Sexting and Love: Part Four
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,686 legacy views
The step from experiencing sexual urges to acting out on them, in my opinion, is still what should be the measure of a man – or a woman, for that matter. Individuals, in fact, are not only governed by their physiological urges, but are molded by powerful cultural, social, emotional, and moral forces that mediate these urges and, optimally help create and maintain a balance between wishes and impulses on the one hand, and the cognitive abilities on the other that help disce
what’s appropriate and what’s wrong.
So, while it may be true that some high testosterone people may have more difficulties, at times, in keeping control over their desires, it is also true that a society that is more tolerant of these behaviors may further reduce these people’s motivations to tame and control their impulses through feelings of commitment, honor, responsibility, duty, or via feeling shame and guilt. The ease with which some people justify their actions seems to be associated with a culture of immediate gratification, entitlement, and self absorption.
So, how can men with high sex drive deal with it in healthy ways?
In order to answer this question, we need to look closer at what happens – or doesn’t happen – in their intimate relationships.
It is often difficult, in intimate relationships, for the two partners to have their sexual needs and sex drive match perfectly. Instead, one partner may have a higher sexual drive than the other. Or, their sex drives may have matched for a while, but then something happened to one partner or the other – medical problems, side effects from medication, menopause, or the normal aging process – and this affected the system that was previously in place.
It is uncomfortable, for most couples, to have frank conversations about sex. This may be hard to believe, in an age where sex seems to be more open than it ever was and where people – men and women alike – seem to be less conflicted about it, but it is true. When there is a problem in the sexual area, the resistances to address this topic become even stronger. Unable or unwilling to communicate with one another about sexual matters, partners at times feel isolated. They may have nobody to talk to about these issues, particularly men, who have hard time sharing this kind of personal information.
In this situation, one or the other intimate partner may resort to the use of the internet, sexting, and pornography as ways of channeling his or her frustrations and unmet needs. But once that occurs, a secret gets wedged between them and the conversation that should take place gets pushed aside. The issues may never get addressed, continuing a pattern of poor communication and acting out.
The advice to these couples is: don’t take anything out of the relationship that belongs to the relationship. As difficult and awkward as it may feel, talking about the issues that create discomfort and disconnection give couples a chance to identify the problems and discuss how to approach them TOGETHER.
If you cannot resolve the issues alone, seek professional help. Being with a counselor or a psychotherapist can help you and your partner overcome the difficulties that impeded clear and healthy communication to take place between you two. In this way you will be able to negotiate strategies that are sensitive to what each of you needs.
In a previous blog and in my digital book on infidelity, I discussed the connection between digital technologies and infidelity. This is a subject in which we will return to again in the future, as we continue to explore how the changes that are occurring in technology reflect on the nature and quality of human interactions.
Article author
About the Author
My name is Daniela Roher, I am a psychotherapist trained in Europe and the US and have been in practice for over 30 years. I have studied in Italy (University of Torino), England (Universities of Cambridge and Oxford), and the United States (Wayne State University), thereby achieving a deep understanding of the human mind and psychopathology. My training includes classes and workshops at the Tavistock Institute in London, England and the London Family Institute, as well as at UCLA. I received a postdoctoral certificate in adult psychoanalytic psychotherapy from the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute, and this model continues to deeply influence my approach and work today.
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Facial Rejuvenation, Is Plastic Surgery Killing Facial Exercise?
With so many people opting for plastic surgery and other procedures, over 11 million in 2006, the fate of facial exercises seems to be in terminal decline. Women and men are going for the quick fix of either injections or, more radically, surgery, where they opt to either have pieces of skin and ...
Related piece
Article
EFT ( Emotional Freedom Technique )Your Passport To A Better You.
In today’s hectic life, there are many people who are time poor. They are rushing around so much and getting stressed, that they do not realize that they are in need of help, and even if they do, they may not know where to go to get help or even what type of help they require. The first ...
Related piece
Article
Exhausted Skin? Let Facial Exercises Lift and Re-new
You know when your skin is exhausted as you look in the mirror you see a grey wrinkly face staring back at you and wonder A., how did I end up looking like this and B., how do I change it ? Given that it is tired, a series of facial exercises may seem a bit odd. Firstly, if it is on your face, chances are that it is on other parts of your body so as you get into your shower check your body over and note what parts need some working on. Right now we are concentrating on the face but the first thing we must look at is the diet.
Related piece
Website
Dr. Phil's Official Website
The official website of Dr. Phil McGraw.
Related piece