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Category Archives: Abuse

10 Reasons Why Your Wife Doesn’t Want to Have Sex

28 Tuesday May 2019

Posted by BNG in Abuse, Dating, Love, Lovers, Marriage, Problems, Relationships, Romance

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I have a lot of guys who read the blog, and I get tons of emails from guys, and the most common problem I hear about is, “my wife never wants sex!”

So today I want to present 10 of the most common reasons I’ve come across why a woman may say “no”. If you’re one of my female readers, read the list, and if you think I’m missing something, chime in in the comments! And if you’re a guy, read the list and see if any resonate with you–and then talk to your wife about them. (And if that’s hard to do, here’s a post I wrote a while ago to start get the conversation about valuing sex in marriage going).

If your wife never says yes to sex, one of these might be the reason why

So here are 10 reasons a woman doesn’t want sex:

1. She doesn’t feel connected to you.

For a woman, to have sex after you haven’t talked much in a while feels strange at best, and insulting or degrading at worst. If you haven’t shown that you care what’s going on in her heart, and if you haven’t shared your heart, it’s hard for her to want to open up. For her, sex means getting physically vulnerable. That’s hard to do. If she doesn’t feel as if you’ve been emotionally vulnerable, then sex is often off the table.

For you, of course, sex is often the doorway into emotional vulnerability, since you feel so close to her afterwards. But realize that for her, she needs you to open up first. So spend some time talking and doing stuff together first! Some ideas:

2. She feels overwhelmed.

Women are multitaskers; because we feel so responsible for everyone in our lives, it’s hard for us to turn off the voices in our head that are always reminding us of things that need doing. We feel constant stress about stuff that needs to get done. If there are too many things on our plate, we won’t be able to relax at night. And because women need to be able to concentrate on sex in order for our bodies to feel good (if our heads aren’t in the game, our bodies won’t follow), then feeling overwhelmed kills our sex drive. For men, sex is nice distraction. For women, distractions make sex virtually impossible.

The solution? Help her not feel so overwhelmed! Talk to her about what’s on her plate. Help her through figuring out how to say no to some things. Help her with some of the evening routines, like making lunches for the next day or putting kids in bed. Spend the last 15 minutes of the day helping her think through and talk through what needs to be done tomorrow, so that she can let it go.

3. She has tunnel vision (often for the kids; or for her job)

When something is on our minds, it’s difficult to stop obsessing about it. While men often operate in boxes, and can switch from one box to the next, when something is really worrying us, or when there’s a big challenge ahead, it’s hard to put it aside. Whether it’s a sick child or a parent who is in trouble; a big project due at work; or a friend in crisis, if something is on our hearts, it’s hard to concentrate on sex (and again–sex needs our brain to be present!)

What to do: If she’s worried, listen to her. Let her talk. Pray with her. Be patient. Sometimes she needs the reminder to put things in God’s hands!

4. She’s simply exhausted.

Yes, sex helps you sleep better. But when you are really tired, sex doesn’t seem that appealing.

What to do: Too make you sure neither of you are too tired for sex, take the initiative in setting a bedtime for both of you. Go to bed at a decent hour every night, together. Take as much of the responsibility for some of the housework and childcare as you reasonably can. A good rule of thumb is this: If she is working, then you should be, too. After dinner, if she’s busy cleaning up or putting the kids to bed, then make sure you find a task that needs doing as well!

5. Sex doesn’t feel that great.

Let’s face it: men pretty much always climax during sex. Women don’t. And for many women, sex just doesn’t feel that great. Maybe orgasm is elusive for her. Maybe she’s never figured out how to make it feel good. Maybe she’s said to you, “It’s okay, honey, I don’t mind. I just like feeling close to you.” Eventually that gets old. And it’s hard to keep having sex year after year if she honestly doesn’t feel good.

The solution: Figure out how to make it feel good for her! Remember that her sexual pleasure matters and talk to her about it, because she may have a hard time believing it.

6. Sex feels degrading, like you’re using her.

God designed sex to be threefold: spiritually intimate (feeling like you’re one); emotionally intimate; and physically intimate. Unfortunately, sometimes in our culture we focus so much on the physical that sex actually becomes impersonal. If you’ve used porn, for instance, and she knows that you derive sexual pleasure from looking at other women, then she’ll feel like sex is dirty. You don’t really want HER; you just want release. And you may even be thinking about those images when you’re with her!

Now, that may not be the case. But if you’ve used porn, that’s often what she’ll fear. Show her that you’re getting real about addressing the porn issue in your life.

Join an accountability group. Tell her what steps you’re going to take to make sure that the next time you feel stressed, you’ll have something else to turn to rather than porn.

Or perhaps the problem is not with you at all. Perhaps she grew up with sex being used as a weapon against her, and she was abused or assaulted. Then it’s very hard to get excited about sex in your marriage.
7. Her hormone levels are all over the place.

Yes, hormones play a huge part in a woman’s libido! And when our hormones are out of whack, then our libido may be, too.

If you fear that there’s something really wrong, encourage her to see a doctor. But also educate yourselves on how to best support her hormones. Start eating real food, and not so much packaged foods. Exercise. Get good sleep.

8. She doesn’t feel a great need for it, but she does feel a need for other things.

For you, sex may be one of your primary needs. But if she lives a really busy life, her primary need may be something very different. Maybe what she needs to feel at peace is a few hours every week by herself, with no kids hanging off of her and no demands on her. Maybe she needs some time to read a book, pursue a hobby, or even just have a bubble bath. Ask her, “what do you currently feel like you have no time to do but, if you did it, it would help you feel like you’re on an even keel?” And then help her find time every week to do that one thing!

9. She hates her body.

You may look at her and want her. But if she feels as if she doesn’t measure up, then it’s hard for her to feel sexy.

So much of a woman’s libido is tied up in feeling like she is desired. The really miserable part for you men, though, is that it isn’t enough for you to actually desire her. She has to feel as if she’s worthy of being desired. And so if she feels fat, or if she feels as if her body has gone downhill, then it’s hard for her to feel uninhibited.

So boost her self-image! Don’t tell her that you don’t think she’s attractive, unless you want to kill your sex life. Talk to her about what specifically you like about her body. When you’re relaxing together, touch her there and tell her, “I love looking at this.” And tell her WHY you love her, too.

10. Your hygiene isn’t the best it could be.

Having unpleasant conversations is difficult, and many women just avoid them. I have so many women send me in questions saying, “How can I tell my husband that I don’t like making love to him when he hasn’t brushed his teeth first?” And this has been going on for years! They’ve been avoiding sex, or trying to make sex go as quickly as possible and getting very little out of it, because they’re afraid to say, “your breath stinks.”

This one is so easy to fix! Before you try to initiate sex with your wife, take a shower. Brush your teeth. And put on pyjamas with no holes in them! See if that makes a difference.

So there you go! 10 reasons why women often try to avoid sex. Remember–I also have several books and a course on how to boost your libido that can help women see sex differently. But today, I thought I’d help men try to see it from the wife’s point of view.

So are you looking for love? or do you want to improve your relationship? Look no further. Join our Facebook group at http://www.facebook.com/groups/romantic.relationship Please Don’t Forget to Subscribe to our Youtube Channel for more of Our Videos, and Like us on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Instagram. Also visit our other website at www.Romantic-Relationship.com and Buy CELEB NUDE Photos & Canvas from The World’s Largest CELEBRITY NUDES! www.photooh.com

Types of Abuses In Intimate Relationships & How to Avoid Them

26 Sunday May 2019

Posted by BNG in Abuse, Dating, Marriage, Relationships, Romance

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The term “intimate relationships” is used here to be maximally inclusive of any romantic and/or sexual relationship between two non-biologically-related people, including dating or courtship relationships, relationships in which the romantic partners live together in the same household (cohabiting), relationships in which two people have children in common but are no longer formally romantically or sexually involved with one another, and marital relationships. Ideally such relationships are loving and supportive, protective of and safe for each member of the couple. Unfortunately, some people, while fulfilling these nurturing, positive needs of their partners at least some of the time and at least early in their relationship’s development, also behave abusively, causing their partners and often others as well substantial emotional and/or physical pain and injury. In extreme cases, abusive behavior ends in the death of one or both partners, and, sometimes, other people as well. Non-lethal abuse may end when a relationship ends. Frequently, however, abuse continues or worsens once a relationship is over. This can happen whether the relationship is ended by just one of the partners or, seemingly, by mutual consent.

There are several types of abuse that occur in intimate romantic relationships. It is frequently the case that two or more types of abuse are present in the same relationship. Emotional abuse often precedes, occurs with, and sometimes follows physical or sexual abuse in relationships. Sexual and non-sexual physical abuse also co-occur in many abusive relationships, and, as with emotional abuse, sexual and non-sexual abuse often are combined elements of a single abusive incident.

Emotional Abuse also called psychological abuse or aggression, verbal abuse or aggression, symbolic abuse or aggression, and nonphysical abuse or aggression. Psychological and emotional abuse has been variously characterized as “the use of verbal and nonverbal acts which symbolically hurt the other or the use of threats to hurt the other” (Straus, 1979, p. 77); “behaviors that can be used to terrorize the victim that do not involve the use of physical force” (Shepard & Campbell, 1992, p. 291); the “direct infliction of mental harm” and “threats or limits to the victim’s well-being” (Gondolf, 1987), and ” an ongoing process in which one individual systematically diminishes and destroys the inner self of another. The essential ideas, feelings, perceptions, and personality characteristics of the victim are constantly belittled.” (Loring, 1994, p. 1).

Psychological and emotional abuse is considered an important form of abuse because many women report that it is as harmful or worse than physical abuse they suffer.

Woman with arms crossed is sulking while her partner is talking to her

Behaviors regarded as psychologically and emotionally abusive include, but are not limited to:

Yelling.
Insulting the partner.
Swearing at one’s partner or calling him or her names.
Belittling or ridiculing the partner; insulting the partner.
Belittling or berating one’s partner in front of other people.
Putting down the partner’s physical appearance or intellect.
Saying things to upset or frighten one’s partner; acting indifferently to one’s partner’s feelings.
Making one’s partner do humiliating or demeaning things.
Demanding obedience to whims.
Ordering the partner around/treating him or her like a servant.
Becoming angry when chores are not done when wanted or as wanted.
Acting jealous and suspicious of the partner’s friends and social contacts.
Putting down one’s partner’s friends and/or family.
Monitoring the partner’s time and whereabouts.
Monitoring one’s partner’s telephone calls or e-mail contact.
Stomping out of a room during an argument or heated discussion.
Sulking and refusing to talk about an issue.
Making decisions that affect both people or the family without consulting one’s partner or without reaching agreement with one’s partner.
Withholding affection.
Threatening to leave the relationship.
Doing something to spite one’s partner.
Withholding resources such as money.
Refusing to share in housework or childcare.
Restricting the partner’s usage of the telephone and/or car.
Not allowing one’s partner to leave the home alone.
Telling one’s partner his or her feelings are irrational or crazy.
Turning other people against one’s partner.
Blaming the partner for one’s problems and/or one’s violent behavior.
Preventing the partner from working or attending school.
Preventing the partner from socializing with friends and/or seeing his or her family.
Preventing the partner from seeking medical care or other types of help.
Throwing objects (but not at the partner).
Hitting or kicking a wall, furniture, doors, etc.
Shaking a finger or fist at one’s partner.
Making threatening gestures or faces.
Threatening to destroy or destroying personal property belonging to one’s partner.
Threatening to use physical or sexual aggression against one’s partner.
Driving dangerously while one’s partner is in the car as a conscious intentional act to scare or intimidate.
Using the partner’s children to threaten them (e.g., threatening to kidnap).
Threatening violence against the partner’s children, family, friends, or pets.

These examples are based on items from various instruments used to measure emotional aggression in romantic and family dyads.

Economic Abuse: This could be considered a subcategory of emotional abuse since it serves many of the same functions as emotional abuse and has some of the same emotional effects on victims. However, it can be distinguished by its focus on preventing victims from possessing or maintaining any type of financial self-sufficiency or resources and enforcing material dependence of the victim on the abusive partner that is, this behavior is intended to make the victim entirely dependent on the abusive partner to supply basic material needs like food, clothing, and shelter or to supply the means to obtain them. The desire to isolate the victim from other people can be one of the motives for economic abuse as well, however. Behaviors that could lead to the material dependence of a victim of abuse on her or his abuser some of which are already listed under the larger Emotional Abuse category include but are not limited to, when the abusive party:

Makes monetary or investment decisions to which the partner might object that affect both people and/or the family without consulting the partner or without reaching agreement with the partner.
Withholds resources such as money or spends a large share of the family budget on him- or herself leaving little money leftover for purchase of food and payment of bills.
Refuses to share in housework or childcare responsibilities so the partner can work.

Restricts the partner’s usage of the family car or other means of transportation.
Does not allow the partner to leave the home alone.
Prevents or forbids the partner from working or attending school or skills training sessions.
Interferes with work performance through harassing and monitoring activities like frequent telephone calls or visits to the workplace (in the hopes of getting the partner fired, for example).

Social Isolation: This also could be considered a subcategory of emotional abuse since it serves many of the same functions as emotional abuse. It can be distinguished by its focus on interfering with and destroying or impairing the victim’s support network and making the victim entirely or largely dependent on the abusive partner for information, social interaction, and satisfying emotional needs. Socially isolating the victim increases the abuser’s power over the victim, but it also protects the abuser. If the victim does not have contact with other people the perpetrator will not be as likely to have to deal with legal or social consequences for his behavior and the victim will not be as likely to get help, including help that may lead to an end to the relationship. Abusive behaviors that could lead to the social isolation of a victim of abuse (some of which were already listed under the larger Emotional Abuse category above) include:

Acting jealous and suspicious of the partner’s friends and social contacts;
Putting down the partner’s friends and/or family.
Monitoring the partner’s time and whereabouts.
Restricting the partner’s usage of the telephone and/or car; not allowing the partner to leave the home alone.
Preventing the partner from working or attending school.
Acting in ways that are aimed at turning other people against the partner.
Preventing the partner from socializing with friends and/or seeing his or her family.
Preventing the partner from seeking medical care or other types of help; threatening the lives or well-being of others with whom the partner might have contact.

Physical Abuse also called physical aggression or abuse; intimate partner violence or abuse; conjugal, domestic, spousal, or dating or courtship violence or abuse. Physical aggression in the context of intimate relationships has been defined as “an act carried out with the intention, or perceived intention, of causing physical pain or injury to another person” (Straus & Gelles, 1986). This is behavior that is intended, at minimum, to cause temporary physical pain to the victim, and includes relatively “minor” acts like slapping with an open hand and severe acts of violence that lead to injury and/or death. It may occur just once or sporadically and infrequently in a relationship, but in many relationships it is repetitive and chronic, and it escalates in frequency and severity over time.

Physical abuse includes, but is not limited to:

Spitting on.
Slapping or hitting with an open hand.
Spanking (non-playfully).
Scratching.
Pushing; shoving; grabbing.
Arm twisting or bending.
Hair pulling.
Hitting or punching with a fist.
Throwing objects at the partner.
Hitting with hard or sharp objects.
Kicking; biting (non-playfully).
Throwing or body slamming the partner against objects, walls, floors, vehicles, onto the ground, etc.
Pushing or shoving or dragging a partner down stairs or off any raised platform or height.
Cutting; scalding or burning.
Forcing a person out of a moving vehicle.
Holding down or tying up the partner to restrain the partner against his or her will.
Locking a partner in a room, closet, or other enclosed space.
Choking or strangling.
Beating up.
Attempting to drown.
Threatening with a weapon.
Attempting to use a weapon against a partner.
Actually using a weapon against a partner.

Sexual abuse includes behaviors that fall under legal definitions of rape, plus physical assaults to the sexual parts of a person’s body, and making sexual demands with which one’s partner is uncomfortable (Marshall, 1992a; Shepard & Campbell, 1992). It also had been defined as including “sex without consent, sexual assault, rape, sexual control of reproductive rights, and all forms of sexual manipulation carried out by the perpetrator with the intention or perceived intention to cause emotional, sexual, and physical degradation to another person” (Abraham, 1999, p. 592).

Sexual abuse includes, but is not limited to:

Demanding sex when one’s partner is unwilling.
Demanding or coercing the partner to engage in sexual activities with which the partner is uncomfortable.
Coerced penile penetration of any kind (oral, vaginal, or anal).
Physically coerced sexual acts of any kind (e.g., through threats with or use of weapons or threats or use of other means of inflicting bodily harm).
Using an object or fingers on one’s partner in a sexual way against his or her will.
Use of alcohol or drugs on one’s partner to obtain sex when the partner was (and/or would be) unwilling.

Physical attacks against the sexual parts of the partner’s body.
Interference with birth control.
Insistence on risky sexual practices (such as refusal to use a condom when a sexually transmitted disease is a known or suspected risk).
Forced or coerced participation in pornography.
Forced or coerced sexual activity in the presence of others, including children.
Forced or coerced prostitution or non-consensual sexual activity with people other than and/or in addition to the partner.
Forced or coerced sex with animals.
Forced or coerced participation in bondage or other sadomasochistic activities.

Stalking (also known clinically as obsessional following. This type of behavior also can be directed toward people with whom the perpetrator has not been romantically involved and can involve motives other than sexual or “amorous” ones notably anger, hostility, paranoia, and delusion. Stalking has been defined variously as: knowingly and repeatedly following, harassing, or threatening another person. Unsolicited and unwelcome behavior, that is, initiated by the defendant against the complainant, that is, at minimum alarming, annoying, or harassing, and that involves two or more incidents of such behavior. A course of conduct directed at a specific person that involves repeated visual or physical proximity; nonconsensual communication; verbal, written, or implied threats; or a combination thereof that would cause fear in a reasonable person with repeated meaning on two or more occasions, and “the willful, malicious, and repeated following and harassing of another person that threatens his or her safety” and “an abnormal or long term pattern of threat and harassment directed toward a specific individual.

As a form of intimate partner abuse, stalking is frequently associated with separation or the end of a romantic relationship. However, some of the behaviors classified under the emotional abuse, economic abuse, and social isolation categories listed above that occur in both intact and ended relationships qualify as stalking behaviors as well. Walker and Meloy (1998) have suggested that, with regard to intact intimate romantic relationships, stalking is an “extreme form of typical behavior between a couple that has escalated to the point of monitoring, surveillance, and overpossessiveness, and that induces fear. Results from the National Violence Against Women Survey (Tjaden & Thoennes, 1998) indicate that many women who are stalked by intimate partners (36%) are stalked by their partners both during and after their relationships end.

Stalking includes, but is not limited to, behaviors such as:

Secretly following and/or spying on the partner.
Hiring someone else to follow or spy on the partner.
Verbally threatening the partner (implicitly or explicitly) through telephone calls or messages on telephone answering machines, written or electronic correspondence, or in person.
Sending cards, letters, gifts or other packages, etc. to the partner’s home or office or leaving such things at the partner’s home, office or on or in the partner’s vehicle inappropriately i.e.,
inappropriately given the status of the relationship).
Appearing in places the partner frequents and waiting for the partner to catch a glimpse of him or her.
Threatening to damage or destroy the partner’s personal property.
Damaging or destroying the partner’s personal property.
Stealing from the partner.
Accosting the partner or someone close to the partner.

So are you in an abusive relationship?

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