My guest is Caitlin V, a sexologist and relationship coach who started out as a sexual health researcher and policy analyst before realizing that real change doesn't happen in research papers. It happens in honest conversations between real people. She's the host of Good Sex on HBO Max, her YouTube channel has reached hundreds of millions of people, and she's become one of the leading voices in men's sexual health, helping guys overcome erectile dysfunction, performance anxiety, premature ejaculation, and the isolation that comes with those struggles.
This conversation went places I didn't expect. Caitlin explains why the biggest roadblock in a couple's sex life isn't your partner, it's the gap between your expectations and reality. She breaks down why "why can't we have more sex" is almost never about sex, what women are actually attracted to in a man (the Indiana University smell study blew my mind), and why the way you do anything is the way you do everything. I also got personal about my own marriage, including why I quit porn years ago and the one question I asked my wife in our mudroom three months ago that changed how we think about intimacy.
If you and your wife have slipped into roommate mode, if the conversation about sex feels impossible to start, or if you want to rebuild attraction and connection after years of kids, schedules, and busyness, this episode is your roadmap back.
Timeline Summary
[1:02] Larry opens with an adult content disclaimer and celebrates episode 1500 landing on his 51st birthday after 11 years
[3:00] The single biggest roadblock in couples' sex lives, the painful gap between expectations and lived experience
[5:16] The performance expectations men carry into the bedroom, from lasting longer to frequency to technical skill
[10:11] Caitlin's first piece of advice for every man, start with your own relationship to sexuality before approaching your wife
[11:37] Why "why can't we have more sex" is really a request for closeness, connection, and feeling loved
[16:33] Caitlin's story, from sexual health researcher to sexologist and host of Good Sex on HBO Max
[20:13] Fact checking the viral claim that 50% of couples married three plus years haven't had sex in a year
[21:55] Why Gen Z is having less sex, porn access, dating app algorithms designed to keep you single, and Covid
[28:49] The Indiana University t-shirt study, why smell predicts attraction and how birth control changes desire
[36:37] What women actually find attractive in a man's body, hands, forearms, posture, and capability over six packs
[44:40] Why your solo sex life shapes your marriage, and Caitlin's snack versus whole meal analogy
[49:49] Larry opens up about quitting porn years ago and how it fixed his arousal issues and transformed intimacy
[53:37] Retraining your body without porn, why orgasm may take weeks to return, and why nobody fails to get there
[57:00] Escaping roommate syndrome, why sex was never actually spontaneous, and reclaiming the effort of courtship
[59:35] The intimacy spectrum beyond penetration, and Caitlin's personal story of healing pain through yoni massage
[1:06:09] The mudroom moment, how one question changed the way Larry and his wife connect after 23 years of marriage
Five Key Takeaways
The biggest obstacle in your sex life isn't your wife. It's the unspoken gap between what you expected sex to be and what it actually is, and the shame that keeps both of you from talking about it.
Never bring the conversation to her when it's burning hot. Do your own untangling first, figure out what you actually need underneath the request, and come with self-awareness and accountability instead of a demand.
How you care for your body is a proxy for how you care for everything. Your grooming, your hygiene, and your posture tell her more about who you are than a six pack ever will.
Don't show up to your wife starving. If she's the only source of meeting your needs, every approach carries desperation. Take care of yourself first and you'll come to her with something to give instead of something to take.
Sex is one point on a wide spectrum of intimacy. A shoulder massage, a hand in hand walk, or a deep conversation on the couch can keep you insanely connected without needing to lead anywhere.
Links & Resources
Closing
Fifteen hundred episodes, and this might be one of the most important conversations I've ever had on this show. When I stood in my mudroom and asked my wife "what type of intimacy would you be up for today," everything about how we connect shifted, and that's available to you too. Don't wait until it's burning hot to have this conversation, and don't settle for being roommates with the woman you married. Share this one with a brother who needs it. Go out and live legendary.