"The excitement of getting married gives couples a hit of dopamine -- a feel-good brain chemical that increases sex drive. For a few months after marriage, things may stay hot, and while you still love each other and feel passionate about each other, the dopamine does settle down. You're back to real life. Your normal sex-drive set point kicks back in. Your expectations about married sex take over. It's the perfect time to do the delicious work of deepening your sexual bond." says marriage and sex therapist Pat Love, Ed.D.
"The
challenge for couples is balancing a sense of intimacy and safety and
security with a sense of unpredictability and creativity and
eroticism," says Barry McCarthy, Ph.D., a psychology
professor at American University in Washington, D.C. "When
sexual intimacy is strong, making love plays a healthy 15 to 20
percent role in energizing your marriage. The paradox is that when
sex is problematic, it plays an inordinately powerful, negative role
in new marriages."
Understanding
the real sexual issues that newlyweds face can help you keep
sex fun and fulfilling -- now and for the rest of your lives. Experts
say these hidden concerns can cool the hottest love life in the early
days of marriage:
Mismatched
sex drives. "When your sex drive returns to its normal level
in the months after you get married, couples start to notice a
frustrating desire discrepancy," Dr. Love says. "It's
perfectly normal. You've just got to work it out."
Testosterone,
the hormone of desire, fuels sex drive in men and women. But,
Dr. Love says, relatively low levels of natural testosterone mean
that two-thirds of all women don't walk around thinking about sex
all the time. "For these women -- and I'm one of them --
you don't feel like having sex until you're already having it,"
she says. "That's perfectly normal. It just means you have to
approach sex a little differently. You have to make time for
touching, time for sex. You can't rely on being aroused to get things
started. You have to start with relaxed touching and kissing to raise
your arousal level."
Clashing sex-pectations
On
the last night of a romantic two-week honeymoon, Priscilla and Greg
Hunt bumped up against a radical difference in expectations and
desire. "We had been making love three times a day on our
honeymoon," Priscilla recalls. "It was wonderful,
but we were about to go back to real life. To work and school and
doing the dishes and responsibilities.
I
had to say, it's time to talk about moderation." Says Greg,
"Sexuality was a real issue. We were both learning about it in
our college courses, but experiencing it firsthand was strikingly
different. My testosterone levels were extremely high. We were not
evenly matched for libido. We had to work hard to communicate.
Sexuality is a very sensitive issue -- you have all sorts of feelings
and insecurities wrapped up in it."
Their
solution? A fluid, flexible compromise: "There were times he
wanted sex when we didn't have it and times I didn't want sex but we
did. Thankfully, there were more times when we both wanted to make
love. There's been a natural ebb and flow. It's something we still
have to talk about," Priscilla says. "This is the
reality for every couple: You're wired differently. If you have
enough sexual experiences together that are positive for both of you,
you'll be able to work out the differences."
This
is an issue for many couples who've enjoyed a lusty sexual
intimacy before marriage and/or during the honeymoon but who settle
into different rhythms during day-to-day married life. The
solution? Talk it out so that you don't feel rejected, frustrated, or
bored.
Emphasize
pleasure, not just the big O!
"Exploration
and touch without the expectation of intercourse or orgasm helps
couples get to know each other's bodies and needs -- you learn what
kinds of touch are pleasurable as a giver and as a recipient,"
Dr. McCarthy says. Pleasure and affection keep you close even
when you don't want sex.
Nurture
emotional intimacy too. Feeling understood, supported, and valued
will make you both feel closer and therefore more receptive to
physical closeness.
Sex-drive discrepancy? Busy schedule? Put s-e-x on the calendar.
It's
a fact of life: Most of us married someone who wants sex more
often or less often than we do. If you wait to feel turned on before
you have sex, you'll miss out on lots of great moments
together. Let touching turn you on rather than expecting to feel
aroused first. This may seem totally unnecessary during the
hot-and-heavy exchanges of the Passion stage, but experts say it's
the best way to ensure you'll still be enjoying great sex when
your life is complicated by kids, a house, stress, reduced sex drive,
and times of conflict.
Low
sex drive? Consider saying yes anyway. "People freak out when
I say this," Dr. Love confides. "But if you make time for
love and romance and try to say yes when your partner wants to make
love -- provided you're not dealing with a compulsive or sex-addicted
spouse -- you will have a better sex life. Let your partner's drive
get you both into bed, or wherever you'll make love, so that you can
be touched and turned on. Why get into the habit of not doing it?"
Think
of life as foreplay. "I found out early on that relational
issues that seem to have nothing to do with the act of sex itself
make a huge difference to my wife and to her interest in intimacy,"
Greg Hunt says. "I learned to pay attention to things I wasn't
naturally good at. If I'm ignoring her and also not paying attention
to things like chores around the house, she's not going to feel cozy
and intimate at bedtime."
Don't
use sex as a bargaining chip.
Angry?
Say something -- don't grunt or "hmph" and roll
over. Withholding lovemaking when you're upset turns this deep,
vulnerable connection into a nuclear weapon for power struggles.
Adding layers of resentment to your feelings about physical intimacy
is a surefire way to make sure neither of you will be in the mood.
Have
realistic expectations. And in particular, dial back on
multi-orgasmic, transcendental expectations. Even for the most
happily married couples, more than 10 percent of sexual encounters
aren't even pleasurable for one or both spouses, Dr. McCarthy says.
An off night -- maybe the sex is hurried, you're tired or
distracted, or simply uncomfortable -- doesn't mean you've got a big
problem. It's life. Don't expect perfect sex every time -- or wait
for the perfect moment to pounce on your mate. Just connect!
Make
it eye-to-eye, soul-to-soul. You'll feel more vulnerable -- but
couples report they also feel sexier, more attractive, more
in-the-moment, and closer when they look into each other's eyes
during sex.
Never
underestimate the power of a quickie. You won't always have all the
time in the world for making love -- and maybe you don't already.
Don't overlook fast sex. It keeps the two of you in the
intimacy loop, so you don't jeopardize the compassion, happiness,
romance, and understanding that sexual closeness can bring.
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