Study: The longer a woman is in a relationship, the more her sexual desire decreases. Men reported no such decrease. |
New research is demonstrating what many people already knew from
experience: Women lose interest in sex over time, while men don't.
The finding has the potential to help couples, the researchers said. Knowing that many women's sexual desire
diminishes over the course of a relationship could encourage both
partners to be more realistic about their sex lives, and could help them
weather the changes in desire as they occur.
Sex researchers Sarah Murray and Robin Milhausen, both of the
University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, asked 170 undergraduate women
and men who had been in heterosexual relationships for anywhere from one
month to nine years to report on their levels of relationship satisfaction,
sexual satisfaction and sexual desire. Desire was scored using an
established model called the Female Sexual Function Index, which ranges
from 1.2 to 6.0.
The participants reported being generally satisfied with their
relationships and sex lives, but women reported lower levels of desire
depending on the length of their relationship. "Specifically, for each
additional month women in this study were in a relationship with their
partner, their sexual desire decreased by 0.02 on the Female Sexual
Function Index," the authors wrote online Jan. 23 in the Journal of Sex
& Marital Therapy.
In fact, relationship duration was a better predictor of sexual desire
in women than both relationship and sexual satisfaction. While the 0.02
decrease in female desire was small, it contrasts with male desire,
which held steady over time, the researchers said.
Evolution of desire
Scientists have disagreed on what happens to desire over the course of a
relationship. "Some researchers suggest that both men's and women's
desire would decrease over time as relationships move from passionate
love to compassionate love," said Murray, the lead study author and a
doctoral candidate in human sexuality.
Yet evolutionary theorists predict that male desire should remain perpetually high in order for them to produce many
offspring, while female desire should decrease as their attention turns,
historically, toward child-rearing.
The new research points toward the latter theory, although
longer-duration studies on different groups of people are still needed,
Murray said.
Men consistently report higher levels of sexual desire than women.
Differences in levels of hormones — testosterone, specifically — are
believed to at least partially explain the gender divide.
Hormonal changes that occur as couples move from the passionate early stage to the compassionate later stage into monogamous relationships sometime
between six and 30 months may also mediate changes in desire over time.
Pharmaceutical companies are currently researching the impact of
testosterone on women's desire, but so far, the results have been
inconclusive.
Hormones are only part of the story, Murray told LiveScience. "Although
they are one piece of the sexual desire puzzle, focusing too heavily on
hormones can remove the contextual factors that play into desire, such
as whether or not a woman is in a satisfying, loving relationship, and
if she has time to feel relaxed, playful and sexy," she said.
Keeping the spark alive
The results could help researchers understand why women who seek sex
therapy complain of low desire more than any other problem. Differences
in levels of desire within couples, known as desire discrepancy, is a
growing area of interest for therapists.
"The concept of an absolute level of 'normal' or 'low' sexual desire is
being replaced by the view that low sexual desire is relative to one's
partner's level of desire," Murray said. But although desire discrepancy
is known to negatively affect overall sexual and relationship
satisfaction, very little else is understood about it, such as whether
it contributes significantly to infidelity or breakups.
The new research could also help couples manage their relationships
over time. In an earlier study, Murray found that women who reported
more realistic expectations about what sex would be like in a long-term relationship also had higher levels of desire than those
with less realistic expectations. "I think that individuals who expect
to maintain the high level of excitement and passion that often exists
in the first few months of a new relationship are setting up unrealistic
expectations about what is to come and will be more disappointed when
the desire and passion take on different forms," she said.
She added that normalizing the fact that sexual desire may decrease
over time may help both sexes to understand that this decrease does not
necessarily mean anything is intrinsically wrong with their
relationship, and may help couples put more effort into their sexual
relationship.
"When an individual has had sex with their partner over the course of
many, many years, it takes creativity and openness to keep things fresh
and exciting," Murray said. "Making time to be together and keep one's
sex life as an important part of one’s relationship is very important,
and putting in effort and keeping things fun and interesting are crucial
components."
A long-term trend?
The researchers cautioned that longer-term studies of desire that
include older couples could show different results. Younger women may
report decreased desire as they experience their first relationship move
away from the "honeymoon phase," for example.
They may also not have experienced some of the benefits of longer-term
relationships that may increase desire, such as going on romantic
vacations, getting engaged, learning more about their sexual likes — and
feeling comfortable sharing those likes with their partner.
Murray added that the self-reported nature of the study could have also
skewed the results. "It has been theorized that men may be less
inclined to admit that they have low desire as this is considered
against male gender norms and masculinity,"
she said. "Thus, it may be that men are not accurately reporting their
level of desire and they may too experience a decrease." Murray is
preparing to study whether men accurately report their levels of desire.
Source- Livescience
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