Citizen's Comfort

Poor Sex, Poor Health: The Health Benefits of Sex. Part 2.

No one loves to be grounded by poor health conditions. But just a few knows that the antidotes to kick out and cut the risks of some unwholesome health conditions like cold, flu, moodiness, cardiovascular and heart challenges, high blood pressure, infertility, prostate cancer, stress and others do not lie in pills’ magic alone but also between the sheets.

Last week, on Citizen Comfort, we started the treatment of this topic. We noted that sex is not only good for a good heart, we espoused other health benefits of sex. We noted that only partnered sex gets the full sex benefits. We warned that free sex players are vulnerable to more health dangers. To catch up click https://www.citizencomfort.com/2021/04/05/poor-sex-poor-health-benefits-the-health-benefits-of-sex-part-1/

We did just enough to highlight the psycho- physical benefits of sex in the opening episode, we shall, however, wrap up the episode by looking at emotional related issues of sex, sexless marriage versus divorce and the challenges to active sex life.

Active Sex Life

Medical experts suggest that general well -being is associated with sexual frequency. A 2015 study assert that relationship satisfaction improved progressively from having no sex to having sex once a week.

Despite the increasingly busy lives, medical reports put average sexual frequency thus:

Psychological & Emotional Benefits of Sex

Sex is strongly linked to a better quality of life including:

In a 2004 study into divorce in mid and later life, found that one in four divorcees couldn’t identify any obvious problems – concluding they’d simply fallen out of love. The study concluded that divorcing couples rarely have sex, at least not with each other, adding that an absence of any physical intimacy is a marital red flag that should not be ignored.

According to experts, marriages survive on intimacy and sex. Once the intimacy is gone from a marriage, the marriage starts to suffer, especially if it has been months since the couple has been intimate. The spouses start to act like roommates. Once spouse is not getting their sexual needs met, they look for sex elsewhere. This leads to infidelity and divorce. Lack of sex in marriage leads to dissatisfaction, which will ultimately kill the marriage.

Navigating the brick walls to jump start marriage & sex life

Statistics show 42 per cent of marriages end in divorce, and 34 per cent of married couples divorce before their 20th wedding anniversary.

The statistics show that many couples who were previously in good relationships end up getting divorced within 20 years of their nuptials.

Frequency of sex can, and often does, change over time. But that doesn’t mean sex frequency has to be a progressive downhill slide.

Sex therapists say it’s possible for sex to be as good as when you first fell in love. Sex and intimacy can improve as your relationship matures.

In her book, “The Sex-Starved Marriage: Boosting Your Marriage Libido, a Couple’s Guide,” therapist Michele Weiner-Davis suggests taking a “just do it” approach:

“At first, many were understandably cautious about my Nike-style approach to their sex life; the ‘Just Do It’ advice ran counter to everything they had believed about how sexual desire unfolds…I could often see the relief on people’s faces when they learned that their lack of out-of-the-blue sexual urges didn’t necessarily signify a problem. It didn’t mean there was something wrong with them or that something was missing from their marriages. It just meant that they experienced desire differently.”

If you always wait for your level of desire to match that of your partner, you may be waiting a long time. Instead, communicate your needs and work together to find a happy medium.

Communication is key to spice up sex life. Sometimes, looking at the non-sexual parts can help. According to experts, Upping sex frequency without connecting emotionally or increasing communication isn’t likely to produce lasting improvements in the relationship.

Healthy communication is the single most important tool to foster intimacy. Someone once said “Say what you mean; Mean what you say; But don’t say it meanly.

Another sex therapist said women G-spot are not always in the same place. According to her, while some men are frantically prodding their partners’ down-below looking for the G-spot, their partners ears’ antennas are on, waiting for the sweet romantic words that will prod them to action. The ear, sometimes, is the G-spot of a woman.

 

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