Dear Serolynne:
I am married, and we have a 3 year old. The sex has gone down to almost none since he was born. Don’t get me wrong I love them to death, but guys as you should know have needs. I’m considering having a discreet outside lover to take care of those sexual needs, what do you think?
- Going Crazy
Dear Going Crazy:
I sympathize with your situation .. and I hear about it far too often.
Perhaps you and your wife need to be making more time for you as a couple. I can’t imagine it being a great environment to raise a child in a household where the parents aren’t connecting and loving with each other. No sex for three years is not indicative of a healthy loving partnership, and that attitude can result in sending really warped messages about what love is to your child as he grows up. Not to mention, it’s got to be creating unnecessary stress between you and your wife.
Some ideas to help get the spark back before you loose the love you had that helped create your child:
- Get a babysitter for the weekend, take your wife on a romantic get away focused on just the two of you.
- Make time for each other on a regular basis.. plan date nights where you don’t talk about the job, the kid or the mortgage/
- Leave each other naughty notes in your lunch boxes, sneak teasing photos of each other into your sock drawer.
- Do something for her: a silly strip tease for her to her favorite sultry song, wrap a blindfold around her eyes in the kitchen and lead her to a surprise in the bedroom, draw her a warm bubbly bath and give her a massage, read her an erotic story by candlelight
- Cook her dinner AND do the dishes
- Take the kid for an afternoon/night and get her an appointment at the spa to pamper her.. help her feel like the sexy woman you married and created a child with, instead of just being a mom.
Women have sexual needs too, ya know - heck, most women I know have far higher sex drives than men. Have you ever questioned where she’s getting hers met at?
Having outside casual sexual encounters isn’t going to fix anything in your relationship with your wife, and in fact will likely cause more troubles than it’s worth (what about when - not if - she finds out? What if you expose yourself to a STD and when you do have sex with her again, you pass it to her?). Are you really willing to risk your relationship, future custody of your son (you’d probably loose a lot of your rights by being the cheater in the divorce) and/or the health of your wife? Get that spark back and find fulfillment in each other.. and if you can’t, seek marital counseling. And if you do find that spark again, and you both want to open your relationship up to others - then do it in conscious ways supporting each other the whole way.
- Serolynne
