How much sex
makes people happiest? Is there a magic number of times per week the average
couple should aim for to keep both partners happy in bed and out? Traditionally,
therapists say sex counts for about a quarter of the total happiness of a
relationship.
New studies
reveal all sorts of interesting and contradictory evidence on how much sex
contributes to long-term relationship satisfaction. Here’s the latest on who is
happiest doing what:
Couples Who Have Sex Once A Week
The reality
is, this is the category most people fit into. If forced to generalize about
how often the average couple have
sex, once a week is probably the best estimate you are going to get far lower
than the often banded about figure of 2.5 times a week.
The most recent reputable data on Britain’s bedtime habits reported most people have sex around five times a month. The good news is, there’s now research to prove weekly sex isn’t the failure lots of couples think it is. A sizeable US study done earlier this year of 2,400 married couples found although couples who had more sex said they were happier, the benefit levelled off at once a week.
Couples who
had sex four or more times a week weren’t any happier than those who did it
weekly. Why does this figure hit the jackpot? Because it’s a realistic goal. It
allows you to find a time when both of you are feeling relaxed enough to become
aroused but is often enough to stop the awful pressure couples feel when
there’s been a sex drought.
The longer you go without sex, the more the pressure is on to have sex for longer next time but if you can’t find time for a quickie, how do you find time and energy for a two-hour marathon session that’s also got to be fantastic to make up for not having it for ages?
Couples Who Have Sex Every Day
If you are
under 25 or in the first throes of your relationship, you will put a mental
tick beside this one and go back to finding out the latest on Kim and Kanye. But
if you’re a long-term couple or older, the idea of daily sex will probably
seem, well, unlikely. A few years ago, books like “365 Nights: A Memoir of
Intimacy” grabbed the headlines, chronicling what happened when a long-term
couple agreed to have sex every single day no excuses allowed.
The couple claimed at the end of their sex-fuelled year, they felt happier, less angry and less stressed. Since then, hundreds of journalists and other couples have taken the challenge with varying success.
Daily sex is
a big ask for most busy people and more sex isn’t necessarily a good thing. One
study that asked couples having sex about six times a month to double the
frequency had a disastrous effect on their sex lives. They enjoyed sex less and
were in worse moods than those who stuck to their norm.
Couples Who Have Sex Three To Four Times A Week
A 2004 study
found the more sex people had, the happier they felt. The book, The Normal Bar, supports this finding. Published
in 2013 and written by three, well-respected US scholars, it draws on thousands
of surveys to find out what makes couples happy.
Three to four times a week was the perfect amount for prime levels of happiness, according to the authors. If you don’t have children, are in the peak of health, going through a great time in your relationship, highly sexed and highly motivated, this could be your magic number.
Couples Who Don’t Have Sex - Ever
One in four
couples over 50 don’t have any sex at all but far from complaining about it,
the couples surveyed by Gransnet (634 users aged 51 to 58) said they felt
extremely happy and satisfied in their sexless relationships with only 65 per
cent rating sex as important.
There’s an
important caveat here: this holds true when both partners are happy not
having sex, not when just one person decides to take sex off the table but if
you have both had an honest conversation and decided it’s simply not something
you value any longer, sex doesn’t appear to be the must have factor for a happy relationship that experts
traditionally believed.
This can also be the case for couples under 50, who both have low or no sexual drive, and are happy not to have it. Times readers may have read the excellent piece ‘Just good friends: can sexless marriages really survive?” this weekend, complete with convincing first-hand testimonies from real-life couples whose relationships actually improved once they stopped having sex.
Another well-respected US study also found the biggest predictor for overall happiness for couples was the relationship connection not sex. It’s still society’s view that couples who aren’t having sex are unhappy and clearly have problems - but that simply isn’t true. One of the main reasons why couples stop having sex isn’t because their relationship has gone sour or they don’t fancy their partners, it’s because they’re so close, the relationship has stopped being sexual.
The closer you are, the more you describe yourself as ‘best friends’ or ‘soul mates’, the less likely you are to be turned on by your partner. Feeling like sex is usually our motivation for having sex but if you think of your partner more as a friend, your brain subconsciously takes them out of the ‘someone who I have sex with ‘ basket and puts them into the ‘someone I cuddle with’ category.
Novelty is what tricks the brain into producing the hormones it did at the start. If you’re happy with the brother/sister dynamic, fine. If you’re not, simply start by having sex once a week whether you feel like it or not. Change location to make yourself see your partner in a different light. Feed your fantasies. Be naughty; think edgy. Imagine someone else fancying them: a little bit of jealousy might feel uncomfortable but it does wonders for suddenly making you see your partner through someone else’s admiring eyes.
The only question you really need to answer is this: are you both happy with the amount of sex you’re having?
If the answer is yes, you’re doing just fine.
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