Bigboobbabe
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2019
- Posts
- 2,445
Will you go into business with me? Together, we could make sex a positive experience in the USA rather than something we still only talk about in dark corners.While the prevalence of STI's in nursing homes is no laughing matter, it does reveal that older people can and will have very active sex lives given the right circumstances, including women who are well beyond the onset of menopause. Which underscores my earlier point that menopause is too often blamed for a woman calling a halt to sex later in life, when the real reason is she's married to a man who won't change how he approaches sex OR she has simply grown tired of having sex with HIM. Which may have happened because he's not trying to earn her affection anymore. Men can scream and holler all they want about how unfair that is or find a solution, such as (just to name a few):
- Try to earn your wife's sexual attraction instead of just expecting it - ie., look nice, act nice, and make her feel good about herself and do it everyday, not just when you're hoping for sex. Want sex to be more like it used to be? Well, behave more like you used to. Quit bitching about your aches and pains and talking about your damn bowel movements
- Approach love-making differently. Abruptly sticking your dick into your menopausal wife can be an absolute torment for her. See a sex therapist or read a book (Come As Your Are - by Emily Nagoski is a good one) about how to approach sex differently after menopause.
- A husband who watches too much or extreme porn can leave his menopausal wife feeling sexually irrelevant. Consider that the next time you google "anal-loving bukakke gang bangs." You may think she's unaware of what you're looking at but you're probably wrong.
- Consider allowing her to have occasional sex with other men as a way to reinvigorate her general interest in sex. Her sexual self-esteem and self-image might benefit from the excitement of being with someone other than YOU - a guy she's had sex with thousands of times.. ..Obviously, this is very tricky and perhaps should first be discussed with a certified sex therapist who can assess your marriage for withstanding this sort of relationship electro-shock therapy.
I agree with so many if your points here and on your profile about section.
I had gyn health problems from before I was married, but I didn't know it. Sex was painful and uncomfortable and rather than support me, my husband just complained and called me names. Frigid, selfish, etc.
To be fair, our pre-marital sex life was no different and he still married me.
If I knew then, what I know now, things would be different. But I didnt.
I am married 39 years, and have spent the last 4 living on my own. I safely and proudly practice polyamoury and every relationship I enter is subject to ethical-nonmonagamy.
I believe it is impossible for one human to provide everything another human desires, and the reciprocal is true. We don't settle for one brand of running shoe, why settle for one brand of sex.
My spouse had a fetish for women's lingerie dating back to puberty. I knew this when we married in the 1980's. That self-proclaimed fetish developed into what he described as crossdressing and as of 2-yrs ago, MtoF transition.
As he was entering into the hormone phase, we were on a temporary separation. I suggested we recouple and that I have penetrative sex outside the marital confines.
I was met with the statement I consider to be the root of all misogyny and narcissism.
I was told, "I can't support your lifestyle"
After living together and loving him for 34-years at the time, suddenly my request of a lifestyle was the breaking point.
When my spouse made her debut at work, she was wearing a sweater set that was a hand-me-down from me. When asked about her name, she proudly explained I chose it for her. At the moment all this took place, I was still in the dark about her top surgery, because it had nothing to do with me.
I would love to travel the country demystifying sex and the human body, teaching everyone that being authentic is not just for the LGBTQA population, and normalizing the theory sex and foreplay begin at the moment you say good morning to your partner, not just when you have an erection (male or female?.