Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a woman I know there are lot's of things I know my husband could do to easily improve my desire, but he doesn't do any of them.
Don't try to turn me into your mom by acting helpless around the house and just grab me and start making out with me instead of weakly asking me if I want to have sex being at the top of the list.
Did I post this without realizing? This is my situation to a T.
ditto. living with a useless, helpless slob who stares 10 hours a day at his iphone is NOT sexually attractive. he can't even hold a conversation any more, not with me nor his kids nor his/my parents!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a woman I know there are lot's of things I know my husband could do to easily improve my desire, but he doesn't do any of them.
Don't try to turn me into your mom by acting helpless around the house and just grab me and start making out with me instead of weakly asking me if I want to have sex being at the top of the list.
Did I post this without realizing? This is my situation to a T.
Anonymous wrote:As a woman I know there are lot's of things I know my husband could do to easily improve my desire, but he doesn't do any of them.
Don't try to turn me into your mom by acting helpless around the house and just grab me and start making out with me instead of weakly asking me if I want to have sex being at the top of the list.
Anonymous wrote:I was reading this today:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/201709/the-quest-lust?collection=1105674
To the degree that a woman feels her libido is lacking, Team Psyche says it could be due to stress, anxiety, a history of trauma, poor body image, relationship problems, or just plain old monogamy—research shows that for women, each month of monogamous commitment is associated with a slight but steady decrease in desire. In contrast, for men, it holds more steady.
So, at some inevitable point, she will want sex less than he does, and perhaps even not at all. The best-case situation is that she has sex anyway because she loves him and wants to keep the marriage going. The worst-case situation is dead bedroom and eventually divorce.
Someone please tell me that this is wrong, and you've managed to keep the desire level strong for decades...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing this decline in sexual interest for partnered women evolved from the benefit of not having too many babies too often. Once you lose your partner, you rev back up to get another one.
That's not how evolution works. To evolve, you have to pass on the trait, i.e., you have to have babies. Also, for thousands of years women did not control whether or not they had sex and had babies. The man was going to fsck his woman whether or not she was "interested". Therefore interest or lack thereof could not be selected for.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been with my husband for 19 years. I still have a very high libido. For me sex is a stress relief. All of the things that make some women say no, seem to make me say yes. I always feel better afterwards, even if it’s just a quick five minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing this decline in sexual interest for partnered women evolved from the benefit of not having too many babies too often. Once you lose your partner, you rev back up to get another one.
That's not how evolution works. To evolve, you have to pass on the trait, i.e., you have to have babies. Also, for thousands of years women did not control whether or not they had sex and had babies. The man was going to fsck his woman whether or not she was "interested". Therefore interest or lack thereof could not be selected for.
Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing this decline in sexual interest for partnered women evolved from the benefit of not having too many babies too often. Once you lose your partner, you rev back up to get another one.
To the degree that a woman feels her libido is lacking, Team Psyche says it could be due to stress, anxiety, a history of trauma, poor body image, relationship problems, or just plain old monogamy—research shows that for women, each month of monogamous commitment is associated with a slight but steady decrease in desire. In contrast, for men, it holds more steady.