Anonymous wrote:Once entitlement enters the conversation, there’s a major problem already.
It goes beyond consent.
If my partner does not enthusiastically share his or her body with me, there is a problem. But there is also a problem if I prize my own sexual gratification above my partner’s ownership of his or her body and enthusiasm to share it with me.
My grandmother taught me to never eat a meal cooked with resentment. I’ve applied the same to sex. I offered duty sex in my first marriage. When I divorced, I decided I would never do that again. My second marriage is much happier. In part because sex is not a currency or commodity.
Anonymous wrote:No. The only thing you're entitled to is deciding no sex is a deal breaker, and you may leave. The idea that a spouse is entitled to sex tracks along the same thinking that you cannot rape your spouse.
Anonymous wrote:If monogamy is expected then yes, although one has a right to say not tonight if it's a legit reason.
In reality, people neglect the sexual relationship, which is why infidelity is so common
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if said spouse gained 50 lbs?
Which comes first, the weight gain or the rejection?
Anyway, the answer is still yes. However, you can hold out for frequent sex as a reward for losing weight. How about a baseline of sex twice a week, but every week he loses a pound earns a reward of another encounter, or bj, or role playing, etc?
NP. I don't even think that would work. DH doesn't want sex with me THAT much, I'm sure.
Sure would be nice though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the wife owe her husband sex even if she’s not in the mood for it?
Does the husband owe her mongamy even if he’s not in the mood for it?
PP that is a different question. When you marry you are supposed to "forsake all others" so my advice would be don't get married if you plan on cheating.
To the op:
No, one is not entitled to sex just because you want it. Marry a robot if you want a servant and not a partner OR be a better partner so she wants it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if said spouse gained 50 lbs?
Which comes first, the weight gain or the rejection?
Anyway, the answer is still yes. However, you can hold out for frequent sex as a reward for losing weight. How about a baseline of sex twice a week, but every week he loses a pound earns a reward of another encounter, or bj, or role playing, etc?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the wife owe her husband sex even if she’s not in the mood for it?
Does the husband owe her mongamy even if he’s not in the mood for it?
If he wasn't interested in monogamy for life then he shouldn't have gotten married. That's kind of the point of getting married. And it's in most people's vows - "to forsake all others".
Most people don't have "to always have regular sex with my husband no matter how he treats me or no matter what life throws at us" in their vows.
But I agree that it's not ideal and usually a sign of deeper issues.