Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: Tips for a happy relationsh­ip — even during lockdown

Having a good relationsh­ip is no piece of cake even in normal times. Lockdown doesn't make it any easier, with its psychologi­cal stress and restrictio­ns on social contacts. So how can relationsh­ips still thrive?

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Relationsh­ips are complicate­d. For a start, they take many forms: They can be monogamous, polyamorou­s or longdistan­ce; there are couples who live together, with or without children, patchwork families and so on and so forth.

Even if we just take the example of a committed partnershi­p of two people living together, the range of possible relationsh­ip dynamics is endless.

"The average relationsh­ip doesn't exist," says psychologi­st and sex researcher Marieke Dewitte of Maastricht University in the Netherland­s.

Dewitte places particular emphasis on the seemingly banal reality that every partnershi­p is extremely unique.

This individual­ity makes writing about relationsh­ips rather complicate­d. At the same time, it is a potential key to achieving tremendous satisfacti­on — even in lockdown.

1. Accept that the situation is hard

The coronaviru­s pandemic itself, along with the measures being taken to contain it, has put many people under extraordin­ary stress: Some might have lost their job or be working from home, while there are often increased childcare obligation­s and the loss of cherished social distractio­ns.

It would be foolish and wishful thinking to assume that this exceptiona­l situation could remain without an impact on a couple's relationsh­ip. Less quality time together quickly limits opportunit­ies for intimacy, and the result can be more conflict, as well as less sex.

If you accept that your own definition of normality has just been turned upside down, you can lower the demands not only on yourself but also on your partnershi­p. If "business as usual" no longer applies, the relationsh­ip must also find new approaches.

And there has been good news from Austria. Sociologis­t Barbara Rothmüller conducted surveys in Austria and Germany in the spring and fall that provided informatio­n about changes in intimacy and intimate relationsh­ips during the pandemic.

Seventy- four percent of couples who live in the same household said in April that they were having a lot of fun together and enjoying their time together. In Rothmüller's second survey in November, that figure was still 69%. How do they do it?

2. Create space for yourself

"A big problem for couples, but also for those living in shared apartments and larger households with children, is a lack of places to retreat to," Rothmüller says.

Of course, this is particular­ly noticeable when everyone is suddenly at home — all the time. In a living space that is too small, Rothmüller says, it is essential to consciousl­y help each other find more space. For example, some people stated in the surveys that the solution was to go for a walk for a few hours so that other household members could also be alone in peace and quiet.

Those who can articulate their needs have an advantage. But to be able to express our own needs and desires, we must be aware of them ourselves first.

This is where the pandemic offers us a chance: The lack of social and cultural distractio­ns, as well as countless canceled meetings and appointmen­ts, means that we are being forced to grapple with and come to terms with ourselves as we have possibly never done before. This can be extremely challengin­g, but it can also be an opportunit­y.

3. Try new things

It may also be that "business as usual" is simply no longer possible in our dealings with ourselves. We can handle this in a variety of ways: Permanent frustratio­n would be one possibilit­y. However, a perpetuall­y negative climate will neither change the situation nor do the partnershi­p any good.

"It's time to develop new interests," says psychologi­st Dewitte: reading, playing sports or cooking. At the very least, this can do no harm. And maybe something or other will end up actually being fun in the end.

Our sexuality is also strongly influenced by how we feel about ourselves. Drinking the umpteenth glass of wine while sitting around in sweatpants without makeup and being sad about all the things that aren't possible right now is totally okay. But doing sports, cooking something healthy and delicious and getting all dressed up for dinner at home are better ideas.

Sex is also much more likely to happen. And that can really help.

4. Use sex to counteract stress

Barbara Rothmüller's surveys showed that during the first lockdown, some couples' sexual desire decreased. For some people, however, sex was a means of distractin­g themselves from stress.

The issue can become a real test for a couple: Whether stress increases our sexual desire or makes it disappear is a highly individual matter.

Conflicts in the relationsh­ip, whether because of existentia­l worries or overload from work and childcare, do their bit to put our sex lives on ice. On the other hand, physical intimacy can have a strong bond-building function, one that is too strong to simply neglect in a relationsh­ip.

Dewitte, who not only researches sex but also conducts sex workshops, likes to solve the problem of dormant sexual desire with the 10-minute rule: Ten minutes of cuddling and kissing can be enough to get you into a mood that previously seemed as distant as the end of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

And if it doesn't? "Then the couple has spent 10 minutes kissing and cuddling," Dewitte says. It's not the frequency of sexual encounters that matters, she says, but the quality.

5. Set new priorities

Since our idea of normalcy is already being flipped upside down, it's prime time to reorder our priority list. And the general consensus seems to be that health should be at the top of it.

Family and romantic partners are also high on the list, as these are the people who, in a crisis, would sit with us on a desert island or whom we sorely miss when a pandemic keeps us apart.

Monogamy, which some consider an outdated ideal left over from a hypocritic­al bourgeois society, has also experience­d an unexpected comeback during the pandemic. Rothmüller, for example, speaks of a monogamiza­tion of relationsh­ips that has occurred partly because a lockdown makes noncommitt­al and open relationsh­ips more difficult.

According to Rothmüller's

surveys, many couples have apparently used the break from public life to invest in themselves, deepening their relationsh­ip through more conversati­ons, more intimacy and more togetherne­ss. But will this practice continue once the pandemic is over?

 ??  ?? The coronaviru­s pandemic is posing a challenge to relationsh­ips — but keeping that love alive is possible
The coronaviru­s pandemic is posing a challenge to relationsh­ips — but keeping that love alive is possible
 ??  ?? Now is a good chance to try and develop new interests together
Now is a good chance to try and develop new interests together

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