Harper's Bazaar (Singapore)

- Mating in Capt i v i t y : Unl o c k i n g Erotic Intelligen­ce The All-or-Nothing Marriage, Journal of Communicat­ion Don’t Waste Your Pretty, LGBTQ Clients in

hen I heard about Gwyneth Paltrow’s erstwhile “living apart together” arrangemen­t (LAT) with her husband, Brad Falchuk, early in their marriage— and how she felt it “helps with preserving mystery”—I registered the typical feeling of envy laced with derision that Paltrow so often inspires in me.“Of course she does,” I thought. But she and Falchuk aren’t alone. According to the United States Census Bureau’s 2019 Current Population Survey, there are roughly 9 million opposite-sex married couples who don’t live together and who love each other from afar for a variety of reasons. My husband, Brett, snores so loudly that I can hear him not only from a different room but from a different floor. After having three children, I’m prone to sheet-drenching night sweats. Oh, and we live with three children.These are only a few of many factors that preclude our household from being a haven of hot sex.

It’s not just the practical domestic considerat­ions that make intimacy scarce in my marriage; it’s also the absence of myster y. Famed couples therapist Esther Perel wrote in her book households. Film-maker Sharon Hyman is working on a documentar­y about LAT and according to psychologi­sts she has interviewe­d, this arrangemen­t can in fact be healthier for certain families.There’s also a movement among women who choose LAT for career reasons, opting to live apart from their partners and children during the workweek and spend time with them at the weekends, something that may seem radical at first glance but that men have been doing since forever.

More women than men find the idea of LAT appealing, Hyman says, which is unsurprisi­ng considerin­g the gender inequities that persist in many households. Demetria L. Lucas, a life coach and the author of says that LAT may eradicate this issue: “There are chores that most people do for themselves when they live alone, but somehow, when a woman is involved in a heterosexu­al relationsh­ip, it becomes women’s work.” LAT could eliminate this odious “second shift” many women take on and force men to scour their own toilets.

LAT is part of a larger movement t owa rd s defining partnershi­p or marr iage on one’s own terms. Psychother­apist Joe Kort, founder and Director of the Center for Relationsh­ip and Sexual Health, and the author of points out that LAT relationsh­ips were common in the LGBTQ community before it was a trend, either out of necessity in a homophobic culture or by personal preference. “Heterosexu­al couples are catching on, and understand­ing that marriage and relationsh­ips do not all have to look alike and be one way,” he says.

There’s no one-size-fits-all relationsh­ip and LAT is simply one choice among many. But regardless of living arrangemen­t, experts agree that prioritisi­ng autonomy and resisting routine can be critical components for a flourishin­g sex life and a rewarding partnershi­p.This means communicat­ing about individual priorities and putting boundaries in place to ensure that those priorities are met. Lucas recommends “taking a day or a meal to yourself every once in a while, or even travelling solo to reconnect with your independen­t self ”.

For my part, I’d love to live a life free from beard-hair-clogged drains, to drop the kids off at “my husband’s house” for a few hours or days so I can reacquaint myself with who I was before I became a wife and mother. And in my fantasy, this has less to do with avoiding squabbles about dishwasher-emptying and more to do with expanding the sense of potential within myself.

Highly independen­t people are good candidates for ‘living apart together’ arrangemen­ts because it allows them to enjoy the benefits of a close relationsh­ip without feeling smothered. —Eli J. Finkel

that a sense of t h e u n k n own a n d u n f a mi l i a r is a cr itical c o mponent t o d e s i re : “When there is nothing left to hide, there is nothing left to seek.” Brett and I are busy seeking our daughter’s lost yellow mittens or our baby’s wayward pacifier because his frantic crying is causing the dog to bark, and the dog’s barking is prompting our oldest kid to scream,“STOP BARKING!” We don’t have it in us to worry about seeking anything from each other. Maybe LAT would give us space to seek the unknown.

Eli J. Finkel, Director of Northweste­rn’s Relationsh­ips and Motivation Lab, and author of says that highly independen­t people are good candidates for LAT arrangemen­ts because it allows them “to enjoy the benefits of involvemen­t in a close relationsh­ip without feeling smothered”. Achieving closeness and connection without having to adjust my individual preference­s and habits to suit another’s sounds positively dreamy. And research shows LAT may also pave the way for a stronger bond.A study published in the in 2013 suggests that couples in long-distance relationsh­ips can achieve equal or greater emotional intimacy than those who are “geographic­ally close” due to a tendency to both idealise and disclose more to each other.

LAT can also be a viable option for blended families, since children are spared the stress of relocation or shuttling between

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