Anonymous wrote:Who should control the frequency of a married couple's sex life?
1) The husband.
2) The wife
3) The one who wants sex most
4) The one who wants sex least
5) Other?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As part of a couple on 3rd year of no sex, it might seem that the person who said no is in control. But actually, if DH would just make a concerted effort, tell me why he loves me, notice what is great about me, provide no-obligation caresses and gratuitous affection, I would probably just melt; I'm pretty sure he could get whatever he wants. He's not willing to work for it so that's why it doesn't happen. So he controls.
So this man did nothing wrong and you cut him off for no apparent reason? I hope he has a busty secretary and you find out 5 years from now that your vow of celibacy was a solo mission and he never spent a single day lonely.
Anonymous wrote:Is not an issue to be controlled.
Anonymous wrote:Who Should Control A Couple's Sex Life?
Congress!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who should control the frequency of a married couple's sex life?
1) The husband.
2) The wife
3) The one who wants sex most
4) The one who wants sex least
5) Other?
I'm going to go out on a limb and say that neither partner "controls" sex.
This. The couple should discuss it and figure out where both parties stand and how to make it work together. Revisit as needed if circumstances (health, other stressors) change.
Him: "I want sex."
Her: "I don't want sex."
Him: "I want sex because it's healthy and it's what married people do."
Her: "I don't want sex because I don't feel sexy."
Him: "You look sexy."
Her: "Maybe if you did lots of chores, took me out, did a bunch of stuff I think needs done for the kids."
Him: [Does stuff]
Her: "Hmm, nope, still don't want sex."
Him: "I still want sex."
End result: He did a bunch of stuff she wanted done and they still didn't have sex. So the person who wants sex the least has an incredible amount of leverage.
Anonymous wrote:What if DH doesn't want sex and doesn't initiate it? What do you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who should control the frequency of a married couple's sex life?
1) The husband.
2) The wife
3) The one who wants sex most
4) The one who wants sex least
5) Other?
I could have sworn that married couples equally share many responsibilities for managing and governing their relationship, including the rate of occurrence regarding their intimacy/copulation.
That would be nice. But the low desire spouse has a way of "forgetting" to keep sex on the priority list. And, honestly, is it very common for married couples to initiate sex about 50/50? I initiate about 80-90% of the time. Of course, her initiations have about a 1:1 success rate. Mine have about a 1:5 rate.
Anonymous wrote:The husband. The wife should always submit to her husband whenever her husband calls her to bed. That is one of the duties of a wife, and if she declines, she is sinning.
This is from the Islamic perspective. Doesn't Christianity and Judaism have some sort of similar rule?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who should control the frequency of a married couple's sex life?
1) The husband.
2) The wife
3) The one who wants sex most
4) The one who wants sex least
5) Other?
I could have sworn that married couples equally share many responsibilities for managing and governing their relationship, including the rate of occurrence regarding their intimacy/copulation.