Anonymous wrote:^speak for yourself I’m 24 years married and my husband is still the only man I want to have sex with. I have zero desire to f@ck a different man. We have great sex multiple times per week. Do I find other men attractive? Yes. Not many IRL. My husband is way hotter and muscular than any of the other husbands so there’s that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
Your friends just wont admit it. My DH is the ne who killed our bedroom. Even if he didnt I woudl still be bored. Every single divorced woman I know wasn't have much sex at with spouse and after separation, their drive sky rocketed. Women do get bored faster than men. Men like convenience.
Plus one. It's rarely personal. Men take their wife's loss of drive so personally. It's just boredom. Happens to most women although some are better at faking it. Lesbians don't have to pretend which is why they are happily sexless after a decade or more
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
Your friends just wont admit it. My DH is the ne who killed our bedroom. Even if he didnt I woudl still be bored. Every single divorced woman I know wasn't have much sex at with spouse and after separation, their drive sky rocketed. Women do get bored faster than men. Men like convenience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
Your friends just wont admit it. My DH is the ne who killed our bedroom. Even if he didnt I woudl still be bored. Every single divorced woman I know wasn't have much sex at with spouse and after separation, their drive sky rocketed. Women do get bored faster than men. Men like convenience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
In retrospect, I was too understanding about the drop off in sex when the kids were little. I didn't push the issue because I thought it was just a phase. It wasn't until about 8 years later, when our youngest was in school full time, that it became clear that our sex life wasn't going to bounce back. I tried making it priority then, but it was too late. Our sex life is never coming back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
This, but also -- it's variable! I think people freak out about the drop off in sex when kids enter the picture. But it's not the end. Things change a lot when kids are old enough to be a little independent, when they can go do sleep overs or attend birthday parties on their own. And then again when they get to high school and are out of the house even more. It's constantly evolving.
There is a period of time when parents are maximally exhausted and have very little time to themselves, plus women go through a lot of physical and hormonal changes around childbirth that can impact their libidos. it's all normal. But if partners are committed and willing to try (and keep talking to each other about it), it will come back, and can even come back in surprising and exciting ways that satisfy the desire for novelty.
So often when people talk about unhappiness in marriage, I think they are getting stuck in short-term thinking. Of course your short-term happiness matters. But people will CAUSE short-term unhappiness by assuming that everything that is happening right now is a permanent circumstance. They look at money constraints and decide they will never resolve. They look at stress or family dynamics when a new baby comes and think their connection to their partner is forever deteriorated. And so on.
The only thing permanent about marriage is the marriage itself (if you let it be). Trust in the commitment and make everything else negotiable, changeable. Experiment. As long as you make those choices together and keep lines of communication open, the specifics are actually a lot less important than you think.
In retrospect, I was too understanding about the drop off in sex when the kids were little. I didn't push the issue because I thought it was just a phase. It wasn't until about 8 years later, when our youngest was in school full time, that it became clear that our sex life wasn't going to bounce back. I tried making it priority then, but it was too late. Our sex life is never coming back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
This, but also -- it's variable! I think people freak out about the drop off in sex when kids enter the picture. But it's not the end. Things change a lot when kids are old enough to be a little independent, when they can go do sleep overs or attend birthday parties on their own. And then again when they get to high school and are out of the house even more. It's constantly evolving.
There is a period of time when parents are maximally exhausted and have very little time to themselves, plus women go through a lot of physical and hormonal changes around childbirth that can impact their libidos. it's all normal. But if partners are committed and willing to try (and keep talking to each other about it), it will come back, and can even come back in surprising and exciting ways that satisfy the desire for novelty.
So often when people talk about unhappiness in marriage, I think they are getting stuck in short-term thinking. Of course your short-term happiness matters. But people will CAUSE short-term unhappiness by assuming that everything that is happening right now is a permanent circumstance. They look at money constraints and decide they will never resolve. They look at stress or family dynamics when a new baby comes and think their connection to their partner is forever deteriorated. And so on.
The only thing permanent about marriage is the marriage itself (if you let it be). Trust in the commitment and make everything else negotiable, changeable. Experiment. As long as you make those choices together and keep lines of communication open, the specifics are actually a lot less important than you think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.
Yeah. None of my friends have expressed that interest verbally either. Frankly, it sounds very slutty. I am not friends with whores though. Nobody condones affairs or cheating.
Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think maybe some of the surprise comes from the way it's portrayed versus the reality of how it comes to pass.
Most of the reason for the decline in sex is that people get bored, and women get bored more quickly than men for mostly biological reasons. Nobody's fault.
The way it gets portrayed blames it on women being asexual generally, causing women to say "hey! We like sex!" and on men becoming out of shape, thoughtless dopes. Guys say "hey! I'm still in pretty good shape and I pull my weight at home."
Since the individuals don't fall into the stereotypical tropes usually thought of as causing the sexlessness, they think that won't happen to their marriages. But, biology is biology, so it happens anyway, and they're surprised.
YES. I'm sexually bored with my husband even though the sex can be good. I just am not interested. Want a new partner.
This is the truth. My husband is good in bed and knows how to get me off, but I crave new and exciting. It monogamy that's the problem
I am surprised by these three posters. I have a hard time believing they are really women. I have never heard a girlfriend say anything like this. Ever. Some of my friends say that they love their husbands but aren't really that interested in sex anymore, but I have never heard them say they don't want to have sex with their husband but crave sex with other men.