
I am at my
wit's end.
My husband and I have been happily married for 14
years and have 3 children (12, 9 & 7 years old). We
rarely argue and truly love being around each other.
The one problem we have is that he asks for sex
non-stop. This is the first thing he says to me in
the morning and usually the last thing he says at
night. He will argue that he does not mention it
very often, but I counted 6 times yesterday - I know
this was wrong and he was angry with me stating that
he will just go without for a month. He also says
that I never start it - I have tried to explain to
him that if he would give me a chance to, I might
surprise him. It is to the point that I don't
really enjoy having sex because I feel I never get a
break. I even dread it when we are home alone
because I know he will expect sex. I would like to
just sit and have a quiet conversation with him or
go to dinner. If we go to dinner, he will make
remarks about getting home. My doctor suggested
that we have a date night or two each week. This
way he can count on my undivided attention and I can
know that he can hug/kiss me without him trying to
steer it further. He did not like this idea. His
biggest argument was that my doctor is not Catholic
and may not be promoting the right thing. Please
help or steer me to the right person. This is
starting to really become a problem. I would love
to have a healthy sex life with my wonderful
husband. -- Frustrated
|
Dear Frustrated,
You
must be very happy to be blessed with a loving and dedicated
husband, with your three children, and with fourteen years
of rich married life.
The problem seems to be that your husband is making too many
demands upon you for sex (“He asks for sex non stop.”).
How can we explain that anything can be abused by going to
excess? I think that any loving husband must take into
consideration the legitimate needs of his wife. She is his
bride and soul mate for life. But she is also a person who
has her own unique personal needs and psychological makeup.
Perhaps the best way to explain this problem is to refer to
the principle that a person is always a subject, and should
never be reduced to the status of an object (of one’s
pleasure). A person is always an “end,” and is “never to be
used” as a “means.” A woman knows immediately the
difference between being loved and being used. If a husband
truly loves his wife, then he wants to do what is best for
her. He will not force his will upon her to satisfy his
personal desires. He respects her dispositions, her
emotional needs and her moods.
The spousal act is designed to be a totally unselfish act,
where each spouse makes the total gift of self to the other.
But if the wife is not prepared, or is indisposed, to
engage in sex at a given moment, then a husband’s advances
become, not an act of love, but an act of self will, a
seeking after his own sexual satisfaction, a forcing himself
upon his wife.
I think that the two of you need to reflect upon the
requirements of the virtue of chastity, as this pertains to
your marriage. Chastity means that we give good, conscious
and reasonable, direction to our passions. We refuse to be
slaves to our sexual drives. We make our sex drives serve
the purpose for which God created them. For the single and
celibate person, this means total abstinence from the sexual
act. For the married person, it means periodic abstinence
during those times when it would not be a loving, or
responsible, act to do.
If a wife is willing to exchange the spousal act with her
husband several times a week, which is the norm for most
couples, then she certainly cannot be accused of withholding
herself from her husband. You might talk with your married
friends and ask what the norm is for them.
One of the advantages of Natural Family Planning is that it
requires periodic abstinence during the fertile periods.
This forces the couple then to find other ways to express
their affection and to nurture their relationship. It means
going back to the time of dating: talking together, a
special meal, sharing a special event together, praying
together, getting to know the deep mystery of each other
better. Genital sex cannot possibly replace all these
dimensions of a marriage relationship. This is also a time
to think about the possibility of having another child, or
to discuss the reasons why this is not a good time for
having another child.
I suggest that you read two great documents: 1) Humane
Vitae (Pope Paul VI, 1968), and 2) A Letter to
Families (Pope John Paul, 1994), and reflect upon them.
You can find them on GOOGLE.
Here are two good passages from these documents:
From Humanae Vitae: 9. Characteristics of Married
Love
This love is above all fully human, a compound of sense and
spirit. It is not, then, merely a question of natural
instinct or emotional drive. It is also, and above all, an
act of the free will, whose trust is such that it is meant
not only to survive the joys and sorrows of daily life, but
also to grow, so that husband and wife become in a way one
heart and one soul, and together attain their human
fulfillment.
It is a love which is total—that very special form of
personal friendship in which husband and wife generously
share everything, allowing no unreasonable exceptions and
not thinking solely of their own convenience. Whoever really
loves his partner loves not only for what he receives, but
loves that partner for the partner's own sake, content to be
able to enrich the other with the gift of himself.
From John Paul II’s Letter to Families: 12. Responsible
fatherhood and motherhood:
There
is however a need for more in-depth study, analyzing the
meaning of the conjugal act in view of the values of the
"person" and of the "gift" mentioned above. This is what the
Church has done in her constant teaching, and in a
particular way at the Second Vatican Council.
In the conjugal act, husband and wife are called to confirm
in a responsible way the mutual gift of self which
they have made to each other in the marriage covenant. The logic
of the total gift of self to the other involves a
potential openness to procreation: in this way the marriage
is called to even greater fulfillment as a family. Certainly
the mutual gift of husband and wife does not have the
begetting of children as its only end, but is in itself a
mutual communion of love and of life. The intimate truth
of this gift must always be safeguarded.
"Intimate" is not here synonymous with "subjective". Rather,
it means essentially in conformity with the objective truth
of the man and woman who give themselves. The person can
never be considered a means to an end; above all never a
means of "pleasure". The person is and must be nothing other
than the end of every act. Only then does the action
correspond to the true dignity of the person.
Cordially yours,
Fr.
Matthew Habiger OSB
www.NFPOutreach.org
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