If you could take a pill daily that would lower your blood
pressure, reduce stress, boost your immune system, and promote bonding with
your mate, wouldn't you do it? You don't actually need a pill to tap these
much-needed benefits. There's another way that's more fun, with no side
effects: having sex with your mate. So why do so many couples let their
relationships fall into a sex-free zone?
It starts with your pressure-cooker job, on top of your load
of household chores. Add your husband's own stressed-out work life, his ailing
mother, and some unexpected bills that are throwing off your budget. Pepper the
mix with two small (or large) children, and what you have is a recipe for a
couple who would just as soon collapse on the couch as shimmy under the sheets.
This scenario is so common that therapists have an acronym
for it—DINS, as in "dual income, no sex." And it's not only men who
are unhappy about it. According to an Australian study in the Journal
of Sex & Marital Therapy, 28% of women ages 35 to 54 who are married or
in long-term relationships would like more sex, please. With 53% of the men also reporting
dissatisfaction, that means at least half of couples are experiencing a
"desire gap."
There's an opportunity here. Frequency of sex is
intrinsically tied to happiness in a relationship. The National Opinion
Research Center at the University of Chicago has consistently found that
married couples between the ages of 30 and 59 who describe themselves as "very
happy" have sex about 60% more often than those who describe their
relationship as "not too happy." (That's 78 times a year versus 48.)
"But does more sex lead to greater happiness or greater happiness to more
sex?" asks Tom Smith, PhD, a senior fellow at NORC.
Evidence suggests that it works both ways. So to boost your
health—and happiness!—here's how to get your groove back.
Take a shortcut.
After a tiring day, anything that helps ignite your sexual
energy should become part of your arsenal. For men and some women, soft porn or
magazines often do the trick. (So don't feel inadequate if your husband resorts
to porn—and don't be embarrassed to use it yourself.) But for many women,
romance novels are equally likely to promote passion, says family therapist
Michele Weiner-Davis, author of The Sex-Starved Marriage. By
providing vicarious thrills, they can help generate natural lubrication, too.
(Here are 8 Sexy Reads For Your Bedroom to help get you
started.)
Be adventurous.
It's not only the time crunch but also boredom with the
routine that kills passion for most long-term couples—because really, if you
were excited about sex, you would make the time, says therapist Esther Perel,
author of Mating in Captivity: Unlocking Erotic Intelligence.
Variety adds that proverbial spice. But the pursuit of novelty doesn't
mean you have to twist yourself into every position in the Kama Sutra. The goal
of sex is to bond and have fun, not to end up in traction. Try a new sex position or anything that makes you feel
naughty or seductive. That might mean role playing ("Professor, I need
some extracurricular tutoring") or dressing up like Rhett and Scarlett
(forget the hoop skirt and go straight to the corset).
Think like a realtor.
Location, location, location: A change of venue accomplishes
two goals. It adds novelty, and it gets you away from the household drudgery
and chores that tend to make your husband blend into the domestic scenery
rather than appearing to be an enticing sexual being. But don't limit your
thinking to a romantic B&B. You'll feel more risque, says Perel, if you
rendezvous at a hotel for a quickie at noon.
Clear the air.
Smoldering resentments, not alleged time pressures, are
often the true cause of a diminished sex life. Couples blame each other for
placing too much emphasis on children or careers at the expense of the
relationship—or for being lazy bums who can't find a job and won't help out
around the house. Such attitudes are not exactly turn-ons. Who'd want to
cuddle up with someone who's not only not romantic but
actually simmering with anger?
Rather than relying on a grope in the dark, try opening up
lines of communication and making him feel appreciated—and hope the gesture
will be reciprocated. "When people feel understood, they often feel a
greater sense of love or passion," says Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD, a
clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical Center in
New York City. If you can't solve all your problems, at least come to enough of
a truce to give each other pleasure. Problem solving may get easier after that.
(Check out these communication tips.)
Just do it.
According to therapists, there are four stages of sex:
desire, arousal, orgasm, and return to normal. "But for a lot of people,
stages one and two—desire and arousal—can happen in reverse order," says
Weiner-Davis. Allow your partner to touch you sexually, whether you're in the
mood or not. Nerves that are wired to parts of the brain involved in sexual
excitement will be stimulated, and physical arousal will likely follow.
Exercise a deux.
Enjoyable activities can help couples bond—and if sharing a
hike or a tennis game makes you feel great, you will tend to associate those
feelings of exhilaration with your partner. Even going to the gym together on a
regular basis can make you feel stronger as a couple. But a more direct turn-on
may be yoga. Many studios offer workshops for couples in which you interact
with your partner—starting with simply sitting cross-legged on the floor and
gazing into each other's eyes. (Need proof? Try these 9
Yoga Poses for Better Sex.) "Yoga poses bring you into a place of
vulnerability and openness, where you're not talking around a problem or
blaming each other," explains Becky Jeffers, a yoga therapist and wellness
coordinator at North Shore Urogynecology in Park City, IL. Other poses involve
leaning on each other—feeling your partner's skin, spine, and weight against
you—or even sitting in your husband's lap, facing him, with your legs wrapped
around him. "Lots of long-term couples try this on their date night or
Valentine's Day," she says. "It generates a lot of heat, both
physical and sexual." It's a kind of foreplay—and you finish at the same
time!
Try a good squeeze.
There are other forms of sexual behavior besides
intercourse, says Stacy Tessler Lindau, MD, director of the program in
integrative sexual medicine for women with cancer at the University of Chicago.
She's found that many couples who can't have intercourse for medical reasons
tend to spend more time touching, holding hands, and hugging as an alternative
way of bonding. But these acts of affection are important for healthy couples,
too. In a study of long-term partners who were together an average of 25 years,
the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction at Indiana
University found that, yes, sex was important. But frequent kissing and
caressing were also predictive of happiness in the relationship—even more for
men than for women, says Kinsey director Julia Heiman, PhD. The study didn't
examine why, but psychologists note that a loving touch makes you feel desired.
Whatever you do, don't give up. Jenna (not her real name), a
56-year-old salesperson in California, thought her sex life was over when she
reached menopause. "I told my husband I was done," she says. "My
hormones had crashed. I thought I was never going to have an orgasm again."
He took her declaration as a challenge to bring it back—and he did, with a
flourish, relying more on manual stimulation than he had before. Now Jenna is
brimming with enthusiasm about her reinvigorated sex life. "No one is more
surprised than I am," she reports—or more happy to be proven wrong.
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