Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously both. Duh.
My husband and I couldn’t keep our hands off one another or be apart after we met. It was intense chemistry and so much sex I was sore.
BUT- we loved everything about one another, had the same sense of humor, interests and truly liked each other’s friends. We were intimate inside and outside the bedroom. He is my best friend.
25 years later, passion can be intense, lull and rise again. Sex can be quick or long or one is more into than the other—and it can also be amazing.
We are 50 now, we don’t go more than a week without having sex and sometimes it’s a few times per week. Or somebody has a parent dying or is sick themselves, and we obviously don’t feel like it.
You need both for a long, happy successful marriage and you need to be flexible and understanding.
This is a good post. My initial inclination is that sex is what makes you a couple and is the one thing you only do with each other. But you are right, both are essential
I think of it like arguing whether the steering wheel or the gas is more essential to a car. If you don't have both, the car is worthless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sex. Was married 17 years yo my best friend in the world. We never argued, could finish each other's sentences, tackled everything as a team. Sex life declined after kids, but we still were doing it about once a week. So not amazing, but not sexless.
He ended up having an affair with his extremely homely, frumpy secretary. She was infatuated with him and I think in the end he craved that power imbalance, the feeling like a masculine hero to a needy damsel who literally had to ask him permission to take lunch.
He was a pretty passive guy for the most part, and I think that thrilled him.
This analysis sounds so spot on.
It's a great example of how, in general, the sexes are different. The post above talking about friendship being most important is someone who will be blindsided by cheating. Men primarily feel love through sex. If that's not a priority in the relationship, it has a shelf life and his eye and heart will be open to another
I might be the “friendship” PP. First of all, aren’t most people in an apparently good relationship blindsided by cheating? How would you not be? So some people plant a seed of doubt before cheating? I’ve never quite understood this, nor the implication that somebody who would be blindsided by cheating is naïve or ignorant.
Second, I might have a definition of “friend.” I don’t think it’s “friend” behavior to cheat on somebody. Like if somebody is cheating on you, how are you friends?
Third, I don’t think that two people who aren’t friends can have a good marriage. If you’re not chatting with each other, having fun with each other, emotionally supporting each other, doing nice things for the other, that’s not a good marriage. But there are marriages in which both partners are satisfied with very little to secs. Why would sex be more important for them than friendship? I think that you can say that sex and friendship are equally important, but if you have to choose between the two and generalize, it’s friendship.
People are still under the misconception that a) sex is a need b) monogamy is necessary b) ace people don’t exist and d) some people truly do love sex but believe that it’s not nearly as important as other things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sex. Was married 17 years yo my best friend in the world. We never argued, could finish each other's sentences, tackled everything as a team. Sex life declined after kids, but we still were doing it about once a week. So not amazing, but not sexless.
He ended up having an affair with his extremely homely, frumpy secretary. She was infatuated with him and I think in the end he craved that power imbalance, the feeling like a masculine hero to a needy damsel who literally had to ask him permission to take lunch.
He was a pretty passive guy for the most part, and I think that thrilled him.
This analysis sounds so spot on.
It's a great example of how, in general, the sexes are different. The post above talking about friendship being most important is someone who will be blindsided by cheating. Men primarily feel love through sex. If that's not a priority in the relationship, it has a shelf life and his eye and heart will be open to another
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sex. Was married 17 years yo my best friend in the world. We never argued, could finish each other's sentences, tackled everything as a team. Sex life declined after kids, but we still were doing it about once a week. So not amazing, but not sexless.
He ended up having an affair with his extremely homely, frumpy secretary. She was infatuated with him and I think in the end he craved that power imbalance, the feeling like a masculine hero to a needy damsel who literally had to ask him permission to take lunch.
He was a pretty passive guy for the most part, and I think that thrilled him.
This analysis sounds so spot on.
Anonymous wrote:Sex. Was married 17 years yo my best friend in the world. We never argued, could finish each other's sentences, tackled everything as a team. Sex life declined after kids, but we still were doing it about once a week. So not amazing, but not sexless.
He ended up having an affair with his extremely homely, frumpy secretary. She was infatuated with him and I think in the end he craved that power imbalance, the feeling like a masculine hero to a needy damsel who literally had to ask him permission to take lunch.
He was a pretty passive guy for the most part, and I think that thrilled him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For people who have experienced both types of relationships (physical chemistry driven versus friendship driven), which type would you consider more successful or which did you prefer?
I feel like the common refrain is "the physical side fades, so you need a solid friendship to sustain a marriage long term." For me, I think the opposite has been true.
First husband and I got along great, loved talking and hanging out together, never fought -- but also almost never had sex, and that was a dark cloud over our entire marriage.
My 8-year relationship with my current boyfriend has been very different. It started with lust, and I didn't care that we had little in common because I just thought it would be a short fling. But we never fell out of lust. We also fight much more than my ex-H and I did. We resolve our fights, but it's a bit tumultuous compared to my ex. But damn, the sex tho. It has been a salve that has gotten us through so many hard times.
I'm not suggesting physical chemistry could overcome abuse or mistreatment or intellectual unfulfillment. But assuming a baseline level of compatibility in any relationship, for me, physical chemistry has been more healing and restorative of the woes in this relationship than a deep friendship was in my old relationship.
Same for anyone else?
Same situation.
Sex is a barometer of marriage, if you aren't having good sex at least once a week, its probably because there is something deeply wrong with the marriage. Of course, friendship is important but you can also get that outside the marriage. With sex, if you aren't getting it inside the marriage, you will eventually get it outside the marriage. Or if you remain faithful, the resentment will destroy all else.
DW here. I need the trust and communication and playfulness of the Friendship to really be interested in the Sex.