Good News for Married Couples

Couple photo

According to a recent study married couples have the most active sex lives, and are also spending more time together. This is great news for couples! Men and women in the study report having sex with their spouse 58 times a year, which is a little more than once a week.

While the media would have you believe that it’s the single life that has it going on, don’t be fooled. While many married couples would like to improve their intimate relationship, it’s good to know that marriage is still the best way to go.

(The General Social Survey, is sponsored by the National Science Foundation and is based at the University of Chicago. The General Social Survey uses a national representative sample to track the opinions and social behaviors of Americans since 1972.)



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Comments
  • UnderTheSun November 2, 2008 at 10:18 pm

    It’s good to hear this news.

    I wonder if that 58 times/year figure was gathered from a sample set which includes people like me at 0 times/year. If so, that drives the average for non-pathological couples to over twice a week.

    Meanwhile, I was in the car today with my wife and we were listening to a John Mellencamp favorite on the radio, “I need a lover who won’t drive me crazy”. The words continue: “A girl to thrill me, and then go away… A girl who knows the meaning of ‘hey, hit the highway'”.

    We’ve heard this song many times before, but I think we both smirked at the same time today after hearing that last line. After a pause, I offered “he must have been really burned by some girl”, and my wife replied, “yea, I guess so”.

    And then I reflected for a moment and thought to myself, “hey, wait a minute. What’s worse: a lover who drives you crazy, or a NON-lover who drives you crazy??” He’s better off than I am!

    It’s incredible to imagine what we have to look forward to when God’s done burning all this dross out of us and turning up something that looks a little like gold…

  • JustMe November 3, 2008 at 12:51 pm

    UnderTheSun,

    Do you mind sharing your coping skills? We are much less than the study’s average but more than zero, and I must say that I don’t cope very well. Please let me know how you keep your sanity and how you manage to not let this drive a wedge between you and your spouse.

    Thank you!

  • letsbefriends November 3, 2008 at 10:51 pm

    Well, personally I’m glad it’s an average. That means that there are also those that bring the average up to once a week (offsetting those in the “Zero” category).

    To Quote a contributor to Dr. Laura’s book on care and feeding of husbands, “We need more sex. Once a day is good”.

    Also, thank you, Laura B. for sponsoring this blog and writing a fantast book that balances propriety with some fundamental realities that couples frequently have a hard time discussing and coming together on. Thank you very much. It’s made a tremendous difference in my life. There’s still a lot more to work on, but I’m not complaining anymore.

    Sincerely, from one who brings the average up – thanks in part to “Strengthening Marriage”.

    • JL December 1, 2008 at 1:44 pm

      I thought it was good to hear about the average because it gives me an idea about what others are doing. It would be nice to have sex once a day but once a week is probably more likely.

      I feel it is better to plan on once a week and if it comes more often, great!

  • JustGettingBy November 4, 2008 at 7:36 am

    I am with ‘JustMe’ asking ‘UnderTheSun’, “how do you cope and keep a good attitude and not let this drive a wedge in your marriage?”

    Having dealt with significant (but luckily not much as ‘UnderTheSun’) differences in desire intimacy for decades and trying every way I can to rectify the situation, I know the cycle well. I try hard to do EVERYTHING I could possibly do to please and make my wife feel as best she can. She will get irritated with me and I will crash into depression. I just can’t keep giving 100% and getting such little love back. It makes me feel selfish for saying it that way. Having said that I have been told by several friends (that know NOTHING of our intimacy struggles) that I was matched up with my wife because I am “as patient as Job.”

    I would also echo ‘letsbefriends’ thanking of Laura for her book and other efforts. I know it must have taken quite a bit of courage to write her book – and she writes SO well and is so insightful. It has not directly helped my marriage, but it has helped me see myself as someone with “righteous desires that are of God” and not some sinful person that can’t control my desires. That has helped me immensely.

    Thanks Laura!

    • UnderTheSun November 8, 2008 at 12:20 am

      To JustMe, JustGettingBy, and my other friends who ask “how do you cope and keep a good attitude and not let this drive a wedge in your marriage?”

      There’s a reason the Book of Job is so long: the mental contortions you can go through trying to get an answer to heart cry “Why, Lord??” are many and drawn out. And I’m afraid that I share all of Job’s faults and a few more of my own, still.

      I’ve been battling this problem since my wedding night a couple of decades ago. Just like the Stages of Grief (see http://www.cancersurvivors.org/Coping/end%20term/stages.htm), I’ve been through the gamut of emotions, possibly several times.

      I continue to struggle with bitterness and anger against my wife, but I usually keep it to myself, since discussing the topic either leads her (deeper?) into a state of depression, or out of guilt she’ll concede to try to “make time for me” sometime, reluctantly and emotionlessly, mind you.

      And meanwhile, my mind is just a fantasy playground. I used to try to fight the thoughts, but that just makes it worse. God made us to love and be intimate. That’s all I’m asking for. I don’t see how that can be wrong.

      So I can’t say it doesn’t drive a wedge in our marriage. I’m deeply disillusioned. I flirt, sometimes just to try to remember what it’s like to get one of those looks of desire from someone, and to make sure I’m still a functioning human being. My sex drive and my integrity are constantly collaborating in my brain trying to devise a solution to my sphinx-like riddle of a dilemma: how to end up with a lover and still not technically break my vows. I’ve pleaded with God on a number of occasions to just bend the rules for me, but so far, no dice. Jesus was also unsuccessful in getting God to bend the rules: “let this cup pass from me…”

      So here I am, in the middle of the night, when I should be up lying beside my wife, but I can’t sleep. You’ve heard of the “Bridge to Nowhere”? Well, I’ve got the “Bed to Nowhere”.

      Strangely enough, God doesn’t mind so much if I whine and fuss, as long as I do it to him. It’s when I walk away and ignore him that he gets concerned. And then once in a while he shuts up the whining with a line like “where were YOU when I created the Universe?”

      This past Sunday’s sermon about how the Israelites’ 40 years in the wilderness is a picture of the Christian life reminded me of a favorite Michael Card song, and I’ll close with the lyrics.

      Blessings to you, friends. I wish we could meet in person.

      ______________________

      “In The Wilderness”, by Michael Card

      http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?i=49674048&id=49674189&s=143441

      Chorus:

      In the wilderness

      In the wilderness

      He calls his sons and daughters

      To the wilderness

      But he gives grace sufficient

      to survive any test

      And that’s the painful purpose of the wilderness

      In the wilderness we wander

      In the wilderness we weep

      In the wasteland of our wanting

      Where the darkness seems so deep

      We search for the beginning, for an exodus to home

      And find that those who follow him must often walk alone

      Chorus

      In the wilderness we’re wondering

      for a way to understand

      In the wilderness there’s not a way

      for the Way’s become a man

      and the man’s become the Exodus, the way to holy ground

      But wandering in the wilderness is the best way to be found

      Chorus

      Groaning and growing amidst the desert days

      the windy winter wilderness can blow the self away

      Chorus

      And that’s the painful promise of the wildernessIn the wilderness

      In the wilderness

      He calls his sons and daughters

      To the wilderness

      But he gives grace sufficient

      to survive any test

      And that’s the painful purpose of the wilderness

      In the wilderness we wander

      In the wilderness we weep

      In the wasteland of our wanting

      Where the darkness seems so deep

      We search for the beginning, for an exodus to home

      And find that those who follow him must often walk alone

      Chorus

      In the wilderness we’re wondering

      for a way to understand

      In the wilderness there’s not a way

      for the Way’s become a man

      and the man’s become the Exodus, the way to holy ground

      But wandering in the wilderness is the best way to be found

      Chorus

      Groaning and growing amidst the desert days

      the windy winter wilderness can blow the self away

      Chorus

      And that’s the painful promise of the wilderness

      • klover November 18, 2008 at 9:37 am

        I feel for all who struggle to become “one” with the Lord and their spouse.

        I think we need to do a much better job of teaching intimacy in our homes and in the church. Virtue is more to do with “yes” than “no”. We “save” ourselves BECAUSE we need to GIVE ourselves — growing up in the home and the church my wife and I ONLY heard the “NO” — and we heard it constantly and repeatedly!!! I have a real hard time not being resentful of our parents and our church teachers/leaders — I feel they have robbed/damed us!!! We need to teach how to GIVE!!!!!!

  • JustMe November 18, 2008 at 2:08 pm

    UnderTheSun,

    Thank you for your comments. Somehow there is some comfort in knowing that others struggle with similar issues. I’m in no position to offer counsel or suggestions but will mention two things. I think we all have some depression in our lives and perhaps for most of us we can deal with it without outside help. Some depression really is a medical condition and is no different than pneumonia or indigestion in that it can be treated. Since you mentioned that your wife has some depression, if you haven’t done so already, you might consider different treatment options.

    Secondly, I have found that I am more happy when I assume that my wife loves me rather than that she doesn’t. Believing that she loves me, even in the absence of the type of “evidence” that I might like to have, allows me to see her strengths. I am in a better position to give and to love unconditionally from this point of view. Perhaps you are already there, but this is something that has recently helped me.

    klover, I don’t think the church will teach much more on intimacy than what they have already. Fortunately we have resources such as Laura’s book, but I think we are largely on our own.

    I, too, have wondered about why I wasn’t taught more in my youth about such an important topic. I think our parents did pretty much what they were taught by their parents- it is just handed from generation to generation. I want to do better than my parents did, but I have yet to have a meaningful discussion about intimacy with my children either. We do need to break this cycle though…

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