“Why don’t we do this more often? I
love sex and I particularly enjoy it with my husband but getting started
is just the problem,” exclaimed one wife after a counselling session in
my office. Another woman said, “It’s strange, but whenever we do make
love, we always look at each other afterward and say“, Hey, that was
terrific. Why don’t we do this more often? Why don’t we?
Many married couples say that once
things get rolling in sexually, they have no trouble responding to a
sexual trip and escapade. But a couple’s inability to get started
sexually is the greatest single cause of sexual infrequency and sexless
marriage.
As much as many couples desire sex to be
a “sudden inspiration,” impressive passionate, sex mostly happens in
marriage when couples make initiating sex a conscious decision. Many
couples have realised that while waiting endlessly for the time of
feeling sexy, they usually are not feeling all that sexy until when they
decide to have sex.
Continue reading after the cut....
But “getting started” is only half the problem in most marriages. There’s also the question of who starts the initiation. Let’s look at the case of Bidemi and Lucky.
Continue reading after the cut....
But “getting started” is only half the problem in most marriages. There’s also the question of who starts the initiation. Let’s look at the case of Bidemi and Lucky.
During the first seven years of Bidemi
and Lucky’s marriage, Lucky had always initiated sex and five out of ten
times, Bidemi had willingly acceded. But one evening, after a party,
Bidemi reached under the bedcovers and began to caress her husband.
“He just pushed my hand away,” Bidemi
recalled with obvious pain and resentment. “He told me I was drunk and
he did not want to make love when I was like that. That my normal self
would refuse sex and when he insists he wants it, I will always accuse
him of raping me under the marriage law.”
Lucky cut in. “I told you that I simply wasn’t in the mood, I don’t want your ‘wahala’
and I don’t want to pretend about it after all, you always refuse and
say you don’t want to pretend about it. Why is my refusal painful now?
This is what I go through day in day out since we have been married.”
This escalated into cold war. Bidemi
was angry, and she began to pay Lucky back with his own coin. The next
time he initiated sex, she begged off, saying that she was not in the
mood. She refused again the next time, and the next. Lucky, humiliated,
stopped initiating sex altogether. They had not made love in four years.
Bidemi and Lucky are on a very dangerous
game of sexual relationship, which has lasted for years, one partner
does not want sex because the other does; refusing sex becomes a power
play: “If you can say no, so can I.” This is typical of many marriages.
Many spouses never initiate sex anymore
because they regard one or two refusals as total rejection and denial,
but sometimes, our partners may not be in the mood for sex, so sexual
refusal should not be seen as rejection. The rejecting partner should
always provide a ‘substitute other day’. If you have to refuse your
partner, let there be a sincere tenable reason genuinely accepted by the
person refused and a promise for a make up.
Lucky’s refusal of Bidemi’s advance,
however, involved more than a passing mood; it is rooted deeply in
cumulative rejections that has transcended into frustration and
resentment. When he pushed his wife’s hand away, he was saying, loud and
clear I have been discouraged and disconnected.
While Bidemi has only responded
sometimes to her husband’s advance only when she wanted, she is now so
confused how to rectify things. She realised that there had been a
serious sexual imbalance in her 7-year- old marriage and it wasn’t fair
because her husband now plays ‘the external league’. I tried to show
Bidemi that all along, she had been only a willing accomplice who has
ignorantly taken her husband for granted and she has always had the
power to refuse even when the man begs on his kneel. But once she too
starts initiating sex, he also refuses.
Because Lucky and Bidemi both wanted
their marriage to work, I urged them to sincerely consider themselves
and consciously give sex another chance even when either of them is not
in the mood, or either of them has been unfaithful.
I knew that their accumulated anger was
preventing them both from turning themselves on. I asked them to try the
talking-touching exercise. Talking-touching is important; it connects
partners and enables them to experience the long lost pleasure. Let your
bodies make friends first. You can talk about the good old days. Once
we allow ourselves to feel our partner’s heart-caressing speech and
touching, it is difficult to stay adamant and angry. When we relax under
a loving caress, frequencies of sex are rebirthed.
- Funmi Akingbade (cafi.punch@yahoo.com)
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