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Posts Tagged ‘relationship’

Sexpert Q&A: Bathroom Intimacy

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

yvonne_headshot2yvonne-q1Dear Yvonne,
My partner wants to keep the bathroom door open when the other is in there and doesn’t understand why it’s a problem for me. He says it’s a statement of our level of intimacy. Is keeping the door open or closed really a commentary on the intimacy of the relationship? Do you have any advice?
—Shawn

yvonne-a2Dear Shawn,
Keeping the bathroom door closed versus open in coupledom is more of an indicator of people’s privacy norms and issues around bathroom habits, for example, taking care of bodily functions. Both are rooted in how they were raised — how their families handled bathroom privacy and self-care in that space.

While some people read the “door open” policy as more intimate, others would say it’s an intimacy killer. Every couple needs to negotiate what’s right for them and provide rationale for where they stand. I’ve found, for example, that people from large families who had to share one bathroom do not find it as big a deal to see others doing their thing as those who are not used to such circumstances. (This is not to generalize members of big families, however.)

Dr. Yvonne Kristín Fulbright is a sex educator, relationship expert, columnist and founder of Sexuality Source Inc. She is the author of several books including, “Touch Me There! A Hands-On Guide to Your Orgasmic Hot Spots.”

Sexpert Q&A: Selfish for Better Sex?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

yvonne_headshot2yvonne-q1Dear Yvonne,
Can being selfish with your time improve your sex life?
—Kip

 

yvonne-a2Dear Kip,
It’s healthy for lovers not to be codependent upon one another, especially when it comes to capitalizing eachother’s time. They’re stronger together when they’re still individuals vs. morphed into at 24/7 situation that causes both of them to be stagnate. When lovers can pursue their own interests and have their own downtime, that shows a comfort and security with the relationship that is attractive. Time spent on their own interests allows them to grow, inviting newness into the relationship.

Second, being too available is a turn off. If lovers spend even a day, for example, she’s having cocktails with girlfriends at a sex toy party while he’s at a horse race, apart, this acts like a hurdle, which can be a turn on. It’s far short of Romeo and Juliet, but it has a similar effect.

Dr. Yvonne Kristín Fulbright is a sex educator, relationship expert, columnist and founder of Sexuality Source Inc. She is the author of several books including, “Touch Me There! A Hands-On Guide to Your Orgasmic Hot Spots.”

Sexpert Q&A: Romeo & Juliet Syndrome

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

yvonne_headshot2yvonne-q1Dear Yvonne,
I am a newlywed of four months. My problem: Before my husband and I got married, we had sex all the time! But since we got married, it hasn’t been the same. I still feel sexually attracted to him. We’re both 21, and before we got married, it was hard for us to see each other because our families didn’t approve of the relationship. Has the sex changed because there’s no longer the excitement of getting caught? 
— Alyyah 

yvonne-a2Dear Alyyah,
What you are describing is a classic “Romeo & Juliet” syndrome, where half of the excitement of being sexually intimate was the disapproval. Doing the forbidden things made the relationship more passionate since the need to overcome obstacles intensified your feelings. Lovers in these situations often have this mentality: “Don’t they realize that more obstacles make us all the more passionate?” As with any taboo sexual relationship, for example, an affair — the excitement wears off after a while.

Just because this type of passion is waning in your relationship, doesn’t mean the exciting phase of starting your lives together has to be passionless. Seek novel ways to have sex and to be intimate. Changing the focus of sex to one of being an entirely new adventure is sure to keep things heated.

Dr. Yvonne Kristín Fulbright is a sex educator, relationship expert, columnist and founder of Sexuality Source Inc. She is the author of several books including, “Touch Me There! A Hands-On Guide to Your Orgasmic Hot Spots.”

Sexpert Q&A: Making a Good Impression

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

yvonne_headshot2yvonne-q1Hi Dr. Yvonne,
I’m about to meet my girlfriend’s closest friends over Thanksgiving. I want to make a good impression. Any tips for a nervous guy?
-Brent

 

yvonne-a2Dear Brent,
First and foremost, dote on her. The more attention you can lavish on her, the more she’ll be the envy of her friends – but in a good way. Since so many guys have trouble being ‘lovey’ in public, any time a guy gets affectionate (and I’m not talking about groping), it wins women over.

Furthermore, the more interest you show in them, and this means even little things, like buying a couple rounds of drinks or picking up the dinner tab or getting the hostess flowers for her fete, the more they’ll be impressed. More than anything, be yourself and let your genuine affections for your girlfriend shine through. Nothing makes women feel more confident about their girlfriends’ romantic relationships than knowing that she has a good guy who is putting her on a pedestal.

Dr. Yvonne Kristín Fulbright is a sex educator, relationship expert, columnist and founder of Sexuality Source Inc. She is the author of several books including, “Touch Me There! A Hands-On Guide to Your Orgasmic Hot Spots.”

Dr. Keith: Living the Truth – The First Step in Changing Your Life

Friday, August 1st, 2008

This step is about clarity.  You take this step because you want to be sure that you’re moving forward with a real, actionable goal. Maybe it’s to revitalize your marriage.  Maybe it’s to find work you really love.  Or, it could be to stop using food as a crutch.

 Many of us have multiple areas in our lives that could use some improvement.  But Living the Truth techniques work in part by acknowledging that problems in life are linked.  Often, they share root causes.  Identifying any area of your life that needs immediate attention and beginning to work on it will lead you naturally to related life issues that can also benefit from the insights you are achieving.

Having an initial goal starts the LTT process in earnest.  When we are dissatisfied, we can feel overwhelmed. There’s often a contagious nature to emotional distress from one problem that can color everything we see and feel.  And that can stop specific, liberating changes before they begin.  

 In what area of your life do you want to achieve positive change first?

If the answer doesn’t come to you immediately, that’s OK.  Find a quiet place to think for a little while.  Let your mind and heart focus.

 You might want to begin with a general statement like, “I don’t like my job. Half the time I don’t even feel like getting out of bed to go to work.”  Write down your statement, so you have a record of this very first sentence, the start of your journey toward insight and empowerment.

 Next, examine your statement.  Hone in on the specific aspect of the problem you’ve identified that troubles you most.  Is your boss someone who criticizes you in a way that is painful to you? Does work not leave you enough time for your family or for pursuing a goal you are tremendously passionate about?  Perhaps you feel that you have been assigned an impossible amount of work and can’t seem to set boundaries between your personal and professional lives.

 If you identified your marriage as the part of your life that troubles you, be specific. What is it about your marriage that is disappointing you?  Do you feel emotionally alone because there’s too little communication?  Is sex infrequent?  Is your spouse’s obsession with his or her own career mean you rarely spend time together?

Write down the most specific statement that describes what you’re struggling with.  Remember, writing a problem down makes it easier to focus on and should give you the sense that you are already committed to working to solve it.

  Don’t stop at just one attempt in making your statement specific.  Keep refining what you’ve written.  Add your emotional reactions to your statement.   If your problem is with an employer, you might ultimately write, “I feel as though I am assigned my boss’ work all the time and get no credit for doing it.  I end up being angry at myself for not setting boundaries.”

 As another example, if you identified your sex life with your partner as the issue you are focusing on, you might come up with something like: “Having to ask for sex makes me feel unattractive and unwanted.  So, I’ve stopped initiating romance between us. ” 

 Here are some other examples:

 – I want to end the co-dependent relationship I am in with a drug user, (in which I am valued mostly as a kind of nurse) and make myself available to someone who will nurture me, too. 

I want to stop letting my mother tell me (and my husband) how to raise my children.  Her intrusiveness makes me feel like a child and disrupts my relationship with my new family.

I want to quit smoking by understanding the underlying factors that make me feel stressed, so I can address them.

 – I want to create a marriage in which I feel understood and valued, and where my career goals are considered as important as my spouse’s. 

  It is important that you not rush this step.  Allow yourself the time and space to sit alone with your thoughts and hone in on the specific kind of growth you hope to achieve.  If you feel a little uncomfortable, that’s good.  As we peel away the layers of denial we have accumulated over the years and move toward the truth, we will inevitably experience some amount of discomfort. It’s like working out muscles that you haven’t used for a long time.  Your heart and soul feel you calling on them to do more.  But asking more of yourself is the way to become what you need to be.  

And you’re already on your way.

 Dr. Keith Ablow is a psychiatry correspondent for FOX News Channel and a New York Times bestselling author. His newest book, “Living the Truth: Transform Your Life through the Power of Insight and Honesty” has launched a new self-help movement. Check out Dr. Ablow’s website at livingthetruth.com.

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