The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Intimacy is a couple’s issue

- ELLIE TESHER ellie@thestar.ca @ellieadvic­e

Dear readers - Regarding the following response to the Sexually Frustrated Husband (April 27):

What have you done lately to romance your wife?

Have you engaged with her in ways other than in the bedroom?

Have you gone on walks with her? Gone to dinner at a nice restaurant? Been to a movie together? Have you invited people over to spend time with you both? Have you attended theatrical performanc­es? Taken an interest course together? Have you given her a massage?

What have you done to ensure that you have shared experience­s together?

It’s very easy for you to blame your wife for not meeting your physical intimacy needs, but are you meeting her emotional needs?

She needs to feel cared for. She needs to feel you’re with her emotionall­y, that you cherish time together, that you can be vulnerable together in the privacy of your bedroom.

Building a life of shared experience­s will give you ways to communicat­e that lead to increased closeness and intimacy in the bedroom. Give it a try.

Ellie - As someone who’s called upon daily to respond to situations like those of the man mentioned, complainin­g about his wife’s disinteres­t in having sex with him, I need to note the realities of relationsh­ip columns:

We can only guess at the underlying facts of who could’ve done more to solve this problem. And while any one of the questions seem logical to ask, the reality is that no one in the man’s original letter answered any of these questions. We just don’t know the truth.

So, I advise all readers to understand that there’s no obvious fault from only one party.

If there’s a reason to end their marital sex, the wife also showed neglect ... no mention of seeing a doctor to correct any internal sexual “problem”, a seeing a sex therapist for emotional reasons or a marriage counsellor for relationsh­ip misunderst­andings/ hurts, etc.

It’s not only up to the husband to resolve whatever has caused the wife to disengage from sex and intimacy. It’s not a certain matter of bad husband/neglected wife. It’s about two people avoiding the many ways to try to resolve their issues or agreeing to adjust to them.

Readers #2-3: My husband and I are marriage counsellor­s who’ve had cases almost identical to this one in question.

We’ve found that often the partner who changes and no longer wishes to have sex with their spouse, is indeed still enjoying sex ... but with someone else.

They’re being loyal to their lover, not to their spouse.

While this isn’t always the case, in our experience it’s certainly worth mentioning. It’s easier for the rejected spouse to discover the truth and go from there, exploring their various options.

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