On those rare occasions when we do, it's ALWAYS me who initiates it and for her, she's just doing her duty. I can't keep this up, it's killing me. I have resorted to masturbation on a few occasions but refrain mostly for all the usual LDS reasons.
It is, my choice of last resort. I do not involve pornography believe it or not, but instead I will concentrate thinking about my wife when I engage in masturbation. There is most often a sense of relief and the hormones released seem to help my general well being, in other words, my mood improves.
That having been said, I'm really looking for counsel as to whether I should abstain from masturbation altogether even though and this is not an exaggeration, my wife and I may never again have intercourse. I love her very much and none other.
What's in her heart is anyone's guess. I have sexual needs that are not being met by my wife and I refuse to fulfill that need with any other woman. Occasional "solo" masturbation seems to be my only outlet. (And yes, we're been to several of our bishops and marriage counselors over the years with no improvements in our relationship.)"
~ Anon56
Dear Anonymous56,
Thank you for reading and your question. It is difficult to know the correct course of action based upon the information that you gave. In all fairness, I don’t know your wife’s side of the story. I will base my reply upon how I understand the situation from your side of the story and how it affects your relationship with your wife and our Savior Jesus Christ.
The presidents of the Church have taught us that sex in marriage has a two-fold purpose. One is to create bodies for our Heavenly Father’s spirit children. The second is to strengthen the eternal bonds of a husband and wife through physical intimacy.
You have both been though the temple and made sacred covenants. To obtain the blessings of the temple, you must keep your covenants – including those pertaining to the law of chastity. That law of chastity also excludes sex with ourselves. I also want you to notice that this same law of chastity doesn’t exclude any sexual activity we have with our spouse. Manual stimulation of the genitals does have its place, but only if used between a husband and wife as a means of strengthening their intimate bonds.
Solo masturbation is a separating and selfish activity, both of which are two of the four marriage killers I write about in my blog. If you are not communicating with your wife and keeping your masturbation habit secret from your wife, then you’ve added a third marriage killer to your relationship.
I’m sorry to be so painfully frank with you Anon56, but because of your plan of action to remedy the situation, continuous masturbation will program a gripping habit in your mind, body and spirit,[1] in a similar manner as a person involved in profane erotica. In some sense, there is profane erotica involved, since you are visualizing a fantasy version of your wife who wants to have sex with you while you masturbate.
I know that you have seen bishops and therapists already, but I must suggest you try seeing a marriage and family counselor (preferably with your wife) to help you reprogram your sex life - someone who understands the doctrine of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, since our issues and viewpoints are unique.
If your only option at this point is to either masturbate or not have sex at all, you don’t really have a marriage anymore - you have a roommate situation. In addition, your marriage is not likely to last. You are in a sexless marriage, which will not build you a healthy relationship and friendship that you both will want for eternity. You can reference my blog to the condition of sexless marriage here:
A return to a focus on your relationship with your wife may help. You’re going crazy not because of a lack of sex, but because of a lack of intimacy with your wife. To use a metaphor, you’re emotionally thirsty, but you are trying to slake that thirst by eating more food (orgasm through masturbation).
People can go a lifetime without ejaculating or having an orgasm. No one has ever died from failing to ejaculate, but people have suffered from severe depression, insanity and even death from lack of intimacy.
I find it hard to believe that you love her with all your heart. In one breath you say you do, but in the next you confess that you know nothing about her. Clearly a major communication breakdown has happened somewhere between your and your wife, and that line of communication need to be re-established if love is going to thrive.
You expressed that you have to be the initiator all the time. Men are biologically designed and naturally carry the role of initiator. At minimum, the spouse with the higher desire has claim to that role.We don’t have to be ashamed or frustrated by that. In most marriages, if no one initiated, sex just wouldn't happen. It is your God-given gift. You are “THE INITIATOR”. Own it.
Not all females are given the same strong sexual drive as men, and therefore often rely on the men to initiate sex. The key question for all men is “How do I do this effectively so she wants sex too”?
The answer goes back to communication. Each gender communicates differently. What men define as sex or romance is very different from a woman’s definition.
A misconception many men have is that a woman’s vagina fills her with the same drive and gives her the same sensations sexually as a man’s penis does.
Most men communicate love through their penis and feel loved when their wives give attention to their penis and husbands consider it the ultimate expression of love when she allows them into her vagina.
Unfortunately, we follow that emotional logic to think “Oh, she must feel the same, and if she doesn’t she is frigid or has a sexual disorder.” This is not true. Women by and large do NOT define sex, intimacy and affection the same.
If we want our wife to willingly and joyfully accept us into her vagina, we have to give her what she associates love and sex with - her heart. Touch her heart.
Here is how to touch her heart:
1. Be
kind to her. Constant criticism kills love and your sex life.
2. Honor
your priesthood. Women can find this to be very sexy; a woman can be turned
on by a husband she feels is worthy to lead her to the celestial kingdom, which
then inspires her to share herself with him sexually. This may sound goofy to
men, but we’re not talking about communicating to men. We’re talking here about
what turns a faithful woman on.
This means you should attend your regular Church
meetings, lead your family in scripture readings and prayer, have regular Family
Home Evenings, give your wife and children priesthood blessings, and attend the
temple with her regularly. Cast evil spirits of contention and anger from your
home when you feel them. This can work wonders for your sexual relationship. As
unrelated as that may sound, it will help her feel loved, cared for and safe,
and allow the Lord to open her heart (and vagina) towards you in many ways you
can’t even imagine now.
3. Talk
to her, and more important – listen to her. Let her know what your
sexual needs are. She has a responsibility to be considerate of your feelings
and needs too. But, also ask her what she needs to feel loved and safe. Ask her
how she defines sex and affection. If you're interested, I know of a test you
both can take to help you discover those personal definitions. She has hung
your "sex" out to dry, but you may not be aware that you may have
been hanging her "sex" out to dry for years.
4. Be
kind to her children (this probably should be number one – it’s very potent
for getting her to want to connect to you sexually).
5. When
you hold her, put your hand over her heart and hold it there. Ask her
how it makes her feel. Don’t get upset or weirded out if she weeps.
Crying is a good sign – it means that she is accessing her emotional center, which
can sometimes lead to feelings of sexuality toward you.
6. Sex
starts for a woman in the brain, not in her genitals. A woman can get
turned on with a story, or a scenario. Get her dreaming. Talk with her about
what she would find romantic – what and where. A story involves a place, or a
situation. It doesn’t have to be complicated. It doesn’t have to involve sex;
it could involve cuddling, rubbing her feet or kissing. This sort of talk
begins to channel her constant thoughts from the cares of the day into her
primitive sexual brain. It helps her to connect emotionally to her desires.
7. Make
life more fun together. If sex seems like a duty to her, that should
be a warning sign to you that you have just become another task on her list to
check off. Women do not generally share the same perspective on
"duty" that we men do. This is not using sex to build an eternal
relationship. Take her on dates every week, romance her, bring her flowers
weekly by surprise, or write her little notes.
These sorts of things can touch her heart, and work
differently on different woman. You’ll need to experiment to see what works
best for your wife. Pray for inspiration in this regard – you are entitled to
it. The Lord is very interested in the success of your sex life. If you haven't
already read it, Gary Chapman's The Five Love Languages could yield some
potential help in this area.
8. For
couples with more severe sexual troubles, a good start might be to read Laura
Brotherson’s book, And They Were Not Ashamed. You could invite
your wife to read this with you if she chooses. Laura Brotherson is very good
for helping sisters to reconcile the importance of sex in a married
relationship, and in terms that women relate to. She also has some exercises
that you both can do together in order to rebuild your sexual relationship.
9. If
your wife finds it difficult to talk about her feelings, you can encourage
her to write them. She may find it easier to express herself in a different
way than talking. When she does express herself - never, ever criticize what
she says, no matter what your inner reaction. If you want her to accept you
eagerly into her vagina, you have to develop a relationship of trust. She has
to know she can trust you with her deepest feelings, and there's few areas more
sensitive than our sexuality.
Many men make the mistake of forgetting the reason she wanted to marry them and have sex with them in the first place. She wants to be romanced – her whole life. This is why we have been counseled by our Church leaders to continue the courtship after marriage.
If you’d like to try something new sexually, she may be adverse at first, but that doesn’t mean she’s totally against it. She just may need some time to warm up to the idea. Touch her heart, talk about it with her and try to understand her feelings. Restate what she says to make sure you understand.
In order for sex to be an eternal bonding experience, it must be a “sharing” activity. If she’s just laying there and “thinking of the Red, White and Blue” (doing her duty), you’re just using her body to masturbate on. Don’t get me wrong, quickies do have their place, but the majority of the time, when we men have sex with our wives, we should be looking in her eyes, talking to her, holding her hands, and learning how she is feeling or how she wants to be touched or held.
When she tells you how she wants to be touched, do it (no matter how dumb or un-erotic it sounds to you). What’s dumb to you may be very erotic to her (and vice versa).
Thirty years is way too long to go without regular, loving, intimate sex, but that doesn’t mean your marriage is automatically doomed. If you’re willing to try again, and your wife is willing to try again, there’s hope. Building an eternal relationship can take longer than a lifetime, but the sealing allows us the time.
Marriages also get into trouble when we start depending on our spouse to make us happy, and using them to justify our selfish reactions. Masturbation in the situation you describe here is little more than a short-term escape valve from your troubles. Instead, I would challenge you to do the hard thing, and go after the root of the problem instead – your lack of intimacy with your wife.
Don’t just go masturbate and give up on your wife. Your marital intimacy is the very key to your eternal salvation. Try something new, until something works, or until you’ve exhausted every possible way of getting through to her. Take 100% responsibility for your sex life and you won’t regret the results. At least once spouse fully committed and invoking the Lord's help can work wonders to save a marriage.
[1] Duhigg, Charles, The Power of Habit (2014, ch.2)
26 comments:
I have been waiting for this topic to show up here, and have to say, thank you for being frank and honest. Allthough I am nowhere near the OP's I have wondered if this might be a olution to problems, but never felt comfortable enough about it to go any further than wondering. Your answer to this question rimes well with what I had supposed, and feel to be right.
I could relate to this man's struggles in so many ways. I've been in much of the same situation for the past 10 years of my marriage.
I would clarify one thing, I disagree that men connect intercourse with feeling closeness. I could have intercourse a thousand times with my wife, but if her heart isn't into it and she's just making herself available, it's as empty as if I were going solo.
When Gary Chapman wrote "The 5 Love Languages" I don't remember sexual intercourse being one of described love languages, it's physical touch. Men want to be pursued, desired and shown that on a regular basis.
If a wife repeatedly fails to consistently express love in her husbands "language" or vice versa, that can cause more serious problems down the road (ie pornography and infidelity among the more serious ones). I'm in a very similar situation with my wife and I ache for this man, hoping that isn't me in another 20 years.
I feel this is one of the plaguing problems among married people, especially in the church.
I agree this is a very common challenge, and I agree with several essential elements of your post. I love and agree with the title "THE INITIATOR."
However, I suspect after 30 years of marriage, multiple bishops and therapists, anon56 has already heard and tried all of the advice on this list, including an LDS therapist, with no success.
You assert occasional masturbation is a violation of chastity, which I agree--although I suggest it's a very minor one--but you don't mention the several temple covenants she is violating by NOT having sex: sealing "give herself to her husband" obedience "hearken to the counsel of your husband," sacrifice, and, yes, chastity. A married person who refuses sex consistently is NOT living the law of chastity.
I also disagree that the level of self-stimulation anon56 describes can be accurately described as an "addiction."
That of course does not suggest two wrongs make a right--that masturbation is okay.
I'm working on a full post to respond to this issue, to come soon.
Essentially, I suspect more firmness, and not more kindness may be in order here.
My post builds on some of my previous thoughts in:
Jesus was not a "nice guy."
Sex and Scripture, and Sex and Prophet Quotes.
I feel like in the past when it came to masturbation the church answer was always "no" and it still is for youth and singles. But within a marriage I think its up to the husband and wife to decide. If a wife enjoys watching her husband do this than its no longer a "solo" activity.
I feel like if Anon56's wife is really not willing to work on their marriage, then masturbation on his part, while thinking of her and with her knowledge of whats going on, can be its own form of intimacy. Its not the ideal situation, but still better than divorce or infidelity.
Coach Sam,
your site is wonderful and I really like it, and I respect everything you have to say. But I think you missed the mark on this one.
I know that he was asking about masturbation, and that's just the symptom of a much bigger problem, as you pointed out.
I think the things you listed as helps would work for a couple that is just starting to go down the road of refusal, but this is a 30 year marriage with a very long history of refusal. The wife is not going to start being sexually giving if he does those things. In all likelihood, she's going to accuse him of doing those things to get sex, and it will backfire.
A more practical answer is for him to take some kind of firm action. A warning shot of sorts. He needs to tell her that he cannot go on this way. He said it was "killing him". I know that you're not going to recommend separation or divorce, but maybe he needs to tell her that things need to change or he is moving out. He needs to list the things that need changing, and stick to it. That's pretty drastic, but she is and has been behaving very neglectfully. Their marriage is not healthy, to put it mildly. She is breaking her marriage vows.
She has cut her husband off from his only sexual outlet, but when he succumbs to his bodily needs he's the one that has to stop, change, do something about it. I say no. She's the one who has to stop, change, do something about it.
You're right, he needs to take responsibility for his sex life, but I think that means making sure she knows that she is the one that needs to change.
My post on this is here:
Masturbation in a sexless marriage
I don't think you missed the point at all. I loved all of your suggestions to him! I don't think it matters what stage of marriage you are at- that IS what women want. I believe that his goal should not be just getting his wife in bed, but getting closer to her emotionally. I find that one follows the other. I am amazed by some of the things I read on here. I am a convert, and my upbringing outside of the church might have changed how I see intamacy now. I commend you for trying to inform others in our LDS culture sexuality in general.
porn = a fantasy verstion of your wife who wants to have sex with you
When a marriage reaches this point we need to be counseling men to leave the marriage not try to fix it. And we need to start doing this much earlier on, not 30 years into something that is inherently broken, and yes SHE is BROKEN.
Let's not change the definition of the LofC. Sam, you said that the LofC also "excludes sex with ourselves". One can not have sexual "relations" with themself! It takes 2, or more, people to have sexual relations!
The LofC, as taught in the temple used to be "that we have no sexual intercourse, except with our spouse". Because there were members who were justifying that they didn't have intercourse, that they were not breaking their temple covenants, it was changed to "sexual relations", which would include any sexual contact with another person.
Anon Sep 20--
Here's another definition of porn: An obviously aroused man having intercourse with a woman who is pretending to enjoy it.
Important Note: This is also referred to elsewhere as "marital sex".
CoachSam said above "That law of chastity also excludes sex with ourselves." I disagree. The law of chastity says that we may only have sexual relations with our spouse, and that's all it says.
According to the New Oxford American Dictionary, the definition of 'relation" or "relations" is:
1.(relations) the way in which two or more concepts, objects, or people are connected; a thing's effect on or relevance to another
2. (relations) the way in which two or more people, countries, or organizations feel about and behave toward each other
3. (relations) chiefly formal sexual intercourse
You have to understand that this very situation can happen to females as well.... like me. Women are not naturally undersexed or anything; I seem to be the "sex maniac" in my relationship. Yes, the problem is intimacy, not sex, but sex is where the attack comes from. For me it has been twenty years, and yes, bishops, counselors (and an LDS counselor) have been involved. His spouse, like mine, is happy with the staus quo, to the heartbreak of the oversexed one, and sees no reason to change anything. I have even been depressed to the point of attempting suicide. There is nowhere to turn...
To Anonymous Jan 11 2012 7:54pm:
Absolutely women can be the partner with the higher sex drive, and this is due to many different factors.
The person with the lower sex drive controls the sex in the relationship...this is a natural phenomenon. With this control comes the responsibility to be sensitive to the needs of their spouse.
Deliberately using this aspect of your marriage to control a spouse can be unrighteous dominion or emotional abuse, whether it's a man doing it or a woman.
Sex doesn't always mean intercourse. There are many other ways to be intimate, and use sex as a means of bonding. Even if a husband isn't in the mood, his hands still work. He can be naked with you, and hold you close to him. He can still speak loving words. He can hold a vibrator.
There's no excuse for such selfishness from either the wife or the husband, in my opinion. If you're the spouse with the higher sex drive, you must communicate your needs, sometimes more than once, to get the point across.
Present it as an opportunity for service, a chance for them to help you feel loved and closer to each other.
If you run out of ideas, don't forget the Lord. He is a fountain of emotional and spiritual support when there is nothing else.
I encourage anyone in this situation to lovingly discuss this openly with their spouse, and frequently. They must understand how you feel.
Your desires for sex in marriage are normal, healthy, and righteous....not 'sex-maniacal' or 'oversexed' at all. Work toward balance.
PS to my last comment:
If you are depressed to the point of considering suicide, I would strongly encourage you to seek out a counselor. The number for the National Suicide Prevention Hotline is 1-800-273-TALK (8255). Or find a local hotline and call it immediately.
No amount of sex or masturbation will resolve that feeling, but could intensify it. Please talk to someone. I personally cannot counsel you in how to cope with feelings of suicide or deep depression, but please find help from someone who can.
I somewhat disagree with the bit about an LDS woman being attracted to a man for "going to his meetings, honoring his priesthood, etc."
I would say that if that is the reason she is attracted to him, it is for the wrong reason. She should be attracted to him first for himself, and the whole "acting as a proper LDS man" thing should be the icing on the cake, not the cake itself.
If I felt my wife was attracted to me because she felt I fit her idea of a "perfect cardboard cutout clone" LDS man, I would feel like she didn't even love me at all.
It's funny how many people here are so concerned about whether or not their spouse's attraction is the 'correct' kind of attraction.
Does it matter, really? If your spouse is having sex with you and tells you they love you and act as if they love you, who cares if it's the 'right' kind of attraction or not? Who cares if their heart's not really in it? Who cares if they love you for you or for some image of you?
They're loving you. Enjoy it!
You could be with someone who won't give you the time of day, much less make love to you. If they're there with you, be grateful they care enough to even make the effort, and enjoy it! Judge your spouse by their actions - not their inner motivations.
Sorry. This is kind of a pet peeve of mine. Thanks for letting me rant.
#2 really strikes home for me, as well as some of the others. I have an interfaith marriage with my LDS husband and although we do not share all the same religious beliefs, it disheartens me when he neglects or ignores his promises according to the LDS Church's teachings. For me it isn't about having the ideal LDS fantasy husband (because I am not LDS), it is about sincerity and commitment. If he does not follow through on commitments he made to God, how can I trust him to commit to even our temporal marriage? To me, his wife?
I have a good relationship with my wife. She is loving, sweet and kind to me. I do have an addiction to porn and masturbate all the time. I feel though that I have a testimony of the gospel. I love my wife, but because of the addiction I believe I steal virtue from her. We want to be sealed together forever, although we are married civily. I feel my addiction is wrong and do not want to do it at all. My wife is pushing me into getting sealed for eternity in the temple. But I haven't controlled my behavior to porn and masturbation. I have been masturbating since I was probably at least 5 or 6 because I learned it when I was sexually abused as a child by my biological father, then again over twenty more times abused by my first adopted father. I was introduced to much sexual activities as a child including abused by a 17 year old boy in a shelter home.
So I never was able to conquer the addiction since I was a child and now I'm 37 years old and have been married for 4 years. my wife is aware of my childhood difficulty and knows I have an addiction. She doesn't like it if she knows I've masturbated and or looked at porn. I need everyone on this blog to help me overcome my addiction to porn and masturbation and to love her instead with every fiber of my being
Dear Anon May 6th,
I feel so much empathy for you and the challenges you have had to face. My heart is also filled with a tremendous amount of love for you because of the desires of your heart.
I commend you for not keeping this a secret from your wife. Not keeping secrets from your wife about your sexual challenges is a huge step toward replacing the old habit with a new habit that will be more beneficial to your marriage.
I hope you recognize that you are not a bad man because you have sexual desires. Your desire for sex is righteous, but that desire has just been aimed in the wrong direction, and trained into you by your associates and circumstances growing up. You are an adult now, and can make choices that will serve you better.
I would suggest working on your masturbation habit first before addressing the pornography. Have you tried having your wife masturbate you instead? Make it as pleasant an activity as possible for you both. Patiently show her how you like to be touched and stroked.
It may take you a few intimate sessions with her before she is able to bring you to orgasm, but keep trying. Your body and brain have to re-learn to associate sex with your wife and that will take a lot of repetition. If she lacks the upper body strength, it's okay to use a vibrator or other sex toys.
She is your help-meet. Inherently with marriage, you both share each other's problems. Let her help you. If she hasn't rejected you after telling her your issues, that tells me that she deeply loves you and is eager to help you.
As for the pornography (and I prefer to use the term "profane erotica" instead because there is "sacred erotica" as well), you cannot defeat an enemy by running from it; you only delay the confrontation until another time when it will overtake you again.
You defeat an enemy by learning everything you can about that enemy, learning what it is, it's weaknesses, and through this how to protect yourself by closing any gaps in your defenses. The goal is to re-direct; re-train your body and mind to have that craving for "sacred erotica" which is your wife.
If you would like some assistance in reaching that goal, feel free to contact me at samzaragoza@sbcglobal.net. My coaching services are free.
Coach Sam:
This came across your facebook feed today, and it kind of touches on something that has been rattling around in my head. One of the things that I see in your response to anon56 is the assumption that sexual problems are always "solvable". I can't remember the percentage, but Dr. Gottman suggests that something like 40% (or whatever the percentage is) of a couple's problems and disagreements will be what he calls "perpetual problems". Much of managing these perpetual problems is to avoid getting "gridlocked" over them.
My own interpretation of anon56's description is that they have reached a point where you might call their sexless marriage a "perpetual problem".
What are your thoughts? What does a sexless marriage look like when it reaches the point of calling it a perpetual problem? How is that the same and how is it different from other ways of looking at sexless marriages?
Hi Dave,
Thanks for reading and your question.
If I understand correctly what you're saying, your question is whether or not some marriages may always be sexless.
Without sitting down with both parties and discussing the situation, it's very difficult to judge just how much of a 'perpetual problem' it actually is.
There's an infinite variety of solutions available to help couples get out of a rut, and desire and motivation are also factors.
My opinion is, as long as a couple are avoiding what I call the four 'marriage killers' that I mention elsewhere in my articles (secrets, silence, separation, and selfishness), they can continue to build intimacy, with or without intercourse.
Keep in mind that 'sex' doesn't have to mean physical intercourse. Knowing the other spouse's love language is (see Gary Chapman's work) can be used as a tool in fulfilling the spouse's intimacy needs.
If your question is, do I believe that all kinds of sexless marriage can be solved, yes I do. But there's not a silver bullet that's a cure-all. And the challenge may never be resolved. There are some problems that couples will struggle with all their lives. Maintaining a perspective of eternity helps us not to lose hope in the mortal struggle.
Coach Sam said: "And the challenge may never be resolved. There are some problems that couples will struggle with all their lives. "
Isn't this a reasonable description of a "perpetual problem"? I'm not sure that a perpetual problem necessarily means "hopeless", but acknowledges that this problem will be with us for the duration of our marriage in mortality.
Perhaps the best sexual example of this, apart from the example given by anon56, would be "mixed orientation marriages" (poster child, it seems, is Josh Weed). You are closer to the psychological literature and could probably say more of what has and has not been studied. It seems that most successful MOM's figure out some way to deal with their sexual differences, though there is always some underlying tension as they deal with "He/She will never truly 'want' me in that way" and "how do I look past my own 'disgust' at having sex with my husband/wife". How does sex therapy approach helping mixed orientation couples? What does sex therapy learn from those MOM's who are successful? What do the rest of us in "traditional" marriages and sexless marriages learn from the successes and failures of MOM's?
Dear Dave,
What I have observed from comparing mixed-orientation marriages that have succeeded, to those that have not, is that those who have succeeded 'play by the rules' of marriage that the Lord lays out for us in the gospel.
I expect you are right, Coach Sam. However, it seems to me that there must be something more to unpack here. MOM's success rate seems to be much lower than other marriages, and it seems that there needs to be something to explain this. Just saying that people in MOMs are "less Christian" or "less spiritual" does not seem adequate. Which "rules of marriage" are MOMs less likely to obey?
Is it commitment? They are more likely to be just test driving the marriage idea, but are not really committed?
How does sexuality figure into this, since that seems the obvious area where they would be different from other marriages? I see many LDS themed discussions where it seems that sex is passed off as a mere "perk" or some otherwise "disposable" aspect of marriage. One might expect that people in MOMs are similar to other groups in conflict resolution skills or selfishness or other "rules of marriage", but would have the most difference in the bedroom.
Is there something else about MOMs that makes them more prone to failure?
It just seems to me that, if it was just "playing by the rules" as laid out in the gospel of Jesus Christ, then MOMs would fail at a similar rate to other marriages.
Dear Dave,
I don't want to devalue your questions in any way. I wouldn't be much of a teacher or student by committing the sin of discouraging anyone from asking questions.
Unfortunately, the answer to the questions you just posed are too large, broad and complex for the space we have here.
Trying to give you a definitive answer this way would actually do you a disservice.
When it comes to why some mixed-sexual-orientation marriages succeed and why some fail is too broad. The reasons are usually too specific to the couple to justify creating a stereotype for all.
Is this topic for a general intellectual curiosity? Is there a client you are trying to help? Is this for you for someone you know?
With a topic as delicate as MSOMs, I believe I would be more helpful in troubleshooting specific relationship issues than providing a generalization that may or may not apply.
Would you like to call or skype me?
Coach Sam: I don't have any specific scenario or couple in mind, mostly just trying to think through "general principles".
In the few anecdotes (like Josh Weed and his wife), I see two general principles that seem to be present in almost all successfuel MSOMs that I read about:
1) Each individual has accepted the spouse's sexual orientation. The heterosexual spouse has accepted that the other spouse is homo/bi/asexual and is not trying to "change" that orientation. The homo/bi/asexual spouse has likewise accepted the heterosexual spouse's orientation and does not seek to change it. Of course, the details of what this looks like will be specific to each couple, but this seems like a general principle that I see.
2) The couple has figure out strategies to have some kind of fulfilling sex life. They have figured out how to be generous towards each other in their sex life so that they feel at least somewhat sexually fulfilled. I see some cases of "open marriages" where the spouse's mutually agree to allow sexual exploration outside of the marriage (which would, of course, be strongly frowned upon in LDS circles).
Of course, these two principles are in addition to other principles that one would include in building and maintaining a strong marriage.
I think one question that I would ask of one who may be more familiar with the literature -- are you aware of MSOM's that would provide counterexamples to these two principles? Because the next thing I want to do is apply them to heterosexual marriages.
The other thing I would discuss is -- what does this mean for heterosexual marriages? I would suggest that this has application to heterosexual marriages, too.
I sometimes read anecdotes of husbands who are so frustrated that their does not experience sexual desire the same way they do. She may be willing to have sex as often as he desires it, but they are still frustrated that she does not feel that intense, spontaneous desire that he does. In other words, he is unwilling to accept the different ways that his wife experiences her sexuality.
In cases where the higher libido spouse is the wife, sometimes she will experience real frustration that her husband does not measure up to the male stereotypes that we so readily perpetuate. She has trouble accepting that her husband does not have that same level of desire that she wishes he had.
And, when speaking of the lower desire spouse, they often express frustration with themselves (for not feeling more spontaneous desire). When attitudes like "good girl syndrome" enter the picture (that is usually a result of misunderstood religious teaching), the low desire spouse will vilify and demonize the higher libido spouse's sexuality.
And, of course, this naturally leads into the 2nd principle, how do you overcome these to build a mutually fulfilling sex-life. Details will, necessarily, be specific to the couple, but the general principle suggests that each couple needs to be working towards this. Perhaps that is where the original question comes in, and I am not convinced that questions around masturbation are as black and white as you suggest here. Sure, masturbation can be used to avoid doing the hard work of building a mutually satisfying sex-life. But it can also take pressure off of the lower-desire spouse to be the "sole" sexual outlet.
On the other end of the spectrum, what does this suggest for sexless marriages? For those accused of "hypersexuality" and/or sexual addictions (if we really believe that sex is addictive)?
I think, when all is said and done, it comes back to the same question -- what are the true principles that underpin these kind of rules and teachings around sexuality?
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