helps people cut to the chase earlier in their relationships. There’s a lot more to long-term happiness than good sex, but basic sexual technique is deeply entwined with lasting love.
Chapter Eight
Keeping Passion Alive in
Long-Term Relationships
As lovers segue from the hotly passionate courtship stage into a more companionate long-term relationship, it’s only natural for them to worry about their sex lives—with thoughts like: there used to be a lot of fire-works, but now sex is getting boring; we used to make love practically every day, but now we’re so busy that it’s happening less often; sex used to last for hours, but with the kids around, we can’t find the time—and quite often we’re just not in the
mood. Couples who are
no longer hitting youth-
Couples who no longer have
ful performance targets
as much sexual variety,
for sexual variety, fre-
frequency, duration, and
quency, duration, and
spontaneity as they did when
spontaneity may fret that
they were younger may
the magic is gone and
worry that the magic in their
their love affair is on the
relationship is gone.
slippery slope to doom.
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This could be true, for any number of reasons. But the problem might also be that the couple has unrealistic expectations about sex—that it must be different every time, happen every single day, last for hours, and always be triggered by spontaneous passion. This chapter points toward a more realistic set of expectations in each of these areas, and also to the critical importance of having a viable route to mutual satisfaction—one that is comfortable and acceptable for both partners, is easy to use, and keeps working over the years.
The Issue of Boredom
Why do some couples get bored with sex after a few months while others continue to enjoy making love throughout their adult lives? The conventional wisdom is that the way to stave off sexual boredom is
variety
—
that “great sex” consists of different positions, different techniques, different routines, different times of day, different venues, different toys and devices, different perfumes, different condom colors—and different lovers. Much of contemporary sex material caters to this view, constantly feeding people new ideas on how to add to the sexual menu. Why else would all those women’s magazines tout a sex article on the cover of every single issue?
Variety-oriented sex advice focuses almost exclusively on foreplay. That’s understandable, since there are
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endless permutations to the positions and possibilities of this part of lovemaking. The whole body is an erogenous zone, and if a couple has the time, the imagina-tion, and the stamina, foreplay can be new and interesting practically forever. Most sex advice spends little if any time on the way in which couples have their orgasms—because, as we
saw in earlier chapters,
there are relatively few
Many people assume that
effective approaches to
variety is the way to avoid
this part of lovemaking.
sexual boredom: different
But is variety during
positions, different techniques,
foreplay really the key to
different venues, different
avoiding sexual boredom?
toys, different condom colors—
Two people can make
and different lovers.
love in an outrageous
number of ways and still
grow weary of each other sexually. This can happen if they’ve fallen out of love, been betrayed, or suffer from other problems, but it can also happen to couples who are in love and really want to make the relationship work. Could it be that another variable is more important to the staying power of a sexual relationship?
This is an empirical question; we could find the answer by doing really thorough, honest, confidential interviews with couples for whom lovemaking has and hasn’t stood the test of time. Unfortunately, sex 1 5 8
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literature is not particularly helpful in this important area—probably because researchers haven’t been asking the right questions. More about that in Chapter 9.
While we wait for better research, though, we can speculate about what truly keeps passion alive. Here’s a theory; it’s unproven, but it poses an intriguing alternative to the idea that variety is everything.
In the early stages of a romantic relationship lovers are full of passion and excitement and often experiment with lots of different positions and approaches and explore their likes and dislikes. As they get to know each other better they tend to settle into a routine—
certain preliminaries and a specific way of reaching (or not reaching) orgasms—with occasional variations.
This is a crucial point in a sexual relationship. Are both partners having satisfying orgasms (not necessarily simultaneous) when they make love? If a couple’s routine leaves one partner sexually unsatisfied (and it’s almost always the woman), there is trouble ahead.
These lovers may confide in their friends that sex has become “boring,” but boredom is not the real issue.
The nub of the matter is a lack of deep satisfaction for the woman, which robs lovemaking of mutuality and depth—and may affect her partner’s level of satisfaction as well; men may be more sensitive to the subtle dynamics of sex than we suppose.
Without the deep satisfaction of mutual orgasms,
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there’s a tendency to focus on sexual behaviors that by themselves can seem repetitive and even tiresome. It
is
boring to go through the same routine week after week if it doesn’t culminate in good mutual orgasms.
The hypothesis here is that if we interviewed couples who have become “bored” with sex and asked the right questions, we would find that they do not have a good technique for mutual orgasms. We would predict that such couples would become increasingly dis-satisfied with their sex life and either accept that (and have a sexless marriage), use other means to gain satisfaction (perhaps masturbation), or look for new partners to try to recreate the “sheer excite-
ment” phase that they
What truly quenches our
remember so fondly.
sexual appetite and leaves a
Conversely, if we
sense of deep gratification
interviewed couples
and closeness is not all the
who have been gen-
foreplay; it’s the
orgasms
.
uinely happy with their
sex life for several years,
our prediction would be that at some point they discovered a good sexual finale and continued to use it (perhaps with variations) over time.
But doesn’t using the same mutual-orgasm approach get monotonous? Strangely enough, it doesn’t. People don’t get tired of having orgasms together any more 1 6 0
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than they get tired of eating good food. The analogy with food works on a number of levels.
• Our appetite for food and for sex are basic drives that build up over time. When we’ve had a fine meal or a good orgasm, we feel mellow and satisfied and our drives are temporarily slaked.
• Both types of hunger are influenced by quality: when food or lovemaking is mediocre, our appetite goes down; when the meal or the sex is good, our appetite increases.
• If we’re extremely hungry or haven’t had sex in a long time, we are less fussy about the finer points of cuisine and lovemaking.
• With both food and sex, we can have too much of a good thing: with food we feel sick to our stomachs; with sex, we get exhausted and sore. In both cases, our appetite disappears, and we have no desire to eat or make love for a period of time. But the basic drives are still there, and before long, they’re back.
But the food/sex analogy breaks down in one area.
Although we can get great enjoyment in the course of eating and making love, what truly quenches our sexual appetite and leaves a sense of deep gratification and closeness is not all the foreplay; it’s the
orgasms
. The kissing, hugging, different positions, techniques, toys, etc., can be great fun, sharpen the palate and heighten
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sexual arousal, and even boost the eventual level of gratification—but unlike the courses of a good meal (which
are
the meal), foreplay activities are
a means to an end
; it’s the orgasmic finale that really hits the spot. The quality of this final stage of lovemaking is what delivers the lasting physical and emotional payoff. Getting that part right is the key—a point that sex books and videos rarely emphasize.
Another reason that using the same mutual-orgasm technique can be satisfying year after year is that the feelings lovers experience from orgasms can change from session to session. One of the remarkable things about sex is the potential for great variety within the same technique. Lovemaking in which a couple uses a single mutual-orgasm approach can be hot and lustful, sweet and gentle, loud and raunchy, whispery and quiet, and everything in between. Subtle differences in mood, time of month, level of
arousal, positions, pres-
sure, and timing can pro-
A couple might make love
duce quite different
every day on a romantic
feelings and climaxes. So
vacation, but the expectation
within the context of one
that sex needs to happen on
successful approach to
a daily basis month after
mutual orgasms, there
month is a killer. People need
can be great variety over
to recharge their batteries!
the years.
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How do lovers know if they have found a good mutual-orgasm technique? There are several ways to tell:
• First, does it deliver a satisfying climax to both partners during a lovemaking session?
• Second, is it acceptable and comfortable for both partners?
• Third, does it still work on a Friday night when both partners are pretty weary? (Let’s face it: most couples with children have limited options for private lovemaking time, most of which are times when they’re not fresh and well-rested.)
• Finally, does it continue to work for both partners over the years?
These questions may be the best indicators available to loving couples as their relationship moves through the years. If they are honest with each other, they will know the answer to the first and second questions quite early on. They’ll get the answer to the third question as life gets busier and they’re more exhausted on weekends, and the answer to the fourth will become apparent after a few years. If they’re always “too tired” for sex on Friday night and sex is becoming “boring,” it’s a sure sign that the couple needs to go back to questions one and two and find a different route to mutual orgasms that really works for both of them.
The bottom line: Sexual boredom can happen—but it doesn’t have to. People can get bored with specific
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foreplay techniques, but they never get tired of having orgasms. Novelty can be an aphrodisiac in the short run, but it’s not a good long-term strategy. Sexual wisdom lies in getting into a groove with a good sexual finale technique. Couples who do this aren’t in a rut; they’re on a roll.
The Issue of Frequency
After the intensely romantic opening months of a relationship, how often lovemaking takes place can become a troublesome issue. In the film
Annie Hall
, there’s a scene in which Alvie Singer (played by Woody Allen) and his lover, Annie Hall (Diane Keaton), are shown in split-screen talking to their therapists: His psychiatrist: “How often do you sleep together?”
Alvie: “Hardly ever, maybe three times a week.”
Her psychiatrist: “Do you have sex often?”
Annie: “Constantly, I’d say three times a week.”
This scene is funny because it plays on the stereotype of men being sexually insatiable and women shying away from sex. But if Alvie and Annie were a real couple and we were their therapists, we might find that her wish to have intercourse less often stems from her impatience and frustration at not getting any real satisfaction with her klutzy lover, and we might find that his desire for more sex is because, yes, he’s a horny guy, but also because he is picking up on her unhappiness and naively 1 6 4
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thinks that more sex will make it better.
It may also be that Alvie likes multiple orgasms and Annie doesn’t. There’s a lot of individual variation in this area: for about 90 percent of couples, one intense orgasm is all they need and they’re off to dreamland. For others, several orgasms are possible, with a time-out between each inning. And some women are able to have multiple rapid-fire orgasms within the same at-bat. These innate differences can cause sexual incompatibility if a man and woman are at opposite ends of the spectrum. Some couples are successful at talking through or working around such differences. Other couples may reluctantly conclude that they are just not sexually compatible.
“Routine” sex on weekends
But most lovers (90
doesn’t have to be a
percent, if surveys are to