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Love In Busy Times

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For
young married couples, this Valentine's Day could be the beginning of a new
romance. Shilpi Kakkar-Madan has her pulse on the no-time-for-love
scenario
You are Mommy to a six-month-old and you feel like a
virgin. Your swollen breasts are like twin geysers, spouting the milk of human
kindness during foreplay. And you can't remember when you last caught a late-
night movie with your husband.
Your
Problems Are Real
You want a tiger in bed. He wants Mata Hari. You
both get neither. The spark fizzles. Face it; when you were dating, you could
veil grooming habits easily because you were not waking up next to each other.
Frets Mayank Malve, 33, ''Watching your wife pluck chin hair, massage hair
moisturiser enriched with 83 vitamins into her scalp and stroke three creams on
her face before sliding into bed is no turn-on. My patience is at the end of its
tether by the time she turns in. I feel I've been waiting
forever.''
Maybe you brush your pearlies 10 times each in the hope
that he will be asleep when you get into bed. ''He has piled on eight kilos in
the four years of our marriage," says 28-year-old fashion designer Vivian
Gomes.I'd like my man meticulous and well turned out."
And what when
sex takes a backseat? ''Making love always helps me reconnect with my husband.
But after two years of marriage, we have yet to take a honeymoon, as his work
schedules are chaotic,'' reveals Mann Patel, 23, fitness
expert.
Parents of infants quit viewing themselves as beings with
sexual needs. ''Where's the time?'' asks Mayuri Kumar, 24, mother ofa
three-month-old baby. ''After eight hours of consistent suckling, my nipples
just aren't ready to be tantalised... Hormonal upheavals and my expanding shape
did not make me feel very sexy when I was pregnant. And once the baby arrived,
we've had no time.'
'Feedings, erratic sleep, late night baby wails
and constant fussing leave her exhausted. ''We honestly tried to pep up our
moments of togetherness,'' reveals artist Ashish Gill, 35. ''But on more than
one occasion, our two-year-old awakened and sat up in his cot, peering at us.
It's just not happening.''
Even without children, double income often
equals infrequent sex. Life changes slowly from fiery I-love-yous to
comfortable cuddling. Complacency burrows into the thrill of surprise sex. ''We
moved into a new house after marriage. In flowed bills and financial
responsibilities. Since then 'recreational' activities have taken a backseat,''
says Shekhar, 29, bank executive.
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Make
Love Continue To happen
• Stay committed to your
relationship.
• Share everything, house- work included. This makes it
easier to share the love.
• Good listeners make good lovers. Initiate
tender discussions. Share your fantasies.
• The need to raise
children and juggle work with domestic demands happens to almost everyone. Don't
get crushed.
• Make time for together-ness. Join a gym or go for a
quiet walk after dinner.
• Stop nagging. You will achieve
nothing.
• An unexpected gift like flowers or even a card works
wonders.
• Don't resign yourself to a sexless marriage. Reconnect to
reclaim your dwindling sex life.
• Woo each other again. Make the
effort to enchant your spouse.
• Do what it takes - intimate
dinners, aphrodisiacs, aromatherapy, relaxing massages, sexy lingerie, feathers,
porn...
• Plan in advance. Assume that your baby will cry at the nth
moment. Try again. Organise productive routines to keep children occupied.
Delegate duties.
• Balance work with a social life that you
enjoy.
• Plan weekend getaways.
• Be demonstrative about
your affections. A snug hug or an inviting pout can work wonders.
•
Focus on your own body. Encourage him to do the same. You both need to feel
happy about yourselves to discover sensuality.
The Reality
• The
"seven-year itch" is real. Couples experience dissatisfaction in 7-year multiple
cycles. A psychology professor from Wright State University, Dr Larry A Kurdek,
in a survey of couples over the first decade of their marriages found that
marital quality appeared to decrease twice: once rather steeply over the first
four years and again after about seven.
• Most couples come for
counselling six years or more after the dissatisfaction in their marriage has
started.
• The newest large group of divorces is among couples who
have been married 25 years or more
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