Get yourself aroused, dingbat, or take steps to tell your partner exactly what arouses you. If you don't know what arouses you, how could your partner possibly know? |
+1 1. It's a problem. (Unless it's not - if your spouse is also uninterested in sex, then ignore all of this, you guys should be delighted to find someone compatible.) 2. The problem needs to be addressed. 3. It's atypical to not be aroused. It's not morally "bad" or anything. Just not the way human bodies and minds normally work. 4. When looking at ways to solve a problem, it's more reasonable to look to make the atypical typical to solve the problem instead of looking to make the typical atypical. In other words, the person without a sex drive is probably the one who is going to be expected to change more. 5. At the end of the day, you'll have to see if you can both change enough to reasonably accommodate the other and if you can live with the result. If not, then there shouldn't be any shame in splitting up. The asexual spouse isn't bad, just different and potentially incompatible with the sexual spouse. Just importantly, the sexual spouse isn't frivolous to want a sexual relationship and shouldn't be made to feel that he or she is being selfish or that his or her needs are unimportant. That said, sometimes sex just isn't going to be possible in the marriage, and the partners will have to weigh the pros and cons of some unpleasant options at that point. |
Sex is a want, not a need. Water and oxygen are needs. |
Can you not see the irony of this statement. |
Sex is a want, not a need, like shelter and clothing are wants, not needs. |
Yes. This is why an unconsummated marriage can be annulled, wiped off the records like it never happened; sex is an expectation in the marriage contract. |
No, actually, it's a need. Not as high up as water, oxygen or food on Maslow's hierarchy, but a need nonetheless. More of a need than the way you spend 95% of your time. |
No, I don't. I think it is the root of a lot of marriage problems. People expect their spouses to make them happy. Everyone needs to make themselves happy. |
Yet your spouse has to make you happy by making sure that she is receptive to sex at least 3X a week... |
NP here, but no that's not it at all. I know what makes me happy, and that is being sexually connected to my SO. If that isn't happening, it's a problem I try to resolve and work on. If they do nothing to resolve or work on the problem I can't make them, but of course their inaction contributes to my unhappiness. So then then the decision of how long I'm willing to not be fulfilled needs to be made. |
This thread is so depressing. Contracts, needs..I was so in love with my husband and could f"@?k his brains out day and night. Now, 13 years later, the thought of touching me makes my skin crawl. |
What part, if any, did you play in bringing the marriage to that place? |
Good try, but I'm the DW, but if we both enjoy sex then we both enjoy having sex regularly which we do about 2-3 times a week. My point is, it shouldn't be forced or receptive to, it should be looked forward to. |
Why did you let it get to this point? Get therapy, find out why you don't enjoy sex anymore. Maybe, fake it 'til you make it. |