Anonymous wrote:Have you read Emily Nagoski’s Come As You Are? One thing she discusses is that women tend to have a more reactive sex drive — we don’t sit there and just get turned on the way men do, it’s usually in the context of things already getting sexy. So building in time to your schedule when you can want it helps.
Anonymous wrote:This is what I found after 10+ years of marriage. Apart from all other marital duties, sex is a part of marriage that absolutely cannot abide any sort of compulsion. Yes, you can guilt-trip your spouse into duty sex with you, but the overall health of your sex life will suffer.
Here are the two guidelines that help us to have it sort of hot:
- accept that as time goes on, there will be ebb and flow in your desire for each other. Regardless of what DCUM tells you, it is perfectly normal for loving couples to take a break from sex for a few weeks or even months, and then come together again with a renewed passion for each other.
- accept that it is better to have less sex of good quality than more bad sex. The key to achieving this is somewhat counter-intuitive, but it is maintaining a level of excitement without bringing it to climax every time, and having generally less sex than we would like. Sexy thoughts, a bit of foreplay, flirtation, some fondling here and there but without expectation that it will lead to intercourse. This can go on for days. Then when we finally have it, it's mind blowing.
Also, if you have young kids, it's normal that you forget about sex for a few months. It just is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s your birth control that ruins your libido. Go see a reproductive endocrinologist and get it figured out.
This country and what it does to women is just maddeningly ridiculous - how many men are on libido ruining birth control?
+ 1.
Use condoms. Any BC pill will ruin your libido. I cannot understand why women are buying that bullshit. And if you are married and have already had your 2-3 kids, ask DH to get a vasectomy. You can go without a condom and be as spontaneous as you want.
+2
I was on birth control once for a few months, it killed my drive. Never again. Condoms are fine, maybe DH will be a vasectomy sometime.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I have been married over 30 years and except for just before and after childbirth I don't believe we've ever gone over two weeks without sex. Right now we average 1-2 times a week (did it last night) and that's been our average ever since we had children. Even before that 3x was likely our high point. We've always been very good friends and he's always been very helpful around the house so I can't give him any grief on that issue. We've both stayed in pretty good shape and my DH has always been affectionate and loving so sex isn't the only time I feel loved. So, I think desire comes from friendship, sharing and that sex is just part of that. If you're not friends and rowing in the same boat I can see why their would be a lack of desire. For me sex is about making love, not just getting laid regardless of how much I enjoy getting laid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:any women tried testorone cream? I know some drs will prescribe it off label. Hard to get the dosing right so it doesn't masculinize you but some women swear it was life changing for them.
Yes. And it’s not hard to get the dosing right so it doesn’t ‘masculinization you’. It’s easy. I take a prescription cream specifically for women from Australia and I got it from my doctor. I just rub a little in each day and it just keeps my sex drive going a bit after menopause. I’m also less tired and can exercise a bit more like I used to. I also feel more like myself emotionally.
I have no masculine issues, no acne, no issues at all. It has dosing for women right on the label and I make sure to use a little less.
Go see a reproductive endocrinologist. My regular doctor , OB and regular endocrinologist were no help at all.
It’s the birth control that is doing this to you though probably - that time just before you ovulate is your monthly sexual peak, I’d hate to miss that. Anyone ever thought of just using condoms?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s your birth control that ruins your libido. Go see a reproductive endocrinologist and get it figured out.
This country and what it does to women is just maddeningly ridiculous - how many men are on libido ruining birth control?
+ 1.
Use condoms. Any BC pill will ruin your libido. I cannot understand why women are buying that bullshit. And if you are married and have already had your 2-3 kids, ask DH to get a vasectomy. You can go without a condom and be as spontaneous as you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm right there with you, OP. Been married 10 years, 2 very young kids, and I work about 55 hours per week. DH does a lot with the kids and around the house but I'm continually tired and stressed out. I was probably low-to-average drive before kids, and now it's basically gone. It sucks. I feel so guilty about it.
So, no advice. Just commiseration.
How does your DH feel about it? If you don't solve the problem he will solve it elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:It’s your birth control that ruins your libido. Go see a reproductive endocrinologist and get it figured out.
This country and what it does to women is just maddeningly ridiculous - how many men are on libido ruining birth control?
Anonymous wrote:any women tried testorone cream? I know some drs will prescribe it off label. Hard to get the dosing right so it doesn't masculinize you but some women swear it was life changing for them.