ladbible homepage
ladbible homepage
  • Home
  • News
    • UK
    • US
    • World
    • Ireland
    • Australia
    • Science
    • Crime
    • Weather
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV
    • Film
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • Netflix
    • Disney
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Originals
    • FFS PRODUCTIONS
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Citizen Reef
  • Videos
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Archive
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube
Submit Your Content Here
  • GAMINGbible
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • Tyla
  • FOODbible
  • UNILAD Tech
Sex therapist explains what the most common issue couples come to her with is
Home>News
Published 18:00 13 Feb 2023 GMT

Sex therapist explains what the most common issue couples come to her with is

The good news is that it's fixable.

Emma Guinness

Emma Guinness

google discoverFollow us on Google Discover

When it comes to getting down and dirty, couples can and do experience the occasional problem.

Now, a sex therapist has opened up about the most common issue couples come to her with - and it tends to happen around the most romantic time of the year, Valentine's Day.

"It's the day where I see the most miserable couples, the most distressed couples," Dr Peggy Kleinplatz, a medicine professor at the University of Ottawa, told Big Think.

Advert

So, what's the source of their misery? Well, it's not necessarily caused by mismatched likes in beds, but a discrepancy in sexual desire.

However, she explained that compromising on this discrepancy isn't the solution to the problem.

"When one partner wants more - or less - sex than the other, compromise is not the answer," she said.

Issues in the bedroom tend to come to the fore around Valentine's Day.
Alamy / Prostock-studio

Dr Kleinplatz then explained that the roots of sexual discrepancy often stem from a couple having bad sex and not necessarily mismatched libidos.

"What looks like a problem of low sexual desire might be evidence of good judgment, perhaps even good taste," she said.

"It's rational to have low desire for undesirable sex."

She said couples should instead focus on having 'magnificent sex' and contrary to what you might think, this isn't necessarily characterised by orgasms.

Compromising on sexual discrepancy isn't the answer when it occurs.
Alamy / Tero Vesalainen

According to the doctor, research has found that great sex is characterised by being totally into the moment and being fully 'in sync' with the other person.

"It's quite something to be fully embodied within, while simultaneously really in sync with, another human being," she said.

How is this achieved? The sex therapist explained that it's characterised by 'erotic intimacy, empathic communication, being authentic, vulnerability, exploring risk-taking and fun, and transcendence.'

She said that empathic communication is about more than just being able to literally communicate well, but 'being so in tune with your partner that you can practically feel in your own skin the way that your partner wants to be touched most.'

'Magnificent sex' isn't necessarily characterised by orgasms.
Alamy / PHOVOIR

Research showed that the characteristics of magnificent sex remained the same regardless of age, sexuality or relationship type.

The therapist added that in order to master the skill of this kind of sex, couples need to devote enough time to their sex lives to get it right.

"The reality is that extraordinary lovers choose to devote time and energy to this most valued of their pursuits," she said. "That's a crucial lesson for all of us. Great lovers are made, not born."

Featured Image Credit: Oleg Elkov / Lev Dolgachov / Alamy Stock Photo

Topics: Sex and Relationships, Health,

Emma Guinness
Emma Guinness

Recommended reads

Jeremy Clarkson issues cancer update as he makes plea to everyone after sharing diagnosisInstagram/@jeremyclarksonHolly Ramsay and swimmer Adam Peaty announce baby news six months after their high-profile wedding Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty ImagesJamie Lynn Spears reveals why she left Hollywood for 'the middle of nowhere'Frazer Harrison/ACMA2014/Getty Images for ACMKaty Perry savagely calls out her famous exes live on stage during performanceAlvaro Ballesteros/Europa Press via Getty Images

Advert

  • Biggest concern men with big penises have, according to sex therapist
  • Expert explains what you should do if you are nebulasexual as more people come out
  • Woman explains why she is fine with her husband sleeping with other men
  • Sex therapist shares main ‘dangers’ of porn as UK government announces major crackdown

Choose your content:

17 hours ago
18 hours ago
  • (Supplied/Emily Richardson)
    17 hours ago

    Woman says she's a 'real-life vampire' due to rare condition that leaves her hospitalised after minutes in the sun

    She needs to wear full UV protection whenever she leaves her home

    News
  • Mark Smith/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images
    17 hours ago

    Norway's football team ship traditional food to its US World Cup training base to avoid eating American food

    Anything to keep Haaland happy

    News
  • Aphantasia is thought to impact 10% of the global population. (Jacob Wackerhausen/Getty Images)
    18 hours ago

    Millions of people have 'mind blindness' and don't realise it

    There a people out their who live with a condition called Aphantasia, which affects them on a daily basis and they don't even know it.

    News
  • Some people don't think in words. (Daniel Lozzano Gonzalez/Getty Images)
    18 hours ago

    This is how people with no internal monologue really think

    Cognitive scientist Johanne Nedergård has explained how minds without an inner monologue work.

    News