The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett

Sex Scientist: Phone Addiction Is Killing Your Sex Life More Than Porn!

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Is your sex life bad? Dr Rena Malik walks you through every single sex question you're too nervous to ask - from testosterone, porn, and erectile dysfunction, to libido and stress! The Better-Sex Doc...

Transcript

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Is there a way to enlarge the f*ck?

So you can put your penis in this device. They've actually done research on this. So 30 minutes twice a day. And it does show improvements in length about two centimeters. Tada.

And that's not all. So they actually do study on pistachios. Your guys at 100 grams of pistachios every day. And it's not a decrease in erectile dysfunction. Because if you're not having a erections,

now you're no longer getting blood flow to your penis. And it would shrink over time. And the same goes for women with their clitoris. Because it's the same type of tissue. But also, when you look at people who have sex once a week,

they live 49% longer. And people who only have sex once a year. 49% longer. Yeah. And every 100 orgasms man had, they live like 13% longer.

Be right back. Dr. Rina Malik has become the world's most watched urologist.

After sharing everything you need to know about hormones,

sexual health, and how to have better sex based on the data. So how can you have the best sex possible? So there's four main pillars of sexual health. So pillar one is fuel. So how you nourish your body?

And it's a huge part of sexual activity. And then pillar two is strength.

When people think about strength, they always think about

going to the gym and lifting weights. But it's much more than that. So you look at the data. Any sort of cardiovascular exercise is going to improve sexual function. It's going to improve blood flow to the penis and to the clitoris.

And then also, if you do 102 minutes a week, it is the same amount of improvement as you would see when you take a medication like Vibe. And the other part of it is the pelvic floor. It's under evaluated and under disgust.

And we'll get into that. But pillar three is environment. So things like stress, sleep, and under-condu-surfing chemicals. For example, they looked at data on men sleeping five hours a night versus eight hours a night.

Guys who sleep five hours a night, their testosterone drops by 15%. And then the last of the four pillars that we don't talk about enough is, and that's still important. I mean, I want to talk about morning directions.

Squirting, clitoris, stimulation, and certain positions that are going to increase the probability that my partner has an orgasm. Let's talk about all of that.

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Dr. Reena Malik, if somebody was to come up to you in the street, having watched your videos online, and they were a follower of the content you've produced over the last couple of years. If you had to guess the question they would ask you, because it's probably the most frequent popular question you get asked.

What do you think they would say? They would say, "What can I be doing right now to improve my sex life?" Who would be asking you that question? And why do you think they'd be asking it? I think everyone can agree that sex is something we enjoy.

It's something that's important that we want to have, right?

And there is a desire to have good sex, or feel like maybe you're missing out on something that could be even better. So, how can you have the best sex possible?

Because you hear all these people's talking about amazing sex in the media.

You might see it on pornography. You might feel like this is something amazing. Why am I not having that? I want that, right? So, on that point, you said it's obvious that it's important.

I think it appears to be increasingly not obvious, that's important. Because when you look at some of these stats, I'll throw this graph that I've found here up on screen. And it shows that people are becoming more sex-less, especially young adults between 18 and 30.

This graph is pretty stark. Mm-hmm. Think about 50 years ago. There was no cell phones. There might be some TV programs, but there was ads in between TV programs.

And there was only certain TV shows you could watch just a certain time that you enjoyed. And then there was nothing to watch. There was no email. So, you went to work and you came home. And there was really not a lot of communication between you and your coworkers or your job.

They made dinner with their family. They hung out. And then maybe they watched a program or two. And then they lie down and bed. They didn't have a phone to scroll on.

They didn't have anything to keep them up. And so, then they were like, next to their partner. And maybe they're talking, maybe they're cuddling. And so, there was more like opportunity and space for sex, right? It was a thing that you did for enjoyment, for pleasure, for fun.

Now, we have all these distractions that keep our mind away from sex.

In order to enjoy sex, you need to have space for it.

You're able to enjoy your partner and feel like you want that, right? And now we're sort of, there's not as much room for it. That's one. Two is younger people. How are they dating?

Right? How are they meeting each other? They're meeting each other through apps, through DMs.

So, they're not actually like really having these deep, meaningful connections.

There's a big hookup culture. There's a big like fleeing culture. And imagine, first time sex for most people is not great. You don't know your partner. You don't know what they like.

And you may not be able to express what you like.

You never taught how to talk about sex, right?

So, you don't know how to say like, hey, I like it like this. And you may be self-conscious because you're first time. So, you have like mediocre sex or bad sex. And you're like, well, I don't really want that. And there's just no follow-through, right?

There's not a lot of education on what sex should look like. The only education people are getting or from often erotic films. And so, they're seeing sex that's not real. That's curated. And they're trying to emulate that. And that's not pleasurable for most people.

And younger people these days are actually having a rise in more recall rough sex. So, choking has become very, very common. As common as like they call choking almost like vanilla sex. So, young people, you look at data like 60% of women. And I think it's 20% of men have been choked during sex

of that age group, like college age group. And of those people who get choked 20% have been choked 25 times or more. Now, I think it's fine if you're into that. But I can't imagine that that many people are into choking. And there's data to support that.

So, when you look at quality of data, this is by Debbie Herbenex. She's a sex researcher and she did quality of research and she asked people. Like, what does it like to you enjoy being choked, tell us about it, right? Women were like, yeah, it's okay. Sometimes I'm scared because my partner is big and strong.

And I'm, you know, a smaller and they have big hands. Sometimes it's fine and sometimes I don't really care for it. But like, it's just a part of sex. It just says normal is kissing, for example. And so, if you're having sex and you're doing things just because you think

that's what your partner wants or what it should look like.

And you're not enjoying it. Well, that's not going to be sex that you want to have. That point you said about the lifestyles we lead and how that might be impacting our sex lives. I thought it was really interesting because we don't talk enough about this.

But when you look at some of the data on this demographic, you know, people 30 and below around that age, the extreme outliers are spending 8 to 10 hours on their phones on social media and on the internet. And roughly about 15 to 20% of young people describe their usage is almost constant. Effectively scrolling during all waking hours,

while they're eating while they're in the bathroom and before they go to sleep. So I was wondering from a dopamine perspective, if there's correlation between these like dopamineogenic activities that are now like hijacking our lives, whether it's short-form videos on social media, whether it's pornography or food, whether it's having an impact on what then happens in the bedroom and not performance in the bedroom.

If you think about what you need to have good sex, is you need to be sort of in the mind space for sex. And if you're constantly like hijacked by all these other things,

you're never like really getting in the mood, right?

You're just like, oh, I'm going to be turned on when I see my partner and we're going to have sex and it's going to be over. And it's just really a mechanical thing at that point, right? You're not actually, you're just trying to get an orgasm. You're not actually like spending the time to enjoy and to experience that fully, because you're just so like, you're just your brain is always doing something else, right?

Because people are constantly scrolling like every 60 seconds, there's a new video, there's something else. And so it's really hard to focus. And so that can translate to the bedroom where you're like, you're having sex, but your brain is somewhere else, thinking about something else, you saw or something

you have to do or something you want to see or something you want to look up,

whatever it is, but you're not really in there in the moment. You're just going through the motions. And so I think that's really where the challenges is that people are becoming increasingly destructible. I find it really hard to get to be as to have sex if I've had like a really, really busy day or from really, really thinking about something.

I almost have to, life that I can potentially create quite a lot of space. Exactly. In order to be able to be in the mood. Yeah, be aroused, right? It takes like time and energy. I appreciate you for saying that, because a lot of people think that men are just ready to go at any moment. And that's not fair, right? Because everyone needs time to be aroused.

It's not just instant for everybody, especially when you have a lot of work stress or life stress or other things going on, it's actually like you have to make time and space for it. Yeah, because I was a man, you got to get an erection.

And I always think that erection is a consequence,

usually, especially when it comes to sex. And I'm not talking about morning glory to you, but an erection is a consequence of like a story. Mm-hmm. Use the word aroused.

Mm-hmm. There's like a story in my head, which makes me go, "Oh, that's kind of hot." Yeah, you need something. You need some stimuli, right? You're going to think about something,

see something smell something, feel something, right? You need to just be together and sort of

allow yourselves to be intimate before that sort of desire and arousal come together. And for me as well, it's not just touch. Like, that doesn't necessarily do. For me, it really is quite like a psychological thing. I was wondering if this is, there's any data around this, or, I mean, just even anecdotally,

Like, people get aroused in very, very different ways, don't they?

Yeah, absolutely. I mean, some people are very like visual.

So they, you know, they see their partner and they get aroused very quickly.

Basically, when you get aroused, you need to be in a Paris sympathetic nervous system stage.

So in order to get an arruption, you need to be in the state, which is like rest and digest. So if you're stressed, if you're thinking about other things, if you're essentially on the go, you are not allowing your nurses into calm down. And so for some people, that's a whole bunch of different things. Some people can switch more easily into that state, and some people need more of like, you know,

to feel either mentally stimulated, or they need to have some associations. Like, it might be like, they need a certain scent, they need to like relax their body, they need to like go take a bath, whatever it is, but some people need different things.

And knowing what that is for your partner is super important, right?

Because then you can incorporate that, everything is scheduled in our lives, right? And then you're like, oh, but now sex is like the last thing on the schedule, right? And like, I don't even think about it. Like, oh, okay, now yeah, maybe let's have sex. But if you actually make time to be intimate, allow yourself to be in that brain space, be together, that's when it can actually happen, especially when you've been in a long-term relationship,

it doesn't come as easily, like spontaneously, which we call spontaneous desire. It comes more of a response to these other cues that allow you to feel desire and to feel aroused. I also think I was thinking about a previous relationship I had where on the days where I'd been like working very hard and I was like tired or stressed or been traveling and I was jet lagged. I think there was also, because I didn't see this person

often, there was also an expectation that when I did see them, we were going to have sex. And that was that was very hard because actually the expectation of it, stressed it out more, and that can happen like, if it becomes the elephant in the room, it can become a little bit heavy, which then is sort of counterproductive to performance.

And this is sort of variation on performance anxiety. So when you feel like you have to perform

on demand, and maybe your worried might not happen, it creates this vicious loop. So you maybe have trouble with an erection, or maybe it's like, I'm expected to have sex, but I really can't get there mentally. Whatever it is, now you're thinking about that, right? And then you're with your partner, like, oh my god, I'm going to have trouble. You're not enjoying the pleasurable sensations or the visuals or feeling each other.

You were literally thinking in your own head about how you're going to respond. And then that anxiety makes it so that you can't get an erection, or you can't be aroused. And so now you're anxious, and you're not focused, you're just almost spectatoring, you're just watching yourself have sex. You're not actually, like, in the moment. So then, you know, you haven't negative outcome because when you're stressed, you're simply

like, nervous system is on, right? You can't really get an erection, or you can't really get aroused. And so then you're like, oh man, now I've let my partner down, now I haven't performed, which I hate that word, but like, perform the way I should or I'm expected to and now something's wrong with me. And now that just keeps going, you know, it's just cycle. Have you spoken to people that experience this? Absolutely. It's common.

Very common. It's help people anytime you have problems in the bedroom, it stays with you. So how do you break the cycle? Yeah, so I tell people, when you're with your partner, take the pressure off penetration, just explore each other's body. Do what's called "acensate focus," like, "explore the rest of your body." Figure out other arogenous zones, other things that can turn you guys both on that don't involve erections in penetration.

And then once you realize you're focused on that, you're really like exploring and enjoying playing, you're having a good time, and you're not thinking about your erection. Now you'll notice, oh, the erection just comes, right? And then once you get to that point, then you can start even touching genitals, but still hold off on penetration. And then after you realize, like, the

genitals are, you know, it's always working the way I want it to, and I'm not thinking about it,

I'm not stressed, then finally you can then introduce penetrative sex again. So it's just sort of like a gradiated sort of slow advance into, you know, having sex again, but now kind of focusing on

being more present and mindful and enjoying those sensations. I think a lot of people will be able

to do that, but there's also a big contingent of people that just avoid sex. It's a source of object and their relationship for whatever reason. Both partners don't have to communicate that haven't got the tools to talk about these kind of things openly and honestly. Do you see that a lot as well? Absolutely. I mean, I think it's really sad. I see people come in and they're like, I ask every patient, like, are you saying, are you having sex? Why not? Right? Because some

of those who know and most doctors are good, okay? But I always say, why not? Right? Why are you not having sex? Is it because you're having an issue? Is it because you're having pain? What's going on? Right? And oftentimes, I'll hear from people that my partner is just not into it and I just sort of gave up and I'm just, we just don't have sex anymore. You know, for me, that's a red flag because sex is a huge important part of our lives. It is a way we connect with another

Human being.

function, meaning you get an erection well, or you get aroused well, and you have a good orgasm,

and everything feels good, that tells me that, hey, you've got great blood flow to your genitals, your nerves are working great, your hormones are sending signals, like all these things are good, right? But also, sex is more than just the active sex. It also helps you live longer. So there's been a few studies looking at sex and longevity. And when you look at people who have sex once a week, compared to people who have sex once a year, the difference in all cause mortality is 49%.

They live 49% longer than people who only have sex once a year. 49% longer. Yeah, yeah. Be right back, no change. So even if you're doing less and once a week, but more than once a year,

it still improves your longevity. There was actually interesting study in 1997, I think it was,

where they looked at the number of orgasms men had. And they found that men who had every hundred orgasms men had, they lived like 13% longer. They had a 13% increase in life expectancy. And so it was really interesting to me to just just showing you that like, this is not just an active pleasure and fun. It is obviously, but it's much more than not because people who are having sex clearly have better health. And this connection with people, I mean loneliness is a big issue. Right

now, the WHO made loneliness like an epidemic. So they've said that loneliness as bad as having like 15 cigarettes. And so sex is the way to feel connected to another human being. On that data, we're not saying that it's the sex itself that's causing people to live longer, where I guess it's hard to establish causation in terms of, yeah, it's not necessarily sex, but they've looked at like they try to control for other things like age and comorbidities and

all these studies. And it's also like sex is a cardiovascular workout, right? For many people as a

cardiovascular workout, you're getting a physical, physical activity with your partner. You are increasing your heart rate. You are doing these things that are also good for your body. And the fact that you're able to have sex, right, tells me a lot about it, right? You're, you're able to hold a certain position. You're able to maintain this level of activity without getting short of breath, right? Like these are things that having sex, you know, keeps you healthy to some degree.

If I want to make sure that I have great sex, what are some of the foundational things that I need to be thinking of in terms of my lifestyle? Yeah, so there's four main pillars of sexual health. And I like to think of it like your sexual health is your house and these pillars are the foundation. And if you don't have the foundation, it doesn't matter what else you do. You can try to

do everything else to patch up your house, but it's always going to break again because the foundation

is not there. So you've got fuel and fuel is how you nourish your body. A lot of the data I'm going to talk about is about men because there's just a lot more data on men in sexual health, but that doesn't mean that the same things don't apply to women. There's just less, less robust data on it. So when you talk about fuel, the Mediterranean diet is the most steady diet. So including things like healthy fats like avocados, leafy greens, nuts. And we're going to talk about

nuts in a little more detail. These things are super helpful. And obviously having lean proteins, having an abundance of fruits, which we're going to talk about as well. There's a study called the Health Professionals follow-up study. They were the 20,000 men. And they saw that men who adhered to a Mediterranean diet had a 22% lower risk of erectile dysfunction. So what specific things in that diet are people are like, what are the super foods I need to have? All men's are great,

but pistachios, they actually do study on pistachios. We looked at a hundred grams of pistachios, guys, and a hundred grams of pistachios every day. And they saw decrease in erectile dysfunction.

So pistachios are not, so we'll make my penis harder. I mean, so I always say, like, I don't love

to talk about super foods because then people are like, oh, I just got a pistachios and they're all good. Right? It's part of a whole diet. But certainly having nuts because they have great omega threes, they have healthy fats. These are the reasons that they really sort of improved diet. Fruit, anything that has sort of flavonoids, so like colorful fruit, like blueberries, citrus fruits, like a peen, which is red fruits. All of these things improve antioxidants,

and also have been shown to reduce the incidence of erectile dysfunction. So having stronger

erections, specifically blueberries actually came out to have, I think, something around 20%

also improvement in erectile function when you're eating blueberries regularly. So lots of, I think, things in the diet that can be helpful. Also fiber is one that we don't talk about enough. When you eat fiber in your gut, it converts to short chain fatty acids. The short chain fatty acids, then sort of have these endothelic protective mechanisms. They protect the blood vessels. They make them healthier. And so when your blood vessels are healthy, you get better metabolic health.

So you get less diabetes, less high blood pressure, less high cholesterol, and these all of these things together improve erectile function. So I think making sure that you meet the criteria

For fiber, which is 38 grams for men, 25 grams for women, is really, really i...

obviously managing your calories in a maintenance, right? Because we don't want to gain weight,

because excess, at a posterior, excess fat also puts you at higher risk for erectile dysfunction and other sexual dysfunctions. Next, we have strength. So there's strength where we think about cardiovascular and resistance exercise, but there's also pelvic floor strength. So we'll start with cardiovascular exercise. The one say that's quoted very often is 150 minutes of exercise of cardiovascular exercise, moderate intensity. When you look at the improvement in erectile function

scores, it is the same amount of improvement as you would see when you take a medication like Viagra. So literally, if you do 102 minutes a week, you are getting the same improvement as you could get with a medication, potentially. And so I tell people, like, look, if you don't

want to take a pill, this is a great way to improve sexual function. Now you might say, okay, well,

I, you know, maybe you're listening and you have heart issues and you can't really do moderate intensity exercise. They actually looked at that too. So there was a group where they looked at men who had heart disease and they weren't really able to do moderate intensity exercise. So they did like a five minute warm-up, the 20 minutes of walking and five minutes of a cool down. And with this supervised protocol, they still improved erectile function by 70%. So it's all relative

to where you're starting, but any sort of cardiovascular exercise that's above what you are capable like what you're doing now is going to improve sexual function, particularly erectile function, because going to improve blood flow to the gentles, going to improve blood flow to the

penis, it's going to improve blood flow to the clitoris for women. So that's where cardiovascular

exercise is so so important. In terms of resistance exercise, now these little weights are probably

not sufficient for doing much, especially for men in terms of improving muscular health. But obviously, we're not going to bring, like, really heavy weights from the table here. So one, we know that resistance training is significantly correlated with testosterone. So when you do heavy resistance training of your large muscle groups, so like your lower extremities, your glutes, you're doing like Olympic deadlift squats, that sort of stuff, you actually see improvements in testosterone.

Now it's not going to be like you don't want to get this sustained improvement, but continuous sort of regular resistance exercise improves testosterone. There's also data that shows that when men do resistance exercise to maintain muscle mass. So we know that muscle mass decreases about 7% every decade of life after around 40. When you maintain it through resistance exercise, there are three times less likely to have a reptile dysfunction. Oh, really? Yeah, so they maintain

a reptile function, they maintain sexual desire, they maintain satisfaction with sex. Because what are quite a study that said muscle is medicine, and I thought that's really true. Based on everything I've learned in this podcast around glucose control and testosterone

and now you're telling me about your sex life. Yeah, it is. I think people push back because they

think like why should I have to go to the gym, but our lives have changed. We sit at a computer, or we sit at podcasts, or we sit all the time. We're not moving, we're not doing manual labor, which is what a lot of our historic history is, right? Doing manual labor, farming, doing things outside, being physical. And we are meant to be physical. We're meant to lift heavy things. We're meant to move our bodies, and we're just doing less and less of it. So I think it's so important.

The other thing is we want to prevent sarcopenia. So sarcopenia is muscle loss. And when you have muscle loss, that also increases your risk of having sexual dysfunction. What about the pelvic floor? Like how does that come into this story? Oh, yes, so we missed that part. So the pelvic floor, here is your pelvis, right? It's his boni structure. We're all your organs live. This is a female. So I'm taking out the internal structures, which is the uterus, the rectum, and the bladder.

And so that's what sits inside the pelvis. And so you can see this bowl of muscles here, right?

And you can see them from the inside, and you could see them from the outside. That's your anus, and in this person, there's a vagina. So that's the whole further vagina. So you can see that your anus and your vagina run through the pelvic floor, and then your penis runs through the pelvic floor. And so this, I can show you on this model. In this model, you can see they kind of show you the muscles here on the side. So these are your pelvic floor muscles that are around the penis and the

anus. Okay. These structures are very important for a variety of things. They attach to your boni landmarks here. Your hips, your sacrum, your pubic synthesis. They attach to all these. And these sort of just work in the back on for most people. How they affect your sexual function is when you orgasm, these muscles contract and release at a, at a, at a rhythmic contraction of

0.

And that's these muscles sort of doing that. And when men ejaculate, the pelvic floor muscles

are contracting to help shoot the ejaculate out. They squeeze when you need to keep things in.

So they'll keep your end in, they'll keep your stool in. And they relax when you need to pee in, when you need to defecate. So when you sort of hold away, you'll like tighten your pelvic floor. Correct. Correct. Okay. But these are also responsive to stress. So just like people get TMJ, where they get tense in their jaw because they are stressing it like sleep at night. And they clench up their jaw. They don't really know they're doing it. The same thing can happen. These muscles

can get very tight or they can get misaligned to see you have a hip injury or see you have a back injury. The muscles can compensate by tightening up. And so a lot of people are knowingly have

tension in these muscles. And it can present in them multiple different ways. It can present

with back pain. It can present with a constipation. It can present with urgency frequently because remember your bladder is sitting right here on top of these muscles. So when the muscles are tense, your bladder is feeling like there's something, something activating it. And so it's like, oh man, I got a pee. That means I have to pee. This tension is telling my bladder. I have to pee. But it's really that your bladder is not that full. It's that these muscles are telling you to do that.

You can also have trouble peeing because you can see that your your breath for a goes through here. And if the muscles are really tight, sometimes it can be difficult to urinate because it clenches off the pee. And then with sucks, it can cause pain. If they're really tight, it can prevent blood from getting to the genital organs. So for men, they can have a reptile dysfunction. For women, they can have difficulty getting orgasms. They're difficulty getting arousal because

they're not getting blood flowed with clippers. Sometimes they can also cause premature ejaculation in men. And so these muscles are so important. And all we hear about is kegels. And kegels are exercises to strengthen these muscles. But kegels are good when you have a normal pelvic floor, meaning like there's no tension. It's completely normal. It's acting normal. You're not having any symptoms at all. But if you have any of the symptoms I talked about, doing kegels might make it worse.

Because you're now tightening muscles that are already tight. We also talked about pelvic floor relaxation, doing exercise to specifically relax these muscles. So that can be diaphragmatic breathing. That can be doing like a figure four stretch. That can be doing happy baby poles, which are yoga poses or child's pose. All these things can sort of stretch and lengthen these muscles so they can

learn to relax again. Now it's really bad. You have to go see a pelvic floor physical therapist who

can really work with you during and find which of the muscles are maybe more dysfunctional and maybe work specifically on those. But I think it's it's so important. It's under evaluated under discussed when it comes to sexual function. It's a hugely important part of sexual function. How many people are struggling with these issues specifically like erectile dysfunction issues?

And what age are they? Yeah. So it starts early. And I think there's always been a sort of

disconnector where we think young guys don't have this or if they have it, it's all in their head. That's not necessarily true. Many young men do develop erectile dysfunction because of biological factors. But the data is really robust on older guys. So above the age of 50, we see 52% of men having erectile dysfunction, which is 50%. Yeah. And it goes up 10% every decade. So 60% of 60% of 70% of 70 year olds. So erectile dysfunction continues to worsen.

This happens because blood vessels get older. They get stiffer. They're not functioning as well as they should. And we're seeing also arise in all these other comorbid conditions. Like diabetes, cholesterol, high blood pressure, all these affect how healthy your blood vessels are. And so with these, they see the problem in their penis or in women's case in their clitoris before they see

heart disease or strokes or brain issues or dementia. I think this is worth posing on which is

a erectile dysfunction problem is a often a symptom of a cardiovascular issue, right? Yeah. We call it a canary in a coal mine. So it is like telling you that something bad is coming. So the data would support that when you have erectile dysfunction, if it's because of an organic reason, right, not psychogenic. But most people I think have a combination of both that within three to five years, you will start developing issues with your heart.

And so it precedes those issues. And if seven years later, 14% of those guys will have a heart attack. And so it's really an opportunity. Sexual problems are an opportunity to look inside, to figure out what's going on and to investigate and to change your life. And when you say erectile dysfunction, we should probably define what that means. Because there's going to be a lot of guys that I hope now thinking on my guard like,

my penis is a bit softer than usual. Yeah. So erectile dysfunction is defined as the inability to maintain an erection that's sufficient for intercourse. So you can get an erection,

It goes away before you ejaculate your climax.

I think it's really important to differentiate that from something like premature ejaculation,

where you climax too soon. So you ejaculate before you're want to. But that doesn't mean that you have a problem maintaining your erection. That's a whole different process. I've got a friend. People didn't think I'm talking about myself. So I used that phrase a lot. I've got a friend. He's almost 40 years old. And I've heard him say on several occasions that he's lost his erection during sex. Is that erectile dysfunction? But what if he can keep

his erection what what's important? Well, so that's more multifactorial, right? So I think

if you lose it once or twice, where most guys will have an issue where they lose an erection at some point in their life. I think the important thing is not to catastrophize. It's a problem when it becomes a routine. Now, if someone is telling me, hey, I can watch porn and maintain my erection,

but I can't with a partner. There's multiple different reasons for that that could be a play.

One is that there's no pressure, right? You're by yourself. You're watching porn. There's no pressure of performance. There's no anxiety of performance. So that may be part of it. Other thing may be that that level of arousal that you're getting from porn. If you're watching like, let's say the same kind of porn every time, you're masturbating the same way every time. Maybe using a firm grip or some people will masturbate like facing the bed or against hard objects.

And so that gets hot objects. Yeah, like their fist or something. And so that can't be replicated by a person. Right? You can't replicate those behaviors by a vagina or a mouth. If you become

habituated to a certain thing that turns you on, and that's the only thing that really gets you going.

And that's that's something that you can't really get with your partner. Then it will be

difficult to reach the level of arousal that you need to get an erection. Okay, so two questions then.

So that doesn't count as erectile dysfunction if you can get an erection watching porn, but can't get it with your partner. Yeah, it may or may not be. So if you wake up with your morning erection, that's great. That's a sign. That's when there's nothing else at play. Right? You are just, that tells me that your body's functioning well. You've got good blood flow, good good hormones working, got a good amount of testosterone, and your nerves are working well,

and you're getting a good morning erection. Now morning erections are night time erections are normal, and they're healthy. So when you're a young boy, you get actually like erections three to five times a night, and they can last up to 40 minutes long. So you can spend a lot of your night with an erection. When you get older, like in your 40s, that drops to about half the times. So it may be erections are a little shorter. They may be max out at 30 minutes, but sometimes

they're shorter. You should still be getting three to five erections a night. You won't know

all of these, but typically you wake up with a morning erection. And so if you're not getting morning erections, that tells me that, hey, there's something going on that we should address. And on your other point about how you must obey impacting your sex life, I imagine that applies to men and women. Absolutely. And are you saying that if there's a particular way you get your soul forth in private, that is very hard for you to person to replicate, you might become

desensitized. You might just get habituated. I don't think desensitized, but habituated is like, you might just, your body just might respond really well to that particular stimulation. Now, that's not inherently a bad thing, right? If that's what gets you off, and you and your partner, okay, with you doing that together, right? You may mutually masturbate together, and that's fun for you, and you guys enjoy it. There's no problem with it. It's just knowing what's

going on, right? And sort of deciding like, okay, if this is a problem, let me try to diversify what I do during my solo sex period. So let me take a little break and kind of try something, you know, just not masturbate for a little while and come back to it later. The fact that we get an erection in the morning, does that mean that's, we're supposed to have sex in the morning from like an evolutionary perspective? That necessarily, it's just, it's the way your body releases

testosterone is one of the reasons this happens is overnight, your body is making more testosterone. That's when your body sort of has natural testosterone production, and so it's highest in the morning, which is why very often you get a morning erection. And you know, it just means that some people will have more desire also in the morning because testosterone is a hormone of desire. Is it the same for women? Yeah, so women, women also have

nocturnal, clitoral, two-messence, same sort of pattern, and they won't necessarily know it, right? Because they can't visualize it, but you know, you can, some women wait, no sort of feel that pelvic congestion are like feeling that there's a bunch of like blood flow in the area, but it's most will not, and that's okay. But your body protects itself. So you've heard the term use that are lose it, right? People are like, your body's protecting itself. You don't have to

have sex. If your body is healthy, it will do this all night to keep your genitals healthy. It will make sure that your genitals are getting blood flow, even if you're not having sex. But if you stop having those nighttime erections, now it becomes more of a problem because over time, say you stop having erections or clurled two-messence for months, years, right? And then there's no blood flow

To those areas.

this purple thing here is called the corporate cavernosa. And this is like a really nice

spongy tissue that fills with blood, and when it fills with blood it expands and lengthens, and then the blood stays there until you're done with your stimulation, and then it goes back. And so if there's no healthy, fresh blood getting to the penis on a regular basis, either through nighttime erections or through sex with your partner, then you will get fibrosis of these tissues. That means it's a little scar in the tissues. And then over time, you might see

some shrinkage of the penis. And so it is really important to maintain also good health of these tissues. And the same goes for women with their clitoris, because it's the same type of tissue.

In fact, if you look at the clitoris, it is, this is the part that you see. We don't really

don't have a clitoris, do we? This is the uterus.

You're going to keep that in. There's a curie, is it curie?

Okay. This is good. This is good. This is good. This is good. Okay. You're going to live that one now. You're going to live that one now. Well, I'm worried about it said that too. Okay. So let's talk about the female anatomy. This is a pelvic model, and here you can see this is the vagina. This is the your rethrow where you pee from. This is your labia menorah, and you can't see the labia major, but there would be out here. Right. So inner lips, outer lips.

Now, this up here is your clitoril glands. So it's the same as the glands of the penis. And so this is all you see. Right. It also has a little covering, which you can't see here. Just like men have foreskin, women have a clitoril hood that covers the head of the clitoris. And so when you look at the clitoris on the inside, which we can't see perfectly here, but I'm going to just take this up.

It actually goes all the way back like this. So if you were to feel from the vagina, from the

vaginal side, it would be at the very top of the vagina going all the way back. These are the these blue things are the clitoril bulbs here. And these are the legs of the clitoris here on the side. And so this is essentially the homolog of the penis. So if I take the penis, we don't have a like a full model here. And so homologs mean that they're essentially the same structure. They're made from the same cells, but they're in the male and the female. So here you can see this is

if this is your penis. This is what you see up to here. This is the bone. This is your fat up here. And then here it goes deep into the pelvis. And so here's your testicles. Right. And so below the testicles, this area of the perineum, you also have penal tissue sort of that you can palpate from this side on that's coming all the way down. And if you had sort of a 3D model, you'd see that it forks out just like the clitoris does. So it is clitoril stimulation feel like

stimulating someone's tip of their penis. Exactly. And so you could think if someone just simply had the head of the penis, they would be fine. It would be nice, but it's probably better if you stimulate more of the clitoris or more of the penis. That's where you can stimulate obviously the external, the clitoris, but you can also stimulate from the inside. And some people are more responsive to that than others. What you hear of is like the G spot or the G zone. Right.

And the G spot or G zone is if you were to go in the inside of the vagina at the top side, I can't really stick this in here, but it would be about two centimeters in at the top. And that's because that's an area where there's a lot of nerves endings. One, you can pop it the clitoris at basically throughout the entire anterior wall, but also there's the skin's glands, without these glands that sit underneath the urethra and they're the homolog of the male prostate.

And so they're right there and then the vagina is there. And so that's an area that can be very

enjoyable to stimulate. It's not necessarily always going to lead to orgasm because some people have

different sort of distance between the clitoral body and the vagina. So some people have less

distance may feel it better than some that don't. But ultimately that's why that area is so

sensitive for many women. On this point of the morning erections, I was thinking, much of the reason why I've always been cautious of having sex in the morning or even like masturbating the morning or anything like that is I'm worried that it will cause a dopamine crash which will make me feel lazy and nostalgic. Also, when you think about what happens during an orgasm is you have this release of dopamine and then you your pro-locked and goes up and sort of like

everything comes down. Now some people feel a sense of clarity, they call it post-not clarity,

Right?

else and they sort of move on from what they're doing. There's some people who feel post-quiddle

dysphoria. They actually feel sad or they feel depressed actually orgasm. And we don't know exactly why this happens but it is because of this dramatic change in sort of neurochemical signaling in the brain and for those people who have it it can be days where they sort of like feel bad. It can be hours where they feel sad and so it can be really dramatic. So Pylitude, what's Pylitude of the four pillars of men's sexual health? We talked about strength. Okay, so we did strength,

yet we did feel what's Pylitude. Pylitude is environment. So we can start with the easy stuff

and that's stress, right? Everyone knows stress is bad, but I think the thing is people just

think like, "Ah, I'll just deal with it. Everyone's stressed. Like what's normal to be stressed. If you are chronically stressed, that means your cortisol is raised all the time, which is dampening your testosterone, which is also keeping you in the sympathetic state and you just cannot get in your mind space and in the nervous system place to actually have sex." So that's super important. And I think there's lots of different ways to alleviate stress. You've got to figure out what

works for you for some people using a stress ball even just at work. And I think part of it, you can actually incorporate some intimacy. There's some evidence that the governments have been on your podcast doing a 22nd hug. So setting with your partner or loved one and hugging for 20 seconds on your own like independent gravity actually helps alleviate stress and breaks sort of

a stress loop doing a six second kiss with your partner. And so it seems like six seconds no

a big deal, but actually if you tie a bit, if I'm just doing a kiss and I'm not like actually it's a little bit longer than normal. And so these sort of small things can help alleviate stress. Any type of movement can be really beneficial. The other thing is just having like interactions with people. And so that's where we're becoming more isolated. But even just like talking to the barista or talking to someone at the grocery store, this again tells your brain that you're in a

safe space like you're talking to someone you're having a normal social interaction. So and then being creative. And we've been trying to work with this work on this with our kids because there's so much external stimuli all the time right. They want to play a video game. They want to watch TV. They want to play sports. But we want them to be bored and be creative. Like come up with creative

ideas to keep themselves interested and engaged in a different way. So I think that's so

so important. And outside of stress, sleep, sleep is just so much abundance of data on how sleep affects hormonal health. They looked at data on men sleeping five hours a night versus eight hours a night. So you take the same guy and you sleep eight hours and you, you know, do a five five hours for a little a few days. His test for a week has testosterone drops by 15%. That's like as much testosterone drop as would happen with 10 years of life. And you know how long

they did that for? It was short as a week. A week of sleep deprivation will tank your testosterone. And sleep apnea is another one that I think people one don't realize they have and two don't realize that fixing it could actually improve their hormonal health. Wait, so does this mean that people who have chronically bad sleep probably have low testosterone? Probably, yeah. And what is the symptoms of low testosterone? So low testosterone, there's sometimes very vague.

So it can be fatigue. It can be brain fog. It can be depression. It can be low desire.

It can be erectile dysfunction. That's what people always think. It's just erectile dysfunction

but it's this whole constellation of symptoms. It can also be increased fat mass, decreased muscle mass. So all of these things can happen because we have testosterone receptors all over our body. We have the men are brain. We have the men are muscle. We have the men are bone. And these can all have really serious consequences when it's low. When you have sleep apnea and how you know you have sleep apnea, your partner might tell you that you're like waking up

and you're like gasping for air. If you have one really easy way to check is take a measuring tape and measure your next circumference. If it's more than 17 inches for a guy or 16 inches for a female, it means it's very likely that you may have sleep apnea. And that's because when you have excess

mass basically here, it's compressing your airway and can make it difficult to get air into your

into your body. When you improve sleep apnea, we've seen improvements in testosterone's highest 200 nanograms for desolater. So huge jumps in testosterone after fixing sleep apnea. And the same goes for other sleep disorders, although the data is not as abundant but sleep is so important. Then we talk about what's in your environment. So you get a bottle of water, so many of my patients actually they only buy like cases of plastic bottle of water. Once in a while a plastic bottle of

water like don't stress yourself out. This goes back to stress. People get really stressed. What's in my environment? What am I drinking? What am I eating? Like do what you can control? So plastic

Water bottles have things like phallates and BPAs which can affect hormonal h...

estrogen. They can reduce the production of testosterone based on these mechanisms. Also things

like plastics in the environment, PFAS, so those things in a nonstick cookware, all those things can affect hormone health. Now, how do you sort of protect yourself? I tell people again, don't stress. There's only so much you can control. So I love that we are not drinking out of

plastic. If you have to get a plastic because you're at an event or whatever, try to make sure

it's not a warm bottle. So it hasn't been like sitting in the sun for hours and hours, now it's because as it gets warm it releases more microplastics and more chemicals into the water. When you're eating food, if you are eating out of, say you get takeout, put it on a plate and warm it up. Don't ever warm up that plastic and when you store food in the fridge, put it in a glass container or a metal container. But don't ever leave the food in the plastic and put it in the

fridge. These are simple things you can control. You could also limit sort of your exposure to dust because dust has microplastics. You can try to wear more cotton fabrics less synthetic fabrics because they shed less microplastics. But again, I think do what you can do, but don't let the stress of these chemicals like, do really, because stress is not helping you there. And how much of the difference does, you know, microplastics make my whole mental health, is it really a big deal?

Well, I think it depends. It's all dose dependent, right? So we're all exposed. Like if you look at the data, like people are, you know, consuming quite a bit of microplastics and we're seeing

them actually even in testicles and penis tissue samples, like they're in our bodies. And so I think

that it's definitely playing a role how much we don't know yet. We just know if there are mechanisms that we know that they do affect hormonal health. And so do the best you can. Do you and your family drink out of plastic bottles? No, we drink. We have like metal water bottles for the kids and myself and what about non-stick pans? We buy ceramic. We do our best to like avoid those as much as possible. So the other things the company you keep. I think we don't talk about this enough and we

talk about it in terms of business. Like you want to keep people who are successful around you. You want to keep people who can help you. But it also plays a role in your sexual environment, right? So my husband is in these groups with a bunch of other male physicians. And there's a lot of

discussion about how they never have sex anymore. And they're all just like, oh yeah, this is just

like normal, like we're getting older. Our partners don't want to have sex. It's so frustrating. And there's a little discussion about this. And it's almost like, oh, that's okay. Like that's just normal. Right? They're normalizing this experience where that sex has not become a priority because

life is so stressful. Things are so crazy. Maybe you're having relationship discord. So it absolutely

plays a role. And there's actually some evidence that it may help you make better choices. So there's one study where they looked at, I think it was like 50,000 people. And they did an intervention where they tried to encourage these people to surround themselves with positive influences that were like have safe sex and avoided negative influences. And they saw that these people had an increase in like sexual positive behavior. So like safe sex practices by 46%. So just by changing

who they spent their time with, they saw this major difference in how they approached their sex lives. Okay. So if your friends are very pessimistic about sex and they're not having a neck and complaining about it, that's going to become sort of contagious. Yeah. And I think it extrapolates to everything. What kind of relationships you're in. How do they view their relationship with their partner? Is it a priority? Do they make it a priority? Right? Or are they just busy doing

their own thing? And they're just like living in parallel lives. They're doing their own thing,

you're doing your own thing. You never really spend time with your partner. And then when you go

hang out with your friends, you're like, "Oh God, I'm so glad to get away." And you're not like talking about how much you enjoy your partner. People tend to talk negatively, right? They want to like sort of like vent. And so when you have people who don't make that a part of their lives, it also affects you. They value their partner. And they talk about them in a positive way. That's a great thing to say, like, okay, this is the right kind of person I want because I want to value my partner too. And

I don't want that to roll off on me because it absolutely does. And the other thing you said in this category of environmental stuff is things like pornography consumption. Is it possible to consume too much porn? So it's not the amount of porn that you watch. It is the sort of the way you feel about it. It might make people watch porn for a variety of different reasons. Most often it's for pleasure and enjoyment. But there's some people who watch porn because they want to get away from negative

feelings, right? This is giving them dopamine and they're using it as a way to just feel better in the moment. And so that can become a compulsion where they're watching porn and it's like giving them these positive feelings and they feel negative in life and they're going back to porn to sort of again have that compulsion to watch porn again. But that's a small subset of people. The other thing is that there is a lot of negative discussion around porn, right? People are like,

"Porn is bad. It's dangerous. It's evil." And I think, you know, it's more nuanced than that. But

If you feel that porn is bad, every time you watch porn, you feel negative, y...

yourself. That's where we see people having the most dysfunction associated with it because they feel guilty. They could watch it once a year and they could feel super guilty about it and it could affect their sexual function. They could see themselves as a bad person. They could see themselves as wrong or immoral. And that's really when it becomes an issue. If you are finding yourself either compulsively watching pornography and using it as a scapegoat, maybe time to reevaluate.

Say, why am I doing this? How can I switch this out for something else that makes me feel better? That might be healthy, like exercise or what going for walks or whatever that might be. And then if it's something that's really making you feel like bad or guilty because maybe that's how you're raised, maybe that's what you feel about morality, then yeah, maybe like you even need to work through that because porn is maybe something that you still want to watch at times,

or you need to abstain. But usually those are, it's very difficult to abstain from most people

to abstain for prolonged periods of time. So I think it's something that you have to work through

if you find yourself having these sort of feelings about pornography or you're compulsively watching it. But for the most people, it's adults, for most adults. It is fantasy. It's a place where

you can experience see things that you may never do in real life that may be enjoyable,

that are fun to watch, that are rye to feel arousal. We see that when couples watch porn together, they are more likely to be more satisfied in their relationship. And when there's a discord, like one person really doesn't like it or doesn't use it, and the other one uses it a lot, that's where we see the problem. It's porn consumption going to impact my intimacy with my partner. So it depends. I think a lot of people watch it without an issue, right?

They watch it and must. I'm not going to then be able to ejaculate very quickly, necessarily, with my partner. Yeah, so that obviously that is, you know, there's a refractory period after you ejaculate. Now, when you're younger, that refractory period could be minutes, and when you're older, that can be a day in half. And so we see that some people may struggle, especially if they're watching a lot of porn every single day, and their refractory

period is maybe a day, then they may actually really have trouble ejaculating with their partner, because they've not given themselves that time. This has had probably the single biggest impact on my office. It's all the products that I've tried that have given me productivity gains or cognitive

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And the last one, the last of the four pillars. Well, that's the four pillars we talked a little bit about. It's called confidence. And confidence is not like, strutting around like a peacock, like I know what I'm doing. It's confidence in knowledge and curiosity. So knowledge we talked about a little bit understanding female anatomy. Like, how do female bodies get aroused? Right? What makes them

aroused? Where is the clitoris knowing someone out of me? And two, actually talking to your partner or paying attention to their cues. For some reason with sex, it's the only time that we just

expect people to be mined readers. We just want you to know what I like and just go for it, right?

And then when it's not good, you're like, well, you just don't know what you're doing.

And it's like, it's wild to me that we actually never got taught how to talk about sex,

how to bring it up with a partner, how to, you know, just explore and have fun with sex.

Maybe add a toy to the bedroom.

This is a Volvo stimulator. So you put this on the outside. So you can see that it would

in theory, this was smaller, would stimulate the, the clitoris on the outside. It also can change in shape. It'll vibrate, right? And I'll have different stimulations that you can play around with and decide what you enjoy. So this one's run out of battery, um, so they're brand new and they've not finished. I didn't say they had been very defensive though. So if my pinky finger, if my finger here is the clitoris, I put it on like that.

Yep. And then it vibrates. Correct. And then the penis goes. Correct. The whole. And there's another version of that. This is basically, this was basically like the whole goes around the penis. And that goes in. And that can go in and stimulate and vibrates. You both feel the vibration. And you both feel the stimulation. I remember when I was with them, I had a partner. And she, she felt that sex toys were for older people. Oh, people. Specifically what she said.

And she, she was kind of against the use of them. I've always been down.

Yeah. Like it adds novelty and it's exciting and it just adds something new. But she felt like

it was almost like giving up. Well, I mean, look, I think I wonder why. I would, if I,

she was here at ask her why do you think that what belief system do you have that's making you think that this is like not a good thing to use, right? We use technology in so many places in our lives. Right. So why not introduce it in our sex life? Are you going to become reliant on it, though, because it doesn't make it easier to get off with a sex toy? So they've actually looked at a vibration and can you get desensitized to it? And the way they've looked at it's actually

like construction workers, whether using those like vibration tools, right? And seeing it's like

their hands get desensitized. And what they've seen is, yes, for a short period of time,

they do lose a little bit of sensation on their fingertips, but then it restores back to normal. And so it's not that you're going to become desensitized forever, right? I think you bought up a great plan. We're just adding novelty. Now, I think when I see novelty, people are like, oh my god, I need to role play in a different way or bring like some sort of BDSM or whatever into my sex life. And that's not exactly true. So when you think about sex, right? It's just like

eating your favorite ice cream. Maybe you have an ice cream, you know, three times a week and you enjoy it. But if you start having an ice cream every single day, you're kind of bored with it, right? And the same goes for sex. Now, having routine in sex, knowing what you like, knowing what you're partner likes, it can be very helpful. But it also is nice to add novelty. So if you think about, we could extrapolate from the flow state. So when you are in a flow state for work, right?

Things feel really almost effortless and you're just like in a zone. You can also get into a sexual flow state. And you look at the flow state. Yeah, you need things to be slightly challenging to get into a flow state. They can't be easy and they can't be so hard that you're going to

get frustrated, right? And so you need to add a slight challenge to your sexual encounter to get into

that flow state. And that's when you start having really great sex because you're like in your throat totally immersed, you're feeling great. And it's super fun, right? So I think that's another part of being confident is being able to and confident to try new things and explore new things. And it can be as simple as like doing it in a different room, or maybe getting a pillow, or switching where your head position is. Like it can be so small, but it can just add a little

bit of uniqueness, novelty, and challenge. Are they certain positions that are going to increase the probability that my partner has an orgasm? Yeah. So typically when the female partner is on top, she has more control over where she's getting stimulation to the clitoris because right, she can angle her body in such a way. So oftentimes that shows that has a higher orgasm rates. There's actually like this technique called the "coidel alignment" technique where you sort of

move in a rocking motion so that your pubic synthesis, so this bone right here, is sort of like rubbing against their clitoris, like this area, the skin here is rubbing against the clitoris while you're penetrating. And that has been shown to increase orgasm rate and pleasure. And so really it's about figuring out and trying different things and realizing like that, for example, that coil alignment technique is sort of difficult. Like it's not that easy and intuitive,

and so you have to sort of play around with it and figure out what is going to work best.

And yeah, realizing it might not work, you might be like super awkward and be like, okay, like that's okay. Like it's not the end of the world if sex is not perfect every time because we're learning and we're playing and we're having fun. And so I think that's really the key is like not letting yourself get so frustrated if something doesn't go exactly the way you envision it in your head. I used to think that a woman orgasm was when this was when she squirted.

Mm-hmm. So that's what I thought it was. I thought an orgasm was squatting. Yeah, well, you're probably not the only one to think that. And so squirting, not every woman

Squirt.

Usually it's clear, colorless, and it can be quite voluminous. It's coming from the urethra,

which is the p-hole, essentially. And remember I talked about those skin's glands. Those skin's

glands are the homolog of the male prostate. And they have a little bit of fluid in them too. Typically, when you have stimulation and squirting, they will release fluid from the bladder as well as the skin's glands that combines together and it's emitted through that. So it's not p. The way they describe it, and there's been a lot of research on this. So there's people who say it's p, there's people who say it's not. There's a couple studies. So one is they put

die into the bladder. And they took women who said they were squirters and they had them orgasm. And they saw, is there die in the fluid? And yeah, there was dying fluid. So it's coming, it has to come from a lot of the skin's glands only hold a small amount. But it's chemically different. It's usually clear, odorless, it doesn't smell like p. And so there's some theories as to why that might be. It may be that when you're having sex, there's different hormonal signals that

change the concentration of what's filtering through your kidneys so that it is a little bit different in composition. There's some theories that when there's more estrogen around that it may change, there may be some like fluid filling in the actual interstitia of the organs. Again, it's hard to say, but it's absolutely coming from the urethral, which is connected to the

bladder as well as the skin's glands. But I think this whole discussion about what it is, it doesn't

matter. Like, is it pleasurable? Are you enjoying it? Great. If you squirt and you enjoy it, great. If you don't, that doesn't mean that there's something wrong and that your partner hasn't orgasmed. The way to figure out if you're a partner orgasm is you asker, right? Either she tells you or you asker. And sometimes it's obvious and sometimes it's not, but, you know, you've sort of figured it out. There's three theories that emerged in my research about why women

squirt from an evolutionary perspective. The first was that some of these are just theories that

are not proven. Of course, the first is that squirting contains PSA and zinc, which are naturally antibacterial and ejaculating these fluids during or after sex may have evolved to flush the u-rethra and prevent u-ty's, the logic being in a pre antibiotic world, a woman who could flush bacteria out of a system after mating was more likely to stay healthy and reproduce. That's one theory. Well, before you go, I want to talk about that really quickly. So that's a really

interesting theory. So one, the reason they emit PSA is because schemes glands are the homolog of the prostate. So the prostate makes PSA, which is prostate specific antigen. To this point, this word homolog again. Yeah, it's basically the prostate in the male, the same tissue when they're an

embryo becomes the prostate in the male and becomes a schemes glands in the female. So that's why

it's emitting PSA. That is an interesting theory because there are a subset of women who get UTIs after sex, not everybody, but some do, and it's not because of the ejaculate or because of the male harboring some bacteria. It's because of the actual thrusting of the penis. It's taking bacteria from the outside and making it more easy for it to go through the urethra into the bladder. In women have a short urethra. And so I want just to debunk that myth that it's like you're getting it from

your partner or there's something wrong with you. It is literally just anatomy. And so some women do get more UTIs after sex. And so that is interesting theory because maybe that's true. I don't know.

The second theory was in ancient ancestors, the hormonal search during orgasm and ejaculation actually

triggered the release of an egg. Humans evolved to ovulate on a cycle now or we kept the plumbing and the neurohomonal reflex. It's a happy accident, a biological vestige that no longer serves. It's original reproductive purpose, but remains because it isn't harmful for survival. Interesting. I mean, there is some thought that maybe orgasming is a phasms orgasm help with fertility, but it's not really robust. And the last one kind of matches what you just

said there, which is the mixed selection theory, the intense pleasure and psychological response of squirting or orgasm, act as a reward system. It incentivizes women to seek out specific partners who provide high levels of stimulation, potentially signaling a better genetic compatibility or a more attentive male, which would help with the survival of offspring. Maybe. That makes sense. 40% of women squirt. Yeah. So the other thing is obviously a lot of sex is focused on genitals,

but there's a whole body of arogenous cells, right? Almost all most of your entire body can be an arogenous cell. And we talked a little bit about it when we talked about sensory focus, right? You can explore. You can find areas that people find arogenous. So when you look at data next, nipples, lips, buttocks, inner thighs, all these areas are considered arogenous. By most most people, regardless of their sexual orientation, regardless of their cultural upbringing,

it seems to be pretty universal. There's actually a famous paper about non-genital orgasms. I'm like, how people orgasm without any genitals stimulation. So lip orgasms, anal sex orgasms.

It's been documented, absolutely.

Even like women have had orgasms during child birth. There's, there have been these documented ways to orgasm. And it's because these areas can be very arogenous. And sometimes stimulating

multiple areas can like add more arogenous interest. And that's why you see people, like maybe

in the BDSM community, though, they'll be using nipple clouds while they're doing other things. Right? So there's, there's a whole bunch of areas that are arogenous. And most of the times, people are not really spending much time on foreplay or stimulating these arogenous zones as much as they should, right? You, you have a whole body to play with. And how do you stimulate them? There's actually evidence behind that. So on your skin, we have these special fibers called

seed tactile efforts. So when you stimulate these fibers, they help you feel pleasure, enjoyment, those sorts of things. And so there was a study where they took 19 couples,

a small study was not a one-din. And they basically told them to stimulate an arogenous zone

and an arogenous zone. The non-arogenous zone being the forehead. And so they had the couple stimuli. And they told them stimuli at levels of 18 centimeters per second in terms of how fast you're caressing the arm or body part and at three centimeters per second. And what they found was those who stimulate at three centimeters per second had more sexual arousal, had more pleasant stimulation compared to those who were stimulating at 18 centimeters per second. Now this makes sense

because those seed tactile effort and fibers respond very well to that slow, gentle caress. The other interesting thing is that these fibers are only responsive to human touch. So if I take a glove and I put it on my hand and I touch you, it still doesn't work. That's so interesting because in Los Angeles where we are now, we were viewing an office and we were walking down the street to see what the neighborhood was like. We walked past one place and it is a robot massage

parlor. And I always thought, great, like, well part of me thought, and maybe I'm pretty

fun to cortex. So, oh, great idea because, you know, you can get massage as whenever you want. Right. It's going to be cheap. You maybe can have one in your home. But then the other part of me as I sort of thought, actually, I don't actually think that's like, where I get massages.

Yeah, I think there's something about human touch which makes a big difference.

Absolutely, there is. And so I think that's where evolutionary, evolutionary built to seek out human touch and human behavior. I wonder if I would want a robot to massage me? It wouldn't be good. I mean, think about sitting in a massage chair. Is it ever as good? It's never as good. Right. And so I don't think a robot's going to be that different from a, maybe a little better than a massage chair, but like,

massage chairs are never good. No. They're just like, they're okay. They're mediocre.

I mean, I want to talk about testosterone, how that links to sexual function, but also just overall health because I was reading that there's been a 300% increase in the United States in the last 10 years of testosterone prescriptions. And my friends are increasingly having conversation about testosterone, which we weren't having even five years ago. It wasn't a conversation. And now the conversation I'm having amongst my friends is like, is our testosterone high enough?

We need to get supplements, please our testosterone. Testosterone is declining. So when you look at testosterone levels from the 1990s, like late 1990s, the average level was around 600. And if you look at data around 2015, it was 450. So there's been like a 25% decline in testosterone. Now you're going to ask me why. One, we talked about some of the endocrine disrupting chemicals. That's part of it, certainly. Two, there's a significant rise in obesity. Testosterone has

aromatase and testosterone converts to estrogen using this enzyme called aromatase. And so when you have more fat mass, you have more aromatase and more testosterone is being converted to estrogen. And so now you have less testosterone. Sorry, how do you have less testosterone? So because there's more fat mass, there's more aromatase. So that aromatase sees all this testosterone

and it converts it to estrogen. Okay, or else that's what they say. They talk about manboops.

Yeah, so when you have a lot of estrogen dial around, you can get men mobs, you can get kind of comastia. So term for it. So that's one. Two is we see a rise in diabetes and insulin resistance, which also causes a decrease in testosterone. We're seeing a rise in ultra-processed food intake. And that doesn't have the optimal nutrition that you need to optimize testosterone. So we're getting highly caloric, which then leads to obesity. We're getting lack of healthy

fats. All these things are super important for testosterone. And the Mediterranean diet is what has been the most studied. And basically it's anti-inflammatory diet is what they found for testosterone. So trying to just eat like whole foods on processed foods as much as possible and minimizing the inflammatory foods. Does testosterone having high testosterone make me more fertile? No, not necessarily. So I think people inherently think that the higher your testosterone level is

When you check your blood work, that that's better.

everyone is different. And what I can't tell you is what your receptors look like, what your testosterone

androgen receptors look like. How sensitive are they to testosterone? And everyone's a little bit different. When you look at the same guy, or you look at two different guys, their variability can be so much that a guy who's 900 can be normal and a guy who's 500 can be normal. Because everyone has individual genetic variations. It's how their cells, how sensitive their cells are, how many cells they have, you know, how many latex cells they have in their testicles. The CAG repeats,

which are these DNA repeats on the receptor in themselves. People who have more or less sensitive to the testosterone that's around. So they need more testosterone to get the same result. Whereas people who have less repeats have more sensitivity. So they don't need as much testosterone.

And so everyone is individual. And so that's why it's really important to understand how are you

feeling, right? It's not about chasing a number. And so absolutely, we know that when your testosterone

is low, but low to 14 nanograms per desk later, that your risk of mortality goes up by two. So you are going to double your risk of dying if you have low testosterone. But when you go super high, super physiologic, meaning like 1800 or higher. Now you're putting yourself at risk for other things. You can have blood thickening, which is a no-inside effect of testosterone replacement. And that puts your risk for stroke, heart attack, heart disease. Over long periods of time, it can affect your heart

because there's also heart muscle cells that get exposed to this high level of testosterone. And when that happens, these days sort of change over time. And they become more collagen deposition. They get more fibrosis. And this makes them stiffer. And so that you're not pumping blood as effectively as you would otherwise. And so there are real consequences to going too high. There's also the side effects of having acne of changes in mood in terms of aggression and

things when you get really high. So really, it's about finding what you feel good at. More is not necessarily better. Once your testosterone receptors are saturated, meaning they're all bound to testosterone. More doesn't help you. It might help you get more muscles, which is why people abuse and abolish steroids in testosterone because it will continue to help you get bigger muscles. But that's it. It's not going to help you with your brain health, your bone health, your sexual health,

your any of that. Is there a way to visually spot a person with low testosterone? Are there visual clues? Usually it's someone who feels very fatigued. Like they can't get out of bed. They feel just like so drained. Usually they are a little bit more overweight. Skinny fun?

Visceral out of pos. I mean, you can't always tell if there's Skinny said could be because

they could have visceral out of posthee, which is meaning that the fat is around the organs. Right? And so you don't see like a big pop belly necessarily. They may have really low sexual desire. They may have decrease in mood. Skinny bones. Does it impact skin and bones? Yeah. So if you get high testosterone, you get acne because it affects the sebum in the skin. Bone health. So testosterone converts to estradiol. And estradiol is really important for bone

metabolism. And so when you have low testosterone, you can also have low estrogen. And when you're estrogen gets very low, you get a higher risk for fractures, higher risk for osteoporosis. And so that's

where your bone health can be endanger. And so that's why testosterone can help protect your bones

because of its conversion to estradiol. If you do have low testosterone, should you be considering taking animal exteroids? Like, and who is testosterone replacement therapy good for? So I'm going to ask you a question why are you saying animal exteroids? I don't know. Because I hear that people, big bodybuilders take animal exteroids. The reason I ask you that is because people think animal exteroids and testosterone replacement

therapy are the same thing. And they're not. And so testosterone replacement therapy is what is given to guys who have low testosterone. If you have truly low testosterone, there's a few things. You can obviously improve testosterone naturally by going back to those pillars of health that we talked about, improve your sleep, do resistance training, avoid endocrine disrupting chemicals. But if you are still low despite doing all those things, or you're like so fatigued that you can't

move your body, I'm sure you really need to do it. Then I think testosterone replacement is very valuable. And so testosterone replacement is getting you to a level of testosterone that is within normal. We're not trying to get you super high. We're not trying to get you to become a bodybuilder.

We're trying to get you to normal. What you should be. And so antibiotics are different.

Anabolic steroids are like all these different oral pills and injectables and things that work on muscle as well as work on your energy receptors. And so those are typically things that people are taking on their own, their kind of self directing their care. And they're not really monitoring their testosterone. They don't really care how high they go. They just want the end

Product of looking muscular.

host of concerns. In addition to the ones we talked about like blood clots and heart type,

but there's a 15 times higher risk of having premature heart failure. And a 122 times more risk

of cardiac death when you're taking anabolic steroids for the purposes of increasing muscle mass and not getting really high in your testosterone. So what is a real serious issue when you take

anabolic steroids because it can have real serious health consequences? I've always imagined

that once I have kids. So I'm I think I'm scared that if I have testosterone replacement therapy at this age 33, it might impact my fertility. It absolutely will. Okay good. So I'm not going to do that until I've had all four of the kids as many as I can. And then I figured when I hit like 45, then I'll go and testosterone replacement therapy. Is this a good strategy? Well first of all, I would want to know why you want to be on testosterone. Is your testosterone low?

I have no idea. Right? Are you having any symptoms? I mean, you live a very high-powered busy life. And so I can guarantee your stress is probably not under control. Like probably you're not sleeping great. And not to say that those are things that you know, you can't do in addition to taking

testosterone if your testosterone is indeed low. But I think the important thing is realizing like

it's only going to help you if your testosterone receptors are not fully saturated and giving you more testosterone is going to saturate them. Doesn't it just drop anyway with age? It does. So it drops about one percent a year on average. Some people drop less. Some people drop more. So if you look at someone who is healthy and they have a normal testosterone, they usually won't become what we call hypogonital or have low testosterone even as they age because the drop is so low. It's only one

percent a year. But if you add on these co-morbid conditions, if you add on a high stress life, if you add on poor sleep, if you add on exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals, you're going to see that number come down much higher. It's actually, I was just pulled up a graph here. That shows testosterone decline with age. And it's actually not that steep. It's not. It is going to decline. But it may not decline to the point where you need testosterone. So not everyone needs it. Depending

on the data, you look at 20 to 40 percent of guys have low testosterone. And when you look at

the number that gets real, it's like 2 percent. And it starts declining from about 20 years old. Yeah, it depends on the person 20 to 40 years old. It's probably around 30 to 40. And the reason we come up with these numbers, right? These guidelines to guide us on what's normal and what's not is because you look at population-based data and you look at when these symptoms arise. And there are clear numbers. You may start having bone loss around 300. You might start having

decreased sexual frequency of thoughts at 215. You might start having feeling less physical vigor around 290. And so there are numbers that we know based on population-based data that we're seeing these numbers decline. Now the other thing to think about when you're looking at testosterone is free testosterone. So testosterone comes into different forms in the body, it comes bound and unbound. So 45 percent of testosterone is bound to SHBG, which is a molecule of protein that is

really tightly binds to testosterone, doesn't let it go for your body to use. Then there's some that's bound to albumin, which is sort of loosely bound. And then there's 2 percent that's free.

One to 2 percent that's free. And that's what we say is like the most available to your body

for use. And there's actually good data that looks at free testosterone, the levels of free testosterone are correlated with these symptoms as well. And so you do have to look at the big

picture. So I always check the total testosterone as well as an SHBG, because some people can

have elevated SHBG. When your thyroid dysfunction due to aging, it's genetic variability, right? In women, SHBG goes up when you take oral contraceptives and it stays up for life if you take oral contraceptives. So it can affect their free testosterone. The other thing to think about to testosterone is it's for life. Once you take it, your body stops making its own testosterone. Many people over years will notice that their testicles get smaller, because their body stops

making its own testosterone. So it's not something to take lightly. Now, if you say you were low right now and you wanted to conceive there are ways where you can take other pharmaceuticals that will naturally boost your own production, like HCG, or clometer, and clomophene, these work basically in different ways to either tell your brain that hey, we need more testosterone or they send the mimic the signals that tell your testicles to make more testosterone. And so there are

ways to do it. And you definitely need someone who's, you know, well versed in managing hormone management. But there are things that you can do if you're low. But again, I don't think it's

Once you, once you start these things, you can't go, I mean, you can get off ...

a process. And it's not something that everyone will do because you're going to feel good on testosterone.

If you're taking it and then when you get off it, because your body is like no longer making, it's when you're going to feel horrible. So do you think most 50 plus your old man should be taking testosterone replacement therapies? Only if they're symptomatic and they're low, right? So would it make them the average man, the average 5th year old man, if this is the average feel better on a daily basis? Not necessarily because if they are normal, like I said, if

they're testosterone receptors are already fully saturated, it's not going to change, right? It's not going to change the, like I said, it may make their muscles look bigger, but it's not going to change their their cognition. It's not going to change their mood. It's not going to change their sex drive. It's not going to change their erections when their testosterone receptors are fully

saturated. And you know in this growth, what is showing the decline here? Is that going to

be thing to do with whether the testosterone levels are fully saturated? Because no, you can't tell from that. You can't tell from that. So you can have low testosterone, but still be fully saturated.

That's what we talk about symptoms, right? Because that's how I can tell. I think, you know,

that's part of what being a doctor is right. Talking to your patients and figuring out what's going on with them and what their symptoms are and making sure it's nothing else, right? You can have low thyroid and that can mimic what, what, what low testosterone feels like you can have a high prolactin because you might have a benign tumor in your brain that's secreting prolactin. And that can reduce your testosterone. So that's the reason to get a full evaluation to make sure

there's nothing else that we're missing. That's causing you to have these symptoms if your other levels are normal. Okay, that makes sense. So just because my testosterone levels would be low, doesn't mean I necessary. If I don't, if I'm not symptomatic, doesn't mean that I necessarily just assume that I need testosterone replacement therapy. Exactly. Okay. Yeah, I think I think most of my male friends are just assuming that once we hit

50, we're along the testosterone. I mean, look, I think when, if you need it, it's a great drug. It's a great option to improve your quality of life. It's obviously preventing bone loss, it's improving your longevity. It's preventing, hopefully having some benefit in terms of cardiovascular metabolic health. And so yeah, absolutely, if you need it, but it's not something that like everyone should just take because why not? Right? Like, it's a, when you play

with hormones of serious business, you know? I guess a lot of men are self-conscious in a way that they don't often admit and they want to have big muscles and they want to feel strong. And this is the, the problem I'm seeing with younger guys right now is that there is a lot of

young kids taking antibiotics because there's so much pressure to look a certain way, right?

Because nowadays, how do you meet people on social media through like swiping and and all you see is what they look like? And so there's this pressure. And like, I'll say that the gym, like, I've got the gym and there's these young kids who are like, there is no way you are naturally that built at that age, right? Like, unless you've been lifting since you were like seven years old. And so, and of course there are some, but it is serious because one, it causes infertility, right?

When you're on testosterone replacement after about 18, 18 months, 70% of people on testosterone replacement will be infertile. 17. 70%, 70. And even as soon as like 10 weeks, we see some people having drops in their sperm count. So it's variable with how quickly you're going to see impacts on your fertility, but it absolutely happens. And it can, it can come back for the large majority of people, but how long it takes depends on your age and how long you were on testosterone

replacement therapy and in some cases it can take as long as two years to come back. I really

need to get my testosterone levels checked. Yeah. But also, should you get your seam analysis checked?

And that's on that. Good. Good. Because that's also a biomarker of health. We've seen that people who have poor seam in parameters, they have higher rates of mortality. And they actually live when you look at age, like what age people die, they, I younger, compared to people. And it's dose dependent. So if you have like normal, the concentration of sperm and it keeps going down and down and down and down, if you look at the age, it's like, they live to 78, 77, 76. So like,

you can actually see it come down except for people who have no sperm because those are genetic disorders. Those are live a little longer because it's not necessarily due to cardiovascular metabolic issues.

But it's basically a reflection of your overall health.

Just making myself a delicious coffee. From the freezer, from the freezer, if you haven't had about come to you. No. Oh my gosh, this is going to change your life. A couple of months ago, the founder of this business called Matt sent a big shipment of this coffee to our office in London. What most people don't know is that the processing of coffee takes out a lot of the taste. So what they do is they flash freeze it at the optimal moment

when it's most tasty. And they send you in the post to the coffee in these little frozen ice cubes. Now Matt sent a big shipment to my office. I moved it to the kitchen. I said to the team, not yourselves out. And then I saw so many messages in our Slack channel of people going,

"Oh my God, what the hell is that?

morning using a little button on the back of this thing. I pour my hot water in and I mix it."

And that is done. You can get $30 off your first order.

I've come to your coffee. If you go to cometia.com/demon. Try it and please Instagram DM me. LinkedIn me and let me know if you love it as much as I do. Make sure you keep one about to say to yourself, "I'm inviting 10,000 of you to come even deeper into the dire of a CEO." Welcome to my inner circle. This is a brand new private community that I'm launching

to the world. We have so many incredible things that happen that you are never shown. We have

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join before it closes. So if you want to join our private close community head to the link in the

description below or go to d.oaccircle.com. I will speak to you there. One of the things I was quite surprised by, I'll be honest, is when I want a new YouTube channel,

one of your very high-performing videos. I think it had 31 million views. Was about enlarging your

penis. Yes. I didn't know that so many men were interested in ways to enlarge their penis. Well, it's interesting because when you look at the data, more men want to, so let's say, most guys would love to be taller. If you're an average height man, most guys would love to be taller. Yeah, true. More men want to have a longer penis than they want to be taller. Really? Wow. Wow. Why is this? Well, I think a lot of people start to get a young age. I have

satins, right? And so I see it. They talk about their penis in such a way, like very early in life. Like, oh my god, my penis is so big or it should be so big or whatever. And it's like this, it becomes this society thing about who's got a bigger penis. It's very interesting. But there's a lot of pressure to feel like and a lot of discussion around bigger is better, right? It's talked about in media. It's subtly joked about. It is everywhere you look people are talking

about like being well and doubt as being better. But usually on my podcast, we interviewed the guy who has the largest medically verified penis. It's I think it's like 13 or 14 inches in length. And he actually has a lot of trouble because it's so large that people don't want to have sex with him. And it's uncomfortable for them. And so like it's not all roses and sunshine on the other side.

But the reality is that many people feel what's called small penis anxiety. And they,

even if they have a normal sized penis, they feel consumed with how the size of their penis is.

And so that's why this video did. So well, I may have had no idea how many people would

resonate with because I'm not a guy, right? And I see patients all the time, but at that time in my career, people weren't coming to me to talk about it. And so I realized that there's so many people quietly feeling insecure. And we talk a lot about women having body image issues, men do too, right? They feel insecure about the size of their penis because also they're seeing guys on pornography who have very well and doubt, balances. And you know, they chose to be

porn actors for a reason, right? Because they are naturally well and doubt. And so you're comparing yourself to the outliers. And the average penis is about 5.3 to 5.5 inches erect. But when you look at like, what do women want? They will say on average they want a six inch penis, but when you look at like the kind of sex toys they buy and they did the study because they were looking at people who they were trying to decide what kind of when they were developing fallacies for

trans people. Like they reconstruct fallacies for they want to, they were making them too girthy and they were like, well we need to figure out what girth women want. And so they looked at like what women buy online, like what are the most purchased sex toy and it's actually pretty close to average. Do you say 5.2 inches? 5.2 to 5.5 depending on the study you're looking at, yeah. Correct. And what size demand think the average is? Oh, they think it's like six or seven inches.

Oh, okay. So they think the average is bigger. And also how does age come into this? Because I'm presuming that when I get older, my penis is going to shrink or something. If you have good blood flow to your penis, it shouldn't shrink. So like I said earlier, if you stop having night time erections, you're not having erections, now you're no longer getting blood flow to your penis and it will shrink over time. Also, if you're gaining weight, it will appear that it's shrinking

Because you're getting more fat over here.

right above this bone and as this fat gets more and more, you're seeing less and less of the

penis. And is there a way to enlarge the penis? So there are many ways that I've been tried,

discussed, attempted. So there's definitely surgeries that you can get, but there's not a lot of surgeons who do a lot of penal lengthening surgeries and they have lots of complications, like very high rates of complications because the penis is a very vascular organ and the thing is that when you have the tiniest difference on your penis, you notice it, right? Like I have guys communicate with the tiniest little thing on their penis and like is this okay? Like this is new

and like luckily it's nothing, right? But I'm like they notice it, you notice it when something's wrong. So imagine you have a surgery and now something changes, right? So it is it is really

difficult to sort of replicate exactly a normal penis when you're lengthening it through surgery.

So I don't recommend surgery for lengthening penis. There is a safer way and it has been shown to help and that's using a traction device. So a traction device, we have one here. This is one brand you can get many of these online and you can put your penis in this device. It really, I like, I feel like I feel like shivers, what I want you to do this to this penis. So you would wrap it, it would be more comfortable than just putting this directly on your penis. If you guys

like constantly she's clamping the end of the penis into this. Into this device and then you sort of lengthen it, extend it with this 30 minutes twice a day for this particular device. They've actually done some research on this one, 30 minutes twice a day and there's a whole protocol in their

website and it does show improvements and length about two centimeters. But it is a commitment to

increasing length and to doing this process. So just on those numbers, to send to me to increase over what period of time and does that? For about three to six months, depending, yeah. And as a permanent. So that's all we don't know. We mostly study stop at, you know, once they get the results and we don't know that if you stop will it just revert back to normal. I don't know. And so the other thing about this particular traction device that's nice is if you have a

curvature in the penis, like you developed something called pervonies to these, this device can actually curve a little bit away from, like let's say you have an indentation on the top of the penis, it can actually bend away from that and it can help straighten out the penis. So that's actually a really nice utilization for it because for some people that can be really traumatic and devastating to have a change in the way your penis appears because it starts curving all of a sudden.

And this is safe and effective and you can have bruising, it can be slightly uncomfortable, but it's you're not going to really hurt yourself too much by doing something like this. I thought a curved penis would hit the G-sport better.

Yeah, sometimes a slight curve can be beneficial for some people, but again, I think like when

you notice that there's a dramatic change, you do that more calm. You would use the end of it. It's okay. I'm just going to figure out how this works. So I get the penis, I put it. Through. Yeah. Clump it down. And you want to put it at your normal, and then you're just slightly advanced the length.

You're not going to pull crazy, it's going to do a little bit of traction, so it's not uncomfortable. It's slight, like, just a slight tension. It shouldn't be like that. It should be a little much less tension, but it is, I mean, they can vary in price from $100 to $500. So it's a one-time cost. It is not like I said, not dangerous. What is dangerous is when people try to do something that became popular on TikTok called Jelking. And Jelking is where you use your your hands,

and you make like an okay sign with your fingers, and you're like stretching the penis with your hands. And this can be dangerous because you can create micro tears in the penis, and we in the urology community have seen plenty of patients who have now developed a reptile dysfunction after doing Jelking because they've now created damage to their penis. And so I really caution people because there is so much despair around sexual function, around penal health that people are

willing to try things, and they might really hurt themselves. No joke. I had a patient the other day asked me if he should drink hydrogen peroxide because he saw some ad that said hydrogen peroxide will fix your erections. And I said, please don't, this is, you know, but he really was like

seriously, or honestly asking me this question. And I, you know, I didn't want to shame him

by any means. And I was like, no, you know, this is actually not safe, and it's not going to help you. And there's no pill, there's no drink, there's no anything that's going to give you a longer penis. What are the cases that you see that break you up? You know, I've seen, so there are I've seen patients who've had surgery to lengthen their penis, and they are above average when they at baseline, and they have these surgeries to lengthen their penis, and they have a bad

Outcome.

because that person knowing the risks and benefits perhaps made a choice, and that choice didn't go the way they wanted. And now they have to live with that for the rest of their life. And that's really sad. Gosh, imagine that Christ was, you know, what it just, it doesn't

work anymore. Well, like, the one patient I'm thinking of, um, he, uh, had it like it basically

developed a scar all at the top of the penis, so it was like disfigured essentially. And so it was really sad. Before I hit puberty, I definitely had a penis anxiety, because I was the youngest in my year of school, and I, I was the, I was short, very, very short, very small. I remember what it felt like to like hide my, hide my dick. When I was around like guys in the changing room and stuff like that, um, you know, after the puberty, I just, things, I changed. And what I want people to

understand, I think more than anything, is that you don't need a long penis to pleasure a partner.

We just talked about how the clitoris is the, is the most reliable route to orgasm, right? And so you don't need a penis to stimulate the clitoris. You can use your mouth, your fingers, you can use a toy. There's so many ways to help your partner achieve pleasure. And, and yes, of course, there are a small subset of women who really appreciate a large palace, but the large majority of women, if you look at survey data, are very happy with the size of their partner, are very content with

average or slightly above average or slightly below average. As long as they are feeling intimate and they're feeling pleasure. And so I think there's a misnomer that people think if I have a longer penis, I'm going to be able to pleasure my partner more. As a relates to women, is that different size vaginas? Yeah, so the app, until like just like there's averages, there's averages and females. And so average vaginal length is about 3 and a half inches. So when women get aroused, it expands

and widens and lengthens to about double. So the average woman can easily accommodate the average

penis, maybe slightly larger than average. And so I think generally speaking, knowing that like you

will be able to fit in the average woman and you will be able to please her with the size of your

palace. And like I said, penetration is not as important. In fact, only about 85 percent of women

orgasm through penetration alone. They need literal stimulation to achieve climax. And so again, penetration feels good. I tell guys it's like somebody rubbing your testicles or your preridium that feels good, but it's not going to make your orgasm. And so penetrating, yeah, if you're getting a lot of literal stimulation because maybe she has a thinner, you know, her literal shaft is closer to the vaginal canal. Maybe, you know, the size of the penis matters

more. But for a lot of women, it's not going to be sufficient and they're going to need some directed, literal stimulation. Why the different vaginas feel different? And I guess the inverse is also the case where like different penises will feel remarkably different, even if they're the same size roughly. And you can have sex with somebody and go, it feels really good. I mean, I think, again, it's like the motion in the ocean, right? Like how you use your,

so let's start with the vaginas first. So when a vagina has more pelvic floor strength,

they may be able to like tense around the penis better. Like they may be able to sort of grab the penis with their pelvic floor a little stronger versus someone who doesn't. And that's where I

think some people get worried when I say, oh, you need to relax your pelvic floor. They're like,

oh, I don't want to be looser, right? And that's not going to happen if you have a normally functioning pelvic floor. Is your? So the penis is going in here, right? Correct. So if I, if you're a woman in YouTube, pelvic floor exercises, they're strengthening. They'll tighter. Well, you're, you're able to contract and squeeze those muscles during sex better, right? Yes. But we don't want you to be tighter. We want you to be able to squeeze the muscles and relax the muscles,

use them like a normal muscle, like your bicep, you squeeze and relax, squeeze and relax. We don't want it to be constantly squeezed. But to the mind, it will feel tighter. You will perceive it as tighter, but it will not be that she's actually tighter. It just means that maybe her pelvic floor muscles are doing a better job. So that's for the female. For the male, it's, it's generally like how the penis moves and how the positioning is and where it's, it may be gross. That's different.

It may be the way that you're moving in the vaginal canal and that may be why it feels different. They often say that if you've got big feel, big hands, you know, like people think you have a big penis. Not necessarily true. So there's, there's actually no evidence that big hands, big feet, correlate to mean outside. There's one study in Japan where they looked at nose length and so the longer your nose is from the, the bridge down to the tip that is

Potentially, at least the Japanese population that they say was correlated wi...

penis. People also think tall people have big penises. Not necessarily. But nose length,

there's some correlation in a study in Japan. Yes. Okay. Let's just check my nose now. Okay. And the last thing I want to talk to you about is Azempek and how this relates to everything we've talked about today, desire or traction sex. Is there any early data emerging that shows me correlations? Yeah. So Azempek, there's sort of benefits and there's potential downside. So the benefits are that when you're on Azempek, we see improvements in metabolic diseases. They have

improvements in diabetes, improvements in heart disease, improvements in overall health. Right. And so that is going to mean that your blood vessels are healthier. You're more able to get blood flow to your genitals. You're going to have stronger sexual function and arousal. Right. So that's great. The other thing is that you are losing weight so you feel better. You feel more like your body

image is feeling good about yourself. Also, from then, remember I talked about this fat pad right

above your penis. That's getting smaller. And so now you can see more of your penis. So you may

have heard of those non-big penis or people saying, "Oh my penis is getting longer." It's not actually that your penis is getting longer. It's that this fat is going down so now you're seeing more of your penis. Which makes it look longer. Yes. Exactly. It makes the reality. Well, it is reality to the person looking. Right. And so those are all great things. And I think that's wonderful. Now, the other part of it is, it was up the works on the brain and it works on the reward pathway.

So you now see fully, you don't feel like it's that much of a reward. So you don't chase after. You have less desire for food. There's emerging data that we're seeing people on these medications with GLP ones, have less desire for. Let's say gambling. Let's say shopping. Let's say, you know, alcohol, smoking, whatever it is. Right. And so there's a theoretical because it works on the same pathways that it could also decrease desire for sex. And I think that, you know, there's so many

people on these medications. There's so many metabolic benefits that I worry that people may not even realize that their sexual desire is changing. Right. They might just be like, "Oh, you know, I'm eating less. I look great. Everything's wonderful." But like slowly in the background, they're like, oh, maybe my desire is less and maybe it's creating discord in the relationship.

Hard to say because we don't have data yet. So yeah, I think it's just something that you should

be aware of that if you start feeling like you have less desire for sex or maybe you're like, yeah, I just really don't feel into anything. Talk to your doctor because maybe your dose is just too high and maybe it just needs to come down a little bit. And again, we don't know yet, but I do worry about this because I feel like we're going to start seeing it. Is it possible to do studies on this type of thing? Absolutely. So you can take people

starting a zampic and you can say, "Hey, here is or we're any GLP-1." You know, there's questionnaires. So like, our women, there's a female sexual function index for men. There's Adam, which is a questionnaire about testosterone, but you could there's sexual desire questionnaires that you can use and you can take it at the beginning and then you can take it as they increase their dose and see if there's a change, right, in terms of their sexual desire. You said at the

start about knowing how to talk to your partner. I think like intimacy design, maybe the conversations like with your partner, how to have that conversation when there's a problem? Yeah, I wish I could say there's like a script that you can follow and it's going to work,

but everyone's so different. But I think that important thing is like not giving up because what

happens is because we don't ever talk about sex when you bring it up, it's immediately like, "Oh, my God, it's something wrong. Did I do something wrong?" Do you not like me? Am I not attractive? Right, you're automatically going down the rabbit hole of worry and concern and instead of dealing with it, you're going to shut it down. No, I don't want to talk about it, right? Especially if like maybe you haven't connected intimately in a while and like you just don't want to deal with that

or you have other stressors in life, maybe you're not feeling like very good about yourself and so you're like, "Well, I don't really feel sexy, so I don't want to have sex." And so I think really understanding that whatever we actually get from your partner when you do talk to them, it's not about you, it's just usually about how they're feeling and so don't stress about that and too like it's anything that is worth having requires work. So having a good sex life,

having intimacy over the long haul with someone, if you are committed to that relationship, it is worth working for it. It is worth dealing with a little bit of discord to get there. And so I tell people, when you want to talk about sex, first of all, don't do it in the bedroom, don't do it right before, after sex. Do it at a time where you are both calm, relaxed, maybe you're out for a walk, maybe you're in the car, so you're not like looking directly at each other,

you're going to kind of parallel and always start with a positive thing. Like I, you know,

I really enjoy this about our relationship and I would love if we could talk about this and and maybe they're going to be like, "Uh, I'm not ready for that." And you say, "Maybe we could come up with a time where we can talk about this that works for you." Right? Let them feel like they're coming to the conversation with like, they're not being ambushed or like talking about something.

Then be curious.

Like I want to, I want to be there for you. I love you. You know, I miss what we used to have,

why I miss this about us. And I think that there's always these misconceptions. I hear it all the

time, right? It'll be like, "This partner only wants sex." And this partner never wants sex. And you know, and that's it. Like that's the end of the conversation. But the reality is that it's somewhere in between. So typically, women tend to view sex as like added stress sometimes when they're already stressed. Like they're like, "Oh, it's just one more thing to do." Whereas men look at it as a stress relief. So when you're coming at it from two different angles,

the other thing is men aren't really taught how to be intimate. And so for a lot of men, sex is

their version of intimacy. Like that's how they connect. That's how they feel connected with a partner.

And so oftentimes when they're doing these initiations or attempts at sex, it feels like they're

being greedy. It feels like they're just want sex. And I think we have to reframe how we look at

that. Like sex is not just sex. It is intimacy. It is being together connecting with another human being. So how do we do that, right? And like how do we make that sex worth having? We get into this frame where we have sex as like in a hurry to quick, like, just got to get this done way. I just need to get an orgasm. I just need to get a release. But sex is supposed to be something we look forward to. It's supposed to be something that we're excited about. And so we have to build

that in. We have to sort of like build the environment where sex can happen. So it may mean like, hey, we are affectionate during the day. Maybe we send a lovey text message. Maybe, you know, I give you a hug. I caress your back. I tell you, you look beautiful. I'm showing you gratitude

for how much I care about you in other ways. I think it's really taking the time to

understand why your partner feels the way they do. I'm curious about all my communication

point about how different genders in heterosexual couples have different sort of taboos and things that are just a bit sensitive. And I was looking at the variance between men and women. And the top one for men was around performance anxiety. So like admitting to things like erectile dysfunction. Because it feels like it's so intrinsically connected to masculinity. And you feel like a failure as a man. If you can't get a erection and pleasure partner. And then for women,

it was talking about prioritizing pleasure and asking for more full play or specific simulation, stimulation around the clitoris or something like that. Because they don't want to be labeled as high maintenance or too much hard work, etc. And it's interesting that on that walk with your partner, there are different things that will trigger each of you. Other ones who are in were pain and discomfort at bringing that up, body image and the mental load explaining why you aren't in the mood.

And other ones for men are expressing non-sexual needs because it might be seen as unmanually unmanly boundaries and rejection communicating when they don't want sex. And lastly, the script, which is discussing fantasies that deviate from the norm. So I want to talk about fantasy, but before that I would just say that, you know, because of social media, we're in a place. And I get text messages from my husband 24 hours a day with like not 24 hours a day. But like

all waking hours with reals and videos. Oh, I think you'd like this. I think you'd like this.

You should check this out. And it's like his way of connecting and like, hey, let's talk about this later.

This is fun. And so I tell my patients like send your partner a video that you saw on social media that might help them understand like why this is important to you. Maybe send them a video to them send them this podcast, right? So you're like, hey, watch this. It was great. You know, and I learned so much. And honestly, so many patients bring their partners to me. Whether it's women bringing male partners or men bringing female partners, they come to me. And they say,

look, like, I want you to meet the doctor. And I want you to talk to them. And like, it's beautiful to see that. Like, I love it because it's it's so deeply caring that they like brought their partner. And they want them to feel good. And they just want to figure out what's going on. And like, I think it's so lovely to to find someone who's so invested in making sure that sex is good for you, right? And as men, we're just not going to talk about this stuff. Right. But,

you know, I think you can't use that as a crutch. Yeah. Do you know what I mean? Like, I do. Yeah. It's not good at it. I know. But no one's a good at it. It's not men. Women are not good at it, either. I think men are worse at it. I think in general, no one is good at talking about sex. Like, you know, I think it's interesting because I talk about it all the time. But I have seen very good communicator struggle with talking about sex. And so I think it's just, it's uncomfortable.

And it's like, if you and I can have this conversation, and we can talk about sex openly, like, there's no reason that you can't learn how to talk about sex. And it's a learning process. And it's worth investing in. To people bring you their fantasies? Yeah. I've had, well, not as many fantasies as like real sort of diverse interests and sex. Which I mean, so I had a patient who came to me and said, you know, after some time,

This was not like our first visit.

the, I really struggle with a rousal. And the only time I get a rousal is I have a medical

kink. And so I go to this person who will put a fully catheter in me. And that's what turns me on.

And I was like, that's really interesting. And I was like, okay, like, that's, that's great. But like, it took a long time for us to get there for him to feel comfortable. But it also then was like, well, if that's what turns you on, you know, then you got to sort of explore other ways to incorporate that with a partner. Maybe that's what. So like a catheter is a, is a, is a tube that you put in the bladder for to drain urine. What hole does that go in the urethra? It goes in the penis. Correct.

And so there's actually a lot of people who enjoy your urethra play. So they will take sounds, they're called sounds like little rods with a frail, flared base. And they won't sort them in the urethra. But people do find that pleasurable. And so because there is some, you know, there are some nerve endings there that can be pleasurable. And so again, it is totally fine to have interests that are, you know, outside what we call conventional. But of course,

I think you need to, if that's something that you're really into, you have to sort of bring

your partner into the, into the fold. If that's what really gets you turned on. Now, in terms of fantasies, it almost everyone fantasizes, right? Almost everyone does. And the interesting thing when you look at fantasies is there's a lot of fantasies that you would think are not common, but are. So, for example, being sexually submissive is very common. So women fantasize about it like

around 60 percent men are like 20 percent having this desire of sex, this fantasy of sexual submission.

It made that mean that they want to be submissive in real life, but that's the fantasy they're having. Men often have a voyeurism fantasies, like watching sex. They also have sex with multiple partners. Women tend to have a lot of like sexual dominance, but also romance in their fantasies or like an exotic place or, or with, and a lot of times, like 90 percent of time, people fantasize about strangers, or could be someone they know, but after their relationship. And so, that's

completely normal and nothing to be worried about. It doesn't mean that you want that person

to fantasy. It's a safe place in your head to think about fantasy. And I think one realizing

if someone fantasizes about something, it means nothing about how they feel about you. It's just where their brain goes to explore. I tell my patient someone's right down your fantasies for yourself, just like write them down. Don't share that with anybody. And have your part into the same. And then if you guys decide you feel comfortable at some point in each share one fantasy, and you can start a maybe one that you would want to try. And like it allows you to sort of

explore and think about different things. It could be negative outcome. Like you could just go like, oh, no, this what didn't do it for me, but it could also be very positive. And so, just like, again, I think the big thing is understanding like it doesn't need to be that serious. Like, we can experiment, we can play, we can have fun. And if you bring that back into your life, you are going to be happier, less lonely, live longer. Like, everyone should just be having more sex.

It's um, yeah, it's interesting that we're getting one more sex loss. Because I think the world is stealing our attention. And that's causing a big loss in connection. But then everyone's lives a more stressful than ever before. If a bomb goes off, 10,000 miles that way, I see it when I open my phone. So it's an interesting time to sort of almost try and reclaim sex. And to work on one's sexual health that over the full picture of one's sexual health, you're working

on a book, which is, I guess endeavoring to do much of that, which is coming out in September, called The Hard Truth, everything men need to know about good health, great sex, some one life.

So if you're watching this after the first of September, 2026, we're around that time,

then the book is probably available for pre-order or already out. It's not available for pre-order yet, is it? We'll be soon, but not yet. When the book is out, I'm going to link it below in the comment section. And when it's available for pre-order, the hard truth, everything men need to know about good health, great sex, and long life. So if the subjects who talked about today have peaked your interest, the book I imagine is going to go into greater detail on all of these

subjects. Absolutely. I think it's a book that really, I wish was a part of sexual education. I think all men need to know this. As women, we end up taking care of our male partners. I make all the doctor's appointments. I organize all of that. I make sure that my kids get all their vaccines, all that sort of stuff, and it becomes on us to take care of our fathers too. And so as women, hold that rule, and I think it is so valuable to understand what men go through, and also to

be able to support them along the way. And I think it's a great gift for men in your life or for older sons, even, to help people understand their bodies. And honestly, it's a huge motivator. I tell people, like, if for nothing else, people care about sex, and I have seen patients turn around their lives because they want to have better sex. They'll literally improve their blood sugars,

They'll improve their blood pressure, because they just want to protect their...

>> Reena, thank you. We have a closing to additional misplocos where the long-skiss

leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're leaving it for. This is the first time

in diarrhea history, where the guest has actually stamped it with a stamp. This is certified 100% human. >> Okay. >> So you can see there's a little stamp. >> So when is that AI? >> So it's not AI. It actually says that in the middle. It says, "Gen AI-free." Sign of things to come. But their question, I guess it's somewhat linked to that. The question they've asked for you is, so much of the world feels hopeless about this moment.

What would you tell someone to help them reclaim their agency?

>> I think that we as humans are meant to be with other humans. We are meant to connect, and I think making that a priority will allow people to feel, to feel a part of something again. You know, I think there is like an emergence of people starting to look back at religious constructs and go to community and be a part of things and enjoy live events again. Like we weren't doing before. I think if we prioritize that, there is still hope that we can come together as a society.

And I think the pendulum always swings, right? In every way it's going to go far right or far left.

And people are going to hate each other and then they're going to love each other and they're going to come back. And I think if you just look at history time and time again, it repeats itself. And we will find unity, and we will find togetherness. We are obviously feeling pain from a variety of different sources,

and we may feel pain, right? Like in terms of other things to come. But ultimately, I'm an

activist and I think that we'll come together and we will find happiness and joy in human

connection. And I hope you're right. And I think we've seen the early signs of that now.

For anyone that's listening, that wants to learn more from Rina. And we're highly recommend make a two-youtube channel. I will clap if we can. And if we do clap on YouTube, you'll see a little smiling Rina next to the director of CereLogo where you can click through to her

YouTube channel. She's got almost three million subscribers and she goes through all of the

questions, which no one has ever answered for us. And I was looking at some of the questions that you answer for people. Everything from why you dribble after you pee and how to stop it, pour and direct to reveals what what seems effect in almost every scene of movies. But then also a lot of the stuff we've talked about today around penal health, erectile dysfunction, sex positions and so much more. So it's a wonderful repository of information that is constantly

being updated. That is a great place to subscribe. So I highly recommend you do. Dr Rina, thank you so much for your time. You're so welcome. [Music]

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