Tune into any TV show, the radio, or your Twitter
feed, and the message is clear: If you’re in a relationship, you should be
having hot, mind-blowing, on-top-of-the-table sex
… all the time.
Yet research shows that 10 to 20 percent of romantic relationships
in the United States are “sexless,” according to Robert Epstein, PhD, a
San Diego-based research psychologist and founder and director emeritus
of the Cambridge Center for Behavioral Studies in Beverly, Mass. That
accounts for about 40 million people in the United States.
And that may be an underestimate, because people are reluctant to
‘fess up about no-sex relationships. Because of society’s obsession with
sex, some couples feel ashamed to admit that they're not experiencing a
certain level of sexual frequency or satisfaction.
In fact, one survey found that 30 percent of male participants in
their 40s and 34 percent in their 50s who were in a relationship hadn’t
had sex the previous year. For women in their 40s and 50s, about 21
percent reported no sex with their partner in the previous year.
So what’s really going on in America’s bedrooms?
What ‘Sexless’ Really Means
Technically, a sexless relationship is defined as when a couple has
sex less than once a month or less than 10 times a year, says Dr.
Epstein.
What does that mean for your relationship?
One thing is for sure — it doesn’t mean your relationship lacks love,
says Jennifer Freed, PhD, marriage and family therapist in private
practice in Santa Barbara, Calif. She estimates that about 5 to 7
percent of the couples she sees in her practice are perfectly happy in
their sexless marriages.
If you’re in a sexless relationship, the main thing you should ask
yourself is: Are you and your partner content about not having sex?
Are Sex-Free Marriages Always a Bad Thing?
Relationships lose the sex factor in a variety of
ways. Both partners may have a very
low sex drive and choose not to have sex very often. Sometimes,
however, life gets in the way: A couple’s sexual satisfaction may be disrupted by
pregnancy or a new baby, health problems, or aging in general.
Epstein remembers a psychology professor who said
this: When sex is good, it’s 5 percent of the marriage, but when it’s bad, it’s
95 percent of the marriage. “The key is to understand what’s good and bad,” he
says. Good means that each person’s sexual needs are being met. Bad means that
at least one person’s needs are not being met.
If both members of the couple have a very low sex
drive and their needs are being met, then they can have a perfectly happy,
sexless marriage, he says.
When there’s a physical reason behind the lack of
sex, such as a health problem, and both members of the couple have agreed that
they’re okay with their rate of sexual activity as a result, they can also be
happy. After all, couples can hug, cuddle, hold hands, give each other back
rubs, spoon, and be intimate in other ways.
Problems occur when there’s an imbalance. This
could happen if one partner has a low sex drive and the other has a high sex
drive — even if they both started out with similar sex drives and
then one’s sexual
satisfaction needs changed, or if one partner develops a
health issue, such as incontinence, that leads them to shy away from sex, and the
other partner isn’t happy with the change.
Not very surprisingly, many people in sexless relationships
aren’t happy. According to preliminary data that Epstein has collected
from 3,000 people in the United States and Canada, 4.8 percent of men
identify themselves as having a low sex drive, and more than twice as
many — 10.8 percent — of women say they do.
“That’s a big difference,” Epstein says. “It
suggests that females in general will be with males who have higher sex
drives.”
What
Should You Do About Your Sexless Relationship?
If you’re wondering where your relationship falls,
take one of Epstein’s research tests online at arewegoodtogether.com
or myloveskills.com.
Sexless relationships aren’t something for couples
to aim for, Epstein says. Becoming sexually intimate is good for emotional
bonding and great for your health and well-being. It burns calories,
strengthens your immune system, has cardiovascular benefits, elevates your
mood, and feels good.
But couples also shouldn't feel as if they have to
measure up to the Hollywood standard of sexual satisfaction or performance, Freed
says. “Successful relationships have to be something that you create uniquely,”
she says.
Sexless Marriages and Relationships is not ok!
4:23 AM
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