QUESTIONS & ANSWERS: Sex & Lust Department
Please remember, this column is designed to help the consumer seeking behavioral-health
information, and not intended to be any form of psychotherapy or a replacement
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column are those of the columnist and do not represent the position
of other SelfhelpMagazine.com staff.
Question
My wife and I focus on intimacy rather than performance while
making love but there are just some times that I just don't "get off,"
especially when she's "done" and no longer excited. Answer
When partners are in long-term, comfortable relationships they can easily slip into
patterns of love making that work well for long stretches and then, inexplicably, don't.
While it is certainly a natural part of lovemaking to take cues from our partner's arousal
to heighten our own, sometimes we can over-rely on that feedback.
In addition, as men and women march on toward middle age and beyond their overall
drives for orgasm lessen. However, the appreciation of sensuous pleasure lingers. This is
normal and inevitable and can greatly enhance the sense of intimacy that partners share.
So the Cyberspace Sex Docs recommend another shift in focus as you and your wife
march into this next phase of sexual delight: make pleasure the goal rather than orgasm by
having fewer "eyes right" to your spouse and more "eyes inward" to
your own pleasure responses.
03/18/98
Dr. Al Cooper, clinical director at the San Jose
Marital and Sexuality Centre (408-248-9737), runs the training program for Counseling
and Psychological Services at Stanford University. Dr. Cooper is internationally
known for his work in sexuality and is freqently interviewed by the media. He
currently writes a column in Men's Health Magazine.
Dr. Coralie Scherer coordinates online services
for the Centre and specializes in sexual trauma, women's issues, and marital
therapy.
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