, it looks like a wishbone,
imagine a wishbone, and the tip of the clitoris
is at the top and then it goes down the sides of the legs, right?
That's the clitoris, amazing.
10 centimeters long.
So because the clitoris is on the outside of the vagina,
intercourse doesn't cut up for most women.
Only 80%, no, 20% of women can climax through penetrative sex.
20%, right?
That means 80% of women are not having their orgasms
through intercourse.
So if you're gonna serve up the same routine sex,
and most couples have sex the same way over and over again,
every time they have sex, and that's your lot as a female,
you're having sex which doesn't give you an orgasm,
you're having sex which doesn't, isn't exciting, isn't erotic,
isn't, you know, in any way really interesting women get bored.
Men don't get bored because they get the orgasm as a reward.
Women get bored because the sex is just not the right sex for them.
So women's desire for sex goes down so much faster than men's does.
So you need to give women interesting erotic sex
and then they'll be interested, but otherwise,
they're not gonna be interested.
There are 80% of women listening now that can relate.
Yes.
So,
and it's funny because I was speaking to a friend of mine,
I told them that, I was gonna have this conversation with you,
and I said, what would you like me to say?
And this was the question they had and it's linked to what you just said.
They said, I'm in a relationship where my partner is having the same sex over and over again.
He's coming very quickly during sex,
and I don't know how to bridge the conversation with him about,
like, this isn't working for me without, like, embarrassing him or whatever it might be.
What advice would you give to that person?
Gosh, talking about sex is just the thing.
I mean, do you talk about sex with your girlfriend?
How long have you been together?
Four years now.
Oh, well done.
They're just very open with things.
Yeah, well done.
That's really good.
Because most people talk a lot about sex in the beginning,
when it's all going well, like, aren't we amazing?
Yeah, wasn't that great?
Lots of stuff.
The minute there's problems, they tail off.
And every sex problem can be solved if you talk about it.
If you don't talk about sex, the tiniest sex problem can ruin your whole sex life.
And the reason people don't talk about sex is that they worry exactly where as you just said,
that they're gonna hurt their partner, that they're going to upset them.
Well, you'd just be really tactful about it.
And I always talk about the compliment sandwich.
So say you want to say, so she wants him to be what?
Give her more foreplay, something like that.
Yeah, just he's reaching orgasm too quickly.
And then she's obviously not enjoying it because he's over and she's still not, you know,
hello, orgasm.
No, well, the mantra for that is she comes first.
Always, the way to solve the whole orgasm thing in several ways, one of the ways,
is to have, you know, give her whole orgasm through oral sex, fingers vibrator.
And then you go on to intercourse, which is when he gets his orgasm.
So that's a very, it's what a lot of couples do, a lot of straight couples do.
You'll notice actually when I talk about sex, I talk about straight couples.
The reason why is that gay couples have a lot better time with it because they've got the same issues going on.
So it sort of helps if you go in lots of ways.
But I would say, don't worry so much about,
like if you say, if she said to her partner, look, I really love our sex.
I love our sex.
I particularly like it when you do X, but you know, when you used to do Y,
give me more foreplay, give me oral sex.
I really, really love that.
Can we do more of that?
So you're not saying actually you, you're not lasting long enough and not lasting long enough is not going to be an issue with most women
because they don't have their orgasm through intercourse anyway.
So I think that men need to calm down about that.
They feel like they have to go on forever and ever and ever.
And it's like, well, she's not going to orgasm that way anyway.
She's going to feel like she has to.
And then you get the faking it and all that sort of stuff comes into it.
But talking about sex is such a huge issue for people.
And the funny thing about talking about sex is that once you've done it once,
it's the first conversation, especially, you know, I do with couples who haven't talked about sex for 30 years.
And that first conversation is excruciating.
You know, you're like, oh, my God, this is awful. I just want the, you know,
air to move like open and get rid of me.
But once you move past that initial awkwardness,
but seriously last like three minutes, then all of a sudden it, this relief,
the amount of couples who say, oh, my God, like, I can say actually, I don't really like it when you do that.
Can you do this?
And like, you know, does it worry you that, you know, my erection isn't as hard as it was when I was young
and and you get reassurance and then they're falling over themselves.
You will never, ever, ever regret trying to talk about sex with your partner.
It is the number one thing you can do for your relationship.
So she should think about what she wants.
Be very specific men, particularly like they respond best to very specific instructions.
So instead of saying, look, this sex isn't working for me because, you know,
you, your climaxing too fast and then all of a sudden it's over and I'm just left high and dry.
If you say, this is my idea of the perfect sex session, can you just like,
let's just take turns, you know, we each have, we each design our own perfect sex session.
You know, could you start with kissing?
You could move on to kissing my neck.
I really like it if you play with my breasts and then I love oral sex,
but could you do it for a bit longer?
Very specific.
And people like, well, that's like telling, you know, saying you love,
can you say you love me?
And then they say, I love you back.
But no, giving instruction in sex is really,
most people are really grateful for it.
And it might feel a bit awkward, the session after that,
where he's thinking, oh my God, I'm just doing exactly what she says.
Isn't this embarrassing?
And then all of a sudden you forget about it.
And then the next session and the next session is like flowing and great.
OK, so a couple of counterpoints here, just from personal experience.
One of the things I've always been a bit conscious of,
or, no, one of the things that I think has irked me a little bit is.
And this goes back to what you said about lust, this kind of spontaneity
and the riskiness of it is, I don't want rules.
You know, like, I don't want rules.
I don't want to be I don't want to be in instructed during sex or even worse.
I don't like that. Do it like this.
Oh, no, no, it kind of kills the like, I think sometimes you can become a little
bit like boy being told off by his arm.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And that can then that can have an impact on one's erect,
erectional erection and their like mindset.
I think sometimes for guys, so much of sex is flowing, feeling like you can flow.
And sometimes if you get like if you've got critical feedback during sex,
that's like a pressure stress, which then the erection might not, you know, hold out.
Well, first of all, it's natural for an erection to come and go during any
sex sessions. So that's not really important.
But maybe, yeah, criticism isn't great.
Like don't do it like that. Move over here or in a very barking, you know, sergeant
major, you know, can you move to the left?
That's not so great.
But if you if you do it, I mean, often men do it.
Do you don't hit the spot and they are doing it wrong?
And so do you want women to just lie back and go?
I'm not even remotely close to where it should be, but I'm going to pretend
because that's what and this is why women don't give men instruction in bed.
It's because they know that a lot of men don't like it. A lot of men say, you know,
it is, you know, it does disrupt the proceedings, but then it's very quickly
back on track. If you do it, you know, if you go and do what exactly she wants,
personally, I think sexual instruction, you can say, or just over to the left a bit,
or that feels great there.
And, you know, whenever you can give positive feedback, rather than negative,
it's great. So giving, I'm sure you wouldn't mind if she says, no, that's perfect.
Stay there. Stay there. Do it for longer.
Yeah, exactly.
The thing is the positive frame. Yeah. Yeah. That's the key thing.
The key thing is absolutely that. And then if maybe you've still haven't hit the
spot, then afterwards, you say, actually, you know, that didn't quite work.
Can I just tell you where or what works for me and then demonstrate on your hand
or something? That's a really good way to do it. But yeah, the key is in the positive.
No one's going to respond to sex where somebody's going, oh, that's not right.
Why are you doing that for? That's terrible.
You know, don't go there. That doesn't feel anything.
You know, no, that's terrible. That's awful.
And those instructional sessions should happen when before sex, during sex, after sex.
Well, depends on the couple. A little bit. I mean, you can use body language during sex.
I don't know about before sex. I think maybe sometimes after sex, when you're getting on
really well and, you know, if you drink, maybe if you drink and relax and just talking generally,
that's sort of the time to say, by the way, you know, that always think that's a good time if you
want to try something new, or to say, oh, by the way, God, my friend was talking about doing X,
you know, what do you think about that? I always think things like conversations about sex that
are positive and exciting and, you know, talking about trying new things should happen outside
the bedroom, really. But otherwise, yeah, you do have to have those instructional sessions,
I'm afraid. What if you want to do something in your partner doesn't want to do it?
Generally, a request for something new, a request for anything is just a request for variety.
So say your partner says, I want to try having sex outside, and you really don't want to have
sex outside. The correct answer to that is, look, that's really not my thing, but, you know, why don't
we try X? Most people, if they want to try something new, if you give them, you know, I'm not open to
that, but I am open to something else, then they'll be fine about it. But I mean, where you get into
problems with somebody wanting to try something other part, other partner not wanting to try,
is if it's something a bit fetish. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that's when you get, did you ever watch
billions, you know, where they, she had the fetish, you know, being whipped and wanting to be the
submissive and he just let her go off and be satisfied by a sex worker. That's one option, by the way,
if you've got a fetish, is to just go, okay, I accept that you've got this fetish and it's
not for me. So if you, if it's really so much part of your makeup that you can't live without it,
then go off with a sex worker and satisfy it. That's the extreme version. But most of the time,
I think, oh, you can meet halfway, like say, say your partner, say you want to have a threesome
with two women, well, then the meeting halfway might be that you have phone sex with the sex
worker, maybe you role play it, maybe you go to a lap dancing club, and she gets a lap dance by
someone. There is, there's always some kind of compromise in there where you can capture a sense
of what the other person wants. Okay, so let's go back up to this, this, this initial question.
My friends, they're in their 30s sexless, sexless relationships. They are increasingly frustrated
about it, it seems. It's funny. I've got like, you know, I've got this collection of my best
friends, we're very talkative and communicative around our sex lives and stuff. And I just noticed
that in various ways they're in situations where they're not, they don't feel like they're
getting enough sex from their partner, and they see it as a critical problem, which might result
in them, for example, being cheating or ending the relationship. Even in my own sort of sexual
experience, what got me really engaged with this subject matter was I was in a relationship where
the pop my partner turned around to me one day, after six months and said, like, I don't like
having sex. And as a young man with me, with me, and as a young man, I think with, you know,
with an ego, I thought, well, what does that mean? That's super emasculating. Does that mean that
I'm not hitting it right? Or like, do I, maybe it's her property, you know, whatever. And so I went
on that journey with, so it's interesting because we separated. Yeah, my reaction was very like,
and also I turned to her and said, like, why? And she said, the next sentence was, I'm not
comfortable talking about that with you. Oh, yeah. So for me, that was like the door closed.
Of course it did. Because where do you go with that?
Yes, exactly. So I broke up with her. And year passes, we both go to different places. We both
go to figure ourselves out a little bit. And on her journey, she really got to understand that
at the heart of her relationship with sex was this fear that had derived from previous relationships
where the partner was very forceful, you know, apparent cheating, all of those things that we
kind of discussed earlier. So it wasn't that she necessarily didn't like having sex. There was a
lot of psychological work to be done on removing that fear of like abandonment. And really,
if I made her feel safe, really, really safe, then the sexual appetite would return. That's what
happened. Oh, so a year later, we get back together, we end up having the best sex of our lives
on an ongoing basis. And it was because she was able to understand, I was, I guess, if she was able
to understand what was really going on, I was able to like be patient enough to like listen and,
you know, go from weeks and weeks and months with not having sexual intimacy and just be there,
which allowed her to feel safe. And then beyond that, we're able to kind of like rebuild it.
Fantastic. And we're still together today. Oh my god, so this is your girlfriend.
Yeah. I have to ask her for permission to say this, well, I'll show her the clip and make sure
she's comfortable with it. But that's an extraordinary story. So we went from a point of, I don't like
having sex, I'm not coming to a really, really bad situation to the best situation. I think one
can imagine in that department, obviously communication was at the heart of it, leg and leg and leg.
Of course, always. Yeah. And giving her space to you know, and I give the credit to her because
she figured that out. But that's what got me really into the subject matter because I've now
got loads of friends that are in that situation. What I would say to your friends is if your partner
doesn't want to have sex with you, I wonder whether how good the sex is because a lot of women say,
no, I'm presuming these straight couples, a lot of women say no to sex because the sex it's on
offer is not that interesting to them. So for this, we need to talk about sex drives,
spontaneous desire versus responsive desire. Have you heard of that? Yes. Yeah.
From reading your book. So spontaneous desire is two thirds of men have spontaneous desire.
And it's the desire that everybody has at the beginning. And by the way, if you want to know
somebody's resting libido, you got to wait about a year. You have to wait about a year to find out
what their real libido is because it's always so artificially inflated at the start.
But so spontaneous desire, two thirds of men have this. It's the one to see one to see,
you know, seek sex, one sex, seek sex. They can go from people with spontaneous desire,
could be like scrolling through Instagram, somebody's sexy walks past and it's like,
wow, I'm instantly aroused for sex. They go from zero to 100 very quickly. They seek out their
mate, one sex and they're off, right? Responsive desire means that you have no desire for sex
or very little desire for sex until somebody is actually doing something to you sexually.
So this is somebody who, you know, maybe is with their partner. Their partner wants to have sex.
They're not even slightly interested, but goes, okay, look, I'll give it a go.
Then once things start happening, if their partner is very good at stimulating them and they enjoy
the stimulation, all of a sudden they're like, yeah, actually, yeah, I'm enjoying this.
That's the warming up. That's the warming up, right? Now, 30% of women have responsive desire.
The rest of them are a mix between spontaneous and responsive. Most men, so you've got this
situation where most men have spontaneous desire, most women are responsive. Most men are very happy
to go straight to genital sex. They don't need warming up the way their anatomy works. For women,
for prey, it's a luxury, it's a necessity because in order for sex to be comfortable,
you need the vagina to tend. So it literally puffs up so that it can, you know, take a penis
comfortably. So if you don't wait for that to happen and you go male-style sex, go straight
for penetration, she's not even off the starting blocks and suddenly you're penetrating, sex isn't
great and then it's all over. So the men, you could have like not even thinking about sex to having
finished within 10 minutes. For women, they need time to warm up because their sex drive is responsive.
So they're almost like blinking it over and they haven't even got to 5% desire.
And this is the problem with couples. And that's, that's, I'm talking about a very basic
couple who probably don't talk about sex and who aren't terribly sexually savvy. So I think,
because I think people have an understanding, vague understanding that women need more full
play, I mean, that's been drummed into men, hasn't it? But I think that what women don't understand
is that women think, you know, at the beginning it was great, it was all spontaneous, I desire was
there, you know, when you get into a long-term relationship, desire doesn't tap you on the
shoulder anymore, you have to create it. And women, I think, think because they're, that spontaneous
desires gone and they don't feel like sex, it just doesn't come out of the blue unless they start
having sex. They think, oh, that just must mean I don't want sex anymore. Well, something's wrong
with me, I don't want sex anymore. You do want sex, it's just that you've got to be,
have sexy things happening to you before you feel the desire for sex. And if people understood
that, if women understood it better and stop saying, oh, it's obviously means my sex drive's
gone, no, it hasn't, it's there. You've just got to have great stimulation and great sex to get it
back. And the other thing about women is that women, we have this thing about that women want
tame and they want romance and stuff. That's not true. So much research now shows that women like
erotic wild sex, I mean, they've done these experiments with women where they'll show the
erotic videos and they'll wire up the genitals to measure genital response. So when you're aroused
as a woman, blood flows to the genital same as men and you lubricate. So they're watching all these
videos, various sexy videos, and they have to say, you know, for anything is disarousing you,
no, because society says no, we're not supposed to be. And the genitals are like,
what are you thinking? This is fantastic. I'm absolutely say yes to this, say yes to this.
So the, you know, there's such a big difference between what we taught and what we would like.
So if your girlfriend's saying no to sex and you're in a long-term relationship, it's because you're
not giving her interesting enough sex. Give her exciting erotic sex. Give her something like,
actually, this is what we're going to do. I mean, look at Fifty Shades of Grey, that
got middle-aged women wanting sex with women who hadn't wanted sex for 20 years. I remember
being on a holiday with my husband and we started talking to this couple and it was around the time
when Fifty Shades came out and she knew what I did and she said, she said, God, I hadn't really
had great sex with my partner. It wasn't interesting sex, you know, for like 10 years. She said, I
read the book. I'm sitting there two o'clock in the morning. I'm looking down at my partner,
I'm thinking, I really just want to wake him up and have sex with him. And she said, and I'd never,
and then she said, and I read the books. And suddenly I was back into this erotic sex with my husband
that I'd just forgotten, I'd forgotten about. Like, you think of sex as I own God, here we go,
kissing, bit fumbling, you know, and then the routine sex, but give people something interesting.
Like all your friends, give her really interesting scenarios. Take her somewhere,
sexy, push her out of her comfort zones, don't give her romance, don't give her, you know,
give her sexy sex, and then they'll be interested.
I'm thinking of my friends, like posing that and how uncomfortable they'd feel.
Like, they want to drive to the countryside and da, da, da, da, because you know, when you've been
with someone and you've become that kind of sibling thing that you described earlier,
they might almost look at you with a bit of horror.
Yeah, you wouldn't go straight from not talking about sex to like,
and we're going to go to a laptop tonight. And no, you have to have the conversation,
you have to bite the bullet and have the conversation because the thing about sexist
relationships, if you haven't had sex for a year with your partner, it is very unlikely you're
going to have sex again with your partner, unless you confront it, head on. If you just think,
yeah, this will pass, this will pass, it will never pass. You're not going to suddenly go,
oh my God, look at that. We have a lot of sex for five years. Let's go to bed now.
No, it's got to the awkward awkward awkward awkward stage. So, I mean, 30% of couples who have been
together for two years or more don't have sex. Two years, not 10 years, two years, 30%.
It is very easy to get out of the habit of sex. And once you're out of the habit of sex,
the less often you do it. And then couples get into this thing where it's like,
God, we haven't had sex for ages, but you know what? Next we can, we'll have this marathon sex
session and that'll make up for it all. And then the marathon sex session is like, God,
I'm not going to find time for that. Or, you know, that's a bit daunting. And then, of course,
you'd have to have sex for like six weeks to make up for the session. So, it just becomes more and
more insurmountable. So, I always say to people, just have little bite-sized bits of sex.
You know, sex doesn't have to have a beginning, a middle, and an end. Like, have a big snogging
session. Have a thing where he gives you oral. You don't do any, you know, give nothing back,
or you give him oral, or, you know, you just do something sensual together. You have a bath
together. That counts as sex. You know, people think sex has to have intercourse in there. It
doesn't. It's the least favourite bit for women. Take the intercourse out. Start doing little
bite-sized stuff to reconnect sexually. It's like a frog in a frying pan, that old analogy of how
slowly that, you know, the frog doesn't realise it's being heated in the frying pan until the
water's boiling and it's dead. Like, it happens very, very gradually in relationships. And then
you get to a point where you go, how the hell did we get here? And at that point... You have to
have the talk. The talk. This is interesting, because one of my friends was talking to him about
it, and I was saying like, you've let it gradually stray so far, and you're currently letting it,
you're not addressing it, you need to stage a crisis. It's kind of the way I framed it to him,
which is like, you need to say, stop. Like, this relationship has to stop. We have to have a
conversation now, because I'm at a point now where I'm either going to leave this relationship or
I'm going to end up cheating or something. So we need to fix this together. And it needs to feel
important. Yeah. Or else it'll be allowed to simmer. That's exactly right. And of course,
what lots of people do in that scenario is they just turn to porn. Yeah. And they just satisfy
themselves with porn. But that's not ideal, obviously. But you... Well, because it's pretty
soul-as-sex, isn't it? Just watching porn and masturbating. You know, there's... It's really
funny about porn, actually, because I used to have a great relationship with porn. I used to say to
people all the time, like, porn is your friend, watch it with your partner. It's great for, you
know, if you've got a high-sex drive and your partner doesn't, it, you know, you can satisfy
yourself. It keeps your imagination, you know, piqued you, you know, can satisfy that sense of
newness by watching porn. And now, porn's moved into a really ugly stage with, you know, there's such a
concentration on aggressive acts, like spitting, choking, choking is terrible, slapping across the
face. It's become very much like that. And young men are growing up to think that this is what a
normal sex session is like. This is normal real-life sex. It is not. porn is nothing like real-life
sex. And then women look at it and go, gosh, right, okay, that's obviously what's expected of me.
This is what I have to do. And it's moving into a very nasty direction. They say,
unmet expectations equal unhappiness. So by setting expectations up here, it's like,
we're going to do this for an hour. And I'm going to tie you up and spit on you and choke you. And
you're going to make this sound and you're going to scream and you're going to tell me I'm this
and you're going to say that I'm your fight, whatever, the first thing it might be. Then for those
unmet expectations, equals unhappiness in the bedroom, you go, well, you know, I'm going to have to go
looking for something else. Exactly. And that's what young men do because they think that's what sex
is going to be about. It's not. So then they keep looking for the girls who will give them that.
And then girls very quickly figure out, okay, if I want to be liked, I have to do that.
I've just done a big thing on choking. And I interviewed all these young girls and it was
horrifying. It was they've been, I mean, between 58% of college students between the age of, you know,
and all been choked, I think 30% of them had been asked. And I'm not talking about, you know,
symbolic choking of just putting a hand on the throat, which even that freaks me out. But I'm
talking about, you know, cutting off wind supply. There was one girl who told me she was 21.
She'd gone out with this guy. He seemed really nice. He started choking her. She said, no,
she passed out. She woke up next to this guy who was asleep. He then said to and then she got
herself out of there and was like, Oh my God, you know, terrified. He texted her the next day and
said, Oh my God, babe, this sex was awesome. Let's meet up again. And she was, she was just like,
how could you possibly think that that was good? And that worries me a lot. I think that that,
I mean, I think, I think it's moving in a great way in lots of ways, particularly for young women,
except for things like that. I think that is terrible. So you know, you don't want to be
satisfying yourself with porn. But you have to have the conversation if sex is now out of your
marriage, you cannot just let it go and be the elephant in the room because exactly what you say
is going to happen, you're going to leave or you're going to cheat. So you sit down with your partner
and you say, listen, we really need to have discussion about this. I love you desperately.
But I miss our sex. I really we used to have lovely sex. I love having sex with you. You're
really desirable. It's, it's, you know, and I can we talk about why this isn't happening anymore.
Are you having the sort of, you know, is it that the sex that we're having isn't doing it for you?
What can I do to make you, you know, want to have sex more often with me? Because I would really
love to have sex with you more often. Can we have a discussion about this?
Okay, I've got friends that have tried that. And what happened?
The partner doesn't necessarily know. It's a similar situation to what I thought the one
and the situation I described that I was in where my partner turned around and said something
because they might not have the information themselves. They go, well, I just don't like having it.
And they might not know that the, you know, the responsive sex language that you talked about
and they might not know what's going on with. Oh, I see the partner might not know why she doesn't
have sex. Why she or he doesn't like having sex. And then you can hit a wall, don't you?
Well, that's when you educate yourself. That's when you give, read a few of my books.
Yeah. To give you a bit of education. But I mean, okay, so the partner who wants sex is
generally more driven. So maybe they could sexually educate themselves and say, you know,
I've been reading up about this. Perhaps it might be because of this. Can we try having sex this way?
But it's all about broaching the topic. And then, I mean, depending on the reaction,
I mean, I know I've, you know, encouraged some people to have this talk and then they've got an
answer, which is just startling. Well, they'll say, I don't want to have sex anymore. I'm not
interested in solving this. So that's it. So you just have to put up with it. That's what I,
that's basically what I got. If somebody says that to you and they really, and you've tried on
several occasions and you, I think that is grounds for walking out myself. And I did. Yeah. Yeah.
And a miracle seems to have. Yes. Because then people did some soul. So it sometimes maybe you
walk out and then the person thinks, well, gosh, actually, that's not very fair. Because monogamy
is all about, you know, I pledged to only have sex with one person. But if that person withdraws
sex, then where are you left? Apart from having solo sex and, you know, or you have an agreement.
Okay, well, if you won't have sex with me, then what are my options? My options are
to satisfy myself, to cheat. You happy for me to seek the sex elsewhere? And lots of times,
people will say, yeah, actually, I am, I don't want to know about it. I don't want it to be in
our friendship group. And we're going to have to have rules about this. But you know, some women
are more than happy for that to happen. Or some men are more than happy for that to happen. It's
not just a female thing here. Men go off sex as well. On this point of porn as well, there was,
I read something recently about the shame that it's causing in people. Like, I think the study
that I read, I think I read that too. But 40% of men that use that masturbate to porn
report to feeling a sense of shame. And then when we think about the sort of macro where we are in
sex as a society right now, there is a decline of sex, isn't that going on? Which is quite concerning.
Yeah, there is a there's a sex recession. And that's very much because, I mean, basically,
there wasn't a sex recession before social media streaming phones. It's all to do with that. We
have too much to do. We basically just go off sex because we have other things to entertain us.
You know, pre all that 1034 on a Saturday night, most couples were having sex. There was nothing
else to do. That was it. We just did two, you know, there's that going on. So we're too busy. We've
got too many other things on our plate. That's the main problem with long term couples. Then you
have like, I think less face to face communication with mate, which makes people quite nervous. If
you haven't had sex before, and you're dealing mainly with, you know, FaceTime calls, you know,
video calls, which is what lots of young people are, when you're face to face, they get very nervous.
They don't know anything about body language. They don't know how to connect. And sex becomes
scary in Japan. There's something like 30% higher. I think more like 45% of people get to the age of
the in their 30s and their virgins. They've never even had a sexual encounter. And they just and
if you don't give your body sex, your body doesn't want sex. So they could quite happily go through
life completely sexless. That's what's going to end up happening with sex. We are becoming less
and less and less. And you know, the more we go into virtual worlds, the more, I mean, the amount
of people who rely on porn for sex who can't even be bothered going out and finding a partner because
it's all too difficult. I mean, we're it's becoming less and less about the intimacy and more and
more about just the getting off part. We're now in an AI world as well. Yes, terrifying.
Which is very interesting. Yes. Because you're now you know, we've heard about sex dolls and stuff
like that over the years, but a sex doll that can speak to you with such depth and reason and
apparent emotional nuance and understanding is really, really scary. You can think I was thinking
about thinking about this, thinking about all the different ways that AI is going to disrupt us as
like the social fabric of society. And one of the really clear ways that was you can now have a
sex doll in your house that speaks to you that comforts you, that understands your problems,
understands what you're going through and can give you unbelievable advice, will never shout at you,
will never criticize you and will please you in a in a personalized way. It will learn how to please
you. Sounds great. Doesn't it? Fantastic.
But that is we're right there. We're on the door step of that world. And you know what, though?
Think about all the lonely people. Think about all the lonely people that can now have a companion.
I think is it a combination? Is it real? If you're somebody who can't find a companion in real life
or you're lonely, I mean, it's better than a dog, isn't it? I mean, it's I mean, I think that's
got some really nice applications to it, but it's also got some dire applications to it.
Because then, you know, ultimately we'll end up with a with no population, will we? Because
no one will be having sex with a real person. Yeah. So I think you think you can see the short
term. Oh, well, you know, Dave's going to be slightly more, less lonely, potentially, right? But
if we if we go up that exponential cover of improvement, we get to a point where this thing
is walking, it's talking, it is making you making your breakfast, your dinner, your whatever,
then it's satisfying you on demand. And then you look over at human and you go, they're going to be
more interested in the community. So that's what I'm saying. They're going to be more interesting.
They're going to be better in every way. No, I think human to be more interesting, surely.
You think? Do you want like somebody like it? It's like a yes person. I don't want a yes person in my
life. I want somebody to think they do. Yeah. People. I think people will choose the short term
without thinking about the long term of like connection, companionship over time and challenge
different solving problems. You'd, you know, I think the average person, if they could be faced
with with if they were to draw their perfect partner, they wouldn't say, I want difficulty
and challenge and sometimes to walk out in arguments and to be interrupted when the football's on.
But then I think surely over time, I don't know, I do worry about AI with humans and I don't share,
you know, like some people present the argument, like we'll be free to do all these amazing
esoteric things. We won't. We'll just sit there and look at social media and get fat and drink and
sit in our rooms watching porn. That's what we'll do. Yeah, because we choose the short term,
dopamine over the long term. Yeah, instant gratification. Gosh, that is scary. That's going to be a
huge industry. Yeah. I mean, it already is a big industry. But these living AI sex dolls will be a
huge industry. I don't think they're quite perfected the robot bit though, have they?
So there's a couple of things happening in tandem. I mean, Elon Musk is working on his own
robots. Tesla, we have Boston robotics, I believe they're called, who have been working on robots
for a long time. But it's going to be very quickly, as all exponential curves do. So now we've got
the kind of machine learning, modeling, MLM, AGI, they call it artificial general intelligence stuff,
moving quickly. The robotics that I think is going to gain pace because now there's a greater demand.
But it's really, really, it's one of the things I am. Did you see that film blade back in the day?
No, it's all now in the real girl. Do you remember that? That was about a guy who had a sex doll.
Oh, really? And the whole village sort of accepted it. And then when he didn't need her, he got a real
person at the end. But now I didn't see blade. Just there's a scene in this film called Blade,
where he puts on a headset and it's set. I mean, it was 20 years ago, but it was set in the future,
puts the headset on. And this headset, you know, it's exactly that. It's an AI that basically gets
him off. And he has a ton of his life. And actually, his cop, his partner sits opposite him. And they
both put the headset on. And they actually, I do think I did. It's a scary world.
That's what we'll be doing. We will be doing that. I mean, we're kind of going that way already
with porn. And we talked about this sort of macro decline in sex. Are you hopeful that we can turn
that around? Yes. And I have great help, hope with the young generation of women. I think this is
the first generation of women who really have probably the least sexual hang ups that we've ever had.
And I think that, I mean, young women are much more adventurous than young men. It's sort of going
in a weird direction, I think that way. And all the young women that I'm in contact with,
I'm talking about young women in their 20s, early 30s. We know that young women are more
bicurious than men. We know that young women are more interested in three sims with two women than men
are. We know that young women are more interested in going to a sex club than men are. We know that
young women are more interested in polyamory. And they don't want several love relationships. They want
the love of a relationship. And then they want to be able to have sex with men on the side.
It's not men thinking like this. This is women thinking like this. And I think that it's going to
make for more interesting relationships. And because the whole women are overturning everything,
the motivation for affairs now has completely reversed. So men used to have affairs for sex.
Now, most men, if they're in a good relationship, will satisfy that with porn, right? Most men.
Now men have affairs for love and affection. Women have affairs, they used to have affairs for
love that they weren't getting from their partner. Now they have affairs for erotic sex.
Sex where they're not looking after their partner, they can be selfish. They don't have to care about
whether they hurt his feelings or say, don't do it that way. They're not going to care about
whether Stephen doesn't like it. If he's being instructed, it's like, do that, do this. They want
that sort of sex, right? And that's why they're having affairs. So I feel like my hope is that
women are going to take the charge and go forward. And we're going to end up with sex that's more
interesting sex that's less doing everything to please a man, more equal. This is what I need,
this is what I want, this is what you need, this is what you want. Let's work out the best way to
do that together. Not where, because so many women still now, that's the thing that does disappoint me,
is still have sex to please men, still pretend to have orgasms during penetrative sex, because
society's brainwashed. We have known that women don't orgasm basically through penetrative sex
since Kamasutra, which was written in the third to fifth century. And yet most men will go,
yeah, yeah, I've heard about that. I've heard about that. It hasn't happened to me, I've just been
really lucky for my girlfriends. I mean, it's just like, they're faking, they're faking because
the girl before faked and they feel they have to fake. And every depiction of sex is that
everybody has this mutual orgasm, simultaneous orgasm together. And that's just how sex is.
Well, it's not like that. It's totally not like that at all. Speaking of young women, in your book,
Great Sex, the last of 50, one of the things we talk about is the issue of sort of sexual
confidence and sexual self esteem. Talk about that in the opening chapter of the book. And
I found it really compelling that really interesting that women view themselves differently when they
look in the mirror, which has a libido impact. Body image is terrible. They just done a study
which looked at two decades, 20 years of study. So they just study on all the studies on body image.
And it turns out that it impacts every single area of sex, regularity of sex, enjoyment of sex,
arousal, desire, orgasm. And it makes sense that if you don't like your body, you're not going to
want anyone to look at it or touch it. It is the biggest problem with women today and their sex
lives is that often, you know, this is the other thing with your friends. You know, have they just
had babies? Has their body changed? You know, are they not feeling so desirable? You know, desire,
I think feeling desired by your partner is much more important to women than, you know, anything
else. If your partner looks at you in a video like, God, you're so hot, you're so sexy, that is the
biggest turn on of all. And if you're feeling not great about yourself and your mindset is so much
down on yourself that you think, I don't even, how could he possibly look at me and think that I'm
attractive, then you'll never feel that you're part of confederacy to death, but you're never
going to feel it because your brain's just gone, Nope, I am not sexually attractive anymore.
So that is a real problem. It's a real problem. And do you know what this solution is for that?
It's not to go off and get a facelift or get your hair done or lose weight or go to the gym more,
though actually going to the gym more is one exercise is really good for your sex drive and
for your self esteem. But the other thing is that QO's body image is, is actually to have sex more.
If you have sex more often and your partner enjoys it, your brain goes on a subconscious level,
well, you know what, I can't be that bad because he's having sex me or she's having sex with me,
whoever's having sex with you, they're enjoying it. And so your brain starts to make sense of it
all and go, okay, right, you know, this is, I'm obviously not as undesirable as I think and it
starts to sort of become better and more able to be dealt with. So the more you have sex, the better,
because it gives you confidence and sexually confident women, women who think they're good in
bed. So increase your skills as well. If you're worried that you're not a great lover,
read up on it, buy some of the books, go online, look up technique, you know, because technique
is very important. And the better lover you think you are, the less you worry about what you look
like in bed. We all know that sexually confident women win all the time. And sexually confident women
put on weight the same way other people do is they get on in life, etc, etc. You know,
their bodies are different after pregnancy, but they don't focus on them. They're like,
hey, I'm the brilliant lover. Who cares? You know, he's not looking at that. He's just thinking how
fantastic I am. So it's more about increase your confidence as a lover, exercise more.
And I mean, then the obvious, take yourself off social media, stop comparing yourself to other
people, all that sort of stuff. But it's difficult. It's very difficult. And I think men suffer from
this as well. That's so unbelievably true, especially, especially the part that it also relates to men,
because I've got multiple accounts from female friends of mine that are in a heterosexual relationship
that have told me their partner won't have sex with them with his top off or with the lights on.
And also the point there about how you solve that body confidence issue that
confidence comes from the evidence you get from doing the thing.
Yeah. And also, if you are worried about your body, when you're having sex,
close your eyes, like close your eyes and think about what you're feeling. It's about what you're
feeling, not like how you're looking, because if it's stressing you out and you're looking at
thinking, Oh, my God, he's looking at my thighs. He's looking at this. Just close your eyes and go
into yourself or become more active. That's the other way to overcome body issues is if you're
really active in bed and you're like looking at your partner, you're talking dirty and you're
making lots of eye contact that way, anything to sort of take yourself out of yourself is good.
You either go into yourself and focus on what you're feeling rather than what you're looking like,
or you sort of become way more active. That also works.
Three things that boost sexual self esteem easily in your book. Initiate sex to feel more powerful.
Yes, absolutely. Initiation is such a big thing on so many levels. And if you don't ever initiate
sex with your partner, you're essentially saying, I don't actually enjoy having sex with you.
I'm only having sex with you because you've asked me to have sex with you. And people argue about
that. It's like, well, his sex drives way bigger or higher and all that stuff. It doesn't matter.
You really need to have a thing where if your partner's got a much bigger sex drive than you,
you need to say some, look, okay, it's really sexy being the person who's the sexy one in the
relationship. That's why it's great. It's nice to be that person, but I want to be the sexy one
in the relationship. So hold off on initiating for a while and give me a chance to initiate so
that I can feel more powerful. And it's such a great dynamic that that power dynamic in relationships
is really important that you have to be sometimes the dominant person. You have to be the submissive
person. And if you swap around, it makes very much more interesting sex life. But if you don't
initiate something, it's a real cop out to never initiate sex. I really do think so. And when women
do it who don't often initiate sex, what often happens is that they'll be so subtle that the man
misses the point completely, it's like, well, I gave him this really sexy kiss. And it was like,
yeah, and yeah, anything else? And he also went with that. And he didn't even, you know,
and now I'm not going to do that again. It's like, off the God's sake, just be really obvious about
it. Be really obvious about it. And going back to initiation, just be aware that how you initiate
sex will influence whether or not your partner says, yes. So if you initiate sex the wrong way,
your partner might say no to sex because you just approached it all the wrong way. Whereas
if you approach your partner that you know has got a responsive sex drive by talking,
cuddling, connecting, whatever she wants, could be, you know, she might want you to
initiate sex like that. But you know, and getting her in the mood the way she wants to be in the
mood, not the way you would like her to get in the mood, but the way she wants to be in the mood,
she'll probably say yes to sex. So a lot of people saying no to sex, isn't that they don't want sex,
they're just being approached the wrong way, and they're not being warmed up the right way.
So if you can solve those two basic things, it can change everything.
It feels like there's something really fundamental here that we assume sex will take care of itself.
Never. Oh my God. Writing all those sex books, when I go to a dinner party,
people either want to sit next to me or they go as far away from me as they possibly can because
they're terrified. And the people who say to me, oh God, but I don't need a sex book. I'm like,
yes, you do. You're the person that needs a sex book. I've written 17 of them, and I'm still learning
about sex. There is so much to learn about sex. How can you think you possibly know everything
about sex without ever educating yourself? And it's changing. Of course it is, but people who
think that they're born great lovers, they don't, you know, I mean, the female response system is
complicated. Who knew what a clitoris was back in the day? You know, like, they're difficult,
still, well, actually, they're not that difficult. You just give it a vibrator and then they're fine.
But, you know, it's not easy being a great lover. And can I just say one more thing about orgasms
is we worry too much about orgasms and how we get them. There is no right way to have an orgasm,
because everyone thinks the right way to have an orgasm is during intercourse with your partner
and preferably them climaxing at the same time. Simultaneous orgasms hardly ever happen for a
star. They're always faked. So the easiest way to give a woman an orgasm mean great women are
can be very easily orgasmic if you use the right finger technique, if you give her the right
oral sex technique. But the thing that is most expert at stimulating the clitoris is vibration.
Most women can have an orgasm within three minutes with a vibrator. So we have this big
orgasm gap problem where men are having lots of orgasms during partner sex. Women aren't
having very many orgasms during partner sex because they don't understand each other very well,
because sometimes people just can't relax with another person there, right? So the solution is to
put your hand in the bedside drawer and bring out a vibrator and she would have an orgasm every
single time the same way you have an orgasm every single time. Why don't we all just do this?
It's the easiest solution in the world. But we don't. Young men are better at it. They'll often say,
or you know, and she'll say if women are honest and they'll say, look, you know, that was fantastic,
but I kind of missed the moment a bit, which you can as a woman. Can I just use my vibrator or can
you use the vibrator on me? Sorted. But we have this like, that's a cheating orgasm. Yeah, or
that it takes something away from what's supposed to be. Yeah. But it's a solution. I'm not saying
have all your orgasms like that, but just maybe now and then have the vibrator in the bed. And
why is it inferior? If you can have all that intimacy, if you've had the oral sex, you've had
the intercourse, you've thoroughly enjoyed it, but it just hasn't given you that tip over.
What I mean by that question about this fundamental belief that kind of sex is supposed to take
care of itself. And I think that's why we don't talk about it enough. We don't research about it
enough. We don't try to invest in making it new and exciting and different. And all the things
you've said is because we just just shoot because at the start, it kind of takes care of itself,
doesn't it? Of course it does. Yeah. The first couple of months and then
all the sex hormones are there. Yeah. Driving us, driving us without even us having to think about
it. And then you don't think about sex or something you've got to work on and talk about and invest
in and buy stuff for and change all the time. I've already got a job. You know, I don't know.
Well, unfortunately, that's what you have to do if you want a good sex life. It's what you do.
And the thing is, it makes me laugh because we put effort into every other thing. You don't,
I eat the same meal every single night. You find it by a good cookbook and look up recipes and
experiment with different things. And no one goes, all that's terrible. That's so much effort.
I don't want to have to do that. I want to know how to cook a three-course called on
blown meal without even looking at a cookbook. Well, in the movies, they never do this. There's
no movie where they sit and talk about sex. What did you like? I could you like to do that.
In the movies, they come in the door and they pick them up and they put their hands back and
they rip the dress off. Oh, you know, and then do you know what I'm the worst person to watch TV
with? Because I shout at the television. Honestly, there was a thing called Dr. Foster. Do you
watch that? Saran Jones was at it. And there was this couple. They'd been together 10 years.
They woke up on a Sunday morning, right? Sunday morning to wake up. She's of course,
full makeup, lingerie, everything. And next minute, he's like,
scrunery against the wall. They're having sex standing up and you know, like all the,
I thought, I'll forget the God's sake. This is a couple 10 years in. It is not happening like
that. And then even me who knows that this doesn't happen, this is not the norm. I'm like a little
bit like, and I always turn to poor balls and I say, you realize that's not true. You realize
this is not a real and he sort of like sitting there going, yep, yep, I do know.
Cover your eyes. Don't have unreal expectations. Don't think you're missing out on this.
And because it's sad, because people try and they think that that hot sex at the beginning
should last a lifetime. And when it goes, and you think the next person you meet is this
going to last forever. This is this one's going to last forever. And then of course,
it dies down and dies down and dies down and you're like, damn it, I've got the wrong person.
You haven't got the wrong person. It's because all the sex and love hormones have stopped working.
That's the only way to keep having sex like that. The only way to keep having that beginning sex
over and over is to swap partners constantly, constantly swap partners. And you can have that
beginning bit over and over again. It is impossible to have the type of sex you have at the start
when you're fueled by all these chemicals at the end of a relationship or during a relationship.
Anything over two years, it's first, you can have satisfying sex, great sex, exciting sex,
but it's not fueled by the same hormones. So you cannot recreate that. And if people knew that,
no matter what person you end up with, then they would stop leaving perfectly good relationships
in search of something that's not ever going to be found. As you might know, this podcast is now
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Check it out. I've talked in this conversation as if sexless relationships are in happy relationships.
Yes. But that is not true is it? No, it's not true. You can often have, I mean people do instantly
think if they're not having sex, oh my god, divorce is coming soon. No, I mean you can get,
sex isn't the be all an end all for everybody. Lots of people are very low sexual abedos. If you've
got two people who have low sex drives, they have a lot of sex at the beginning or maybe not even
that much. And then all of a sudden it fades off, they're perfectly happy. Some people are happy
having one great session every six months. That's enough for them. It keeps them perfectly satisfied.
So long as both of you are like that. But what doesn't work is if one of you is highly sex driven.
In the beginning, we all worry about compatibility. Please match up with somebody who has the same
sex drivers you. And I know it's artificially inflated at the beginning, but don't commit to
anything until you're six months in, eight months in a year in. Don't marry anyone under that because
you don't know what their sex drive is. Wait until after a year and then you see, and it's very
difficult if you've got a massively higher sex drive and your other one doesn't. But you can be
perfectly happy in sexless relationships. So long as both of you are happy with that. And also,
you know, they used to define a sexist relationship as couples who had sex 10 times a year. Now,
plenty of couples, especially couples over 50 only have sex 10 times a year. And they were
like indignant to be described as sexist. So now they've changed it to a sexist relationship is
one where sex hasn't happened in a year. And that's a low sex relationship to be 10 times a year.
But it's all dependent on where you're at in life. Like if you if you've just had babies and
they're under two, you're not going to be having a lot of sex. If you're 18, you just got together,
you're going to be having an awful lot of sex. You know, if you're part if you've just gone through
menopause or perimenopause and everything's gone to hell, you're not going to be having sex
at that period of time. So you can't there is no one size fits all things. So find your normal is
what I would say. And if your normal is no sex, so long as you have a conversation about it,
that's fine. But you what you cannot do is stop sex and not talk about it. That is really,
really dangerous. You've got to have some kind of discussion, even if that's getting into bed one
night and one of you says, we don't have sex much anymore. Do you does it bother you? Now it
doesn't really bother me. Good. Even if it's that. But you do need and you need to have lots of
affection, lots of you need to make up for that. Don't stop touching physically because when sex
stops, people often stop touching each other because they're worried that that's going to lead to sex
and that's going to be awkward. So keep up the effect. That's why you've got to have the chat.
If you don't have the chat, affection stops and if affection and sex stops, then you are in trouble.
If you've got lots of affection, you're okay. So long as both of you are happy.
Interesting. But you're not going to be happy if one person doesn't want sex to stop
and the other one does. That doesn't make for a happy relationship at all.
And in that situation, is it right to then just leave?
No, you have the chat.
And the chat is, but they say in the chat, no, I want more sex. It's hard. I want more sex than
what you do. Well, then you look at exactly what you said, you go through a process. So
you have the chat, you talk about you make sure the sex that's on offer is good sex for the person
who doesn't want to. You look at anything around it like, you know, have they got any childhood issues
that need dealing with? Do they not want to want? If they don't want to want, then you need to look
at what happened, sexual trauma. I mean, if the person that doesn't want to have sex with you
is willing to look at ways to become more sexual, stay, of course, stay. There's always hope. Yes,
there's tons of stuff you can do. You can take strip sex right back to basics where
you don't have penitentiary sex for a year. You might do the Sensei Prokers program,
which is all about touching each other without sexual intent. And it might be that you have to go
almost like you've got to learn how to have sex all over again. If your partner's willing to try
anything's possible, definitely don't walk out. But if your partner says, I don't want to have sex
with you and I have no interest in having sex, I've got no interest in trying to, you know,
bring, get back my desire and you're not allowed to have sex either. You're not allowed to seek
it anywhere else or, you know, apart from running off to the office in Master Banger to Poor. And
well, what choice have you got? I mean, some people stay. Some people stay in that scenario
because the love is very strong and they've got kids or whatever. But I think that's an incredibly
selfish thing to say to a partner. Chapter nine of your book, it says that 33% of
couples said that they rarely or never had sex and one quarter of those rated themselves as being
extremely happy. That's right. So something like 75% of people who are denied sex nearly all of the
time stay if the love is strong. People choose love over sex. And of course they do because how
often are you having sex? Even if you're having sex a lot, even if you're having sex once a day,
twice a day, it's still only really for half an hour each time. So, you know, in the proportion of
the time you spend together, your, the love bits more important than the sex bit definitely is.
Unless the sex bit is really bad. And then it tends to poison the rest of the relationship.
Do you do any sort of therapy for couples? No, not face to face. No. Do individuals come to you
for advice in a professional context to get therapy? No, I do friends and friends and
friends and stuff like that. I don't because I lack the skills to disassociate. This is why I
never became a therapist because I'm not very good at there are ways to solve a problem where
you can stand outside the problem or you stand right in the middle of it all and take it all on.
And I'm the stand in the middle person. And I, and I wouldn't ever be at it. I would have no
boundaries. They'd be calling me day and night. So no, I can't do that. What are the most
common questions that people ask you about sex? And I'd like the ones that we don't talk about
enough. So, you know, I don't know whether it's erectile dysfunction or whether it's not. Oh my God,
erectile dysfunction for men is women don't appreciate how having not being able to get an
erection or, you know, is the biggest psychological catastrophe men experience.
We can't fake it. No, no, penis envy. Who wants a penis? I certainly don't want a penis. It's
all out there to see. We can fake everything. But it's really difficult for men. And I think men,
I mean, we have a problem with Viagra, by the way. Viagra is a big problem because young men take
Viagra because they want to have the biggest hardest erections ever. And they're worried about,
they're so performance, you know, they have so much performance anxiety because they're watching
too much porn. And they think that that's real. So they take Viagra because they think just this
once, you know, I'll be, I'll just wing as first time I sleep with her. I want to be really hard.
And then of course, you know, eventually you stop it or try to. And your girlfriend says,
Oh, this isn't, you know, you're not as hard as you normally are. And suddenly you're back on this
cycle. And then young women expect that that is a normal erection, which is not anyone who's looked
at a Viagra driven erection and a normal erection. They're completely different. And then on the
other end of it, you've got older couples who, you know, we've got two problems with when you get
over 50 or 60 men have erectile dysfunction and women have, you know, driver, designers and very,
you know, the vagina, basically atrophies. So they've solved it for men. Great. Take this pill. And
suddenly you're like, you were 18 again, but you're still with this vagina that's not 18,
where it's going to hurt like hell. And then the man who suddenly got the swinging penis is like,
well, what am I supposed to do with this? And then he goes off and cheats with somebody because he's
so happy to have this, this big rock hard erection again. Is there a relationship between age and
infidelity? I'm not sure about that. I would say as men cheating late, more likely to cheat
later in life or I know that middle age people cheat a lot because that's when you've got choices.
Yeah, yeah, you've got choices you're traveling. You've got money. It's probably
easy to get away with your board. You've had the kids that, you know, you started to take everything
for granted. You know, things like that make people cheat. It's opportunity, temptation,
and your moral code, you know, it's not to do with love. It is to do with respect, though.
Red flags in relationships, the most compatible couples have compatible life goals. Something
I've heard you say before. Yes. I think that is really important because it is all about its timing
is so important. And and life goals say you've got, you know, you've got the perfect relationship
now. Your girlfriend's great. So suddenly you decided, right, I want to go off to Africa and work
with pygmies for five years. This is my life goal. You know, what she's supposed to do. Of course,
it's important to have the same goals. If you've got one person who wants adventure and you like
to be hiking every weekend and, you know, camping, my idea of hell, they're not going to match well
with somebody like me who wants to be in a nice hotel and, you know, having lots of cocktails,
you know, I'll be like, I don't mind the old camping, but do you know what I mean? Like,
you've got to have you got to be compatible. There's some stereotypes that still sort of exist in
linger around sex and men and women being, you know, one of the ones that I was reading about in
chapter six of your book is studies show it's not true. Men have a high sex drive than women.
Women have a different desire for sex, which you talked about studies also show it's not true that
monogamy is harder for men than it is for women. We tend to think that men are the ones that cheat,
which has never made sense because if we just pretend the world for a second was,
do the heterosexual equation? Every time a man is having sex in a heterosexual sexual world,
so is a woman. So, you know, the numbers don't quite add up. One would assert just from the
looking at the numbers that it's got to be quite close to like 50 50 to some degree.
Yeah, of course. And also, like, if you look at the stats on who's happiest, the happiest people
are single women and married men. They're the two happiest groups of people always.
Single women and married men are the happiest groups of people, like not married women.
Married women like end up doing all the jobs and, you know, married women aren't happier than single
women. Single women are happier than married women. And married men are really happy because they
get everything done for them, basically. What role did the kids play in this whole equation?
Oh, my God. Kids, I think, really make the love part better. I suppose because you've created that
thing, but they're terrible for sex. Terrible for sex. I mean, the minute the kids come along,
you can kiss goodbye for sex for five years, really. And people freak about it. And they're like,
it's never going to come back. And it will come back. Of course, it will. But, you know,
all your energy is going to children. So I think if you're going to have kids,
you've got to accept that your sex life is going to take a back seat for a long, long time.
Don't panic about it. Keep having little sexual connections that aren't necessarily
including intercourse, little bite-sized pieces of sex and you'll be fine. But don't kid yourself.
It's not going to change your sex life because it will. Boy, will it?
Some people think that having kids will save the relationship. Oh, God, no. It's so stressful.
I do not understand this. Every time I see somebody with a child, you only have to hang around
children for about two seconds to realize how stressful they are. If you've already got problems
with your relationship and suddenly you're going to sleep deprived yourself, you're going to have
somebody dependent on you 24 hours a day, how is this going to make you more, you know, happier
with your husband? It doesn't even make sense to me. It might stop people leaving because of,
you know, obligation, but who wants to be with somebody out of obligation?
You said something that in your work that a neuroscientist told me in this podcast,
which is that after the first year, non-parents are generally happier over time than parents.
Kind of a controversial idea. It is a controversial idea, but I mean, there's a trade-off with kids.
There's such a trade-off. You can never, I mean, and I think there's, I'm a step parent. My husband
has a daughter. And when we're going through hustles with safety, which she's a little darling,
but also can be a little devil, let me tell you, he can sleep. I'm sorry, I can sleep.
Miles can't sleep. And when I lie there, I think, gosh, if I had given birth to Sophia, if she'd been,
you know, I wouldn't be able to sleep. There's no way that I'd be able to sleep. It's, it's, you are
knowing that you're going to be worrying for the rest of your life once you have a kid.
It's, it's such a big responsibility. And when you have that responsibility, it'd been, you know,
you're not going to be able to do, you're not selfless. You become selfless then,
you can't be selfish and have a kid. Well, you can. You could be a really bad parent,
but it's different, isn't it? It's really different. I'm sure, but then parents say, well,
you're the one that's missed out because you don't have this incredible. And I have such a good
relationship with my mom and my dad and, and us three kids are all milling around. And they're like
87 and 89. I'm thinking no one's going to do that for me. Who's going to do that for me? How to
pay for it. So there is that when I hear that start, I do, do wonder if it's the term happiness is
the confusing thing because, you know, a parent might say it's giving me such a sense of purpose or
meaning. Yeah, of course. If you ask me in a survey on a, on a Tuesday, how I'm feeling after
staying up till fucking two a.m. because this kid was screaming, I'm probably more likely to
report at any given moment to being less happy. But if you zoom out, there's more meaning in
purpose. One might say that to, to try and provide the counter argument. I mean, how many people
who say what's the best thing you've ever done? They say having children. Yeah. Everybody says
that. Yeah. And they can't all be lying. No one says a promotion at work or whatever else they say.
Yeah, they don't. So it must be, you know, me, not everybody says that. But I do know mothers who
say, God, you know what, if I look back, maybe I wouldn't have done this, but they're very brave.
And they tell childless women that they never tell a woman with a child. Yeah, of course.
Women's libido. I was reading in, in chapter six about women's libido tends to drop as, as,
as they age, whereas men's seems to remain fairly stable throughout the relationship.
Stable, but then they have the, you know, women struggle with the drop of, because
menopause with all the drop of testosterone and all the, you know, test estrogen, all those
things that keep your genitals in good shape and keep your sex drive high. Men's testosterone
drops as well, but then they're struggling with erections. So if you're an older man and you can
get your head around that you're not going to get erections as easily as she did and it doesn't
bother you, you're going to be fine. If you're a woman and you actually, you know,
get all the things that are available to you, take HRT, if you can, like there's solutions for
all of this and don't think to yourself, Oh, well, we're old now, we're not going to be sexual,
you'll be fine as well. But I think people panic, you know, when they hit a certain age and
there's this perception, you know, like, you know, people get, I did a campaign for
replanes, which is a vaginal moisturizer, which most men blink and good to see you didn't.
And it was all about and had these beautiful images of older people kissing passionately or
naked from the back and and they were quite old. They, and they were the most beautiful images and
so many people were threatened by that. They were really threatened because there was old people
doing sexual things and we were not treated to that. We don't see that very often. So when somebody
does that, they, yeah, people freak, they don't like to think about older people having sex. So
when you're old, you have it already in your head. I'm not supposed to want sex anymore.
Which is completely untrue. And is that why you wrote a book called Great Sex, Dancer 50?
Yes, because for me, that's what happened. I went through the whole of my life with a high
libido. I've written about sex. I thought this isn't going to happen to me because I know everything
about sex, of course. And then I hit like 50, no, actually probably even before that. And suddenly,
I realized, I remember typing away one day and thinking, I was tired, but I was single at the time.
I hadn't masturbated for ages. What's going on? I haven't even thought about sex for ages.
And it's the drop in hormones. And it's quite extraordinary to that whole spontaneous desire.
I had very high spontaneous desire. And suddenly it went. So I just suddenly became like other women,
I suppose. And suddenly it was like, Oh my God, I see where everyone's going on about. So I thought,
yeah, for my own sake, I might write that book. And it's very good writing that book. There's a lot
of solutions in there. What are some of the most important solutions for my listeners that are
maybe experiencing a similar situation? Again, manage expectations, keep having sex that whole
use it or lose it. You've got to keep having sex. That's very, very important. Get your head around
the whole thing about that. All doesn't mean that you can't be sex. You can be it doesn't matter
what you look like. It's what you feel like. It's it's so many, many different things. And also,
you don't have to put I think as a society, particularly English people, we all put up with stuff.
Like there are solutions for all of these things. Like if you've got a driver,
giant, go and get a vagina moisturizer, go and get a estrogen, pessary, there are solutions for
everything that happens with menopause. You don't have to sit there and just put up with it all,
because if you do, then you won't want to have sex. Definitely. So seek all the solutions. Don't
be scared to to try and find solutions to all these things because they really are out there.
Change your headset. And the women, it's interesting that they did a big thing about what really
influences women's desire, post menopause. And it wasn't menopause. It was your attitude to sex.
If you'd always loved sex and you wanted sex to continue, you can you found the solutions and
you kept on having great sex. If you were never that keen, it's like, well, actually, you know what,
here we go, an obstacle. What a great, what a great sort of excuse to never have sex again.
So it's attitude was way more important to how good the sex was after menopause. Nothing to do
with menopause. It seems again, like one of the foundations behind all of this, that's kind of
hiding in the back room when it as it relates to people's libido and their attitudes to sex,
is that kind of childhood experiences we talked about, which is super tricky to unpack and even
become aware of. And we all have our own childhood experiences of sex, intimacy, relationships,
some cases, in the worst cases, abuse and all those things that we need to find a way to overcome
first or address first before we can even have a, and I mean, particularly for men,
often their first experience, childhood experience of sex is being caught
masturbating. And how the parent deals with that is very formative, because if it's like,
absolutely, what are you doing? You know, like, do you have a very filthy, it's dirty? It's like,
what are you doing? Then they are going to continue to masturbate because pretty much they do,
but they're going to try and do it faster and faster and faster. So every time they're
masturbate, they're going to be trying to get it down to as quick as possible time so that they
don't get in trouble again. And then they end up with rapid ejaculation. They can last two seconds
before they ejaculate. So that's affected their sex life in a purely physical way. It sets us
up in so many different ways, our childhood. You know, and I mean, I was lucky to grow up in a
household where, I don't know why a household was like that, but we just talked about sex
openly. I suppose my sister worked for Family Planning, which helped, but that was later.
So I don't know, my mum and my dad were really cool talking about sex and things. And so I grew
up thinking, well, yeah, all households are like that, but they're not. It's an unknown unknown. So
how do you go about even solving for those things? I guess you have to get a therapy and start
and packing it. Yeah, I'll just unpack it yourself. You have to just think about, you don't necessarily
have to go to therapy. There's so much, I mean, the joy of the internet is so much online that you
can do. If you typed in, you know, I don't like sex as my parents, you know, taught me this. There's
a book called Sex Marchely, which is very good about childhoods. Sex. Sex Mart, it's called Sex Mart.
Yeah, you can still buy. It's an old book, but it sort of delves into all of this. And yeah,
I mean, I think I'm so pro therapy. I think everybody should go to therapy. No one has a
perfect childhood. In fact, having a perfect childhood can also set you up for things. So,
you know, if we have a problem, if you have a problem with sex, you know, going to see a really
good sex therapist is, could sort it out very quickly. So don't leave it too late.
Go, I work out and I can't even pick all these books. This isn't even all the books, is it?
No. So you've got hot relationships, how to have one. Great sex starts at 50.
Sex doctor, Fix Your Love, my fast hot sex, how to do it. We've got dare. Oh, that looks
for a 50 shades. More hot. More hot sex. Okay. Would, um, would like to meet.
Yeah, that was the two you show did about dating. Yeah, yes. Okay. That's the question with that.
There's a question there I should ask because I'm thinking again about a friend that's just
popped to mind. Is there something going on with male and female dating in terms of it becoming
more difficult in the modern day and age? Yeah. There's some stats that one of my podcasts
guest shared about how women are, um, having less children and they're finding it more difficult
to date and to find a compatible male in the modern way that society is designed.
And I've got friends that are, oh, you know, around that sort of mid late thirties range that
are really, really, really struggling in the modern world. It's almost, I almost men or women or both.
Women. Right. Yeah. I almost suspect that, um,
I actually didn't have that many friends that are in that region that aren't. But it's almost
like there's a generation almost caught in a gap where you read the Gen Z native to social media,
the internet, you know, that's the where they grew up. And then maybe the older generation already
partnered off because, you know, they met someone at church or commit this generation who were
caught in the gap. Are they all high achieving women? Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. That's the problem.
So what happens is you get, and this is why there are more and more single women now because
more and more women are high achieving. So they're not like looking for a husband straight away.
And when you've got a big gene pool of people to, you know, like when you come out of uni or
even before you go into uni, because lots of people meet at uni and stay together,
you've got this big, you know, like numbers game, you've got loads of women single, loads men single
and you sort of all hook up. And if your motivation is to get married and have kids and that's your
only motivation, you're going to find a partner early and that's it. You job done, keep going,
right? Assuming it all goes well. But if your motivation isn't necessarily that, if you want to go on
to university, you know, get your career sorted and then turn around and have kids like at 30,
okay, right now, I'm achieved, I'm at the past, you know, where I want to have kids, and I can
take a bit of a break here and then suddenly, where is he? Well, he's not there because he's
already been taken up everybody else. And men traditionally don't like dating high achieving
women unless they're high achieving themselves. And the amount of high achieving women is getting
higher and the amount of high achieving men is getting lower. So you've got even less of a pool
to choose from. So the answer for the women is to think outside the square and think, right, okay,
do I really need the guy who's got the degree because women, high achieving women like to go
for high achieving men. Is that statistically, it's just generally what happens, isn't it? You
just, if I've got a degree, I want somebody else's got a degree. So then you have to change your
wish list a little bit and think, okay, I'm going to, you know, look in it, I'm not going to be as
rigid with my, you know, must haves and perhaps, you know, think about things like, well, does it
really matter how much he owns if I'm already earning lots of money? You know, isn't kindness,
you know, generosity, sense of humor, attractiveness, you know, just general chemistry, isn't that,
isn't that enough? So if you go for those qualities, you end up a lot better off and
I end up happier as well. Is that against our innate wiring? Because, you know, some people sometimes
say that men care less about the financial resources of their partner. So does that kind of go, for me,
if I'm a woman and I'm looking for a partner, am I going to look for someone who is kind of
up into the right? Probably. But that doesn't necessarily work. See, for me, that didn't work.
Because if I'm like very alpha female, so whenever I went out with an alpha male, we were just like,
right, yeah, on the boss, no, I'm the boss. No, I'm controlling, you know, you know,
no, it didn't work at all. Didn't work at all. Very competitive. I'm too competitive. They were
too competitive. That didn't work. So, so I've got, I mean, my partner is really proud of me. He's
not at all threatened in the slightest by any success. Any success I've had, he's my biggest
proudest supporter. He and we work differently. Like, you know, if my thing is to, you know,
if you know, I make more money than him, he doesn't mind me saying that because he's
he's fine with it. And so if I've got more money, that's great. So therefore, you know, if he's got
more time than me to do the traditional female things, then he's fine with that. And then sometimes
other times I'll do it. And, you know, he assumes the male role. So it's very, you know, we're
comfortable with each other. We, you know, we don't care that I tick the male boxes in some
roles and he ticks the female boxes and it works very well. And I think you have to, I think that's
hopefully where we're headed. But there is, there are some times where, I mean, I know, I'm not
typical with females. I know that a lot of women, you know, won't go out with a man unless he makes
a lot of money, particularly if they make a lot of money, they won't. I've never been like that.
I've never been get their money. It's make my, if I want money, I'll make it myself. Thanks.
I don't want to have someone else's money. That's not mine. So I do think it's a big problem for
women and men. I think we both have to, especially women, have to stop being so rigid with that,
you know, and how expect the man to provide. I think men have to stop being so feeling
emasculated if it's the woman who's owning more. So what? Who cares? Someone's got some
money somewhere. A lot of them are. Who cares? Which one?
If you're in that age range between say 30 and 40, and you're a woman and you're single and you
don't want to be single, that's important to say, you don't want to be single. You want to have,
you know, you want to meet a partner, you want to have a family, whatever it might be,
what advice would you give to that person? I'm thinking now about my series of my close
friends that are women that are single in that range and that have expressed that they,
they don't want to be single. But they're struggling for all the reasons you said,
super high achieving, you know, they've got great careers. They're very, very busy because of that
as well. Yeah, that was the issue, isn't it? It's, I mean, I was talking about Helen Gearly Brown,
the Cosmo founder, and she always said, you can have it all. And that's the biggest lie
win we've been sold. You can't have it all. There is something that gives and these high achievers,
yeah, they have compromised their chances of finding a partner by putting it all into their
career. You can't have it all. And I did that. I mean, it took me to 50. I had lots of relationships,
it took me to 50 to find somebody that was, I was compatible with, it's not easy. It's really,
really difficult. And I was out there meeting tons of people. So first accept that it's nothing to do
with you doesn't mean that you're not attractive or anything. You're probably less marketable because
you're too intelligent and some men will be freaked by that. And you're too successful and some men
will be freaked by that. They don't know what to do with you and it makes them feel bad because
they're going to those traditional patterns like how she's not going to go out with me.
I'm not as successful as her, so I'm not even going to try. So you have to make the approach.
Number one, change your wish list to become qualities, personality qualities. It must be a
certain height, must be a certain income, must drive this car, must, you know, all those sort of things
because they really don't matter. And also, date outside of type, go out with people, look beyond
the exterior, see what's inside. I think that we're very quick to go, oh, I know, I can't go out with
that person, you know, like go on a couple of dates and even if the first date's disaster,
go on two or three dates, go on at least three with people, you know, go out all the time.
Often these women are so busy, it's like, well, when do you actually go out to actually put yourself
in a situation where you can meet someone? Never. They're not going to walk in your lounge room,
unless you sort of order delivery and they're really not. So come on, you've got to make some effort
here, you've got to do the numbers game. And I don't know whether that dating apps are the right
way forward, but they're probably the only way, it's the way that most people meet. So you kind of
have to just suck it up and get on there, I think. I think that's phenomenal advice. I was really,
really happy you said that as well because I know certain friends of mine are going to be listening.
And hate me for it. No, I don't think so. I think it's an opinion, it's one that makes sense.
And I think that's all that anyone can deliver on this podcast. And that's why I like it. And
it actually matches the opinion I had from a man previous on this podcast who received quite a,
when a man says those kinds of things, I don't think it's received as well,
necessarily, because they're speaking from a place of like, they don't have the lived experience.
And there's a lot of like gender inequality things that are, you know, historical things with men.
And the term one of my previous guest used to describe it was a tall girl problem.
You see what I mean? It's not necessarily the most, you could also say, yeah, you could say
small man problem. Yeah, exactly. It's the same that, you know, this is an interesting question.
It's probably the question I should have started with. What is sex? Well, sex certainly is an
intercourse. And people need to stop thinking of sex as intercourse. Sex is any type of,
any type of feeling, word, thought that makes you feel aroused. That's how I describe sex.
And what purpose is it solving? Why does it exist?
To create other human beings. This is why, you know, going right back to the beginning,
this whole thing that we have that, you know, why can't we have the sex at the beginning
all the way through? Because it doesn't suit, it wouldn't work. If you were so in, you know,
lust driven and all you wanted to do was shag like rabbits, you would never get anything else done.
You certainly wouldn't have children. You certainly wouldn't have a job. So we are designed to keep
the world in a safe place. We go through lust and infatuation, romance, attachment for a reason,
so that we calm down. We don't have the hot sex and we keep the world, you know, we bring up our
children in a sensible way and the world continues. What does that say about monogamy though?
Because if that's probably not natural, that's what I was going to say. Because if my sex drive is
deteriorating to any degree, one would suggest that's encouraging me to go
shag someone else. Well, it is, but you don't because you love your partner. So you, it's a trade
off. It's always a trade off. You can have the love and this contentment and the companionship.
And this is why older, you know, you asked about infidelity statistics. Older people don't
cheat very much who are in good relationships because they're not having that drive that lust
is gone. You know, your sex drive is lower as you get older. And it's the trade off. It's like,
yeah, I could go out and cheat and have really hot sex, but I'm going to have to look my partner
in the eye and I really love my partner. So I'm going to, I'm happy to wave goodbye to that hot
sex. I've had enough of it in my life. So it depends on your motivation. So if you are driven by sex,
then just don't settle down. Keep swapping partners and get that out of your system. And then you're
not going to be dishonest to anyone. But if you do want a relationship, sometimes you have to go,
okay, we can have great sex. It's not going to be like the sex that you have at the beginning,
but you know what? I've got two kids. I've got a great wife. I've got, you know, it's a trade
off in life, isn't it? Everything's a trade off. So you don't think monogamy is natural?
I think that for sex, no, I think for sex, no, it's absolutely not. For our sex drive,
it's the worst thing is to give some security and, you know, predictability and stuff and the
same person over and over. No, not for our sex drive. But the problem is, is that the alternative
is polyamory, right? So you have this one love relationship and then you seek sex elsewhere.
Now, in theory, that really appeals to me. I can see that that would be great, right? But I'm
never going to, I'm not going to feel comfortable waving off my husband by darling. You have a great
time. You know, don't worry about what time you get back. No way. He's my, you know, this
possession, isn't it? It's ownership. It's sexual ownership. You know, you're not going to, you might
want to do it yourself, but you're not going to send your partner off and they might want to do it
themselves, but they're not going to send you off. So I don't know what the solution is. I really
don't. Well, as you said, in life, you can't have it all. So everything is trade offs.
Yes. And that is another trade off where I'm sure some people would love to be able to have sex
with other people, but they wouldn't be able, they wouldn't want to reciprocate that. Exactly.
To their partner. We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a
question for the next guest, not knowing who they're leaving it for. And the question that's been
left for you. Okay. When you are near the end of your life and looking back over it, what will you
be proudest of? And what will you regret the most? God, proudest of my career and having helped
people. And what are the really annoying people when you're in a dinner party who's just knew
what they wanted to do really early on with the writing and then that happened very early with my
parents. So I'm really proud of that. My first book, I was so excited. Literally, you know that
when you just jump on the spot, I was literally jumping on the spot. I didn't really do regrets,
actually. I don't really do regrets. Maybe I wish that I was more or had been more confident,
I'm confident on the outside, but not on the inside. I'm the most confident,
unconfident person you'll ever need. So, and probably realize that no one's looking at you,
the TPC worrying about themselves. I was trying to calm down a bit and was more confident.
What's the symptoms of that, you know, lack of confidence?
And insecurity, like going away and like every, you know, the first time I listened to this,
for instance, it'll be like, Oh my God, I was terrible. Look at me. Look at the way I look.
Look at it. I'm like, God, why didn't I do something else in my hands? What, you know, like I'll go
through it. Then, there, not go. Don't be silly. And then I'll listen to it and then I'll have an
okay opinion about it. But yeah, there's still that little bit there. Any idea where that's come from?
Yeah, parents, when you're left on your own and you'll abandon at the age of 15, that's not great,
is it? And then all these small things are a potential abandonment. Maybe people don't think,
I don't get on me. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's funny. I'm confident of,
I'm confident of my abilities professionally. I'm confident that I'm intelligent. I don't know.
I suppose, yeah, you never really mean, I remember when I studied psychology and the
guy just got up there and said he was a great lecturer and he said, it's all about your childhood.
And we all just rolled our eyes and went, Oh, for God's sake, it's so like ridiculous. It's not.
It's not. And it is. It really is. Like, I'm still that 15 year old girl that stood there terrified.
You know, she's still there. And yeah, so it's interesting. But I put on a good show, like everybody.
You certainly do put on a good show. Thank you so much, Tracy. Thank you. You've given me so
much answered so many of my questions and I know for sure, for sure, people are going to tell you,
I'm sure they're going to message you. But for sure, I can say on behalf of all of the people
that have listened, you've helped them today. And I think everybody will take away something
different from that, which is why it's so incredible. I'm going to do something I've never done before
because I really want to illustrate how I believe you've helped people. The previous guest that
left you a question and you know, I don't usually tell people this is a guy called Robert Waldinger.
And what he has committed his life to is something called the Harvard
study of well being. I'm going to call it that I know I've got one word there wrong.
I'm going to call it the Harvard study of well being, which was the longest ever study done
on a group of people to understand what makes people fundamentally happy at the most basic level.
So they followed people for almost 90 years, the same group of people, even the founders of
the study have actually died. So they've passed the study on to Robert. And at the very heart of
what they found on this study, which ended up being a TED talk, which has done 45 million views.
It's the most one of the most listened TED talks of all time, is that the thing that makes us most
happy in life and also healthiest in terms of an insulation from stress is relationships.
It's number one men that have positive romantic relationships, live 14 years longer, women seven
years longer. And one of the things that ends great relationships and leads us to isolation and
loneliness is sexual issues. I see it in all of my friends and the work you're doing is therefore,
in its very essence, helping people to solve the most important problem of all, which is connection
relationships. So it's incredible work to be doing. And it's worked and a lot of people will want
to do and confront because of the stigmas and taboos that still remain. So thank you so much, Tracy.
Thank you. Thank you for being so wonderful. It's a wonderful compliment.
You're captivating. No, you really are. You're really, really captivating. And you're super smart,
and you know your stuff, and you've looked at all the research. You really are the best at this.
So thank you for being here. Thank you for helping me. You have, and thank you for helping all of our
wonderful listeners. Thank you. I'm going to walk away very confident now.
Awesome. And you look amazing, by the way. You're just as fantastic. Everything about you is
fantastic. So yeah, thank you. You know, I never really usually pick the chocolate flavored
hules. My favorite are the banana flavor. I love the salted caramel flavor. But recently,
I think I impart blame Jack in my team, who is obsessed with the chocolate flavor
hules. I've started drinking the chocolate flavor hules for the first time, and I absolutely love
them. My life means that I sometimes disregard my diet. And it's funny, that's part of the reason
why I've had a lot of guests on this podcast recently that talk about diet and health and
those kinds of things, because I am trying to make an active effort to be more healthy, to lose a
little bit of weight as well, but to be more healthy. And the role that he will plays in my life
is it means that in those moments where sometimes I might reach for, you know, junk foods,
having an option that is nutritionally complete, that is high in fiber, that is incredibly high in
protein, has all the vitamins and minerals that my body needs within arms reach that I can consume
on the go is where he will has been a game changer for me.
So, thank you.
Bye.