Anonymous wrote:I loved sex pre marriage and fully expected to keep loving it. But life happened and I lost my libido. I didn’t “trick” my husband by pretending to love sex and planning to do it less once married. I wish I had a stronger libido but I’m always tired. And I’ve lost some attraction to him as well. 30 years is a long time with the same person. Admit it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved sex pre marriage and fully expected to keep loving it. But life happened and I lost my libido. I didn’t “trick” my husband by pretending to love sex and planning to do it less once married. I wish I had a stronger libido but I’m always tired. And I’ve lost some attraction to him as well. 30 years is a long time with the same person. Admit it.
Neither did he “trick” you by pretending to be monogamous ... but then losing interest in that entirely.
Please give up on the selflessly and unconditionally BS. If the spouse denying sex loved selflessly and unconditionally, there would be no need for this discussion and a million of similar ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think some people get married with the false expectation that marriage gives them some legal entitlement to sex at a certain frequency.
Agree. Or if not a legal entitlement, a moral one.
It seems to be a cultural norm that a man's ongoing desire for sex is more important than a woman's equally normal waning interest in sex, after menopause (or for some, after childbirth). I'm not sure why that's fair.
Implicit in monogamy is the idea that one’s spouse will engage in a reasonable amount of sex. No one views marriage as a potential vow of celibacy at someone else’s discretion.
The key word here is reasonable which is somewhat subjective.
But if you read on here and advice columns, movies, etc. will give you the idea that most men consider anything less than once a week to be totally unacceptable and tantamount to abuse.
I would say 3-4 times a month is reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved sex pre marriage and fully expected to keep loving it. But life happened and I lost my libido. I didn’t “trick” my husband by pretending to love sex and planning to do it less once married. I wish I had a stronger libido but I’m always tired. And I’ve lost some attraction to him as well. 30 years is a long time with the same person. Admit it.
We’ve been married over 30 years and I enjoy sex just as much now as I did before we were married but I admit that the frequency is down to 1-2 times a week. I am definitely more fun in bed now than I was back then. Just two nights ago we did a couple of things at the same time for the first time that had both of us in a frenzy. Yes, 30 years is a very long time with the same person so it really helps to spice things up.
Anonymous wrote:I loved sex pre marriage and fully expected to keep loving it. But life happened and I lost my libido. I didn’t “trick” my husband by pretending to love sex and planning to do it less once married. I wish I had a stronger libido but I’m always tired. And I’ve lost some attraction to him as well. 30 years is a long time with the same person. Admit it.
Anonymous wrote:I loved sex pre marriage and fully expected to keep loving it. But life happened and I lost my libido. I didn’t “trick” my husband by pretending to love sex and planning to do it less once married. I wish I had a stronger libido but I’m always tired. And I’ve lost some attraction to him as well. 30 years is a long time with the same person. Admit it.
Anonymous wrote: DCUM society is having less sex, across the board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think some people get married with the false expectation that marriage gives them some legal entitlement to sex at a certain frequency.
Agree. Or if not a legal entitlement, a moral one.
It seems to be a cultural norm that a man's ongoing desire for sex is more important than a woman's equally normal waning interest in sex, after menopause (or for some, after childbirth). I'm not sure why that's fair.
Implicit in monogamy is the idea that one’s spouse will engage in a reasonable amount of sex. No one views marriage as a potential vow of celibacy at someone else’s discretion.
The key word here is reasonable which is somewhat subjective.
But if you read on here and advice columns, movies, etc. will give you the idea that most men consider anything less than once a week to be totally unacceptable and tantamount to abuse.
I would say 3-4 times a month is reasonable.
You would be completely wrong about that. If you can't even commit 20 minutes with your spouse twice per week, you should not be married (or at least not demand fidelity). Most dog owners spend more time picking up poop than that.
Anonymous wrote:Let me ask the men this.
Do you treat your wife now the same or better than you did when she was your girlfriend?
My DH and I used to travel all of the time. He bought me jewelry, we went out to fancy restaurants.
Now 3 kids later, we still go out but maybe 1x per month. Not 4-5 times per week like before.
He doesn't spend hours looking at necklaces or researching resorts in Europe like he used to.
Our relationship is still great.
I don't bitch and moan about not going to Fuji this winter because things change over time. That money is used for school, lessons, college etc. And I am fine with that becuase we are not just a "WE" we are a family now.
Sometimes that means less travel, less eating out, less sex.
I wish more men would be like my DH and not feel entitled to their wife's body whenever and wherever. Because i would bet good money YOU are not the same man she married and was wooed by.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think some people get married with the false expectation that marriage gives them some legal entitlement to sex at a certain frequency.
Agree. Or if not a legal entitlement, a moral one.
It seems to be a cultural norm that a man's ongoing desire for sex is more important than a woman's equally normal waning interest in sex, after menopause (or for some, after childbirth). I'm not sure why that's fair.
Implicit in monogamy is the idea that one’s spouse will engage in a reasonable amount of sex. No one views marriage as a potential vow of celibacy at someone else’s discretion.
The key word here is reasonable which is somewhat subjective.
But if you read on here and advice columns, movies, etc. will give you the idea that most men consider anything less than once a week to be totally unacceptable and tantamount to abuse.
I would say 3-4 times a month is reasonable.