Steps to intimacy and better sex
For sex to turn from a negative element of your marriage into a positive one, you need to focus on intimacy. Here are three steps you can take right now to start working toward sexual intimacy.
- Have honest conversations
Talk about what sex means to you. Some couples who’ve been married for decades never talk about sex. Your sexual journey will be transformed when you pursue your spouse’s heart. You can do this by asking questions such as:
- Tell me about a time when you felt close to me during sex.
- How would you define a fulfilling sex life?
- How do you feel when I initiate sex? When you initiate sex?
- How does what you learned about sex growing up impact your view of sex in our marriage?
- What about our sex life makes you feel particularly vulnerable?
If you have never talked about sex this openly, you might want to involve a counselor who can help you navigate such vulnerable conversations.
- Know that both of your sexual journeys matter
The sexual journey matters for both of you, not just the one who has the higher desire.
Whether or not you experience sexual desire, your sexual journey matters in marriage. Sex is a call toward mutual pleasure and intimacy. If your spouse hates sex because of a variety of relational, physical or emotional barriers, demanding they meet your sexual needs can make things worse. Instead, play a part in your spouse’s healing by exercising patience and encouraging them to seek help.
- Embrace hope
Realise that barriers to pleasure and compatibility may actually lead you to the deepest sexual intimacy of your marriage.
Over the past decade, I’ve heard from hundreds of couples who are navigating severe difficulties including porn addiction, sexual abuse recovery, debilitating physical illness, vaginismus (sexual pain during intercourse) and infertility. During such seasons, mutual sexual pleasure seems impossible. But the gift of sex is one that extends far beyond immediate pleasure. When sex is “good” it allows a couple to delight in each other. But when sex is difficult, it invites couples to experience the goodness of unconditional love.
How important is sex in your relationship? It’s an important part of marriage, but not the way you may think it is. Rather than focusing on “Am I happy with how often we’re having sex?” instead ask, “How can our sexual journey prompt us to a deeper experience of intimacy?”
© 2022 Juli Slattery. Used with permission.