Posts Tagged ‘relationships’

Kissing Part 3 – Why Stop?

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011 by Barbara Gross, LMSW

I have been actively looking   for the answer to why people stop kissing. I love research, particularly medical and psychological  journals, because I love to read and I really like to know the answers to why things are the way they are. After searching literally everywhere, I found almost nothing. I can find statistics on how often people have intercourse at any age, single or married and on virtually every continent, but why people stop kissing is not a topic most people, researchers included, really consider. I really think they should.  Sex generally slows down and lessens over time, and the intensity certainly will, which I understand.  But why kissing, which many find even more intimate than intercourse, lessens and ends is unknown.

I think the reason is because intimacy between two people over time is really the hardest thing on earth to achieve. The statistics on divorce are widely known, the statistics on miserable marriages or even marginally miserable marriages are not. Staying close to another human being over time is extremely difficult. And when it is done successfully I honestly think it is one of life’s miracles. Hopefully a relationship starts out with a bang, hormones, and fireworks and fun. Some do not… some grow stronger over time.. but just about all relationships require tremendous work and energy to maintain closeness.

We know the reason why most versions of intimacy struggle and fail: exhaustion, children, financial stress, time stress, illness, etc. etc. So how do people keep it together? Not only the passion, but the connection.  It is a lot of work, yet with the right match, enough fun, humor and compatibility  the work of it hopefully becomes less arduous. I couldn’t find any research to explain the demise of kissing, but I can tell you from personal experience and logging countless hours listening to people talk about their relationships…that staying “connected” whether through kissing or other means is the best way to stay happy.  Kissing is just one aspect of connection. My boss says “if you don’t use it you lose it”, usually in reference to sex, but I would say the same is true for kissing. If you don’t keep doing it…… soon enough….you just won’t want to.

Kissing Part 1 – How Often do You Kiss?

Thursday, December 8th, 2011 by Barbara Gross, LMSW

A recent survey conducted by the British Heart Foundation found that, “one in five (18%) married people don’t pucker-up with their partner for an entire week, while two in five married people (40%) kiss for just five seconds or less when they get it on.  Apparently Scots kiss the longest, for 28 seconds. And  East Anglians ( those from the East side of England) kiss the most.”

Kissing is the first thing to go in a relationship. I have seen it over and over again, in relationships and marriages. I am not exactly sure why. Is it because it is too intimate? Is it because it takes time? Is it something that happens as a relationship progresses? Does it have to do with one’s age? What about where you live? Do people from certain places kiss more than others? I don’t know the answers to these questions, nor do I think that matters.  What matters is how kissing or not kissing affects you and your partner.

The survey also said, regarding statistics in England, “Young lovers in the 18 to 24 age group are making out an average 11 times each week”. Stereotypically, younger people are hooking up more often and they have the time and energy and hormones to be kissing more often.

Sadly, only, “5% of people aged over 45 are managing over 31 snogs (or kisses) each week.” 31 kisses a week, averages out to be slightly over four kisses a day. Two in the morning and 2 at night? And only Five percent?! That is awful! So according to this survey,  95% of Brits over 45 are not kissing much at all, not even four kisses a day. If you are not into kissing I guess this doesn’t matter a bit , but if you are and you have just gotten lazy or busy or disconnected from your partner, then put it right back into your life. Kissing can make you feel better, but more on that next week.

Do you enjoy kissing? How often you do it? How long you have been in your relationship?

I want to hear from you!

Online Dating Part 2: My response to Online Dating in the New Yorker (A little Different Than Paumgarten)

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 by Barbara Gross, LMSW

Online dating is one of the best things to come out of the explosion of communication and social media ventures. As the number of people you know becomes smaller over time, the number of single friends you have may also become more limited.  So with online dating that pool of available single people always remains fairly large (or larger) than the group of people you already know, and as a single person you can continue to meet people you would never come into contact with. Paumgarten states a very important statistic in his recent article about online dating in the New Yorker, “1 in 6 marriages is the result of online dating”.

Millions of couples have met, married and stayed married from online introductions. As a therapist who works in the field of relationships and sexuality, I think anyone can meet and marry. The complicated part is to stay married if that is what you want. I look forward to longitudinal studies done on couples who met online versus those who met other ways and how they all fare over time. I think the way a couple meets is probably not predictive in one way or another of how successful they will be, but it would certainly be interesting to see if it is.

Online dating is the most popular way for couples to meet today. Young people will never know the stigma once attached to online dating, and in my opinion that is a great thing.   Many people, young and old, have had bad online experiences, but I would say the exact same statistics hold for meeting someone through a friend, family or at a bar. Relationships are complicated because people are complicated, and in general I feel that most people reveal only what they are comfortable revealing. So the process of discovering or uncovering another person and assessing if they are a good match for you remains one of life’s great mysteries. Online dating  just makes the whole process a little more accessible.

Sex = Love?

Thursday, October 28th, 2010 by Bat Sheva Marcus LMSW MPH PhD

Does sex equal love in a romantic relationship?

Okay—most people would roll their eyes if you asked them that. OF COURSE sex does not equal love. Sex is sex and love is love.  Yet… when one partner does not want to have sex with the other partner, there can often get translated into a lack of love or lack of passion.

The bottom line is no matter how often someone tells their significant other “It’s not you. Really. I just don’t want to have sex at all,” the partner still hears.: “he doesn’t really want me. He’s not that into me. He obviously isn’t attracted enough to me. If I was really attractive, if he really thought I was sexy, if he really loved me, he’d want me.”

Here’s the deal. We want to be wanted. We need to be wanted. And most of us yearn to be wanted in the most fundamental, elemental, intimate ways possible. And that, like it or not, translates into sex. Many, many people cannot live in a relationship without having the kind of affirmative, intimate connection that sex affords.

So I guess if pressed I’d say: Yea, sometimes sex does equal love.

The taste of semen…

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 by Dr. Neil Cannon

They say that if a man lives long enough he will ultimately die from prostate cancer.  On a similar note, in my world, if a workshop goes on long enough somebody will inevitably ask about semen.  Well here it is folks, your comprehensive guide to semen in 500 words or less.  First off, semen is not to be confused with seamen.  Although many seamen are men, and most men have semen, and most semen contains 1% sperm, not all seamen can swim.

As for the taste of semen, all men try to convince their partner that semen tastes like honey.  The fact is however that most men have never drunk a full serving of semen so they don’t really know what semen tastes like.  In my experience as a couple’s counselor, I have noticed however that the taste of semen is often impacted by the state of the relationship.  Imagine that!

For the complete article go to:  http://www.accessrx.com/blog/sexuality-dr-neil-cannon/all-about-semen/