Is There Sex After Marriage?: Professional Advice on How to Bring Desire Back and Make Sex Better

Is There Sex After Marriage?: Professional Advice on How to Bring Desire Back and Make Sex Better

by Carol Botwin
Is There Sex After Marriage?: Professional Advice on How to Bring Desire Back and Make Sex Better

Is There Sex After Marriage?: Professional Advice on How to Bring Desire Back and Make Sex Better

by Carol Botwin

eBookDigital Original (Digital Original)

$11.49  $14.99 Save 23% Current price is $11.49, Original price is $14.99. You Save 23%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Is There Sex After Marriage? is the answer for the millions of Americans trapped in the cycle of low- or no-sex marriages. Contrary to the widespread cultural acceptance, from TV shows to standup comedy, sex doesn’t have to end once the honeymoon does. Seasoned sex-pert Carol Botwin brings her decades of relationship experience to bear and teaches couples with no-nonsense candor and plenty of humor how to rekindle the fire they had in their courtship, and how to keep it burning forever.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781453231593
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 07/29/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 804 KB

About the Author

Carol Botwin’s lively and exhaustive writings on sex and infidelity “made her one of the leading sexologists of her generation” (The New York Times). She is the author of Sex and the Teenage Girl, The Love Crisis: Hit and Run Lovers, Jugglers, Sexual Stingies, Kinkies and Other Typical Men Today, Tempted Women: The Passions, Perils and Agonies of Female Infidelity, Men Who Can’t Be Faithful, and Is There Sex After Marriage?

Read an Excerpt

Is There Sex After Marriage?


By Carol Botwin

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 1985 Carol Botwin
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4532-3159-3



CHAPTER 1

The Problem So Many Couples Face


Allan and his wife Francine, both in their twenties, were sexually active until the birth of their first child, Laurel. Then Allan stopped wanting to make love with Francine. He now forces himself to every three weeks or so, but even though he reaches a climax, he finds the pleasure minimal and the act more mechanical than anything else. Francine complains that they don't have sex often enough. Allan blames it on his being tired because of his career efforts, but the truth is — although he doesn't know why — he no longer finds sex with his wife appealing.


Debbie and John have been married fifteen years. They have three children — two boys and a girl, whose ages range from seven to twelve. Although Debbie and John enjoyed sex together at the beginning of their relationship, their desire has gradually withered until now they have intercourse maybe once a month at most.


Larry and Tina have been living together for a year. Although they are happy and compatible in every other way, their sex life is driving Tina crazy. Everything was fine until Larry gave up his apartment and moved in with her. Then all of a sudden he lost interest in sex.


Ginny and Peter married three years ago. Sexual interest between them has gradually dribbled away since then. Though happy with one another in every other respect, they are living together asexually — like "a brother and sister who get along very well," as they describe it.


Charlotte doesn't understand why there's so much fuss about sex. She never enjoys it, and because of this, she avoids intercourse with Ron, her husband of sixteen years, whenever she can. He feels frustrated and angry, and for years has buried his sexual desires under a pile of work. Today, however, as he approaches his forty-first birthday, Ron is beginning to insist that Charlotte do something about their situation: he wants to lead a normal sex life — before, in his words, "it's too late."


These couples are suffering from the number-one sex problem in marriage today: lack of interest in making love by one or both partners. Leading sex clinics around the country have reported an upsurge in recent years of husbands and wives who, in one stage of their marriage or another, have confronted the fact that the sexual "charge" is going, has gone, or, in some cases, has never quite been there — and who want to know why.

In Manhattan, for example, at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, Dr. Helen Singer Kaplan, who heads the sex therapy clinic, says that waning desire is the leading complaint of couples she sees. Dr. Raul Schiavi, director of the Human Sexuality Program at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York, reports that both single and married people complain of other sexual dysfunctions, such as impotence, premature ejaculation, and inability to achieve orgasm, but every male patient in his program suffering from lack of desire has been married. At the Marriage Council of Philadelphia, a survey of patients with sexual problems revealed lack of sexual desire to be the leading complaint. Some therapists estimate that 50 percent of their patients are turned off to sex.

Dearth of desire as a problem in committed, established, long-term relationships has become so noticeable that loss of libido has recently been given an official name — "inhibited sexual desire" — and classified, for the first time, as a sexual dysfunction in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual issued by the American Psychiatric Association.

Recent studies back up the fact that infrequent sex is a relatively common phenomenon in marriage. One survey of 100 couples, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, discovered that 33 percent of the husbands and wives were having intercourse with their spouse two or three times a month or less. Another study, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, revealed that among 365 husbands and wives, one-third had ceased having sexual relations altogether for long periods of time. Although the median period of abstinence was eight weeks, some of the husbands and wives had gone without intercourse for three months or longer.

Until recently, it was widely assumed that sparse sex and lack of desire would most likely be encountered in the marriages of older couples, but the surprising news is that libido can be lost in marriage at any time. Case histories from leading sex clinics confirm this and the American Journal of Psychiatry study makes the fact strikingly clear: more than three-quarters of the husbands and wives making do with little or no sex were under the age of thirty-eight — a prime time in life, when intercourse between spouses, on an average, takes place two or three times a week.

Most people being treated to restore a lagging or defunct sex drive are in their thirties and forties, but men and women arrive at sex clinics at all ages, these days, wanting to revitalize a dying sex life. Dr. Joshua Golden, director of the Human Sexuality Program at the University of California, Los Angeles, has successfully treated couples in their seventies. Dr. Helen Singer Kaplan and Dr. Harold Lief, the well-known psychiatrist and sex therapist who is now in private practice and who headed the Marriage Council of Philadelphia for many years, have seen an increase in the number of husbands and wives under thirty who are concerned about their loss of interest in sex. Dr. Kaplan thinks that younger people, because they are more open about sex in general, often don't let lack of desire linger as a problem in their relationships the way older people do — which is fortunate, because the sooner you catch the problem, the better the chance to overcome it.

Dr. Lief and Dr. Kaplan, working independently, first defined interest in having sex as a separate, initial stage of the sex act. Desire has to be present before you can go on to intercourse itself. Dr. Lief and Dr. Kaplan were also instrumental in pinning down the fact that impairment of the sex drive is a sexual dysfunction in its own right; often, patients who couldn't reach orgasm or were impotent were found to be suffering primarily from lack of desire, which caused other sexual difficulties when they forced themselves to have sex anyway.

Although the problem of impaired sexual desire in marriage has "gone public" through reports of work being done at sex clinics, the population of patients seeking treatment probably represents only a fraction of a much larger group of married couples who lead lives of sexual estrangement to varying degrees. Journals, books, and papers by marriage therapists, psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers have reported, from the time of Freud on, a wealth of case histories based on patients who for one reason or another have had trouble feeling sexual passion for their marriage partners. Dr. Edmund Bergler, the late, eminent psychoanalyst, once wrote that "the history of sex in modern marriage is, in general, the history of sex sparingly used."

Works of fiction, such as Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, deal with the problem. Broadway musicals have alluded to it; Stephen Sond-heim, in a song from Follies, wrote revealing lyrics about "passionless lovemaking once a year." The biographies of public figures contain telling references to it. Freud himself stopped having intercourse with his wife at about the age of forty. Tolstoy hated sex so much that he was moved to remark, "Man can endure earthquake, epidemic, dreadful diseases, every form of spiritual torment, but the most dreadful tragedy that can befall him is and will remain the tragedy of the bedroom." He believed in celibacy in his own marriage.

There is no doubt, though, that the largest number of people suffering from loss of libido are those countless ordinary husbands and wives who continue to live together in marriages in which sex is infrequent or absent altogether, and who do so without ever seeking professional help or, sometimes, without even discussing the situation with each other. The aforementioned Dr. Lief, professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and chief investigator of sexual-desire disorders for the American Psychiatric Association, estimates that about 20 percent of the general population suffers from inhibited sexual desire. Some of these people consider themselves to be happy anyhow; others feel varying degrees of distress about their sex lives but don't know what to do about it.

There is some debate among experts about the true state of life in sexless or sexually sparse marriages. Certain authorities believe that when sex is unimportant to both partners but they remain close and affectionate in other ways, they can continue to be reasonably happy. It is, they maintain, when husband and wife are on different wavelengths — with one still interested in sex, while the other is not — that a real problem exists in the marriage.

No one can deny the potentially devastating effect rejection can have upon a partner who is continually refused or ignored sexually. Some slighted spouses seem to take no notice, however. Indeed, if they have a sexual problem of their own, they may welcome the mate's lack of interest. They are happy they no longer have to be "bothered" for sex. It is far more common, though, for sexually ignored wives and husbands to feel rejected, inadequate, or unattractive as a result — as if, somehow, it is their fault that the partner has turned off. Many spouses feel very threatened. They worry that the uninterested partner may abandon them. There is often a sense of deprivation or anger. Frustration, bitterness, and resentment may grow over time. In addition, although such fears prove groundless in most cases, spouses these days may secretly wonder if a mate is ignoring them because he or she is a closet homosexual. It is very common for the rejected partner to become depressed, preoccupied, or obsessed about the mate's sexual rejection.

A forty-year-old woman in a large New England city recently described her reactions in such a situation. She has been married for ten years. Her husband is a lawyer with a very busy practice. Sex with him is great, she says — when they have it. At the beginning of their marriage, they used to have sex two or three times a week. The rate gradually fell off during the year after their wedding until it reached the point it is at now: they have sex once every three weeks or so. She is a woman with a strong sex drive and feels the lack of physical contact intensely. She has confronted her husband in the past about the infrequency of sex, but most of the time he claims he is too tired for lovemaking. He works hard, puts in long hours, and he feels that the way not to relax is to have sex. He regards sex as a chore.

This woman blames herself more than she blames her husband for their predicament. His lack of interest makes her feel humiliated and unattractive. As a result, as soon as the frequency of sex fell off in the relationship, she tried to improve her appearance, thinking that a new look might help to restore her husband's interest. Although she was not really overweight, she went on a diet. She watches her weight compulsively now. She also started to put on cosmetics the minute she woke up each morning. Her efforts produced no results, however: her husband remains unaroused. Sometimes she feels attracted to other men, but this makes her feel guilty and ashamed, so she fights her sexual impulses. Since she feels so unattractive, she hates to go to parties. She goes with her husband when she can't avoid it, but she suffers from a sense of inferiority the whole time. The sexual situation in her marriage is never far from her thoughts. She stays married to her husband because he is a kind, protective man who is considerate of her in every other way.

Of course, this woman was insecure to begin with — but most of us are to some degree. Perceived sexual rejections generally feed into whatever insecurities exist or activate dormant feelings of inferiority. Consequently, "neglected" sexual partners tend to feel worse about themselves than they would otherwise.

Some spouses react to their partner's sexual indifference by pressuring the mate even more frantically in an effort to elicit a sexual response, which usually makes matters worse: the partner avoids sex even more. A more common reaction among sexually ignored spouses, however, is retreat. The partner who feels spurned eventually withdraws sexually, too, out of fear of further rejection or additional humiliation. As a result, sexual efforts on both sides come to a standstill.

The partner who has turned off may not be bothered by the fact at all except for the spouse's pressure tactics and expression of frustration. If a spouse does not complain, the indifferent partner may go without sexual activity for years on end without thinking much about it. But, in contrast, many people with impaired desire are very distressed. They may feel damaged, humiliated, or see lack of sexual interest on their part as a sign of aging. Often they think they are washed up sexually. Others interpret their condition as a sign that they no longer love their spouse.

Frequently, both the partner who is turned off and the one who remains interested in sex may try to "sit it out on the sidelines," waiting patiently, and somewhat unrealistically, for the problem to go away. Their hope is that the turned-off partner will just wake up one day and be interested in sex once more. "Fifteen years can go by in this way," says San Francisco psychiatrist and sex therapist Harvey Caplan, commenting on the number of women and men he sees who wake up late in the game to the fact that diminished sexual desire is a genuine problem in their marriage and that they had better do something about it.

Dr. Otto Kernberg — medical director of the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, Westchester Division, and one of the most well known psychiatrists in the United States — takes issue with those of his colleagues who think that couples with little or no sex in their marriages can be relatively well adjusted anyway if they are not in conflict about lack of sex. "A couple can eliminate sexuality altogether and believe that they live very well," he says. "I think, however, that the lack of sex indicates an impoverishment in their relationship. It is an impoverishment that shows in other areas of their life. There is generally a severe restriction in the scope of their emotional life.

"If a couple in their seventies has sex once a month, I would like to know how they are doing. How is their sex? It may be satisfactory. But if a couple in their thirties or forties has sex once every three months, I consider this to be a serious sexual inhibition," says Dr. Kernberg. "I consider it to be a major problem, even if they don't. I have found, in my practice, that even people who have severe sexual inhibition haven't been aware that it is a problem. If they don't want treatment, I would leave them alone. I'm not saying everybody should have satisfactory sexual relations in marriage. You can't order people to be normal."

The well-known sex researchers John H. Gagnon and William Simon take a somewhat opposing point of view in their book Sexual Conduct:

It is possible that we have assumed an important role for sexuality and the management of sexuality in the maintenance of the marital bonds because we have assumed that sex itself is an important part of most people's lives. This may not be true. Particularly after the formation of the marital unit, it is quite possible that sex — both as a psychological reward and a physical outlet — declines in salience. It may become less important than alternative modes of gratification (work, children, security, constant affection — any or all may become more significant), or the weight of these alternative modes of gratifications may minimize the effects of any sexual dissatisfaction.


The results of various surveys and studies that have explored the relationship between sex and marital satisfaction perhaps tell the story best. Time after time, these studies come up with the same findings: the couples who consider themselves most satisfied and happy in their marriages also lead enjoyable sex lives. The most recent of these reports was the Love, Sex, and Aging survey of over 4,000 men and women over fifty done for Consumers Union by Edward Brecher, which found that high enjoyment of sex correlated with happy, long-term marriages and low enjoyment of sex correlated with unhappy marriages.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Is There Sex After Marriage? by Carol Botwin. Copyright © 1985 Carol Botwin. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Foreword by Harold I. Lief, M.D.,
Acknowledgments,
INTRODUCTION,
1 The Problem So Many Couples Face,
PART ONE: THE NATURAL HISTORY OF SEX IN MARRIAGE,
2 Stage One: The Early Years,
3 Stage Two: Let's Make a Baby,
4 Stage Three: And Now We're a Family,
5 Stage Four: Muddling Around in the Middle,
6 Stage Five: When the Kids Leave Home,
7 Stage Six: Sex in the Golden Years,
PART TWO: THE HIDDEN DYNAMIC,
8 Bed and Bored,
9 Ghosts from the Past,
10 Too Close for Comfort,
11 When Mad Is Bad,
12 Sex under the Gun,
Stress,
Depression,
13 Sex and Power,
14 The Price of Success,
Mission Accomplished,
Success versus Sex,
Afterword,
APPENDICES,
A Twenty-three Ways to Make Sex Good (and Keep It That Way) in Marriage and Other,
Long-Term Relationships,
B Directory of Sex Clinics,
Selected Bibliography,
Index,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews