Project 8 of 12 for high-nurturance families and relationships

 Improve Your Sexual Harmony

Learn and Resolve the Real Problems

By Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/basics/sex.htm

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on healing psychological wounds,  building high-nurt-urance family relationships, breaking the [wounds + unawareness] cycle, and preventing divorce. This introduction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. replace, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

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        This article is one of a series on strengthening primary relationships. It focuses on resolving sexual problems between committed partners. Related pages focus on reducing sexual stress between ex mates, stepparents and stepkids, and stepsiblings. The article offers...

        This article assumes you're familiar with these concepts...

  • premises about solving any relationship problem, and about managing marital problems;

  • four requisites for a mutually satisfying relationship,

  • this introduction  to normal personality subselves (like yours) - slides or text

  • this overview of the silent [wounds + ignorance] cycle that may be stressing you all, and...

  • this overview of Project 8  - grow and keep a satisfying primary relationship

        Are one or both of you partners not getting your sexual needs met? “Marital sex” is too complex a topic for this short article to offer a meaningful roadmap to total bliss. The article does offer some basic perspectives that can help you discover probable primary problems, and options for resolving them together.

        Premise - your “sex problem" may be a symptom of other unmet primary needs. Identifying and focusing on them together raises your odds of getting your mutual sensual and sexual (and other) needs satisfied well enough.

        I have post-masters-degree training in sex therapy and sexual-abuse recovery, and I am not an ex-pert on this subject. From 70 years on Earth, 40+ years' study of communication skills and human be-havior, and 30 years' learnings about personal recovery from low-nurturance childhoods, I feel qualified to offer the ideas in this article.

        As you know, “sex problems” usually result from an interactive cluster of unmet needs in both part-ners. This implies that identifying and resolving your version of these common relationship problems may improve your sexual satisfactions as a bonus.


colorbutton.gif Basic Premises - Sex 101

        Your sexual satisfaction is based on your basic attitudes and beliefs about gender, sensuality, sexuality, and morality. See how many of these ideas you agree with individually and as a couple:

        Sexual tension, desire, or need is a mix of physical, psychological, and spiritual discomforts. They’re based on involuntary neuro-chemical cycles, which are semi-consciously shaped by environmen-tal factors, attitudes, and beliefs that you’ve grown since early childhood. - e.g. “Masturbating is unheal-thy, sinful, and disgusting!"

        Your mind-body-spirit need (“drive”) to periodically release sexual tensions is human. It is no more shameful than digesting, burping, or urinating. The related urge to procreate is primal, and beyond moral judgment.

        The way you fill your sexual and procreation needs can be judged between nurturing (mutually sat-isfying and healthy) to harmful (toxic, abusive) based on many things. There are three or more judges to please: (a) your ruling subselves (e.g. your Inner Critic, Idealist / Optimist, Pleaser, and Perfectionist), (b) your mate’s ruling subselves, and (c) other people whose approval you value.

        Psychological, biological, and environmental conditions can inhibit natural female and male sexual needs and responses. Odds of improving your sexual satisfaction rise with looking honestly in all three domains.

        Typical female sexual-gratification has a different "profile" (arousal, buildup, orgasm/s, post-release) than average male satisfaction. In "non-casual" sex, females' wholistic enjoyment often increases when their partner's genuine focus is on love (intimacy, tenderness, patience, sensuality, romance, communion, empathy, passion...), vs. mindless mechanical lust, orgasm, and conquest.

        Some males need to feel powerful, potent, and dominant, which manifests as sexual aggression. Some females have a complementary need to be dominated, or vice versa. Research suggests that typical female brains need (a) more foreplay than males to reach full climax; (b) need sexual release somewhat less often, and (c) can experience more sequential orgasms than average male brains and bodies.

        More "Sex 101" premises...

        Adults who suffered sexual trauma (like abuse) in childhood seem more likely to have significant sexual (and other) problems than those who didn't. Typically, the greater the mind-body-spirit trauma, the more like-ly the survivor will have developed (a) a false self and (b) protective memory distortions or blocks about it 

       Adult symptoms of early sexual trauma are clear, and effective healing therapies are available. In my clinical experience, a significant percentage of average men and women suffered major sexual and other traumas in their early years. A common one is being shamed and/or guilt-tripped for feeling and expres-sing natural sensuality , sexuality, and normal curiosity about those.

        Our ancestral Christian and Victorian attitudes cast natural sexual desires and behaviors as shameful ("dirty"). To satisfy consumer demand, our profit-minded media engine ceaselessly barrages us with unrealistic and exaggerated focus on...

  • youth, attractiveness (“Six days to more flattering abs, whiter teeth, and an alluring tan!”), and sexual desirability; and...

  • superficial sexual adventure, titillation, and gratification.

Decades of exposure to this can hinder some mates from having realistic marital sexual expectations and experiences. Reality check: who do you compare your sexual attitudes and behaviors to - do you have sexual hero/ines?

        Wounded co-parents enduring ceaseless inner pain can be addicted to self-medicating via sexual fantasies (e.g. pornography), arousal, and orgasm. Like other addictions, these cravings are obsessive (thoughts) and/or compulsions (actions).

        They’re beyond logic or willful control, because of the underlying primal need to mute relentless shame, guilt, and emotional/ spiritual emptiness. A related addiction is to “sex and love.” I believe any addiction is a clear symptom of major childhood neglect (nurturance-deprivation) and significant psycho-logical wounds.

        Individual subselves in each partner have their own values, needs and priorities about sensuality and sexuality. These may be based on inaccurate information, experiential learnings, and ancestral inhi-bitions or prohibitions. (e.g. “A proper wife must want to submit to her husband’s sexual needs, and not assert her own.”)

        When these are too conflictual, a partner can experience hormonal imbalance (“low sexual drive”) and/or enough distraction to block their natural sexual responses. That can manifest in many ways, like vaginismis (prolonged contraction or spasm) and impotence.

        Sexual preference appears to be largely developmental and hormonal, rarely learned or chosen. As such, there is nothing inherently immoral or shameful about consensual bisexuality or homosexuality. If you’re curious, skeptical, outraged, or disagree, I recommend that you read “Brain Sex,” by Anne Moir and David Jessel.

        "Good sex" consistently ranks fifth or lower in thoughtful surveys of marital-satisfaction factors. Respect, honesty, companionship, empathy, and emotional/spiritual intimacy usually rank higher, at least with typical women. What are your priorities?

       From 29 years' study, I believe U.S. divorce is epidemic partly because many partners commit to the wrong people, at the wrong time, for the wrong reasons. One wrong reason is “to socially and morally legitimize and satisfy my sexual desire for you.”

        Premise: typical “sexual problems” are symptoms of major psychological wounds + toxic atti-tudes + ignorance of sexual and relationship realities + ineffective communications. Once identified, each of these can be reduced. From this view, there is no such thing as a sexual problem, other than organic dysfunction like hormonal imbalance. Even those may be affected by personality disharmony!

        You mates can improve your sensual and sexual satisfaction any time you commit to...

  • helping each other reduce any significant false-self wounds;

  • raising your knowledge and awarenesses; and...

  • risking new attitudes and behaviors (be “more vulnerable.”)

Lasting improvement is most likely when you each feel "This is our project," vs. "This is your problem: you must change and learn how to satisfy me (insulting implication: "my needs and dignity outrank yours").

Status check: See where you stand with what you just read: T = true, F =  false, and? = "I'm not sure," or "It depends on ____"

I believe each of the premises above; or if not, I’m clear on what I do believe. (T  F ?)

My sexual beliefs and values are my own, not someone else’s - like a religion’s, my ancestors', my mate’s, or the media’s. (T  F ?)

I know all I need to know about (a) healthy human sexual functioning and behavior and (b) my personal sensual and sexual needs. (T  F ?)

I can clearly (a) name the major differences between male and female sexual needs and responses, and (b) describe how those differences affect my and my mate’s recent sexual satisfactions or frustrations. (T  F ?)

My needs for sensuality and sexuality (a) have been satisfied well enough recently, (b) in ways that enhance (vs. stress) our re/marriage and our self and mutual respect. (T  F ?)

I believe that any “sex problem” my mate and I are experiencing is a symptom of deeper personal and relationship problems. (T  F ?)

I can separate my and my mate’s needs for psychological and spiritual intimacy from our respective needs for physical (sensual/sexual) pleasure. (T  F ?)

When one of us has sexual needs, I consistently rank my partner’s worth and psychologi-cal, spiritual, and physical needs as equal in importance to mine. (T  F ?)

My partner would answer each of these items as “True” now. (T  F ?)

I (a) want to discuss these items with my partner now, and I (b) feel totally safe doing so. (T  F ?)

My true Self is clearly leading my other subselves right now - or if not, I know who is lead-ing. (T  F ?)

        If you learned anything important here, what is it? If you didn’t learn anything, what does that mean?

         With this foundation, let’s explore typical sexual problems and your options. If you're not in a stepfamily and don't expect to be, skip to here.

colorbutton.gif Stepfamily Sexuality

        See if any of these aspects of typical stepfamily life may be affecting your sexual satisfactions:

Typical re/marrying co-parents are older than first marriers, and (usually) have more sexual experience to draw on. Compared to their younger selves, the frequency and intensity of their desire may have mellow-ed, and their mid-life priorities are often different.

If a mate has a chemical addiction, being older implies the addiction may have progressed to the point that it impairs sexual functioning. The four types of addiction seem to be common in typical divorcing families and stepfamilies.

Sexual distrust may be higher in some stepfamily re/marriages where a partner acknowledges one or more marital affairs that contributed to their prior divorce.

The ongoing presence of one or more former sexual partners (i.e. stepkids' other parent/s) makes sexual insecurity and jealousy more likely with new stepparents than in typical new first marriages. A divorcing co-parent may still feel strong sexual desire for her or his ex, which is not subject to logic, requests, threats, or legal decree.

The presence of resident or visiting stepkids can add complex inhibitions and distractions, and sexual-privacy intrusions, that childless newlyweds don't face.

        More stepfamily factors that can affect your sexual harmony:

Re/marrying mates' needs and attitudes about child conception are more complex and different than first-marriers. This can generate tension when a childless stepparent wants to conceive, and their mate says “I don’t need to again.” Conceiving an “ours” child sets off a complex web of financial, psychological, loyalty, physical, and family-structure changes that can cause conflicts and triangles which inhibit household and sexual harmonies.

The primal incest taboo is weaker in average stepfamilies than in healthy biofamilies, raising the odds that stepparents and stepkids (and/or stepsiblings) can feel sexual attractions. Where stepparent-stepchild attraction is present, the sexual part of the re/married mates' relationship will be affected, and/or unfilled adult needs may contribute to inappropriate thoughts and/or actions.

Minor and adult kids may feel significant “upset” (disgust, resentment, outrage, scorn) with either bio-parent behaving sexually with another adult - specially if the kids haven't finished mourning their signifi-cant losses.  This upset can cause secondary problems that distract and/or conflict you mates from marital and sexual intimacy and serenity.

At least 80% of the many hundreds of typical co-parents I've consulted with since 1981 seem to come from significantly low-nurturance childhoods. I assume they represent most U.S. divorcing and stepfamily partners. Low-nurturance childhoods promote significant psychological wounds. That raises the odds that one or more of your stepfamily co-parents will be sexually repressed, shamed, abused, misinformed, scared, addicted, and/or promiscuous. And...

Innerpersonal and interpersonal confusions, conflicts, and distractions are more common in average stepfamilies than in healthy intact biofamilies. Privacy and undistracted time for intimacy can be harder to attain. This can inhibit your shared sexual focus and enjoyment, unless you intentionally work together to avoid that without guilt or anxiety. That requires shared awareness and priorities, and effective communi-cation.

        These and other factors will affect stepfamily partners in unique ways. Bottom line: achieving con-sistent sexual harmony in warp-speed America is challenging enough. The odds of significant sexual dis-satisfaction ("problems") are probably higher for typical stepfamily mates than their first-marrying peers, for many reasons. What do those problems look like? If you have any, what can you mates do about them?

colorbutton.gif Typical Surface Sexual Problems

        Women and men’s sexual anxieties and frustrations sound the same in any family situation:

"Too seldom (or too often)!"

"Too fast (or slow)!"

"Not enough romance!"

"Too little time!"

“I feel used!”

"I don't feel desired (or desirable)!"

"I (you) have little sexual desire"

"Too little (or too much) foreplay!"

"You compare me to _______ "

"I have an (old) infection that..."

“The kids will hear us…”

"You've, uh, lost your sexy body..."

"You fall asleep right away, and I..."

"B-o-r-i-n-g...."

"You don't know what I like!"

"You won't do what I like!"

“I don’t do things like that.”

"Too many interruptions"

"I'm (or you're) too tired, too often!"

"You only do that because I ask, instead of wanting to..."

"I just want to cuddle, and you want orgasm.'"

"I’m scared that we'll conceive, despite..."

"It's your duty as a spouse to..."

"(Some authority) says..."

"I'm ashamed and guilty that I can't please you"

"I'm afraid that I can't please you..."

"You have a big (sexual) problem..."

        Add to these a collage of "mechanical" problems with erection and penetration; hygiene; premature, mismatching, or interrupted orgasms (or none); timing conflicts ("I like it best in the morning, but Burt's a night man");...

        Any bells ringing here? These are surface problems which can combine to cause major personal and mutual hurts, anxieties, resentments, distrusts, frustrations, and doubts. These can be amplified by many other family and life stressors. To find relief, let's look a little deeper..

Continue by reviewing six underlying primary problems, and options for resolving them.

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Updated  September 16, 2008