Last time, in part 1 of our discussion of Sex At Dawn, we did something a little bit different. As part of learning and improving, we do a lot of reading and I recommend a lot of reading to clients as well.
Doing well in social interactions and with women is all about psychology and there’s so much to learn. Recently, I convinced McConnell to read Sex at Dawn which is a book that I found so interesting because they really interpret a lot of things very differently from the conventional view.
It suggests that monogamy is actually not the norm for our hunter gatherer ancestors and points to all sorts of anthropological and biological evidence to support the view that we are indeed a sexually wild species!
Here’s what we talk about in part 2 of this discussion:
- What Bonobos and WWII Fighter pilots have in common
- Women have periods and that means more sex for everyone!
- You don’t have to be jealous–there’s plenty of love to go around!
- Women don’t know what turns them on, and you can use that to get what you want
- Sexuality hacking–learn more mindsets and cherry pick for the sex life you’ve always wanted
- and a whole lot more…
Mentioned in This Episode:
Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships
Read my review of Sex at Dawn on Asia Dating Experts for more details.
The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation
What Do Women Want?: Adventures in the Science of Female Desire
Is There Anything Good about Men?: How Cultures Flourish by Exploiting Men
Read my Review of Is There Anything Good about Men? on Asia Dating Experts.
Have a question that you want us to answer in a future episode? Scroll down to the bottom of this page, type it in and we’ll get to it in a future chill session. And now I’ll kick you over to the video I mentioned in the recording…
Evolution of Sex and Reproductive Strategies
This is a series of really eye opening and enlightening lectures about what human biology says about our mating habits, and how culture intersects with and shapes our tendencies in different ways to explain a lot of our common behaviors.