Desire during pregnancy and after having children
By Diane Riley co-author
of “Sexual Secrets for Men, want every woman
would want their man to know”.
This article mainly addresses the issue of changes
in sexual desire after childbirth. However the
sacred sexuality practice suggested here to assist
with this issue is also applicable to changes
in desire during pregnancy.
It is not surprising that childbirth can profoundly
affect your feelings about sex. I remember in
the second stage of labour of my first baby saying
to myself “I’ll never have sex again!”
And seriously deliberating the joys of a celibate
future.
However, pain experienced in labour is not the
only cause of changes in attitude towards sex
after childbirth. How you have been treated during
this time and the level of emotional and physical
support you receive during those first few weeks
and months with a new baby also affects you. As
well as this you are trying to establish routines
within the context of relationship, other offspring,
even returning to part - or full time work. You
are dealing with breast or bottle feeding, broken
night’s sleep and fluctuating hormones.
The thought of sex may appear as either some wonderful
dreamy luxury or be enough to make you to want
to become a nun!
As life goes on, amidst feeding, washing, cooking
and domestic chaos you may start to feel that
you are the primordial Great Mother - providing
for the well being of all others; the baby, the
family, the job and to top it off: the conjugal
rights of the husband!
Fluctuations in desire - during pregnancy and
after childbirth - affect both the man and the
woman in the relationship and yet it is a time
where emotional and physical closeness is needed
to enrich your union.
With the arrival of the baby a man may feel that
he has both lost a lover and gained a dependent
who wakes and squawks at irregular hours (of course
he loves the baby too!). He may sense that your
body which he so loved to touch and make love
to is off limits; your breasts may be swollen
and tender, your vagina gradually going through
the healing process, or you may be recuperating
from a Caesarian. There is no time for romance
or passion, let alone sex. He may be wondering
where he fits into to the scheme of things. Unfortunately
after a while some men start to feel they are
just a co -carer of the offspring with not much
room left for being the lover!
With most of their emotional and physical energy
taken up by the child many women feel they have
no energy 'left over' for sex. They want “five
minutes peace” and need a little supportive
nurturing themselves. Instead of feeling desire
and looking forward to moments of passion, making
love can become just another obligation that they
have to attend to. For many couples this can escalate
to create big problems.
During my seminars many women of young children
have spoken to me of their feelings about sexuality
before children (B.C) and ask how they can integrate
their sexuality into motherhood. While some women
do find a deepened connection with their sexuality
and can surrender conscious control of their bodies
and enjoy orgasm even more (or for the very first
time), others find it difficult to even have their
partners sexually touch them. Most say there is
an adjustment period where partners are moving
into new rhythms of parenting while still being
lovers. They welcome creative ways to assist this
shift.
Lucy and Adam’s story
Lucy’s is a common story. Lucy is a young
and vivacious mother of two; a little girl, two
and a half years old and a three-month baby boy.
B. C. (before children) she and her partner Adam
enjoyed a really connected relationship. But Lucy
had a difficult birth with her first child and
didn’t feel like sex for several moths after
the birth.
Adam had been understanding and patient but of
course it was a difficult time for both of them.
They finally got back into their previous regular
pattern of lovemaking but then they had another
child. Lucy said: “Now with the second I've
got no energy at all left at the end of the day,
I just want to curl up in bed and be cuddled,
no sex, I've got no desire at all. I don’t
want to have sex. Adam is becoming more distant
and the pressure he is putting on me is not appreciated,
I feel as if l have three children all wanting
something from me"
I reassured Lucy that her experience is a common
one for mothers of young children. They become
both physically exhausted and strongly emotionally
connected to their babies, losing their sexual
energy. If this goes on for long the relationship
suffers and may deteriorate to an irreparable
extent.
During this critical time a special awareness
is needed from both partners in the relationship.
Men can naturally feel neglected both emotionally
and sexually yet a lot of women just expect them
to put up with the changes in sexual relationship
and to await a return of her sexual energy before
sexual relations are re-established. This may
take months, even years.
Sacred sexuality practices offer an answer to
this dilemma. One particularly appropriate practice
is Daily Devotion. Taoist master, Dr Stephen Chang,
introduced this practice to us and my husband
and I have adapted it for modern lovers. Daily
Devotion works very well when partners are experiencing
a difference in desire so it is especially applicable
when new bundles of joy arrive in your life! For
More click here
|