
Home > Marriage > Real Sex
 Marriage Partnership, Winter 1997
Bedroom C.E.O., Rapid Response and Zero Interest
by Louis and Melissa McBurney
My wife's a successful, assertive businesswoman. I'm thrilled that she
is fulfilled in her work, but she brings that same driven mindset home. I
can handle the way she manages the household, but not the way she dictates
the terms of our sex life. She schedules our sex, as if it's part of her
agenda to be completed between the weather report and "Nightline." Her driven
nature may work great in the business world, but it fails miserably in bed.
What should I do?
Melissa: Sex should be driven primarily by your relationship, not
a production quota. If either partner makes sex a control issue, intimacy
goes off the bottom of the profit chart. Your wife's controlling style has
worked well for her on the job, and it's hard for her to relinquish it once
she gets home. These same controlling behaviors also protect her from relational
and emotional issues that are less comfortable for her.
It might be a good idea to borrow the terms and methods of relating in the
business world, where your wife feels comfortable. Start "speaking her language"
by making an appointment with her, through her support staff. When you get
together, have a written proposal for her to consider. Begin by affirming
her as a successful executive, telling her the things you mention in your
letter to us. Next, assure her of your support and love (you're not staging
a walk-out).
Then ask her to consider your point of view. Make this statement appropriately
clear: You want to have a closer relationship with more emotional and sexual
intimacy. Let her know you feel unfulfilled, disregarded and relegated to
the status of just one more agenda item. Tell her you want a sense of mutuality
in your sex life. Finally, propose a new "contract agreement" that would
restore romance and warmth into your partnership. That may require some lunch
meetings or weekend conferences!
At the same time, get your wife's input about how she'd like for you to be
as a husband. She's an assertive person used to taking control. She may be
waiting for you to exercise more strength. Even strong women like to be able
to lean on their men.
I have a problem with premature ejaculation. I can't last more than five
or ten minutes during intercourse. My wife is kind about it, but I feel
disappointed and embarrassed. How can I last longer?
Louis: Unlike the olden days, now that we're familiar with the orgasmic
potential of women, there is far greater pressure on husbands to bring their
wives to climax. This creates dramatic anxiety to perform, which has triggered
an epidemic of premature ejaculation. But anxiety during sex is not the only
factor.
Sometimes a man has a history of hurried experiences, either from masturbating
or from rushing sex for fear of being caught in premarital relations. Some
genetic theorists explain that earlier ejaculations often have a better success
rate for impregnation (in other words: not as much satisfaction, but great
for conceiving children). But there's no question that performance anxiety
undoubtedly turns up the speed, and there's no doubt that the male response
time is inherently different from the female's. Your experience is typical:
Five or ten minutes of direct stimulation will usually be adequate for
ejaculation.
So the issue really gets down to mutual marital satisfaction. The definition
used clinically for premature ejaculation rests on the percentage of times
the wife is left disappointed (50% being the arbitrary number). Rather than
perceiving the speed of a man's response as a biological deficiency, it's
preferable for couples to see their teamwork in pleasurable sex as a delightful
challenge. It helps to remember that simultaneous orgasm is not the only
satisfactory conclusion to sexual play. Also, foreplay can speed up a wife's
response to become more in sync with her husband's, and a husband's stimulus
time before ejaculation can be lengthened.
You and your spouse can decondition your quick response by using the effective
"squeeze technique" described in most books on sex. A woman masturbates her
husband to the point just before ejaculation, then applies firm symmetrical
pressure to the shaft of the penis just below the glans (the head of the
penis). The pressure of this "squeeze" is maintained for several seconds
until the feeling of ejaculatory inevitability goes away. After a pause,
stimulation is resumed until climax is imminent again; then the squeeze is
reapplied.
This technique can be practiced for several minutes at each setting, ending
with intercourse or ejaculation by manual stimulation. These adjustments
take time and practice, but over a period of months you should develop a
noticeable increase in stimulus time before ejaculation.
Melissa: Working through this kind of problem can be great for your
marriage. It encourages me that your wife is kind. That is an essential
ingredient. As you focus on giving your wife pleasure and meeting her needs,
your premature ejaculations may not matter so much anymore. Try the squeeze
technique, but also practice relaxing, since tension aggravates the problem.
My husband and I have a one-year-old son, and for months my husband has
had no interest in sex. I am always the initiator, and he turns me down with
excuses about being tired or having financial worries. I wonder what it would
be like to be married to someone who made me feel wanted and beautiful. What
do you suggest?
Louis: There are lots of reasons a husband might lose interest in
sex. Fatigue and financial worries are legitimate causes for many men. But
you also seem to connect his disinterest with the birth of your baby.
Pregnancy and delivery of a baby cause more than just abdominal stretch marks
and post-partum depression for the mother. New dads get their own set of
psychological stretch marks that can make sex less appealing.
A father often reacts to the invasion of his space by a competitor. Suddenly
he doesn't have you all to himself. Here's this other little male getting
time at your breast. The baby puts new time constraints on both of you. Your
focus of attention and affection may have shifted toward your son. And your
husband knows that, as a father, he's not supposed to feel jealous of his
own baby. But subtle resentment can develop.
Another factor can be a husband's unconscious compartmentalization of "mothers"
versus "sexual playmates." As a mother, you've moved onto a sort of sacred,
revered pedestal outside the category of women who are sexually stimulating.
You may have encouraged this attitude if you wanted a break from sexual play
after childbirth.
Remember how you felt about the changes in your body during pregnancy? Your
husband may have had some strong reactions, too. Men can be squeamish about
earthy stuff like labor and delivery, episiotomies and lactation. The idea
of getting you pregnant again may have cooled him on intercourse.
Talking these things through is best, but if he refuses, there are other
things you can do. First, try to decrease his life pressures and financial
demands, since these are the excuses he gives. Second, try to find out if
he has emotional needs that have been left unmet since the baby came. Third,
work toward regaining your figure and your playful availability. Fourth,
make babysitting arrangements, kidnap him to some romantic spot and seduce
him. Finally, let him know he's still your hero.
Melissa: If you are wondering what it would be like to be married
to someone "who made you feel wanted and beautiful," you could be vulnerable
to an affair. Please, please be careful! Don't make the mistake of thinking
you can listen to someone say how beautiful you are and not be lured into
trouble. Read Proverbs; the good advice to young men about prostitutes goes
for young women, too. Make a firm decision ahead of time that you will not
let your vulnerability trap you into a compromising situation.
I hope you and your husband can get some professional Christian counseling.
Real Sex columnists Melissa and Louis McBurney, M.D., are marriage therapists
and co-founders of Marble Retreat in Marble, Colorado, where they counsel
clergy couples. The McBurneys have been married 35 years.
The McBurneys aren't able to respond personally to readers' letters. But
if you have a Real Sex question you'd like them to address in this column,
send your question to:
Real Sex
Marriage Partnership
465 Gundersen Drive
Carol Stream, IL 60188
Or you can e-mail your questions to:
mp@marriagepartnership.com
Copyright © 1997 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Winter 1997, Vol. 14, No. 4, Page 71
Marriage Partnership
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