transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:00] Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to The Mel Robbins Podcast. I have a question that I want to ask you about your sex life, and I want you to be honest. Do you want to be having better sex? Like, just stop and think about that. Do you want to be having better sex? Of course you do. Whether you're not having sex at all, whether you're having sex with somebody that you love, but it's just not fun or pleasurable, or it just feels like another thing on your to-do list. Let me tell you, things are about to change. And our guest today is the perfect expert to not only tell you that you can have better sex, she's going to teach you how to do it. I am so excited for our episode today because it's going to flip all of the typical sex advice that you get right on its head. I mean, everybody else is busy telling you what to do to your partner, to make your partner's sex better. No, today we're talking not about your partner's pleasure, we're talking about your pleasure. No more performing, no faking, no more going through the motions of boring sex while you're thinking about what you're going to have for dinner. Our expert's going to tell you, you don't have to turn into a different person or change how you look in order to have incredible sex. You deserve pleasure in your life, and you have everything you already need. She's going to teach you how to tune into your own body and access the pleasure you deserve. Today, you're getting the Guide to Better Sex, Intimacy and Love from the number one sex professor in the world. You know how every January people start yelling, New Year, New You? Yeah, no. The you right now, the one juggling work, kids, aging parents, your own head, that you, that you is already doing a good job. And the goal this year shouldn't be to replace her, it's to support her better. That's where Ollie comes in. They make science-backed supplements that fit the real lives women are living. Multivitamins, vaginal probiotics, libido support, Ollie probiotic mango gummies make taking care of yourself feel more doable. They support your gut, digestive health and immune system. Three little wins and just two gummies. Whatever your goals are for 2026, Ollie makes it simple to find what you need so you can feel more grounded, more energized and more supported on your own terms. Ollie offers solutions that help you take care of yourself while you're taking care of everything else. And honestly, that should be the vibe this year. Not a new you, a more cared for you. Head to olly.com, olly.com and start supporting your gut and overall well-being with solutions that are easy and delightful.
Speaker 2:
[02:50] Ollie!
Speaker 1:
[02:51] These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. This podcast is brought to you by Expedia. Planning a family vacation is a lot. Everybody has different schedules, different needs and strong opinions. So wouldn't it be nice to have a co-pilot? Some that makes the planning part way easier. That's where Expedia comes in. Expedia lets you book flights, hotels, vacation rentals, cars, activities, all in one place. And when you bundle it together, you can save up to 30%. Plus if plans change, because they always do, at least in my family, Expedia helps you stay in control. Expedia, the one place you go to go places. Members only, savings vary, see site for details. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to The Mel Robbins Podcast. I am so excited you're here. It is always an honor to be together and to spend this time with you. And if you're a new listener, or you're here because someone shared this episode with you, I just wanted to take a moment and personally welcome you to The Mel Robbins Podcast family. Now, before we get started, I just have to say something. The title is self-explanatory, but today's conversation is a candid, grown-up discussion about sex, intimacy, and sexual arousal and pleasure. So if you got little ears around, could you please pop in headphones or save this for later? Okay. We alone? Good. I am so excited to tell you about our guest today because she's here to teach you, that you can reinvent your sex life at any age. She has everything that women need to hear about pleasure and sex. Her name, Dr. Nicole McNichols. Dr. McNichols is a professor at the University of Washington, who teaches the single most popular course at that university. Based on the number of students that take it, she's probably one of the most popular professors in the United States. Today, you're getting a front row seat in her class. Dr. McNichols is responsible for reinventing the sex lives of millions of people who follow her online for her science-backed wisdom, myth-busting facts and her contagious passion for teaching the truth about sex and pleasure. Dr. McNichols' new book is called, You Could Be Having Better Sex. And after listening today, you will be. Please help me welcome Dr. Nicole McNichols to The Mel Robbins Podcast.
Speaker 2:
[05:29] Thank you, Mel. I'm so excited to be here.
Speaker 1:
[05:31] I'm really excited that you're here too, because I know I personally would like to be having better sex. And I'm sure as you're listening, you would like to be having better sex. And so let's start with this. Dr. McNichols, what could change about my life if I take everything to heart that you're about to share with us today and I apply it to my life?
Speaker 2:
[05:54] Mel, if you take all of my advice today to heart, I am going to give you a roadmap to having amazing, incredible sex. And it's not going to be the kind of sex that you see in porn or the kind of sex that you see on shows, on TV, or that makes you feel like, oh my god, that's just an unattainable goal. It's going to be the kind of sex that feels not only pleasurable, but authentically connected to who you are as a person. And I just want to tell anyone who's listening to this podcast, this podcast episode is for you if you're in a 20-year marriage, if you are finding your way back to each other, but don't quite know how, if you are newly single and trying to figure out what sex and dating are like now that you're in this new phase of your life, if you are having okay sex, but you just have this sense that it could be a bit better, I want to really be able to speak to all of those people and tell them that I can give you the science-backed tools and roadmap toward cultivating a truly pleasurable sex life.
Speaker 1:
[07:03] Wow. Is that also true if I'm tired?
Speaker 2:
[07:07] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[07:08] Or I feel self-conscious about my body or I haven't been with somebody in a number of years.
Speaker 2:
[07:15] It truly is. This is actually such an incredibly burgeoning area of research because it's become so clear just how exhausted people are, how exhausted women especially are. You have so much going on in your life between a career, your family, the two dogs, the people who are all depending on you. I think, and this is a message especially for women, we're so socialized to be taking care of other people and to be attending to other people's needs and I'm telling you that this is about reclaiming something that you really deserve and that is within your reach. A great sex life is not something that is just reserved for people who are in new relationships or have a certain sexual chemistry that's determined from the very start or that are single and have actually real time to give to it. There really are some basic simple habits that we can talk about that will change your state of mind and allow you to achieve the type of sex life that you want, that you just may not know how to get to yet.
Speaker 1:
[08:26] It's so interesting that we're starting here because, you're right, when you are in a new relationship and the chemistry is dazzling, sex is easy and it amplifies everything. I'll just speak for myself personally, being married for 30 years, it really does, I hate to use this word, but it starts to feel almost like a burden and you forget what an amazing, intimate sexual experience can bring into your life. What does cultivating a great sex life for yourself add to your life personally that maybe we lose sight of?
Speaker 2:
[09:08] Well, I'm so glad you brought that up because we tend to think of sex as something that's just a treat, right? If you even look at the language that we use around it, it's you get lucky or save room for dessert. And, you know, the reality is that sex is something that needs to be prioritized. We understand the effects of exercise or the benefits of nutrition, but most of us don't really have an awareness of the basic benefits of sex. For example, we know that sex, when it's, you know, satisfying and consensual and connected, it leads to increased physical health, right? It leads to increased cardiovascular health. It protects the brain against degenerative diseases. There are even some studies that it predicts longevity. So sex is something that truly is important, but even more than that, it builds ego resilience. And what I mean by that is when you prioritize pleasure, when it becomes something that you spend time cultivating in your life, you experience this upward cycle where you gain this ego resilience. It fills your bucket, so to speak. It causes you to have a broadening effect. You turn outwards. You seek more sources of social support. It allows you to think more creatively, even at a basic cognitive level. The data shows that when we experience pleasure, we're able to think more creatively and abstractly. And so we tend to think that pleasure is superfluous, but the reality is we need pleasure in our lives to be able to even just accomplish all of these things that we want to, to live the lives that we want to live. And beyond that, at a more concrete level, if we're looking at relationships specifically, we also have long-term studies looking at couples. And what we find is that, yes, you know, as most people know, sexual satisfaction and relationship satisfaction are highly correlated. But it's not the case that just improving your relationship or having high levels of relationship satisfaction are going to naturally lead to a better sex life. What we know is that when people's sex lives improve, when they experience an uptick in sexual satisfaction later on, they experience more relationship satisfaction. In other words, working on your sex life will improve your relationship in an important, very authentic, powerful way that really deserves attention.
Speaker 1:
[11:49] What I love about this conversation already, I can't wait to trap my husband in a car. Be like, hey, let's listen to The Mel Robbins Podcast and put this on. Because I think this conversation, listening to it with the person that you are in a relationship with, if you are in a relationship right now, could really open some things up. So I just want to give a couple take aways that I've gotten so far just at the very beginning. Number one, it is transformative just to switch your mindset from thinking about sex as a, I should, I need to, I have to, to just it being a conversation about pleasure and allowing pleasure in your life and prioritizing pleasure in your life.
Speaker 2:
[12:34] Exactly, 100%.
Speaker 1:
[12:36] The second take away that I got already is you talked all about, what was it called, ego something?
Speaker 2:
[12:42] Ego resilience.
Speaker 1:
[12:43] Ego resilience. And what does that mean exactly?
Speaker 2:
[12:47] It's essentially an academic term for what we think of as resiliency, meaning you're going to be faced with life's inevitable challenges. There's going to be problems that are thrown your way, but what we don't realize is that pleasure actually fuels you to be able to meet those head on. When we're given sources of pleasure, it's those negative challenges can be right there, but we're just more creative and more likely to find the people and the ideas that are going to help us to solve those very problems. So sex is important, yes, for your health, for your well-being, for your relationship, but it's also going to play a transformative part in your life that is not superfluous, but is actually absolutely essential to your well-being.
Speaker 1:
[13:39] I've never actually looked at sex this way. Like I'm having this huge aha moment about the role that pleasure plays in your life. Because if you really just stop and consider what Dr. McNichols is saying, if your whole life is one giant to-do list, if it's work, if it's taking care of other people, you start to feel like that's your only value.
Speaker 2:
[14:01] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[14:01] When you create intentionally the space to allow yourself to feel pleasure, that you deserve that as part of your life, it makes you feel like a whole person. And it also almost feels like this little space where you get to be you and you get to experience something other than all of the demands of your life.
Speaker 2:
[14:24] Yes, exactly. And I'm here to tell you that all of us deserve that.
Speaker 1:
[14:30] Wow. And then the final takeaway that I had, and I've never really seen this before, is the connection between allowing pleasure into your life, creating the space for it, being intentional about it, and how that must boost your sense of self-worth.
Speaker 2:
[14:48] I think all people recognize that this is an area of their lives that they would like to improve, but that if you're able to do the work of figuring out what turns you on, prioritizing pleasure, figuring out how to communicate that to a partner, how to keep some elements of novelty alive while still not becoming a whole different person, that that very skill set that is going to enable you to have an incredible satisfying sex life, that's going to translate into other areas of your life. I mean, really, when you're prioritizing sexual intimacy, you're prioritizing yourself and you're developing skills that are going to help you in just about every other area.
Speaker 1:
[15:33] I want to read to you from your best selling book, You Could Be Having Better Sex. This is on page 18. Here's the reality of sex and pleasure that most people try to deny. We are not born knowing which sensations and which types of sexual activities we will one day enjoy. Just as we're not born knowing which food we'll like and what kinds of entertainment we'll prefer. We learn about our sexual likes and dislikes, the same way we learn about what pleases us in other areas of life, through experimentation. And then you go on to say you may love certain techniques and sexual positions when you're younger and different ones as you age. Turn-ons and pleasure zones evolve throughout your lifetime. So what is the invitation in terms of how you want us to listen to everything that you're about to teach us?
Speaker 2:
[16:30] The reality is that, yeah, we're born thinking that, okay, we should just all be really good at sex. So we should just know instantly what turns each other on. But the reality, and this may not sound sexy, is that sex is a skill, right? And it's like any other skill that we have in our life, right? Trial and error, making mistakes, you know, I mean, this is why, if you want to improve your sex life, and I think that for many women who are feeling like there's nothing that you can do to change it, that sex is just kind of the way it is, that married sex never changes, there's so much research coming out now showing the power of a sexual growth mindset. And what that is, is the ability to lean into this idea that you need to try different things, that there needs to be communication, that it's okay if you try something that just simply epically fails and you learn to just laugh at it. And so when I talk about this idea with people and especially my students, they're quick to be like, well, wait a minute, what about that guy that I met when I was back on spring break, Eduardo, and he did that thing with his tongue. He really instantly knew what he was doing. I'm not saying, Mel, that sexual unicorns don't exist, right?
Speaker 1:
[17:56] Everybody wants now Eduardo's tongue skill taught.
Speaker 2:
[18:02] I'm telling you-
Speaker 1:
[18:03] Like, what was Eduardo doing with his tongue on spring break?
Speaker 2:
[18:05] We need to get there, but I'm telling you, we can teach each other to have Eduardo's tongue. It's just his trial and error. It is accessible. I want to give you Eduardo's tongue and I know that I can do that.
Speaker 1:
[18:20] How do you start to live with a sexual growth mindset?
Speaker 2:
[18:24] You start to lean into this idea of experimentation and failure and learning to communicate through that, right? And so when we look at couples, for example, and we ask them about, you know, well, what do you believe about sex? What are your attitudes? People who have a sexual growth mindset, they say, I do believe that sex over time can change, that it can improve, that if I communicate with my partner and we learn about what turns us on, and if we engage in things like masturbation, which gets completely shamed in our culture but is a totally necessary tool to understand your body, you can learn and you can bring those conversations, no matter how awkward or scary they may seem, to your partner and your sex life can improve. And it won't improve overnight and it may take some time and there will be things that, you know, oh no, actually, honey, that wasn't quite Eduardo's tongue, but let's try this instead. But you can get there, you know, whereas people with sexual destiny beliefs, which are the opposite of sexual growth beliefs, they tend to think sex is what it is, right? Married sex just kind of never changes. A person has a certain level of skill. It never gets better. And those are the people that really start to struggle. And it really is that mindset that is just way more predictive of sexual satisfaction than any kind of innate skill set that we think that we're simply born with.
Speaker 1:
[19:57] Well, I love that because then the first step is just literally adjusting your mindset to say, we can make this better. We can learn how to have more pleasure together. We can experiment and have fun. You know, for the person who's listening who really just wants more sex or better sex, what is the biggest misconception that is keeping them stuck from having more or better sex?
Speaker 2:
[20:24] I think in the context of relationships, it's that an amazing sexual experience begins with feeling wildly turned on and excited the minute your partner walks in the door. But for the vast majority of us, you know, especially women who are in long-term relationships and who have a lot of things on their plate, desire might be something that kicks in only after you've started touching your partner. Sometimes we need to get out there and actually be trying an action. And then we realize, oh, this is actually really fun. This feels really good. My mind and my body do want this. And so in learning tools to sort of allow yourself to get into the mindset where you can be physically intimate with your partner and be touching your partner and be connected to your partner, I think people don't realize that sex can be incredible even when it comes from that place.
Speaker 1:
[21:33] That place of like, I don't really feel like it, but I know I want better sex, so I'm going to reach over and touch you even though I'm not turned on. I think a lot of times, okay, this is probably about to turn into my own personal sex therapy session, but a lot of times there is that ambivalence that you feel that you want to be closer, but maybe you don't want to have an incourse. Do you see what I mean? Because I'm in that mode where I'm not really, I'm tired. But I love you, and I'm trying to signal that I want to kiss and hold you for a little bit, but I don't really want to have to do all the others. You know what I'm saying? Is that a common concern?
Speaker 2:
[22:12] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[22:13] Do you hear that?
Speaker 2:
[22:13] Oh, absolutely. I think that really the key there is building habits of being able to touch your partner in non-sexual ways on a regular basis, right? Your phone should not be the last thing that you touch at night before you go to bed and put it down, right? There should be some kind of cuddling. It's just that physical touch and connection. But I think what happens is that if you don't have that regularly in your life, then every time your partner goes to touch you, you're going to kind of feel like, oh, God, no, wait, I don't want, I don't have the energy for this tonight, right? You almost feel yourself recoil. And that can be a horrible feeling because you know you love your partner, you know you're connected, you know you're attracted to them and they're touching you. And suddenly you feel like, oh God, this feels like there's an obligation if I engage in this. And so I think we need to normalize cuddling each other, right? Even if it's just hugging, if you just simply hug your partner for 90 seconds a day, it's going to build relationship satisfaction and it's going to lead to you naturally experiencing more desire.
Speaker 1:
[23:27] Well, that's a great specific thing to do. If you're the person that wants to be having better sex, but you're in that mode where you don't want the touch to signal like, it's on. The takeaway here is just start more non-sexual touch, more like looking at the person in the eyes, holding their hands while you're sitting on the couch. That kind of intimacy builds the bridge that then helps you step toward the actual kind of growth mindset around sex when you hit the bedroom.
Speaker 2:
[24:02] Yes, exactly, exactly. But the other thing that I think is really important for people and especially women to know, is normalize giving yourself the space and having patience for yourself to know, I might not be wildly turned on right now, but why don't we try cuddling or why don't we try even just being next to each other, having the sides of our bodies touch while we're reading our books or watch whatever it is that we're doing. If you start doing that, and this is backed by years, decades of research, a lot of times you will find your body starting to turn on, right? You get close to your partner and you start to think, oh, this, I want this, this feels good. And then one thing leads to another and you are having incredible sex. We need to give ourselves permission to explore the possibility of intimacy on certain evenings where we're not quite positive if it's what we're really aiming for that night, right? Give our bodies time to turn on.
Speaker 1:
[25:10] Is there research around how long it takes, you know, the average person or the average woman, like, to turn on, so to speak?
Speaker 2:
[25:18] I mean, one of the most common refrains is, I need more foreplay, right? And so, yes, you know, and that revolves around this idea that we tend to treat sex according to this very heteronormative script where you start kissing, you start touching, maybe there's a little bit of oral, you go to penetration, he has an orgasm and it's over, right? Very sad script.
Speaker 1:
[25:42] Everyone's thinking, were you in my bedroom last night, like Dr. McNichols? Exactly.
Speaker 2:
[25:47] And we need to throw that out, right? This is one of the reasons that we find a huge orgasm gap is that we rely so heavily on, you know, that idea of penetrative sex being put on a pedestal. It's also why when we look at queer couples, they tend to have more equal and higher levels of orgasm rate because they're not just starting from the position of, oh, you know, sex equals penetration and then he comes and it's over. But if we're regularly setting, you know, a part time with our partner to allow us to transition mentally and calm our nervous systems, right? Allow our nervous systems to sync up, connect with each other, not just about our days, but about larger things happening in our lives that we're excited or anxious or worried about and really feeling seen and heard in that moment. If we're setting again this time for intimacy, that's going to lead to much better and more frequent sex.
Speaker 1:
[26:57] I mean, it makes sense. What is one adult sex ed fact, Dr. McNichols, about women's pleasure? That most people were never taught, but can like change your sex life immediately.
Speaker 2:
[27:09] The reality that most people are not taught is that only 18% of women can have an orgasm from penetrative sex alone.
Speaker 1:
[27:20] Only 18%?
Speaker 2:
[27:21] Let that sink in. The rest needs some kind of clitoral stimulation, either in conjunction while you're having penetrative sex or on its own. So when I teach this and show this data in my class, I have so many people on the edge of their seats, right? Women feeling normalized, right? My female students feeling like, God, I thought I was broken that I couldn't have, you know, sex just from normal, you know, as we call it in the literature, penis and vagina sex. And also men who feel like, oh my God, this explains it. I thought it was a failure on my part that I wasn't, you know, doing sex right, right? That I was bailing, you know? But unfortunately we don't teach people that. And it leads to a huge epidemic of people faking orgasms, especially women faking orgasms. Which does not lead to anyone's pleasure at all.
Speaker 1:
[28:24] Is it true, I read in your book, that the human clitoris was only mapped out in 2015. That's just a decade ago.
Speaker 2:
[28:34] It was actually 2005, but it took about 10 years for it to come into mainstream literature. Isn't that wild, Mel? I mean, if you think about it, right? I mean, and the reason why of course, is that the clitoris' only purpose is sexual pleasure. It plays zero role in reproduction. And so historically, you know, because female sexual pleasure has been placed in this framework of not important, right? If anything threatening, it was just ignored. It was viewed as inconsequential. But luckily, in 2005, a very famous scientist, Dr. Helen O'Connell, through MRI studies, was able to map its full structure. And it completely turned on its head everything we know about female pleasure and everything we know about female anatomy.
Speaker 1:
[29:30] Wow.
Speaker 2:
[29:31] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[29:31] Dr. McNichols, in all of your research and your teaching and writing your best selling book, you have identified that there are myths that people believe about sex that keep you alone every night. I want to go through them. Myth number one, Dr. McNichols, is believing that your genitals are supposed to look a certain way and that there's a normal way for them to look.
Speaker 2:
[29:53] Exactly. That is a huge myth that causes so much insecurity, right? People think that their labia are supposed to have a certain perfect ratio of the outer labia and the inner labia, which usually hang a little bit below or come peek outside the outer labia. So, vulvas come in all beautiful shapes and sizes, but penises also come in all different lengths and widths.
Speaker 1:
[30:21] What is the average size of a penis?
Speaker 2:
[30:23] It is about five and a half inches.
Speaker 1:
[30:26] Erect?
Speaker 2:
[30:26] Erect. Yes, exactly, which is not nearly as big as what we're used to seeing in porn or on the internet.
Speaker 1:
[30:35] So for somebody who's listening that has, for their entire lifetime, shame themselves because they believe they are too small.
Speaker 2:
[30:42] Right.
Speaker 1:
[30:43] Dr. McNichols, what do you want them to know?
Speaker 2:
[30:46] I want you to know that the size of your penis does not matter at all in terms of its ability to pleasure another person, that you are capable of experiencing just as much pleasure as any other person with a penis, and that it is not a measure of your manhood in any kind of way or form. You don't need an enormous, ridiculously huge penis to be having great sex. If you do, great! Congratulations! High five! That's awesome! But it is not a prerequisite to incredible orgasms and sex.
Speaker 1:
[31:28] Dr. McNichols, I am so glad you're here. I love how you are explaining this. I feel so empowered already. I know you do too as you're listening. I need to hit the pause button. I don't want to, but we need to. I got to give my sponsors a chance to share a few words, but I want to give you a chance to share this, because if you're listening and you're thinking, oh my God, my partner needs to hear this, or my sister needs to hear this, or holy cow, this is unbelievable. Be generous with this. Share this episode with one person that you love, whether that's your spouse, your partner, your best friend, your sister, somebody who you know could benefit from this really no-holds-barred conversation about pleasure. Do it now, and don't go anywhere, because we will be back with more from the amazing Dr. McNichols in just a few minutes. Stay with me. I swear, this time of year, shouldn't it count as a workout? I mean, you're hauling boxes, host and family, chasing kids, juggling a hundred things, and somehow you still feel guilty for not working out? On top of that, temptation is everywhere. Cookies in the break room, leftover pie in the fridge, drive through dinners because you're too tired to cook. It's so easy. Oh my gosh, to let your goals slide. That's where Peloton comes in. They've just released the new Peloton Cross Training Tread Plus powered by Peloton IQ, their most advanced piece of equipment yet. It's not just a treadmill. It's a full cross-training experience that helps you break through the busiest time of the year without losing momentum. Peloton IQ gives you real-time strength coaching. It tracks your form, counts your reps, even suggests weights and goals as you go. This is smarter, safer training that fits your schedule. And with that swivel screen, you can go from a 45-minute run to a five-minute stretch without missing a beat. It's variety that keeps you engaged in personalized plans that keep you consistent even when life tries to throw you off. So let yourself run, lift, sculpt, push and go. Explore the new Peloton Cross Training Tread Plus at onepeloton.com. Oh boy, you know that stretch right after winter break when the kids go back to school and it's like their brains are still on vacation? Trying to get them to focus? I mean, you basically need a bulldozer. The motivation is gone. It's easy for them to fall behind. That's why you need IXL. IXL is an award-winning online learning platform that helps kids truly understand what they're learning. It covers math, language arts, science and social studies from pre-K through 12th grade with personalized interactive practice that adapts to your child's level and pace. So it's not more pressure. It's a simple way to keep skills sharp and help them feel capable again. And it's trusted. IXL is used in 96th of the top 100 school districts in the United States. So if you want an easy way to support your kids as the school year moves into the most important stretch, check out IXL. Make an impact on your child's learning. Get IXL now. And The Mel Robbins Podcast listeners, that's you, can get an exclusive 20% off IXL membership when you sign up today at ixl.com/mel. Visit ixl.com/mel to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price. This is a paid ad by BetterHelp. February is the month of love. And when it comes to love and romantic relationships, let's be honest, no one has it figured out. Everybody may look like they have it all together, but everyone's just a work in progress. And wherever you are on your romance journey, whether you're single, dating, whether you're married, or you're just focusing on you, therapy can be a helpful way to just sort through everything. And getting started with therapy has never been easier with BetterHelp. Signing up for therapy with BetterHelp can help you find your way by understanding what you want from a relationship and taking some of the pressure off yourself. BetterHelp is the world's largest online therapy platform and handles the work of matching a therapist for you. You just fill out a short questionnaire about your needs and preferences and thanks to BetterHelp's industry-leading match fulfillment rate, they usually get your match right the first time. Plus you can feel confident knowing BetterHelp therapists are fully qualified and work according to a strict code of conduct. Everyone is still finding their way. Find yours and feel lighter. Sign up and get 10% off at betterhelp.com/melrobbins. That's betterhelp.com/melrobbins. Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins, and you and I are here with the extraordinary Dr. McNichols, and we're learning how to reinvent your sex life and have more pleasure at any age, any stage. You know, another myth, Dr. McNichols, that people believe is that if you don't orgasm fast, or you take too long, that there's something wrong with you.
Speaker 2:
[36:21] Yes, and so this is particularly true, I think, among women. First of all, if you're looking at a sexual experience, on average, a woman has an orgasm about 10 to 15 minutes in, right? For a male, it's five minutes within the beginning of penetration, right? Or the beginning of stimulation. So most women, right, in the context of partnered sex, at least in the context of straight sex, if they're having any kind of an orgasm from penetrative sex, is having a lot later in than it is for men. That is normal. Just because it takes a little bit longer does not mean at all that it is less intense or less pleasurable, right? We tend to be so incredibly focused on numbers, right? If you even look at the language around sex, achieving orgasms, right? Finishing, right? We're so numbers and goal-oriented. It's okay if it takes a little bit longer. In fact, that's better, right? It means that it's more exploratory, right? It's a longer experience. But the other thing is just coming back to the importance of the clitoris. Although we find that women in having partnered sex, right? Within the context of straight sex will have an orgasm later in than men. When you look at the speed with which an orgasm occurs for men and women when they're masturbating, it's exactly the same. It's about four to five minutes.
Speaker 1:
[37:57] Okay. I just want to make sure I heard that.
Speaker 2:
[38:00] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[38:00] And that as you're listening or watching on YouTube, you got that.
Speaker 2:
[38:03] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[38:04] That the average length of time that it takes a woman to have an orgasm is about 15 minutes if you're full on intercourse. But if you're masturbating, men and women achieve orgasm within four to five minutes. That's because we know what we're doing.
Speaker 2:
[38:19] Exactly. Because we know what we're doing. And we tend to be stimulating the clitoris, right? Again, penetrative sex is incredible, but it's not the most efficient path towards orgasm, right? It's wonderful for things to take longer, but you're not weird if you're taking longer having a type of sex that just naturally isn't designed to be stimulating the parts of you that are most important when it comes to pleasure.
Speaker 1:
[38:49] Well, and what's interesting is that since we began with you basically saying, let's flip our mindset and let's really think about your sex life as allowing pleasure in, the second you focus on whether or not you're going to orgasm, now you're in the burden zone versus just being in the moment and allowing whatever it is to feel good.
Speaker 2:
[39:12] And it's that kind of pressure that leads to so many women faking orgasms, right? Over 50% of women say they have faked an orgasm at some point. And when you interview them and ask for the reasons, it's because often they felt like they had to protect their partner's feelings, right? That if they didn't orgasm, that they'd be making their partner feel like they just weren't a man, right? Or that they just weren't a good sexual partner. And that it would lead to sort of this dynamic where one person felt insecure and rejected. And it just leads to more and more pressure. And again, the more pressure you're putting on the sexual experience, the less likely you are to enjoy it, right? The less likely it is to be pleasurable.
Speaker 1:
[40:04] I think 50% is probably a low number. And if you're being honest with yourself, if you faked an orgasm to either finish things and be done with it, or because it's taking too long and now you're up in your head and you're not enjoying it, and now you don't want them to feel bad. So it's like an out.
Speaker 2:
[40:20] The trick to pleasurable sex isn't this innate ability to have an orgasm that is just somebody's permanent skill set, right? It's through communication. It's through being able to use phrases like, guide me or show me what you want or is this feeling good or should I do more of this or show me what you like? It's using slight shifts in position or slight shifts in initiating something that feels really good to you. It's using sighs and moans to again communicate what's working, right? And so it's shutting down honest communication if you're just shutting yourself off from your partner by faking an orgasm and essentially using deception, right? And if you think about the couple that's been together maybe for 20, 30 years and there's been a repeated pattern of faking orgasms, it can be a really hard place to all of a sudden, you know, 20 years in say, honey, I've actually been faking orgasms all this time, right? And all of a sudden, it's sort of this monumental time when you're like, oh my gosh, our sex life just hasn't been what I thought it was, right? Now there is a path back from that.
Speaker 1:
[41:44] What is it?
Speaker 2:
[41:45] It's first, you need to figure out what does turn you on. You need to masturbate. You need to, whether it's on your own, in the shower, with one of the amazingly creative, technologically advanced sex toys we now have available to us, you need to learn what the types of touch and sensation are that make you feel at home and connected to your body. You need to give yourself permission to maybe take longer, like we talked about, than what the whole world has taught you is necessary and expected, right? And it's through communication, right? And this might look like having a conversation with your partner, right? Or you say, look, I know this topic is really awkward, but it's important to us, and I want sex to be as pleasurable as it is. And so let's have an actual conversation, right? And this is why in my book, I give all sorts of questions that couples can ask each other to try to improve the sex that's in their relationship.
Speaker 1:
[42:57] I have so many thoughts. I am so happy you're here, because I do believe that if you listen to this conversation with your partner, it will open the door. And I applaud anybody that is willing to say out loud to somebody, I really want to work with you to improve this. My husband did that in our relationship four years ago. Now we're going to be married 30 years this year. And I remember when he came to me and said, you know, one of my goals this year is that we really lean in and improve our sex life. And when he first said that, Dr. McNichols, I was like, what do you mean? What's wrong with it? What am I not doing? And now I have to do more? Like it just was this, and the poor guy is just trying to connect around something so important. And I remember feeling very much like, I'm doing something wrong.
Speaker 2:
[43:51] Right. And I think so many couples struggle with that. It can immediately feel like a rejection or wait, oh my God, you mean, are you not happy in our sex life? Is something missing? Is it not as good as I thought it was? And so yeah, learning to have those larger conversations where you ask each other really important questions, but you have to frame it as I love you, right? This is important to us, to me, to you, right? Sexual intimacy is something I would really love to focus on and I'm attracted to you and I love you so much. And this is an area of our life that I feel like we should work on because it's fun and because it can always get better, right? And I feel like if you're, you know, setting it up with the positive, right? Because one thing that is so true when it comes to sexual communication is that if you are stressing what's working, stressing what's positive, right? Talking about, well, what's the best sex we've ever had, right? Or what helps you to feel the most turned on? What are different types of micro-novelty that we could introduce?
Speaker 1:
[45:14] What's a micro-novelty?
Speaker 2:
[45:15] Oh, micro-novelty is, so we've all heard that novelty is critical in keeping sex alive. But we tend to be scared of it, right? We think that novelty means going to the sex shop, buying the whip, getting the paddle, right? Or that we have to become almost a completely different person in order to have novelty and experience the sex life we want. But the reality is that, yes, novelty is important. And the research shows that couples who introduce some form of novelty once a month or more, right, so a total of 12 times a year, we're talking, experience greater levels of sexual satisfaction than couples who engage in less novelty. So it is important. It doesn't need to look like swinging from the chandeliers.
Speaker 1:
[46:08] Because I was going to say the paddles and the whips and stuff sound like macro.
Speaker 2:
[46:12] Right, they're macro. And if that's what you're into, go for it, right? By all means. I have a whole chapter in my book if you are interested in exploring that. But it could be trying a different technique, right? A different type of touch that I go deeply into, right? Read chapters two and three where I talk about all these different types of touch and technique that can be really pleasurable. It could be setting the mood in a slightly different way, right? We have research showing that couples in long-term relationships who set the mood and, you know, this is sort of sweet and you can take with this with a grain of salt. But couples who say I love you during sex report higher levels of sexual satisfaction. Kissing, kissing more during sex, increases the chances of orgasm among women and increases sexual satisfaction, right? So it might be having sex at a slightly different time of day, right? Maybe instead of saving it until the end of the day when you're exhausted or after a huge meal, you schedule it for before you go out to dinner or before you go out at night or earlier in the day, right? It could be that you've noticed that the best sex of your life happens when you're on vacation. Maybe it's making an effort to schedule more time to go away just the two of you or get a hotel in the city you live. Why do you have to be traveling to do that even just for a single night? Or it could be introducing a blindfold or one of these types of sensation play that doesn't involve any kind of pain, maybe a little pinwheel, maybe it's ice cubes, right? Maybe the blindfold, which increases your attention to your body, the sensations you're experiencing, all of these things, you don't have to be, again, whipping out the paddle. You can, but it's not necessary.
Speaker 1:
[48:09] I mean, the sleep mask is right there next to the bed. I could probably be using it.
Speaker 2:
[48:12] Just put the sleep mask on.
Speaker 1:
[48:16] Normally, that signals something else, but you could introduce micro-novels and be like, let's go.
Speaker 2:
[48:22] Okay, I think on your sleep mask, it could be double-sided. So like one side means sleep, but the other side is your clue.
Speaker 1:
[48:30] Sex is what it means. Sleep versus sex.
Speaker 2:
[48:33] Exactly, and the beauty of things like a mask or any kind of, when you're cutting off one sensation, you're automatically, your body is compensating by tuning in to other sensations. So you are immediately going to be more sensitive to touch, and you're also going to be sort of more in the present because you're going to be so focused on that type of touch because your body is relying on it.
Speaker 1:
[49:00] Dr. McNichols, you are explaining so much. I feel so empowered. I know as you're listening, you feel the same way. And here's what I want to do. I'm going to hit the pause button. Let's give some love to our sponsors, listen to what they have to say. But please share this episode, share with your partner, especially if you're starting to feel like roommates, or you don't know how to bring the topic of pleasure or your sex life up without it getting awkward or tense. Let Dr. McNichols open the door and don't go anywhere. Because coming up, she has more specific and simple steps that are going to help you reconnect with pleasure in your life, reconnect with the person that you love without shame, without blame, without pressure, and don't go anywhere. There is so much more we're going to dig into when we come back. Stay with me. Relationships are hard. You know that fight you keep having, the one that starts about the dishes and ends up with, you never listen to me. Yeah, it's not about the dishes. Listen up because my good friend Jay Shetty just dropped a new Audible original series called Messy Love, Difficult Conversations for Deeper Connection. And the whole point is love isn't perfect. It's practice. In this series, Jay guides three couples through the kinds of conversations most people avoid, but they're so important. You're invited into real coaching sessions behind closed doors, couples working through resentment, broken trust, and the family baggage people drag into relationships. There's no script here. Just real talk about real life. And what makes messy love powerful is you don't just hear the hard moments. You get tools you can use. How to communicate with clarity and compassion, how to break the blame and withdraw cycle, how to rebuild trust, create emotional safety, and appreciate every day. It's emotional, raw, hopeful. This is messy love. Go to audible.com/messylove to start listening today. So what goals do you have for yourself this year? New job? A move? Writing a book? Meditating? Well, here's one that matters a lot. Taking better care of yourself and your body, starting with your heart. February is Heart Health Month, so I want to remind you about an easy way to stay on top of your prescriptions and save money doing it. GoodRx. GoodRx is free. It's an app and a website that helps you save on your prescriptions. All you do is search your medication, compare prices and grab a free coupon to use at the pharmacy counter. It works at over 70,000 pharmacies. Walmart, Walgreens, CVS, Publix, Kroger, basically everywhere. GoodRx isn't insurance, but it works whether you have insurance or not, and it may even beat your copay. GoodRx also offers 30 popular heart health medications for less than $30, and you can find expert information on managing high cholesterol, blood pressure, and diabetes. Stay smart about your heart. Check GoodRx to save time and money on prescriptions. Go to goodrx.com/mel. That's goodrx.com/mel. You know, the other day, I was out in Los Angeles, and I saw somebody who's pretty famous wearing this crazy cool cashmere vest, and it looked so comfy. And when I gave her a hug, because she's a fan of The Mel Robbins Podcast, I was like, oh my God, I need that. And she showed me the brand. And here's what I thought, I'm going to see if Quince has that. Now, Quince is one of the sponsors of this show. I love Quince because they have luxury essentials that feel effortless. They look polished. They're perfect for layering, mixing, and building a wardrobe that you'll wear on repeat. Their Mongolian cashmere is absolutely incredible, and it feels like all the pricey designer sweaters without the markup. And so I looked on Quince, and you want to know what they had? They had almost the exact same cashmere vest. You want to know how much less? 80% less, and it wasn't even on sale. It didn't need to be on sale, because it was so reasonable. How do they do that? They cut out the middleman, and they pass on the savings to you and me. You have all of the luxury, all of the quality, all of the style, without the cost. Refresh your wardrobe with Quince. Don't wait. Go to quince.com/mel for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Now available in Canada too. That's quince.com/mel to get free shipping and 365-day returns. quince.com/mel. Welcome back, it's your friend Mel Robbins today. You and I are talking with the extraordinary Dr. McNichols. We're learning all about the importance of pleasure, the importance of sex, and enjoying your sex life at any age and any stage. All right, let's just jump back right in. Dr. McNichols, another myth that people believe about sex is that if you fantasize about something, it must mean you really want it, and you feel guilty for even thinking about it.
Speaker 2:
[53:59] I really wish I could free people from the shame that they experience around their sexual fantasies. There's wonderful research on it that exists now. And one of the major takeaways is that people fantasize about really wild, diverse things. And that what you fantasize about is not necessarily what you want in real life.
Speaker 1:
[54:27] So, Dr. McNichols, how do you want us to think about our sexual fantasies?
Speaker 2:
[54:33] I want you to first of all normalize whatever fantasy you're having. So, for those of you who are wondering, the most popular sexual fantasy in America is threesomes. So, let's take that as an example. Multi-partnered sex. Not everyone that is having a fantasy about threesomes actually wants to have a threesome, right? In other words, a lot of people might kind of have that fantasy. It gets them turned on. Maybe they even think about it when they're masturbating. But the reality of a threesome feels overwhelming, unappealing. Do you, you know, how would that even work? I mean, personally, I know with my ADHD, I don't think it would, it's too much. It's-
Speaker 1:
[55:20] I fall into that category.
Speaker 2:
[55:21] Yeah. But it doesn't mean that it's not natural to fantasize about it. Same thing with taboo activities, right? Having sex in a public place, right? Public sex is a very common sexual fantasy. Having sex in the airplane bathroom, right? Having sex in a situation where you might get caught, right? Very, very common. They're tied to certain interesting personality correlates, but they don't necessarily predict what we want to have happen in real life. It's not just that we're having fantasies about wild kinky things. The reality is that all of us really want to be desired, right? Feeling like somebody else really wants you is a huge aphrodisiac, which I don't know if you've seen the show Heated Rivalry.
Speaker 1:
[56:14] Okay. For anybody who has not seen this show, this show, right now as we're taping this conversation, everybody's talking about it. It's about two male pro hockey players who are our arch rivals, who fall crazy, madly, obsessively in love with each other. I binge watched it with my husband.
Speaker 2:
[56:34] Love that.
Speaker 1:
[56:35] Never in a million years did I think a television series about two male hockey players falling in love and having sex would be one of the biggest turn-ons ever. It's helped my sex life so much to watch He Did Right. I'm like, why? I was really thinking about this because I think it was observing the desire on your knees, take your pants off. After 30 years of marriage, watching this show, I'm like, oh my god, I remember that.
Speaker 2:
[57:09] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[57:14] Why does that happen? What was happening in that? Because if you had the same experience, I'm sure it is enlivening the sex lives of millions of heterosexual women, but why?
Speaker 2:
[57:27] Exactly. That's what's fascinating is that the main viewership of that show are heterosexual millennial women. It's a hit for heterosexual women because that show taps in to our fundamental need for desire, right? If you look at those two male hockey players, it's not just about the physical sex that they're having, although to be fair, it's hot. But it's also just exploding with the tension between them, them wanting to connect with each other, have sex with each other, falling in love with each other, but feeling restrained from doing so. And I think it really speaks to the fact that, first of all, desire and passion and romance, it's one of America's top sexual fantasies, and it feeds into this very core human motivation to want to feel wanted. We all want to feel like our partner desires us. And it's also pointing into something else really fascinating about human sexuality, which is that a lot of times, the things that we fantasize about, or the things that we can watch and get turned on by, don't necessarily line up with what we want in real life. It's because we are designed as human beings to be creative in our desires and to place ourselves into imaginary situations that allow us to open ourselves to fantasies and desires and emotional states that are core to our level of wanting but that don't translate into the details of what we want to do in real life. In heated rivalry, there's this sense of egalitarianism. They're both rich, they're both hot, they're both star hockey players. And so, seeing them together, seeing them navigate a relationship where they both have equal power, it's not a man dominating a woman. It's not a woman experiencing the need and the desire which we're used to seeing. It's showing men express that desire and longing and wanting. We don't normally get to see that.
Speaker 1:
[59:56] Well, that makes perfect sense because inside each and every one of us is this innate want to be desired.
Speaker 2:
[60:04] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[60:05] And when you see people devouring each other like that in the intimacy building and the connection building, it reminds you that you want that too in your life.
Speaker 2:
[60:15] Exactly. We all fundamentally want that in our life. Heated rivalry isn't just about the actual physical sex scenes, it's about that dimension of wanting. So, I think for a lot of women, seeing that show up in men, they relate to the wanting, but also seeing that it's something that's a universal emotion, a fundamental need, not just a gendered behavior is pretty activating sexually and mentally to a lot of us.
Speaker 1:
[60:50] Dr. McNichols, you have another myth about sex, which is that this belief that your sexual identity should be fixed, that it's crystal clear to you, and that if you're still kind of figuring out your sexual identity, that there's something wrong with you.
Speaker 2:
[61:06] Yes. So, we now know from so much research, Siri Van Anders, Lisa Diamond, so many incredible researchers in this field, that show how fluid sexuality can be and how multi-dimensional, right? Meaning that sometimes the sexual orientation that you start out having stays consistent throughout your life. But a lot of times it evolves, right? A lot of times you may not be totally sure who you're attracted to, and you kind of discover it later on in adulthood or through college years. There's especially so much stigma, particularly towards people who identify as bisexual, right? Because the bisexual community in general is faced with this idea of, oh, you're just weird, you haven't decided yet what you are, you're just on a pathway to being gay. But the reality is that a lot of people are attracted to more than one gender, and that's okay. And in fact, when you look at women who identify as bisexual, they tend to have that not as just this phase that they go through and then later on become gay or straight, but it actually tends to be more often the case that they transition towards being bisexual. And that's important to point out because 23% of Gen Z nowadays identifies under the LGBTQIA plus umbrella. And of that group, 80% identifies bisexual. So I think that, you know, it's time that we celebrate that fluidity, that multidimensionality. That doesn't mean that you're secretly hiding your real sexual orientation. It just means that we're complex. And sometimes what we enjoy in our imagination is just what makes us uniquely human. And sometimes it doesn't translate into what we want in real life. So it's multidimensional. And it just also depends on the particular domain, fantasy, imagination, you know, what you actually want in real life. It can vary across those contexts as well.
Speaker 1:
[63:15] I love that answer in that context and framing because it just makes you feel normal.
Speaker 2:
[63:22] Yep.
Speaker 1:
[63:22] And it helps you put the fantasies or the things that turn you on into context of just the importance of desire and pleasure in general in your life.
Speaker 2:
[63:32] Yes, exactly.
Speaker 1:
[63:33] So helpful. A final myth that you talk about related to sex is that if you are into non-traditional sexual activities or kink or whatever else, that it's weird or it's unhealthy or there's something wrong with you.
Speaker 2:
[63:48] Yes. So there is unfortunately this long history of shame towards people who are kinky, right? And the idea is that if you are kinky, you must have experienced childhood abuse, right? That's a major myth. And that you are just trying to relive this abuse over and over and over again. And this myth is so, so pervasive that there's actual, actual studies showing that this is not the case, right? There have been studies looking at people who are kinksters and looking at their, you know, interviewing them about their childhoods. No, actually the majority were not abused as children. What it is, is, you know, a need for novelty, right? And excitement. And, you know, this is again, almost something that is being thought of as almost, you know, part of the sexual orientation research, which is that some people want connection and slowness and reassuredness and stability and security and prediction and control in their sexual experiences. And some people are just oriented to want excitement, thrill, maybe entering into a headspace that is absolutely, completely opposed to the headspace and identity that you have in the rest of your life. And that can actually be a healing thing. I want to normalize people having all different forms of sexual expressions and interests. And look, kink is something that more and more people are getting into. But again, because of the media that they see, they don't understand that it involves consent. It involves having conversations ahead of time about what you're into, what you're not into, what you want to feel, what your safe word is. And so I want to be able to normalize that. Because, I mean, here's the reality, Mel, is that those lessons that we often learn from the kink community in terms of consent and communication throughout the whole experience, is they're not just relevant to people who are practicing kink. They actually can help all of us. It really models how consent and that ongoing checking in with a partner throughout the whole experience can make sex better. It can make it hotter. It can add that excitement and that desire and that thrill. So I feel like by showing them, I'm normalizing something that somebody in the audience, many are probably thinking, okay, wow, I've always fantasized about that and I thought I was weird or broken or wrong. And we're talking about this in a really open way.
Speaker 1:
[66:30] Dr. McNichols, can you talk to us about The Clitoris?
Speaker 2:
[66:32] I actually brought some friends with me that could illustrate what we know now.
Speaker 1:
[66:37] Absolutely.
Speaker 2:
[66:38] Okay.
Speaker 1:
[66:38] Let's go there. Dr. McNichols, here we go. And if you're listening and you're not watching on YouTube, you have picked up, this is like a stuffed toy. What is that?
Speaker 2:
[66:50] This is my lovely stuffed plushy Clitoris and Bulva that shows the external structures as well as the internal structure.
Speaker 1:
[67:02] It looks like a purpley clam almost. It's like a little baby in the middle of the clam. We're wearing like a hooded towel.
Speaker 2:
[67:14] It's cute. Exactly. Oh my gosh. So I'm holding my stuffed clitoris. What I'm going to point to first is what you, Mel, pointed out as what looks like a little baby head. And this is at the top of the vulva. And just to orient you first, on the outside, it has what are known as the outer lips of the vagina, which are the labia majora. And then we have inside, we have the inner labia, which are the labia minora. Before we go any further, the inner labia are really critically important because they have tons of nerve endings in them.
Speaker 1:
[67:54] They do?
Speaker 2:
[67:55] They do, tons of nerve endings that are really related to sexual pleasure. And so people do what I call gun it for the clit in the beginning of sexual pleasure. You do not want to gun it for the clit because the clit starting out is going to be very sensitive.
Speaker 1:
[68:12] Sensitive, yeah.
Speaker 2:
[68:12] Yeah, and it's not gonna feel good if you kind of just immediately go there and touch it. See, the trick is you need to first of all embrace the idea that the full body is an erogenous zone, right? I mean, it feels good to be touched everywhere. But then you want to kind of warm up around the outer labia, which has nerve endings, and then these inner labia. Now, I need to also mention something critical about the inner labia. People don't realize how important these are for sexual pleasure. And yet, in porn, we see totally unrealistic portrayals of what they look like. People are literally going into a surgeon and having their inner labia shortened because they think it'll make it look tidier and neater according to what they see.
Speaker 1:
[69:00] Oh my god. Well, you can't even see down there, so I don't know why you'd be doing that. Unless you're very bendy. But so I just want to make sure as you're listening, like, just imagine it's the outer lips.
Speaker 2:
[69:10] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[69:10] It's the little or depending upon your body, just the ones that aren't so big on the outside.
Speaker 2:
[69:17] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[69:17] That are on the inside that you're talking about. So when you move up to the top of the anatomy, now we have the part that I described like a little baby head in there, nestled in, but that's the clitoris?
Speaker 2:
[69:33] That is the external portion of the clitoris.
Speaker 1:
[69:36] External.
Speaker 2:
[69:36] External portion. And I think this is fascinating. It originates from the exact same embryonic tissue as the glands of the penis head.
Speaker 1:
[69:44] It does?
Speaker 2:
[69:44] It does. Which if you think about it, means that by ignoring the clitoris for decades, we were essentially ignoring the equivalent of the glands of the penis, and it develops from the same tissue as the glands of the penis. Meaning it is just as critical to pleasure as the head of the penis. So this part is critical, do not lose sight of that. And then Mel, there's also a very important place right between the vulva and the entrance to the anus, that's kind of like a flat piece of skin. That can be incredibly sensitive and responsive to erotic touch. So, you know, we kind of fall into this trap of thinking, it's just about the clitoris, or it's just about the head of the penis, but all of these places can be incredibly sensitive and feed into a lot of pleasure. It's just a question about experimenting and finding what feels right to you and for your partner. But here's the thing, Mel, is that you might be thinking this, you might be listening to this episode thinking, okay, clitoris, got it, underneath the clitoral hood, check, I know where that is. But what many people don't know is that, and what was discovered in 2005, as I turn around my stuffy, What the hell is that?
Speaker 1:
[71:04] Like I don't even know to describe what the hell that is.
Speaker 2:
[71:06] These are the internal portions of the clitoris. These are incredibly important.
Speaker 1:
[71:12] Okay, so let me just make sure I'm following this. So first, Dr. McNichols, you said, don't just go right for the clitoris.
Speaker 2:
[71:20] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[71:20] Pay attention to all of that, warm things up, and then when you go to the actual clitoris, which is at the top of the female anatomy, right? That it's made from the same tissue that a penis would form from, and so it has the ability to swell and become erect when stimulated. You've now turned around the little stuffed clitoris, and now all of a sudden you've got these, like, I don't even know what to describe that as.
Speaker 2:
[71:54] It has these external wishbone structures, right, that are extending six to eight inches down inside your body.
Speaker 1:
[72:03] Inside?
Speaker 2:
[72:03] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[72:04] Wait, but when it swells, it's six to eight inches into your body?
Speaker 2:
[72:09] Yes, exactly. It's a lot longer than people realize.
Speaker 1:
[72:12] Because you only see, like, a little bit even when it swells.
Speaker 2:
[72:15] Yes, exactly.
Speaker 1:
[72:17] That's incredible.
Speaker 2:
[72:18] It's incredible. And so what we're looking at here are the outside structures, which are the crura. And then we have within the crura the vestibular bulbs, which are another sort of inner wishbone structure. Now, these are both going to fill with blood and become aroused and erect during sexual arousal. Okay, so you might be thinking, all right, well, that's fascinating. The clitoris has internal structures. But what does that mean for pleasure? It means that if we think about pleasuring the clitoris, right, we've got the glands, the outside portion. But then if we're thinking about what feels good from a penetrative standpoint, we want to be able to penetrate these internal structures. In other words, if you're watching this, if you're sticking your fingers about two to three inches inside the vagina and stimulating the upper wall, two to three inches inside, you're going to be hitting against these internal structures of the clitoris.
Speaker 1:
[73:24] So it's not just swelling outward, it's swelling inward.
Speaker 2:
[73:28] Yes, exactly. It's because all of this is inside the body, right, this is wrapping around the vagina. So you've stuck your finger.
Speaker 1:
[73:39] Nobody's ever explained this to me before.
Speaker 2:
[73:40] I know. It's critical about anatomy.
Speaker 1:
[73:44] What is the most common question that you get when you start talking about the clitoris and the anatomy of a woman?
Speaker 2:
[73:54] How big a penis has to be to be able to stimulate it, I would say is a big thing. And when I talk about the fact that this is only two to three inches inside, it's showing you that you don't need some enormous porn-sized tool to get in there.
Speaker 1:
[74:14] Literally, for a woman, right after you enter the vagina, it's just a short amount of space right inside that is swelling.
Speaker 2:
[74:22] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[74:23] Where all of those nerve endings are.
Speaker 2:
[74:26] Exactly. And so again, so this is the vagina where this clitoris is wrapping around internally. If you are, you know, again, sticking your two fingers, anything inside this, right? Where, you know, man, woman, whoever you are, and you're stimulating the top part.
Speaker 1:
[74:43] And Dr. McNichols is literally sticking her two fingers out.
Speaker 2:
[74:47] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[74:47] And you're now like lifting up.
Speaker 2:
[74:49] Exactly. The way I describe it to my students, it's kind of like the Spider-Man technique.
Speaker 1:
[74:55] Oh, you're going to spray.
Speaker 2:
[74:56] You're going to, like this, and then you're kind of going like that.
Speaker 1:
[75:00] And she's making like a come hither.
Speaker 2:
[75:02] A come hither motion.
Speaker 1:
[75:03] You both say come hither because that's kind of sexy. It's not like come over here, it's come hither.
Speaker 2:
[75:07] We're in tune.
Speaker 1:
[75:07] Yeah, you're like stroking it like Spider-Man.
Speaker 2:
[75:11] Exactly. And so, you know, we used to think of this as the G-spot, right?
Speaker 1:
[75:16] Oh, that, see, I thought the G-spot was like way up top somewhere. We're like always searching for it. It's right there?
Speaker 2:
[75:22] It's right there. It's just two to inch. And so most people are like, well, I don't have a G-spot and they're searching too far deeply into the vagina because the reality is that it's exactly, it's just two to three inches there. And it feels a little bit different than the other tissue in the vagina. The texture of it is a bit closer to a walnut as opposed to being smooth. Like, yeah, almost like the backside of cardboard. You know how that's bumpy? Like if you just put your fingers over that, right? Okay, so the G-spot actually has a long, fascinating political history behind it because, you know, Freud used to believe and tell all of us that vaginal orgasms, which were the kind that you had, you know, with penetration, a penis, were more mature than clitoral orgasms. Essentially what this was suggesting is that women who had orgasms on their own, aka masturbating, were not as emotionally evolved as people who are having orgasms with a partner.
Speaker 1:
[76:28] And you just taught us that only 18% of women can have an orgasm when there is something inserted into her.
Speaker 2:
[76:35] Exactly. So, I mean, essentially Freud was saying that 82% of us are immature simply because we can't have the kind of sex that requires a man, which if you think about it is really kind of appalling. But here's what's fascinating is that when it, you know, for a person who is having an orgasm from internal stimulation, it's usually because it's stimulating what we now call, it's not some sort of magical spot the way we used to think, like the G-spot, it's, we call it the clito-urethral vaginal complex.
Speaker 1:
[77:12] That's way too long. Clitoral-lorethral vaginal complex.
Speaker 2:
[77:15] Yes, close enough. Very good. And the idea is that all these structures are related. In other words, when you're having an orgasm from internal stimulation, you're still having a clitoral orgasm. It's just stimulating the clitoris from inside.
Speaker 1:
[77:31] Okay, hold on. I just want to make sure I just caught this. So when a woman is having an orgasm, whether it's because a penis or another object is inside of her, or she's having an orgasm because somebody is using the Spider-Man two-finger kind of come-hither wave technique, just two inches in, or she's having an orgasm because you are stimulating the outer, the inner, and the clitoral area, whenever a woman is having an orgasm, the clitoris is the thing that is pulsing. Is that right? Exactly. Why did I not know that? I always thought if you're inside me, then the orgasm is actually coming from somewhere else.
Speaker 2:
[78:18] Right.
Speaker 1:
[78:18] You're basically saying any of the stimulation is just to get the clitoris to go.
Speaker 2:
[78:23] Exactly, exactly.
Speaker 1:
[78:24] Oh my God.
Speaker 2:
[78:25] Yeah, and when we-
Speaker 1:
[78:26] Why did I not know that until I was 57 years old? That's, like, what?
Speaker 2:
[78:31] Because we're women and our sexuality has historically been sidelined and viewed as unimportant because if it's not tied to reproduction, who cares? Scientists have actually put women inside MRI machines and looked at what's happening in their bodies during orgasm.
Speaker 1:
[78:49] I'm trying not to imagine what that research study looks like, by the way.
Speaker 2:
[78:53] It's amazing that we even have this. And whether it's stimulated from the external portion of the clitoris, the inter vaginally, just through fantasy alone, some people can even have an orgasm just from fantasy alone. It involves the exact same sequence of contractions of what we call the orgasmic platform, which are all of the muscles that are tied into orgasm. One of the most important ones is the pubococcus aegis muscle. And don't worry, that took me several years to pronounce it.
Speaker 1:
[79:25] Okay, keep going.
Speaker 2:
[79:26] Otherwise known as the pelvic floor.
Speaker 1:
[79:28] Oh, that's the technical name of the pelvic floor?
Speaker 2:
[79:32] Yeah, yeah. So it's essentially the same thing that you can strengthen by doing Kegel exercises. And I'm sure most people might know, but in case you don't know what a Kegel exercise is, it's that contraction of muscles that you do when you're trying to stop the flow of urine, right? And so the idea is that if you do a certain set of those, right, a couple times a day, that that will strengthen your pelvic floor and actually can lead to more intense orgasms. And the beauty of... Does that work? I think it does, right? And I think it's incredibly important, especially for women who are menopausal or post-menopausal, when that tissue, you know, or after childbirth, when that tissue can get stretched out. Now, I do want to point out there are certain women who have a very tight pelvic floor already, who don't want to do that exercise. But for most people, it can be really helpful. But yes, it's the same contraction of muscle. So this idea, you know, I mean, I remember sitting around with girlfriends in college and thinking, well, you know, I can have a clitoral stimulation, but I can't have one from vaginal sex. And, you know, just thinking that it was some holy grail of a different type of orgasm, it's not. We see blood flow to slightly different areas, but the contraction of muscles in those two different types of orgasms is totally equivalent. So you're not missing out.
Speaker 1:
[80:58] I find that those facts to be liberating.
Speaker 2:
[81:01] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[81:02] And very empowering.
Speaker 2:
[81:03] Yes. And that is my absolute goal with teaching people about this is that you are not missing out on some holy grail of orgasms if you can't have an orgasm just simply from penetrative sex alone.
Speaker 1:
[81:19] Well, it makes perfect sense because the orgasm is mechanically the same thing as happening regardless of what produced it. Dr. McNichols, we have a bunch of listener questions and I want to start with one from Karen who's 56 years old and she writes in, Dr. McNichols, I want to have sex, but it hurts now. I'm dry, it burns and I'm starting to dread intimacy because I'm scared it's going to be painful. Is this just menopause? Is there anything I can do?
Speaker 2:
[81:50] It absolutely can be menopause. That sounds like menopause to me. And we are in a fabulous time right now where there has been so much more awareness brought to the impact of perimenopause and menopause. You know, it's a time when, look, levels of progesterone and estrogen are rapidly declining. And that's going to have the effect on the vagina of making lubrication harder. There can be atrophy of the vaginal walls. And yes, that can lead to sexual pain. But sex should not be painful, right? It should absolutely never be something that you're just suffering through. And so I think it's amazing that we now have, you know, the black bottle warning from HRT therapy removed, that people, you know, are taking different types of hormones. You know, I personally will say that I take it. It has been transformative in my own life, taking estrogen and progesterone. Testosterone therapy has also been really revolutionary for women. We don't know that we have testosterone in our bodies. And actually, we lose it dramatically during menopause. And by introducing just small amounts of it, to get it back to where it was in our 30s and 40s can have a huge effect on our sex drive. So I want to be careful because I'm not a doctor. I'm not a medical provider. I can just speak from my experience and from what I've read myself, which is that it can absolutely be hugely helpful, as can things like estrogen creams, which can simply be applied directly to the vagina.
Speaker 1:
[83:30] So if you're in menopause, yes, and you're going through hormonal changes or perimenopause, yes, and you're experiencing dryness other than HRT, what is there anything else like use lube?
Speaker 2:
[83:41] Lube, yes, exactly. So there are so many beautiful types of organic flavored, name what you like kind of lube that we should all be having and displaying beautifully at our nightstands. And it's just, we've come so far in the types of lube that are available, that can be wonderful, right? And don't have to be messy and can be fun to use and can really just make sex, you know, in general, I tell people the wetter the better. So the more lubrication you can have down there, the better off you're going to be. And estrogen creams too, right? That can really help to rebuild the tissue, you know, around the vulva can be helpful. When we talk about menopause and we talk about perimenopause, I want to also just bring up that obviously, as thrilled as I am for those conversations, I don't want women to lose sight of the fact that there are other very real things happening in your sex life that could be influencing your desire, right? So for example, if you are feeling, you know, stressed out and exhausted and overwhelmed and taking care of everybody else's needs, right? When we look at all the variables impacting women, that can have just as much of an effect on lowering your level of desire as can the hormones. And equally needs to be addressed, right? Whether it is through having conversations with your partner about perhaps how to rearrange different divisions of labor in the household, right? The more you have a partner that can lean in and help you to, you know, feel like you are achieving your dreams and that you are able to have support where you need it. And, you know, even, you know, I tell people, I don't think mystery is the secret to keeping passion alive. I think it's gratitude. I think it's really being able to appreciate all that our partners do to, you know, help us, help our families, that the ways that they lean in, right? Because so often it can be sort of these hidden culprits in your relationship, these tiny resentments that can start to grow if you feel like you're not appreciated or if you feel like you're just simply not seen or not heard in your relationship. Then we need to understand everything and be interested in everything about our partner, you know, not just what they did that day, but what they want, what they're interested in, what they're worried about, what their insecurities are, what the details are of the hobby that they're really into, what the details are of the work that they're working on. Because the more that we can see in relationships, the more we feel connected and see each other, the more we feel heard, the more gratitude we express. That is going to be a pathway, I think, into that desire that we all crave, that really sets the tone for a healthy sex life.
Speaker 1:
[87:06] So when you say gratitude, Yes. Are you talking to our spouse? That they need to be more grateful for us? Because I, you know, like when you hear it and you're also the mom and the wife, and you're taking care of everything, and you're exhausted, and your hormones are all over the place, and, and, and, and, and, and, and you're last on your list, feeling grateful for your partner is like, are you kidding me? Don't they need to be grateful for me so that I want to have sex with you?
Speaker 2:
[87:36] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[87:36] So talk to me about this gratitude piece and what you actually mean.
Speaker 2:
[87:39] I hope that you are listening to this with your partner, because I want you to both experience gratitude. But yes, I think especially for women who are in relationships where you are working to manage everybody else's needs. Maybe you have a career as well on top of that. You are thinking about the kids' parent-teacher conference that's coming up or the dog that ate the crayon set last night. And it's your, you know, now you've got to call the vet and figure out exactly what's going on. There's so many responsibilities. You're doing so much. And to the extent that your partner, right, your husband or whoever you are with, can lean in and recognize that, right? Really understand just the enormous amounts of emotional and invisible labor that you are undertaking. That is a huge aphrodisiac. That is going to help you feel needed, feel seen, feel appreciated, right? Distance does not make the heart grow fonder. Gratitude does. We need to be appreciating all that our partners are doing. And yes, of course, this goes in the other direction, right? Understanding that the men in our lives or our partners are also doing so much, are under a lot of stress, are maybe don't have the ways to find the support that they need because of this culture we live in. That under-prioritizes being able to give proper attention to men's feelings and insecurities, right? He might be feeling a sense of anxiety about things that would really help him to feel more connected to you too, if he could talk about it. But the most important thing is to feel like your needs are being recognized, that the amount you are doing is appreciated, because when we feel appreciated, we feel seen, and when we feel seen, that turns on our desire.
Speaker 1:
[89:53] Our next question is from Maya, 41, Chicago. I've been single for years and it's like my sex life just disappeared. I miss intimacy, but dating feels exhausting. I feel rusty and insecure. How do I rebuild desire and confidence when it's been so long, without forcing myself into hookups? I don't want to.
Speaker 2:
[90:14] So being newly single, I just want to really normalize that. It can be a scary time, right? Whether you are young and still navigating sex and dating culture in your 20s, or if you're in your 40s or 50s and newly single after being divorced, or it can feel scary being with a new sexual partner, right? Whether it's been many, many years or if it's just an ongoing part of your life. And so understanding that when you show up sexually, first of all, with a person, again, it's having this growth mindset. You shouldn't just be assuming that the sex you're going to be having is going to have to instantly out of the gate be absolutely perfect. It's letting go of these ideas of perfection and normalizing, you know, maybe you feel a little bit different in your body. It's going to take a little bit of time to get back. But in terms of this anxiety around casual sex and dating culture, I want to speak to that specifically because we are in now, you know, I describe it to my students as a culture of chill. It's literally a time when it is very cool to not have, you don't want to catch feelings, quote unquote, right? We don't want to come across as being needy or as codependent, right? We have all of this language around what is a very basic human need, which is to simply be made to feel like our needs matter. And so when you're looking at casual sex and hookup culture in general, right, it helps to first know that it is possible to have wonderful casual sex experiences, right? It is possible, you know, when we look at the literature, you know, we do see that absolutely. In fact, if you're even just looking at, you know, younger people where the majority of casual sex research has been performed on, that, you know, there are about a third of people who report having great casual sex, about a third who report that it's meh, kind of good, kind of bad, meaning they felt it was exciting, it was pleasurable, but they just kind of felt maybe a little disappointed in themselves or they felt a little bit, you know, not great about the whole experience. It felt maybe a little empty and disconnected. And then there's a whole third of people who felt like it just was a really crummy experience. Look, I think like a quarter of 40-year-olds I just read are now single. And, you know, if we look at, you know, the average age of marriage, it's 31. We have a lot of people in the population who are trying to navigate singlehood and casual sex and may not be ready for a long-term relationship. And so the question becomes, can we look to the data and try to understand what predicts a really positive, pleasurable, exciting sexual experience versus one that leaves you feeling empty and maybe a little bit shook? Right? And what we find is, you know, a couple of interesting things. First of all, it really largely boils down to motivation. You know, in other words, if you are looking at the sexual experience and coming from a place where you want excitement and it's adventure and it would feel good and to be pleasurable and that's sort of the thrill of the chase and it seems exciting, you are probably more likely to have a positive experience. We tend to have more negative casual sex experiences when you're doing it because you're secretly hoping it's going to lead to more, but you don't quite know how to ask for that, right? And again, because we live in this culture, that makes you feel like you're needy if you ask ahead of time, you know, I'm not quite sure where things stand, you know, can you let me know or I can't quite tell what you want, you know, I'm really into you. This is really exciting. I love spending time with you. I'm really attracted to you, but I'm not that into casual sex. So is it any, you know, can we have a conversation about kind of where we are, right? Versus, you know, also normalizing phrases like, are you okay if this is just for fun? Right? Are you okay if this is just about a night of excitement? Right? In other words, part of the problem is that because we put so much shame on casual sex experiences, we need to feel like we need to hide our motivation if that's really what we're looking for. And by acknowledging that sex can be satisfying in a variety of contexts, what we're really doing is empowering people to say, know what you want, right? Go after what you want. Are you the kind of person that feels like casual sex could be fun that maybe, you know, while you're single and exploring your sexuality again and maybe looking for excitement that it could be something as pleasurable? Great, right? Don't feel shy about having it, right? Make sure that you find a partner who is, you know, emotionally there and mature and that you really connect with, you know, or is casual sex just something that you know in the back of your head is not right for you, right? Some of us are just not wired to be having unattached casual sex, and that is also very okay, right? You're not not sex positive if you don't like hooking up. You're not not empowered if you don't like hooking up. You're not not confident if you don't like hooking up. You just aren't why it's okay, right? So it's just about normalizing this and giving people the tools to know what they want so that you can go out and choose and only agree to the sexual experiences that truly make you happy.
Speaker 1:
[96:14] What I love about the question you just gave us, are you okay if this is just for fun tonight?
Speaker 2:
[96:19] Yeah.
Speaker 1:
[96:20] Is that before you ask it of the other person, you should ask it of yourself.
Speaker 2:
[96:24] Yes, exactly.
Speaker 1:
[96:25] Because I do think we gaslight ourselves, women in particular, into believing that if I go along with the casual sex, if I drink and I'm down to you know what, that somehow that's going to lead to something meaningful in long term.
Speaker 2:
[96:40] Right.
Speaker 1:
[96:41] Now in the research, is there any breakdown in terms of men versus women?
Speaker 2:
[96:47] There are some gender differences, but they're not nearly as extreme as what the media portrays them to be. We see this in the literature, but we also, I mean, I can't even just tell you when I pull the thousands and thousands of students that come through my class, and I look, for example, at that group that says the casual sex experience was amazing, there are slightly more men than women who report that, but the difference is not nearly as big as you might think, right? And one group, the data does show, is particularly good at having positive casual sex experiences are older women who might be newly single and maybe don't feel like they have the pressure to settle down and they feel a bit more confident and they feel like they're better able to speak up, right? And that does a couple of things because if you're in that position, you'll feel better asking for what it is that brings you pleasure. So in other words, if you are having an orgasm, if it's truly pleasurable, it's more likely to be a positive experience for you. I don't want to under emphasize or dismiss the fact that, yes, a sexual double standard still exists. Women are going to be judged more harshly. It's also more dangerous because they're physically smaller on average, for sure. Casual sex does, for that reason, carry more risks. But I think that, you know, I mean, in terms of emotional intimacy, yes, there is data showing that for women, especially when there is emotional intimacy, they tend to be more likely to enjoy sex and to have orgasms.
Speaker 1:
[98:32] Here's another listener question. We have two kids, we're exhausted, and our house is zero privacy. By the time we get to bed, we're done. How do you rebuild a sex life when life is chaos and you can't just, quote, schedule a date night every week?
Speaker 2:
[98:46] I mean, isn't that the fundamental challenge? And I can really relate to this. You know, I've got two teenagers, an 11-year-old, and I remember especially when they were a lot younger, it's exhausting, it's hard to carve out time where it's just the two of you. And yeah, the scheduling sex and the date night, it just feels like such tired advice, right? The first thing I want to say, though, is that your kids deserve to have parents that have a healthy sex life, because like we talked about in the beginning of this podcast, sex and pleasure are critical for your well-being. The more that you can prioritize pleasure in your lives, the more sense of joy and connection that you can model towards each other, the better parents you're going to be, right? I think a big struggle parents have is that they just don't understand how important this aspect of their life is, not just to the relationship, but to their own well-being. And so, yeah, it does mean figuring out not just a date night, but again, this intimacy date where you're finding what is the emotional state that I need to get into in order to feel turned on for sex. How do I like you to initiate? How do I like you to talk to me before we have sex? Are there ways that we can set the mood ahead of time? Should we be experimenting because if we're looking forward to a different type of novelty, then it could be something that kind of peaks our interests and gets us excited and makes us pay attention to the moment more, right? So you're having these conversations and engaging in the non-sexual physical touch and setting a part time when you can connect, it will happen, right? It will absolutely be something that you can just simply close the door at night and know that you're actually doing a service to your kids by showing them that mom and dad have an area in their life that is just about each other, that's just about their own relationship, their own connection, that the kids are, yes, critically important, but they don't always have to be the absolute center of your life, 24 hours a day, 60 minutes out of every hour. You can take 30 minutes for just the two of you and close the door and they will be okay. They will be better off for it and you'll be a happier person and better parent.
Speaker 1:
[101:24] I love that. You know, one of the things that changed my sex life with Chris was when we started having sex before we went out. Because I always felt bloated or a little drunk or whatever when we came back from a date night. And then I didn't want to. But if you have a babysitter or a sister or friend coming over anyway to watch the kids, have them come an hour early. You're like, okay, great, we're going to go get ready.
Speaker 2:
[101:51] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[101:52] And then you're having secret sex.
Speaker 2:
[101:54] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[101:54] Which is pretty hot. And then you have it before you feel bloated after the meal. Yes.
Speaker 2:
[102:00] And if you're a parent and have a million responsibilities, not only are you full and bloated and a little bit drunk when you get home and not as able to experience pleasure, you're also exhausted. I mean, you started out tired. After that night, you're going to be really tired. So yes, have the babysitter come an hour earlier and enjoy it then.
Speaker 1:
[102:24] I love that. But I love the larger context that you deserve pleasure in your life.
Speaker 2:
[102:29] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[102:29] And it makes your whole life better. This question is so relatable because it's about sex, pleasure and how you feel about your body. And this listener writes, after menopause and weight changes, I don't feel sexy anymore. I'm so in my head during sex that I can't relax. I avoid intimacy because I'm embarrassed. How do I get out of that spiral and feel desire again when I don't like my body?
Speaker 2:
[102:55] This is so incredibly common and there's so much research coming out just about, first of all, how much body image can get in the way of our ability to enjoy sex. It really can, as this listener is describing, bring you out of your head. Start judging yourself from a third-party perspective during sex, where you're thinking about, oh my God, my stomach, my thighs. God, what do I look like from this angle? This is not being helped by the media, which is showing us, again, totally unrealistic airbrushed AI-generated images of bodies that are not attainable for 99.99 percent of us. And it's just creating a level of insecurity and anxiety that is literally activating the exact parts of your brain that need to quiet in order to enjoy sex. So the question is, what's the antidote? The most effective tool that you can develop to treat body image issues and their impact on your sex life is to develop a sense of sexual mindfulness. It is a practice that is similar to other types of mindfulness that you might practice in the rest of your life. But it literally means during sex, bringing attention back to your breath, bringing attention back to the sensations that are in your body, looking and focusing on exactly the sexual cues that are emanating from your partner and allowing those to guide the sexual experience. Now, just like when somebody tries to meditate, it's going to be natural while you're trying to do that for these ideas of, oh my God, what does my stomach look like? Or what do I look like from this angle? That's natural. Just notice those thoughts and allow them to pass out of your brain, right? Because the reality is that the person you're having sex with, they're psyched to be there, right? They're not sitting there judging what you look like. And the reality is that you don't need to have a perfect body. You do not need to be hairless or have perfectly sized genitals to have incredible sex. I think it's hard to tell people, and this is where I think the body positivity movement has been both helpful, but also let us astray a little bit in that sometimes it's not going to feel realistic to think, I love my body, right? I love my body. I love how I look. I think for some women, that's just sort of not really realistic expectation, but if you look in front of the mirror, right, and you're standing there naked, you can probably find a part of yourself that you do love. Maybe it's your collarbone, maybe it's your lips, maybe it's your eyes, maybe it's your hair, your legs, right, your butt, and just focus on that, right? You know, I remember after each of my pregnancies, right, I gained like 70 pounds for each one. And your body is just fundamentally different after having kids. But for me, I know what was really helpful was instead of focusing on, oh my gosh, my belly, I have a pooch now and I'm heavier. My body had just done something incredible. It had just produced a life, right? If we can start appreciating our bodies for what they do for us, they get us to the places we want to go, they allow us to live the lives that we do, you start to have more of an appreciation for your body beyond just how it looks. You are desirable exactly the way you are. Your body, your genitals don't need to be perfect. It is just a question of practicing mindfulness, being at home in your body, noticing those things when they get in your way, and just bringing your sensations back home where they belong.
Speaker 1:
[107:07] Maybe this is too pragmatic of a way to look at this, but one of the things that you've really also taught us, Dr. McNichols, is that the parts of your body that give you pleasure, they work no matter what you weigh.
Speaker 2:
[107:20] Yes.
Speaker 1:
[107:21] They work regardless of what's hanging or shaking or that you don't like, and that those parts deserve to get some attention.
Speaker 2:
[107:31] Exactly.
Speaker 1:
[107:32] So there's also this like focusing on 99 percent of your body that you hate. You got one percent that's still going to give you an orgasm. So give that part of your body a little bit of attention for crying out loud. Exactly. Give that a little love.
Speaker 2:
[107:44] Yes. Amen.
Speaker 1:
[107:46] Dr. McNichols, what are your parting words?
Speaker 2:
[107:48] Own your pleasure and own your fundamental right as a human being to enjoy a healthy sex life and the physical connection and psychological well-being that that brings with it.
Speaker 1:
[108:00] Dr. McNichols, thank you, thank you, thank you for hopping on a plane and flying across country and really teaching us and empowering us about this fundamental aspect of improving our lives, which is really seeing the critical role that pleasure plays in your life and teaching us ways that we can be in control of having more pleasure. The book is, You Could Be Having Better Sex. Thank you, thank you, thank you for teaching us how to have better sex.
Speaker 2:
[108:33] Thank you, Mel. This was such an enjoyable time. I really appreciate it.
Speaker 1:
[108:37] Well, I can't wait to hear what you do with this conversation. And so I just want to thank you for spending time listening to or watching here on YouTube and learning about sex, learning about your body, learning about having a growth mindset related to sex. I am so excited. I cannot wait to listen to this with my husband, Chris. I can't wait for you to share this with people in your life. But mostly, I'm just excited for you to experience more pleasure in your life because you deserve it. And now you understand the critical benefits of it. And in case no one else tells you, I wanted to be sure to tell you that I love you and I believe in you. And I believe in your ability to create a better life. And what I'm convinced of because of Dr. McNichols is that pleasure is a very important part of your life getting better. And now you got the roadmap for experiencing more of it. Alrighty, I will see you in the very next episode. I'm going to welcome you in the moment you hit play. We're good? Okay, excellent. Do you want me to read this and then we go to pickups or what do you guys want?
Speaker 2:
[109:45] I could tell that you're- Okay. Okay, great. You're ready to want. Okay, great. Awesome. A plus.
Speaker 1:
[109:50] A plus for you. Thank you. You got an A plus and now it's just you just have to do this.
Speaker 2:
[109:56] All right. I just have fun.
Speaker 1:
[109:59] It's shows now. Dr. McNichols, Work, Work, Work. Couples Therapy, Dr. McNichols Pickups. Oh my God. It was so good.
Speaker 2:
[110:09] That was amazing Mel.
Speaker 1:
[110:10] Thank you for the opportunity. You are incredible. Well, you're a pro.
Speaker 2:
[110:12] Thank you.
Speaker 1:
[110:14] You teach the class on this.
Speaker 2:
[110:16] Thank you.
Speaker 1:
[110:21] Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you. This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode. SiriusXM Podcasts Hey, it's your friend Mel. If you love The Mel Robbins Podcast, you're going to love this. If you want to hear all the new episodes ad free, subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts on Apple Podcasts or visit siriusxm.com/podcastplus to start your free trial today.