Should You Schedule Sex with Your Partner? Part Two

Should you schedule Sex? Part Two….

In Part One I talked about the misconceptions associated with scheduling sex with your partner. READ Part One HERE.  In this post, I want to share the important tips for having the conversation about scheduling sex and how you can make this activity a success!

Scheduling sex could be a great option for you but there are a few ground rules to help you factor in the inevitable interruptions and life’s monkey wrenches.

Before you begin picking dates and mapping out the schedule, you and your partner should have a compassionate conversation about what you both consider to be the frequency to be intimate.

If your libidos are mismatched, this conversation isn’t about who wins and gets it as much as they want, rather it is about compromise.

Rarely do we see partners who have the exact same sexual appetite. If you and your partner’s drive are different here are the most important ideas to keep in mind.

  • This is about making your relationship BETTER and INCREASE CONNECTION, not about creating pain, frustration or picking a fight.
  • If your conversations about sex frequency have gone sideways in the past, step back and think about why? Your goal is not to set off those triggers again. If you both feel like the conversation will be too difficult, it might be a good idea to work with a professional therapist.

 

So, if you are both on the same page about scheduling sex, here are a few of the rules to keep in mind.

  • You each get one ‘pass’ for any reason at all once a month.
  • If something completely unexpected comes up and you just can’t muster the mojo for sex — plan to cuddle for at least 20 minutes. There’s always time to cuddle. BUT don’t use the cuddle card too often.
  • Decide what counts as sex as a couple. Does it only count as sex if full penetration has occurred? What constitutes sexual intimacy for you and your partner?
  • If you get a little frisky on a date that wasn’t scheduled, GOOD…but it doesn’t count as your scheduled time. Consider that a bonus 😉 or if you feel like you can’t make a scheduled date and the impromptu date makes up for it, just make sure your partner knows so they can manage their expectations.
  • Pick your schedule and stick to it for 30 days and then re-evaluate. Look at how many cuddle cards, interruptions, and passes were used and together discuss how you both feel about that. Maybe you were too aggressive in your frequency? Maybe you didn’t use any passes and found that you wanted to be intimate more often. After thoughtful review, schedule your next month and see how it goes.

So, should you schedule sex?

We say yes…if it means that you are carving out time to be intentional with physical affection and intimacy.

Keep the objective in mind that increased intimacy and connection are the goals and you’ll be on the right track for scheduling sex.

Did you read part one of our series on Should You Schedule Sex?  If not, click here to read how to overcome possible objections.

How Humor Strengthens Your Relationship

Is there Humor in your relationship?

Do you laugh at yourself?  Or, do you take yourself too seriously?  Laughter can be THE best medicine.  A good sense of humor can strengthen your relationship with yourself and others.

If you’ve ever been to therapy, you know some sessions are hard.  

Other sessions not so much; perhaps less heavy, less intense. Let me share a story with you of how one couple turned a difficult session into a breakthrough with humor.  

I had been seeing this couple for a few months.  

They had lots of conflict and worked hard on their relationship.  

During our session, I shared a thought of mine. Suddenly, I noticed a smirk on the one partner’s face.  I looked at him and said, “I see you smirking! What are you thinking right now?”

Then, he just started laughing. He repeated the thought I had just shared with them, verbatim, and sarcastically called it “therapy gold, a real master’s level summary.”  

When he reflected my statement back to me, I realized how funny it was, as did his spouse.

I kid you not, when I share that all three of us – him, his spouse, and me – broke out into hysterical laughter.  

It was the kind of laughter that brings tears to your eyes.  

The kind of laughter where you have a hard time regaining your composure.  

It took all of us a while to get back to business, and we laughed about it for multiple sessions.  

But, it reminded us of the power of humor and how it can transform a difficult moment, conversation or conflict into a different kind of experience.

Therapy Isn’t Always Hard

There are two reasons why I’m telling you this story.

  1. Humor strengthens your relationship with anyone, including during therapy. What an amazing gift, when you have that kind of rapport and trust with your therapist – so much so that you can lightly poke fun at them; everyone can laugh about it and all parties have a good time.  For me, humor is symbolic of the quality of our relationship.    
  2. Therapy isn’t always intense or hard.  Depending on the session, what we’re talking about, and the level of humor you practice in your life, there can be funny moments.  I have experienced intense humor and hard laughter in my office.  Sometimes clients are poking fun at their own idiosyncrasies; sometimes they are poking fun at me.  

Stories like this also remind me of the role of humor in my own marriage.  

My husband and I have the ability to laugh at ourselves. And, that’s really how humor starts.  

If you can’t laugh at yourself, then you’re most likely too hard on yourself. Lack of humor robs you of the playfulness that life has to offer.

You’ll miss out on how humor transforms and strengthens your relationship. Because laughter is like a relief of pressure in an already pressured world.  

How Humor Strengthens Your Relationship

When’s the last time you laughed?  (I’m talking about doubled-over, cheeks-hurting, tears-popping-out-your-eyes laughter.)  Humor not only strengthens your relationship, it’s just plain good for you! Here are six (somewhat unexpected) health benefits of laughter:

  1. It burns calories!  Laughter is actually like exercise.
  2. It strengthens your core.  Laughter literally works your midsection.
  3. It increases your heart rate, which increases circulation in your body.
  4. It decreases stress.  When you decrease stress, you increase your immune system.
  5. It can lower blood sugar.  Lower blood sugar boosts your mood.
  6. It improves your quality of life.  Laughter truly helps you see the world differently.

Love. Live. Laughter.

So, I ask again – Do you laugh at yourself?  

I promise that humor strengthens your relationship with your partner.  If you laugh jokingly and mutually (that’s key), then you won’t take yourself so seriously and you will be more tolerant.  Humor and laughter are part of what brings harmony and aliveness to our relationships.

3 Steps to Improving Intimacy: What is Your Relationship EPS?

This is for you whether or not you are in a relationship. If you are in a relationship, think of these steps as a how-to guide to improving intimacy in your relationship. If you are single, think of these steps as a way to spark the relationship you want to create.

If you are proactively trying to educate yourself, like many of my clients, then this framework is for you. This is for anyone looking to overcome typical obstacles and areas that people get stuck when they are trying to make their long-term relationships work – basically when sex becomes complicated.

Improving Intimacy is 3-Fold

Intimacy is a broad subject. There are three main areas to address when we talk about improving intimacy. Think of these areas as touchpoints within the larger topic of intimacy. Breaking intimacy down into a three-part framework helps to create a concrete framework. It simplifies intimacy for you, so you can get to work on nurturing your connection with your partner.

What is your Relationship EPS?

You are familiar with GPS – a system for navigating where to go and how to get to your destination. To navigate where you want to go in your relationship, you need to pay attention to how you nurture intimacy with your partner. This is what I call your EPS.

Intimacy or Relationship EPS breaks down into:

  1. Emotional Connection
  2. Physical Connection
  3. Sexual Connection

3 Steps to Improving Intimacy

Intimacy is not just about sex. Please do not make that mistake. Physical intimacy is just one component of nurturing your connection with your partner. There are three steps to improving intimacy.

  1. Have emotional conversations with your partner. You do not want to just talk about life management. Make sure to talk about how you feel. I am referring to your emotional reaction to what is happening in your relationship. Whether you are navigating conflict, talking about money or sex, it is not just about the content. The conversation is about the feelings behind the content; that is what makes the difference for nurturing intimacy.
  2. Make room for touch that does not become sexual. Physical connection specifically refers to non-sexual touch. When touch only leads to sex, someone is going to start shying away from physical touch in the relationship. Reach out to touch a hand, give a hug, share a kiss or a cuddle – with no intention of turning it into a sexual experience. What that touch does is it communicates safety. It builds in a sense of security for the partnership.
  3. Ask yourself – Am I nurturing my sex life? Am I engaging in it? Am I participating in it? What I want you to think about on a consistent basis is whether you think about sex (if at all). Think about how you contribute to your sexual connection.

All three areas of your intimacy work together. Each of the three steps works together to nurture your intimacy. Think of Relationship EPS like a braid. Each strand weaves and overlaps until they begin to interlock. When the strands work together (in harmony), they produce a beautiful braid (your relationship). When they fray, the braid breaks apart.

5 Step Process to Intimate Love

Do you fear intimate love? You’re not the only one. We all want deep connection. Sometimes we even crave it.  Yet, we find ways to block or ignore intimate moments.

Want some examples? Staying single. Spending more time on tech than with our partners. Sustaining chronic conflict. Living in a sexless marriage. I could go on.

 

Why do we do this? Because intimacy is friggen scary. Pardon the passive “f” word but it fits. In fact, I teach about this in my Intimacy Revival Platinum program. In this 6-month program, couples practice three components of intimacy:

  • Courage
  • Risk
  • Vulnerability

When I created this program, I searched for definitions on vulnerability. Oxford dictionary published one that struck me deeply.

“The quality or state of being exposed to the possibility of being attacked or harmed, either physically or emotionally”

Wow. Did you read that definition??? This helps you understand why you might dance around this topic. On the one hand, you are wise to protect yourself. But watch yourself. You might also prevent yourself from being fully known or loved.

You deserve to feel loved. And you can’t feel truly loved – emotionally, physically and/or sexually – until you surrender into intimacy. One does not exist without the other. I know, hard news to take but it’s true.

Think of it this way. It’s a 5 step process toward intimate love. It looks like this:

 

5 Step Process of Intimate Love

Step 1: Tap into your courage so that you can take greater intimacy risks.

Step 2: Say yes to risk despite your fears (rejection, abandonment, disappointment, etc).

Step 3: Take risks through the vulnerable act of mental, emotional and sexual transparency.

Step 4:  Use this transparency to create clarity, confidence, closeness and trust.

Step 5: Reap the rewards of full, authentic, honest and whole love.

One thing that I know is this:

Every single person that steps into my office possesses the first step: Tapping into courage. I know that you have courage too. Step into your own courage to create an unbreakable, intimate love.

6 Intimacy Myths You Need To Know

Intimacy is an experience.

You can’t buy, own or touch intimacy. Most partners claim they want an intimate relationship but struggle to define or understand intimacy. 

Below I debunk 6 myths about intimacy that very regularly show up in my conversations with couples.

Myth #1: Intimacy Is Sex

Some couples say, “We want more intimacy”, code for “We want more sex”. I’m here to tell you that intimacy does not mean sex. If you use the term “intimacy” in place of the word sex, you are probably afraid to say the word sex. If you struggle to say the word sex, that’s the reason you are not having it. Sex can feel intimate but “intimacy” itself does not mean sex.

Myth #2: Intimacy Should Happen All The Time

Intimate experiences are powerful. In fact, they are so powerful that I do not believe we can tolerate them as a constant experience. A common problem is the expectation of shared intimate experiences all the time. Intimacy needs to weave in and out of your relationship life.  “Out” is just as important as “In”. But “Out” without any “Ins” equals disconnect.

Myth #3: Intimacy Means Agreement

Intimacy requires that you know yourself well.  Why? Because when you know yourself well, you can more clearly express your differences to your partner.  If you both agree on everything without any conflicts, well, someone is not telling the truth. Intimacy requires truth.

Myth #4: Relationships Fail Without Intimacy

An interesting study published in The Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families I-7 on intimacy found that some couples can get along great without any deep levels of intimacy. Overtly or covertly, partners agree on low degrees of intimacy. The problem arises when one partner begins to desire more intimacy than the other. So, low levels of intimacy can work for some couples, as long as neither one asks for more intimacy.

Myth #5: Sex Requires Intimacy

Sex does not require intimacy, however, good sex does. Intimacy in sex does not mean candles, flowers and romantic gestures. Intimacy during sex requires honest expressions of desire, sexual appetite, sexual boundaries and expressions of curiosity. A one-night stand can feel very intimate if both partners consent, are honest about their intentions and express their sexual desires fully.

Myth #6: When Partners Love Each Other, Intimacy Should Be Easy

I have been with my current partner who is also my spouse for 20 years. Some intimate moments are easier than others. After 20 years, we still have intimate moments that challenge us. I’m glad for the challenge. It means we show up real.

***

As I study intimacy and work to refine my own working definition, I invite you to join me. What aspect of intimacy do you struggle with the most? Let’s work together to help you create healthy, transformative intimate experiences.

Fear of Intimacy: Do You Fear Losing Yourself in Your Marriage

Do you have a fear Intimacy?

As a scholar of intimacy, I continuously attempt to refine my own understanding of this abstract concept and how it shows up through the multiple layers of our relationships.

I witness couples avoid it, dance around it, dip their toe into it, beg for it, misunderstand it, desire it, need it, want it, demand for it, fear it and block it, sometimes all within one therapy session.

Some partners seek it out but ensure they never receive it.

They partner with someone who maintains a safe emotional distance. Others desperately crave intimacy and develop enmeshed relationships.

Here, they lose their own identity. They cannot distinguish where they end and their partner begins.

 

But what is true intimacy anyway?

In a research article assessing marital satisfaction, written in The Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families by Sobral, Teixeira and Costa, the authors define intimacy as the capacity to exchange thoughts and feelings of personal significance with another individual who is highly valued and to depend on them while also experiencing healthy autonomy.

The words “exchange” and “depend” stand out to me.

According to these authors, these are the action words, the behaviors, required for partners to experience intimacy.

The authors highlight that traditional definitions of intimacy exclude the concept of dependence.

So what might get in the way of achieving intimacy?

 

These researchers have defined two key areas:

FLS – Fear of losing the self (dependence)

FLO – Fear of losing the other (exchange)

Both of these require a withholding behavior.

It looks like this:

(FLS) If I share all of me, I might lose my autonomy, my independence.

(FLO) If I share all of me, you might disapprove of me and then reject me.

Therefore, I keep parts of myself hidden away from you but as a result, I feel lonely.

I think FLO is easier to identify than FLS because the feelings associated with FLO are more tangible.

 

These include feelings such as exposure and rejection.

Behaviors like direct eye contact can feel intolerable and create a kneejerk response to hide.

Conflict avoidance is another form of FLO. If I just keep the peace, you won’t leave me. But what does FLS look like?

Thoughts that might accompany FLS include not wanting to justify one’s actions to a partner, “I don’t have to explain myself to you”, “I don’t’ have to tell you where I spend my money” and/or operating from an “I” instead of “we” mentality.

With FLS, dependence not only feels uncomfortable but can also be threatening.

I am currently working with a couple that prides themselves on not “needing” each other, almost as if their autonomy is a badge of honor.

However, their fear of dependency has contributed to a sexless marriage of several years and a recent affair.

Therapists Brian and Marcia Gleason offer one of my favorite descriptions of dependency within a relationship.

In their book Going All The Way, they conceptualize healthy need as one’s ability to recognize one’s own autonomy while simultaneously being aware that with their partner, they are capable of so much more.

In Attachment and Human Development, psychologist Jude Cassidy wrote in her article Truth, Lies and Intimacy: An Attachment Perspective, “Autonomy is important for intimacy because to permit oneself to become truly close to another person, one must have confidence in the autonomy of both the self and the partner so that one is free from fear of engulfment”.

True intimacy requires both the prioritization of connection over distance as well as transparency over suppression.

When you permit yourself to need your partner, to reveal yourself and to fully connect, you live from a courageous heart. You allow love to conquer fear.

As I continue to help couples experience greater levels of intimacy, consider how FLO and FLS might keep you from experiencing a fuller, richer, more satisfying relationship with the one you love.

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