Are you and your partner struggling with intimacy?
Sex can be a difficult subject to talk about. Some people feel embarrassed to talk about it, while others struggle to understand the importance of talking about it in the first place.
Whether youโre in a new relationship or a 20-year old marriage, sex is something that you and your partner need to discuss. More often than not, long-term partners stop having sex, which leads to unhappy relationships and disappointment. In other cases, the individual needs of each partner arenโt discussed, which leads to one person taking, taking, taking, while the other person is just giving, giving, giving.
Hereโs the bottom line: We need to communicate better about sex.
But how do we go about that? Today on The School of Greatness, I have the perfect person to help us start these conversations and move towards sexual healing and fulfillment. Dr. Emily Morse is a sex therapist and a Doctor of Human Sexuality, and she has made it her mission to normalize conversations about sex.
Who Is Emily Morse?
As a Doctor of Human Sexuality, Emily Morse is on a mission to liberate the conversation about sex and pleasure. Over the last 15 years, Dr. Emilyโs work has made her the best-selling author of Hot Sex: Over 200 Things You Can Try Tonight, a pioneering MasterClass instructor on Sex and Communication, live SiriusXM radio host and executive producer, and host of the #1 Sexuality podcast on iTunes, Sex With Emily. Sex With Emily is the longest-running sex and relationship podcast and an endeavor that Dr. Emily has grown into a thriving media company.
Dr. Emily has helped millions of people around the world navigate their sex lives. Her candid conversations challenge cultural taboos, misinformation, and awkward sex talks to create a future where people can deeply connect and embrace pleasure-filled lives.
Emily believes that sexual healing is essential for pleasure and physically intimate relationships but also for complete healing as an individual:
โPleasure is your birthright. And we all deserve to have pleasure. We prioritize so many other things, work, family, home, and usually, we put ourselves last. I believe that [when] we heal ourselves sexually, we will heal so many other parts of our life.โ – Emily Morse
In this interview, Dr. Emily and I covered many important subjects, including how to upgrade your sex life, restore intimacy with your partner, and communicate your needs and desires confidently. We also talked about how greatness is about giving more than receiving. This is a conversation you donโt want to miss, so letโs get started!
What Is the Most Important Piece of a Thriving Sex Life?
I think most people โ if not everyone โ reading this would say that they want a fun and fulfilling sex life. They would probably also agree that communication is an essential part of any relationship. What Emily has discovered after over 15 years of studying and teaching others about sex is that communication is the secret to thriving sex life.
โIf couples do not talk about sex and they don’t prioritize their sex life, and they just assume it’s always going to be how it was during the honeymoon phase. โฆ It’s going to fall apart.โ – Emily Morse
Just like any good thing, sex rarely stays good without maintenance. Take an athlete, for example โ they have an incredible fitness level and elite skills, but their fitness level will decrease if they don’t keep prioritizing it. And guess what athletes talk about a lot? Their sport, training, strategy, or recovery. They talk about it because itโs important to them.
If having an epic sex life with your partner is important, you need to prioritize it and talk about it. But just because prioritizing and talking about sex is important doesnโt mean itโs always going to feel like a comfortable conversation. Many of us are carrying sexual wounds and lack education beyond โhow to make a baby.โ But thatโs exactly why Emily said we need to have the conversations.
โ[Talking about sex is] always uncomfortable at times. โฆ It’s not comfortable for anyone to talk about sex because we don’t have role models of people talking about sex. We had zero sex education … if [we] did, it wasn’t accurate, and … there are all these things that we’ve learned about sex that are untrue. And one of those is, โIf you have to talk about sex, it means that there is a problem. And that’s when you should just call it quits [on a relationship].โโ – Emily Morse
Feeling like you need to talk about sex with your partner doesnโt mean your sex life is broken or irreparable. More often than not, it means that thereโs room for improvement โ it can get better! Having that uncomfortable conversation will help both partners know what to do to heat things up in the bedroom again.