Posted on 12/29/2008 11:11:17 PM PST by goldstategop
n Part I, I made the argument that any woman who is married to a good man and who wants a happy marriage ought to consent to at least some form of sexual relations as much as possible. (Men need to understand that intercourse should not necessarily be the goal of every sexual encounter.)
In Part II, I advance the argument that a wife should do so even when she is not in the mood for sexual relations. I am talking about mood, not about times of emotional distress or illness.
Why?
Here are eight reasons for a woman not to allow not being in the mood for sex to determine whether she denies her husband sex.
1. If most women wait until they are in the mood before making love with their husband, many women will be waiting a month or more until they next have sex. When most women are young, and for some older women, spontaneously getting in the mood to have sex with the man they love can easily occur. But for most women, for myriad reasons -- female nature, childhood trauma, not feeling sexy, being preoccupied with some problem, fatigue after a day with the children and/or other work, just not being interested -- there is little comparable to a mans out of nowhere, and seemingly constant, desire for sex.
2. Why would a loving, wise woman allow mood to determine whether or not she will give her husband one of the most important expressions of love she can show him? What else in life, of such significance, do we allow to be governed by mood?
What if your husband woke up one day and announced that he was not in the mood to go to work? If this happened a few times a year, any wife would have sympathy for her hardworking husband. But what if this happened as often as many wives announce that they are not in the mood to have sex? Most women would gradually stop respecting and therefore eventually stop loving such a man.
What woman would love a man who was so governed by feelings and moods that he allowed them to determine whether he would do something as important as go to work? Why do we assume that it is terribly irresponsible for a man to refuse to go to work because he is not in the mood, but a woman can -- indeed, ought to -- refuse sex because she is not in the mood? Why?
This brings us to the next reasons.
3. The baby boom generation elevated feelings to a status higher than codes of behavior. In determining how one ought to act, feelings, not some code higher than ones feelings, became decisive: No shoulds, no oughts. In the case of sex, therefore, the only right time for a wife to have sex with her husband is when she feels like having it. She never should have it. But marriage and life are filled with shoulds.
4. Thus, in the past generation we have witnessed the demise of the concept of obligation in personal relations. We have been nurtured in a culture of rights, not a culture of obligations. To many women, especially among the best educated, the notion that a woman owes her husband sex seems absurd, if not actually immoral. They have been taught that such a sense of obligation renders her property. Of course, the very fact that she can always say no -- and that this no must be honored -- renders the property argument absurd. A woman is not property when she feels she owes her husband conjugal relations. She is simply wise enough to recognize that marriages based on mutual obligations -- as opposed to rights alone and certainly as opposed to moods -- are likely to be the best marriages.
5. Partially in response to the historical denigration of womens worth, since the 1960s, there has been an idealization of women and their feelings. So, if a husband is in the mood for sex and the wife is not, her feelings are deemed of greater significance -- because womens feelings are of more importance than mens. One proof is that even if the roles are reversed -- she is in the mood for sex and he is not -- our sympathies again go to the woman and her feelings.
6. Yet another outgrowth of 60s thinking is the notion that it is hypocritical or wrong in some other way to act contrary to ones feelings. One should always act, post-60s theory teaches, consistent with ones feelings. Therefore, many women believe that it would simply be wrong to have sex with their husband when they are not in the mood to. Of course, most women never regard it as hypocritical and rightly regard it as admirable when they meet their childs or parents or friends needs when they are not in the mood to do so. They do what is right in those cases, rather than what their mood dictates. Why not apply this attitude to sex with ones husband? Given how important it is to most husbands, isnt the payoff -- a happier, more communicative, and loving husband and a happier home -- worth it?
7. Many contemporary women have an almost exclusively romantic notion of sex: It should always be mutually desired and equally satisfying or one should not engage in it. Therefore, if a couple engages in sexual relations when he wants it and she does not, the act is dehumanizing and mechanical. Now, ideally, every time a husband and wife have sex, they would equally desire it and equally enjoy it. But, given the different sexual natures of men and women, this cannot always be the case. If it is romance a woman seeks -- and she has every reason to seek it -- it would help her to realize how much more romantic her husband and her marriage are likely to be if he is not regularly denied sex, even of the non-romantic variety.
8. In the rest of life, not just in marital sex, it is almost always a poor idea to allow feelings or mood to determine ones behavior. Far wiser is to use behavior to shape ones feelings. Act happy no matter what your mood and you will feel happier. Act loving and you will feel more loving. Act religious, no matter how deep your religious doubts, and you will feel more religious. Act generous even if you have a selfish nature, and you will end with a more a generous nature. With regard to virtually anything in life that is good for us, if we wait until we are in the mood to do it, we will wait too long.
The best solution to the problem of a wife not being in the mood is so simple that many women, after thinking about it, react with profound regret that they had not thought of it earlier in their marriage. As one bright and attractive woman in her 50s ruefully said to me, Had I known this while I was married, he would never have divorced me.
That solution is for a wife who loves her husband -- if she doesnt love him, mood is not the problem -- to be guided by her mind, not her mood, in deciding whether to deny her husband sex.
If her husband is a decent man -- if he is not, nothing written here applies -- a woman will be rewarded many times over outside the bedroom (and if her man is smart, inside the bedroom as well) with a happy, open, grateful, loving, and faithful husband. That is a prospect that should get any rational woman into the mood more often.
LOL! Oh gosh. Now I have to read the entire thread.
Maybe it will be a fun thread? ;) It has to be, it’s about sex :)
No tears allowed. I am the guy that’s made it a point to make his bride laugh at least once every single day from the first day we met.
Heck, last year while I was being made ready to be wheeled in for heart surgery, I asked her to please get my fishing gear ready. LOL
When I woke up after surgery and was informed that I had suffered a stroke (mostly recovered now), I told her that it’s going to be tough to eat with utensils and asked her to order out for pizza. ;>)
If couples tried to make each other laugh at least once a day, they might be surprised at how different life can be.
I think you may be kin on my daddy’s side of the family! ; )
Fun?
Maybe not, but You have a great sense of what make the genders work and your input is rock solid!
>>...and so was doing her best to make you grumpy enough to give her the reaction she wanted to provoke.<<
You are right. But she failed. In fact, she was telling people I had an “anger problem”, yet one of my friends families, on a camping trip (that last year), saw her go on an uncontrolled tyrade simply because I didn’t go fetch her water exactly the way she wanted me to. My friend and his wife were dumbfounded.
Interestingly, some of her friends spouses (men) counselled me on what I could do to get her back and how I needed to change my ways. One actually told me that I needed to give her money whenever she asked for it. Dead serious.
Oh, and the epilog is black comedy at its best. Within five years, every single one of those men came to me, unsolicited, and apologized for taking the stand they did and confirmed that I had actually been the “good guy” in this.
But wait! It gets better! All but one of those men was divorced by his wife. And every single one of those women USED THE SAME ATTORNEY MY EX USED!
The one who is still married is now a friend of mind. And so is his wife.
Time brings clarity.
;>)
As an occasional thing, sure. As a chronic condition, it turns into an indication that it's time to move on.
I have a feeling that these women were being "supportive" of each other, psyching each other up that they could do better than stay married to the guys they currently had. Did any of them remarry to anybody better, or have they degenerated into a bitter circle of angry harridans?
Thank you :) I call that normal ;)
Started reading. Read the first part a couple weeks or so ago. VERY interesting.
Seriously, though, people divorce in their minds long before they make up the papers.
I can’t stand it, I have to tell another one.
Ok, I truly am a full blooded guy, yes, like the ones that once lived in caves.
Now I wasn’t ever a complete slob, but many years ago, I did have a bad habit of tossing my socks on the floor at night. She mentions it to me and I continue. She moves the hamper out where it would be handier, I try, but like all habits, I start tossing them again and she quit bring the subject up.
She surprises me with a new puppy one day and within a week without a word, I am picking up my socks to keep that little rascal from chewing them to bits.
It was several months later that she springs it on me, I never had a clue... she bought the puppy because she knew I would keep the socks off of the floor to keep him from eating them. We have laugh about that for years... she is very special, and probably the only person on the planet that had any chance at successfully training me. LOL
First thing you said...not just about “mood” as that could range from the normal to the ridiculous. Way too much analyzing basic human behavior, imo.
LOL! ok, I do get the talk talk talk because sometimes I do talk talk talk.
Men and women are different just like people are different.
I like sex. I like making love. That’s normal. And sometimes I don’t need or want anything but the spur of the moment, quickie. And most of the time, I don’t need a reason or any “emotion” or “flowers and romance” stuff to get me in the mood. And sometimes, it takes me a bit more time to “get in the mood” and my husband makes sure he gets me in the mood. And 99% of the time, all it takes is him being in the mood or me being in the mood.
My husband does some of those romantic things. and they’re great, because he’s such an awesome person in every way and so giving. I don’t require them (but the food is great). I’m not a really romantic type person and rarely do the “romantic” thing.
Well said. We owe our spouse (both sides). Most of the time, that translates into what we want too.
When I woke up after surgery and was informed that I had suffered a stroke (mostly recovered now), I told her that its going to be tough to eat with utensils and asked her to order out for pizza. ;>)
***
I’m sure you were in the mood for pizza!! lol I had my 3rd open heart about 8 yrs. ago (Ross Procedure) 25 % chance of making it. My EX flirted with the airline stewardess, complained about his back having to sleep on the couch in my room, and wouldn’t offer to get me a thing when he went to the snack room, offered no comfort and was worried about when I would be able to have sex.
I’m suppose to want to be intimate with THAT???
What a great husband!! sorry...ex-husband.
Way too much analyzing over something that is so enjoyable and fulfilling for so many.
Bless you and prayers on a steady recovery.
Talking and laughter is the best in a relationship. If one does not have that, there is no relationship.
We talk non stop. He has a warped sense of humor and I have a dry one. We laugh almost daily.
And just as many women complain about their men/husbands. I will never understand that.
You’re going from working out to being fat...almost like it’s an excuse for anyone to get fat. There’s a whole lot of in between.
Besides, working out takes at most an hour a day (30 minutes if one is good at it)...I sincerely doubt working out and getting fat has anything at all to do with the “problem” or time contraints.
Most of the time, that is all it’s takes...the look in his eye, the back and forth, the humor...
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