Sunday January 15, 2006
Sex surprises
Everything you know about sex is only a first step. Most advice for couples doesn’t go far enough – as a result, basic truths about long-term passion are surprising.
WE can all recite the mantras of modern sex advice: Tell your partner what you want; focus on how your body feels; relax. Since its only natural, goes this idea, great sex is a matter of getting over your hang-ups, loving your partner and letting go.
Yet something doesnt add up, as the huge market for self-help books and advice columnists proves. As a nation, were not getting any. We crave sexual bliss but all our relaxing and getting-in-touch isnt helping most of us. When the standard advice doesnt work, you feel like a failure: Too uptight. Not in your body. Worse, maybe youre not really in love.
While the relax and connect advice isnt wrong, its just a first step, addressing mechanics rather than the deeper dynamics at the heart of sexuality.
1. Many people dont really want great sex
Good sexual experiences can be emotionally overpowering mind-blowing, rather than warm and comforting. Lusty sex requires you to confront all kinds of worries getting so close to your partner that he or she overwhelms you, or being rejected at an intensely vulnerable moment. It may even put you in touch with your own mortality, reminding you that your partner wont always be around. Great sex requires inner reserves to tolerate the angst.
2. It gets better with age
Even though young people get aroused more quickly, amazing sex is a specialty of people in their 50s and 60s, contends marital and sex therapist David Schnarch. In youth, women struggle to be sexual but not cheap; men are easily threatened. Midway through life, you have a stronger sense of self and are less self-conscious and insecure.
3. Compromise may not work
Trade-offs (Ill do this if youll do that) may seem egalitarian, but in practice, each partner rules out anything that makes him or her uptight. The couple is left with a limited repertoire that guarantees boredom, not to mention scorekeeping and resentment when one partner is less enthusiastic than the other. Better to take the initiative and challenge yourself to try something new.
4. Women like hot sex
Women are often much more interested than men in talking about f?ing horny, lusty, intense sex Schnarch reports. But in bed, they often hold back out of shame or fear of making their partner feel inadequate. A lot of couples think that married sex is supposed to be gentle, affectionate making love and feel guilty if they want to get nasty.
5. Sex isnt a skill
The hoopla about techniques is a red herring. If you think of sex as a set of talents, youre going to wind up focused on doing it right, rather than on who youre doing it with. Likewise, giving your partner a technical playbook (there but not here, this way and not that way) leads to mechanically proficient, predictable and emotionally dead sex. You may also not know exactly what you want it changes! Pushing your own limits by organically exploring new sexual styles fosters more sizzle.
6. Cancel the orgasm derby
More orgasms dont equal better sex. Lots of people can perform in bed all the parts work just fine but are never really satisfied, because theyre too emotionally disconnected. Thats usually said about men rather than women, but both sexes are capable of being physically aroused without getting any erotic charge, and both can have orgasms without really enjoying the sex. Instead of focusing on orgasms, pay more attention to the emotional and physical connection: Can you become intensely aware of your partner during sex? Can you make contact?
7. Tune in-dont space out
Shutting down your brain, focusing on your sensations and going into a trance state, or fantasising about others, all of which sex therapists often recommend, may help you have decent sex, since it can jump-start your engine. But by zeroing in on your body or your thoughts alone, youve tuned out your partner. Youre also vulnerable to distractions: The mood can easily be shattered by a car alarm. Shifting your focus to include your partner can make the experience much more intense. By Kathleen McGowan
Related Stories:
Attaining lifelong intimacy
Marriage isn’t the only struggle
Staying cool when things get tense
How sex makes grown-ups
Learning the language of sex

