Talking About Sex
by Clayton E. Tucker-Ladd, Ph.D.
Bach and Deutsch (1970) illustrate the deception that occurs early in a
relationship, using "Will" and "Carol." These two people have had a couple
of dates, like each other, and are trying hard to please and impress the
other. After a fun day at the beach and a romantic dinner, Will asks Carol
to stay over night at his place. She agrees. But after a long drive home,
both are very tired, have sun burns, and need to go to work early in the
morning. Actually, both would rather go home tonight and set aside a
special
night for making love the first time. However, they are pushed by their own
needs to please, to impress, and to deceive the other. Each assumes (without
asking) the other is horny. Each wants to give the impression that he/she is
highly sexual too. The truth is that both are concerned about their sexual
adequacy.
Since neither can say "let's wait," Will and Carol stay together and have
intercourse. They utter the right words to each other: "I love you," "You
are fantastic," "Yes, I came," "You are a real man," "You have a great
body," and so on. But during sex they were thinking: "I'm too tired to
come," "I feel miserable," "He will think I'm frigid," "I can't keep this
up, I hope she comes soon," "My God, she wants more!" and so on. Will has a
climax and Carol fakes one. After telling each other how wonderful it was
(while hoping the other is ready to sleep), they struggle to be affectionate
and provide a little afterplay. This leads to more intercourse which neither
wants and both fake a climax this time. They weren't honest. The experience
was much less satisfying than it could have been. By pretending, they set a
high sexual standard to live up to in the future, and they increased their
own feelings of sexual inadequacy. If Will and Carol do not become secure
enough to be frank with each other, they will become stressed and irritated.
Their relationship may be headed for trouble.
Later in marriage a common complaint is "I ain't gettin' enough." But
Masters, Johnson and Kolodny (1985) say frequency is almost never the issue.
What is the problem then? The complainer may feel neglected or lonely or
that something is wrong with the relationship. The partner being complained
about may be anxious at work, upset about adding weight, disgusted with
his/her lover, or depressed. The tasks of a couple who "ain't gettin'
enough" are to recognize what the real underlying problems are, talk about
solving those problems, and express loving concern for each other. The freer
one can talk to his/her lover about sex and other concerns, the better the
sex will be (Levin, 1975). Many books discuss intimacy and communication in
marriage (Gottman, Notarius, Gonso, & Markman, 1976; Rubinstein & Shaver,
1982b; Rubin, 1983). Below are guidelines for communicating about sex:
-
Be honest, open, and direct. Don't
pretend, be genuine. If you don't know what your partner is thinking,
wanting, or feeling (and you probably don't), please ask, don't assume.
Don't be overly eager to impress, like Will and Carol.
-
Forget the nonsense that men know or are
supposed to know all about making love. No man knows how a woman feels
or what she needs to climax; each woman is different. Talk to each
other, DON'T AVOID DISCUSSING PROBLEMS. Both the male and the female
have to let the partner know what feels good and what doesn't, what acts
are appealing and unappealing. If there is a problem, just say "I'd like
to talk about our love-making," then find out when is the best time to
talk, i.e. after making love, before, or at an entirely separate time.
-
Forget the notions that men should take
the initiative, that the man is responsible for making sex good, and
that the woman just lies there, letting the man do things to make her
feel good. These are outdated Victorian ideas. So are ideas like: "a man
never gets enough" or "most women want to be loved but aren't really
interested in sex." The best sexual adjustment (80% satisfied) is
achieved when each spouse takes the lead equally often. When the
initiative is one-sided, only 66% are satisfied (Blumstein & Schwartz,
1983). A wonderful aphrodisiac is an excited, active partner.
-
Try your best to avoid thinking negatively
about the partner, especially watch out for blaming the other person for
your problems. Examples: "I might have a climax if he were a better
lover." "If he loved me, he'd take more time, whisper sweet nothings in
my ear, and massage my back." "If she loved me and wasn't such a prude,
she'd play with my penis a lot." "He/she never wants sex, he/she must
have a problem (gay/lesbian,
feels inadequate, ashamed of his/her
body)." The stereotypes and negative thinking frequently hide our own
feelings of inadequacy: "It's not my fault, he/she is the one to blame."
You need to understand what is really going on.
-
Use "I" statements when expressing a
concern (see chapter 13). This shows you accept responsibility for your
own feelings. It shows that you are hoping to work cooperatively to
solve the problems.
-
Use empathy responses when the partner
talks about problems (see chapter 13). This helps get the true
underlying problems out on the table. Remember nothing kills sexual
urges as fast as resentment and depression.
-
Use books as a stimulus for discussing
sex. They may help you see the problem from another angle, suggest
factors you had not thought of, and offer you a variety of solutions to
consider with your partner.
-
Often it is much more effective to show
your partner how to do something, rather than trying to tell him/her. If
the woman will guide the man's hand
as he touches her clitoris, he will
more quickly understand what she wants. Likewise, the man can
show the
woman how he masturbates and then guide her hands so she knows she is
doing it just right.
-
Don't expect things to stay the same; how
a couple makes love tends to change from time to time. Don't expect
perfection--but you do have the right to a good sex life. Talk about
trying new things. And don't forget to laugh too.
Dr. Clayton E.
Tucker-Ladd is licensed Clinical Psychologist and author of Psychogical
Self-Help
Next: What Makes
for Good Sex?
Last reviewed: 10/05
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