My boyfriend needs Viagra â the lack of spontaneity is killing my sex drive
I started dating my boyfriend seven months ago, and it has been amazing. I love him, he makes me laugh, he is so kind to me â but we still havenât mastered the bedroom. When we first got together, he couldnât maintain an erection to have penetrative sex. This upset him, and I stopped trying to initiate sex because it just wasnât a pleasant experience. He has since ordered Viagra, and we have been able to have sex, but for a while it felt as if he was calling the shots. He wouldnât tell me when he was taking one, and would just spring the erection on me. I told him how I felt, and now he asks me if he should take one â or I ask him to take one.
But I still struggle with the fact I canât just have sex with him â it has to be planned. Weâre young and healthy, so it is definitely a mental thing. Iâm the first girl he has slept with where thereâs an actual emotional connection.
When we do have sex, itâs good â but it doesnât have that spontaneous jump-on-me-and-throw-me-into-bed vibe, and I just feel unfulfilled. I never initiate it because Iâm a bit scarred from when he couldnât stay hard.
Since sex is a learned experience, it is not easy or spontaneous for many people. Movies and TV shows often depict spontaneous sex, so it is easy to get the impression that itâs the norm in relationships. But there are many important reasons why sex may need to be planned during a coupleâs life together â to fit in around work, children or live-in parents. People living with pain or disability have to plan sex for times when they have maximum benefit from pain-alleviating treatments.
Itâs very early days in your relationship, and he is just learning how his body works in the context of a partner â so try to be patient. You are learning important skills, too, and it will all pay off. But your desire for spontaneous sex is at odds with your complaint that he is calling the shots by springing sex on you. Decide what you really want, and, after he gains more confidence, gently ask for it â which could certainly be achieved with the use of medication to support his erections.
Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a US-based psychotherapist who specialises in treating sexual disorders.
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