Sex and Your Body Image
Sometimes it's tough to feel good about your body
How comfortable do you feel with your body? Do you like it?
How comfortable are you with letting your husband or wife see you nude? Is
it “all lights off, please!” during sex?
Many of us would like to
change or improve those parts of
our bodies with which we are not happy. I’m not talking extreme makeover,
just a few changes to areas we find we’d like better if they were improved.
While we may wish for slimmer hips, a flatter stomach, a
tighter butt, more muscle tone, most of us will, either be happy with, and
accept, ourselves the way we are, or work on improving those areas through
exercise and diet. There are some of us who may take the desire for
“perfection” to a whole new limit and go for plastic surgery.
Some allow the perceived “disaster” areas to ruin their
lives. Women in particular have a
distorted image of what the female body
should look like (distorted body image) and obsess about their own lack of perfection.
Society and
the printed air-brushed images we see every day have lead to this obsession.
This unhappiness with body image can ruin not only a person’s self-esteem
but the sex life in a marriage.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Mind-Body Perspective on Female Sexual Health
Laura Berman, MSW, PhD at the 2002 Women's Sexual Health Conference discusses
psychological issues affecting female sexual function. Dr. Berman
has been working as a sex educator and therapist for over a decade. She
is Co-Director of both the Female Sexual Medicine Center (FSMC) at UCLA
Medical Center, Department of Urology, Los Angeles, CA. (Note: Start
this at 6:00 min. Before that is just introductory remarks.)
Listen with
Real Player. |
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Let’s face it-we are likely to be undressed in front of our
spouses every day. They are able to see us in any stage of dress or undress
at various times of the day or night. Not feeling comfortable with our own
body takes away not only our pleasure at being seen but their pleasure at
seeing us. Sex is a tactile and visual act.
Our view of our own body is influenced by many factors,
starting in childhood. Your parents’ ideas about sexuality and the body make
a deep imprint on young minds. If the nude body was a taboo subject in your
family, then you may feel the need to “cover up” even in front of your
spouse. If your parents’ religious beliefs lead you to believe that a naked
body and its natural sexual feelings were sinful before marriage, it is
difficult to change your ideas after the wedding.
Other factors that influence our attitude towards our bodies
come from how we viewed adults in our lives. Did we admire them? Were they
fit and attractive? Did we want to be like them, or did we secretly hope we
wouldn’t look like them when we became adults?
One woman I know says that her mother’s obesity had a
tremendous impact on her view of the female body. A man told me that the
memory of the way his father and uncle looked at the beach with their “beach
ball” stomachs makes him obsessive about doing sit-ups. What we found
unattractive in a parent, especially if we resemble that parent, can make us
feel unattractive also.
If showing your body to your husband or wife is embarrassing
to you, you need to do some mind-searching and find out why. Is your body
really so horrible? Take a realistic, not emotional, look at yourself.
Do you see a need for improvement? Do something. If weight
is an issue, join a weight-loss organization and an exercise class.
Understand that, besides time, it will take daily effort to lose weight. And
please, set a “normal” goal weight for yourself; don’t just look at the goal
weight charts.
Every body is built differently. I know very few women who
are a healthy 118 pounds, and very few healthy overly “bulked-up” men.
Remember, you not only want to look better, but, feel healthy and vital.
If you were taught to be
ashamed of your body you must
“unlearn” this attitude. Again this will take effort and time. Remember: the
human body is a beautiful machine, perfect in every way. “It” eats, talks,
hears, sees, moves, repairs itself, feels pleasure, and has the ability to
create life. View your body as a wonderful gift.
Have realistic expectations of what you want done and seek a
reputable board certified doctor if you opt for plastic surgery. This is
major surgery you’re contemplating, not a day at the spa.
Above all remember, everyone’s idea of beauty is different.
Even before your spouse-to-be ever spoke to you, he or she was attracted to
you because you fit his or her idea of beautiful. To your spouse, your nude
body is “eye candy.” The look you receive is not a critique; it is pleasure
and desire.
Body image and sex are eternally entwined.
Love your body as
your spouse does.
Enjoy the pleasure your body can give and get. Be proud of
the greatest machine ever created-your body.
Next: Being Overweight
Can Be A Drag On Your Sex Life
Last updated: 10/05
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