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Save My Marriage: Help! The Kids Won’t Let Us Have Sex!

Remember sex before you had kids? Remember how you would tear each other’s clothes off, leaving a trail from the entryway to whatever soft surface would cushion your passionate urges? Remember rolling over in bed on a Sunday morning and staying there with your lover all day?

Or has it been so long since you had kids you can hardly remember sex?

You already know in order to have a marriage that survives and thrives you and your partner need to cultivate an active sex life. You also know that children from toddlers through teens are a constant distraction to your privacy.

So what’s a parent to do when (s)he wants to get their groove thing goin’?

Here are six ways to get more romantic privacy. Some are common sense, some you have probably used already and some will be completely new to you. Make romance a priority and not only will your marriage benefit, so will your kids. (Though you may end up with one or two more than you had planned….)

Lock the Doors and Bar the Windows

Well, you probably don’t have to put bars on the windows, but you can certainly put a lock on your bedroom door. This not only keeps the kids from “accidentally” interrupting your game of “Indiana Jones and the Genie of the Magic Lamp,” it also takes away the fear that one of your kids will wander in.

Tell Them the Monsters Live in Daddy and Mommy’s Room

Every little kid has a secret desire: To sleep with mommy and daddy. At first, it’s cute. They’re “scared” or “lonely” and “it’s not fair you get to sleep together and I have to sleep alone.” Don’t fall for these little con jobs. Small children have a secret society where they teach these guerilla tactics to one another. If you want to have an active sex life with your spouse, make the tykes sleep in their own beds. You can lay with them for a while if they are particularly scared (or you thoughtlessly let them watch Freddy Kruger with you), but their bed needs to be their bed.

Trade Your Kids on Ebay

No, just kidding. What I really mean is set up a trade with one of your friends who also has kids about the same age. One weekend (or even one night) they take ALL the kids to their house for the night. The next weekend you take all the kids to your house for the night. The kids get a sleep over with their friends and both couples get a romantic weekend alone.

Hire a Professional

Babysitters are expensive. So are lawyers. You hire a lawyer when you have a job so terrible no one else will do it. That’s why they’re paid so much. Same is true for babysitters.

Whether it is an evening out, returning after the tots hit the hay or spending the night at the Hilton, a babysitter is often a small price to pay for carefree time alone.

Mall Your Teenagers

Teenagers present their own set of privacy problems. They tend to figure out when ol’ Dad and Mom are getting’ old age, gross, frisky. They also stay up later than you do.

So if you have teenagers, offer to fund a party at a friend’s house. “Dad and Mom want time alone, son, so I’ll spring for Pizza and Red Bull at Tommy’s.”

You get time alone, they stay up all night in a Red Bull induced frenzy and everybody’s happy.

Take ‘em to Geezer Town

Your parents LOVE to watch the grandkids and they love to visit G-ma and P-pa, right? Indulge them both by sending the kids on an all expense paid trip—alone—to Geezerville. Your parents will learn again the joy of mid-night feedings and diapers while the kids will hone their Bridge skills and learn to play “Hide the Dentures.”

They’ll never want to come home.

Do you need more time alone with your spouse? Pick out one of the ideas above and put it to work. I’ll bet you both end up smiling—and maybe just a little bit more in love.


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You Married Your Spouse for a Reason

As you read this some of you are on the verge of giving up. You can’t imagine staying in the marriage. You’ve tried everything you know of and still you are unhappy every day.

Your spouse is just not the person you had hoped they would be—or not the person you need at this point in your lives. You look around and see other people who seem to have fulfilling marriages and you feel cheated.

You feel like it must be over.

I have some good news: Your marriage may not be as dismal as you think!

Before you give up on your spouse, it’s a good idea to start with why you married them in the first place.

Most of us pick a mate based on all sorts of criteria. The main criteria are often sexual attraction and emotional attraction. We have fun together—in and out of bed—and that’s how we pick a mate.

In addition we usually come up with all sorts of practical reasons to give out conscious mind the rational excuses to get our swerve on, but those are typically secondary to our subconscious reasons. Attraction plus logical reasons equals marriage.

But once we get married there is more on our plate than just sexual attraction. Sometimes, under the intense light of real life, we forget the positive reasons we married and start focusing on all of our spouse’s shortcomings.

Often, during these periods of forgetful mental criticism, we end up looking for the person our spouse is NOT and end up disappointed. She was carefree when we dated, now she seems irresponsible. He was a “lone wolf” who drove you wild, now he just seems to ignore you.

Before you throw in the towel think for a minute about who you married, why you married them and what that likely means for your future together. Chances are it will give you a much better (and more positive) picture of your future.

When we are picking a mate we tend to look at them without a critical eye. We love how their playfulness offsets our rigidity. We wanted to be more spontaneous. Sure (s)he lacked a little in the punctuality department, but who cares—(s)he made you laugh.

Keep in mind: Most of us marry someone who has a similar set of values to ours, but who complements ourselves rather than replicates ourselves. “Accelerator” personalities tend to marry “brake” personalities. Outgoing gregarious personalities tend to marry more subdued personalities.

So when someone marries a playful person, they are likely not as playful. They appreciate their spouse’s playfulness, but they themselves tend to be the follower in play. At first it seems great.

What we fail to realize is that playfulness is also likely to indicate a person who, by nature, is not going to be hyper responsible when it comes to things like showing up on time, finishing projects around the house or paying the bills.

Sure (s)he can make you laugh, but right now you are more concerned about your kids’ underfunded college accounts.

The key to finding happiness in your marriage again is this: Accept your spouse exactly as they are. Love the things that attracted you in the first place. Enjoy the things that attracted you in the first place.

Be willing to pick up the slack in the areas where your spouse in naturally challenged and free yourself from resentment.

Who knows, you must just enjoy being married again.


If you liked this artilce you will also enjoy:


Marriage Help

Get Aaron’s New Book FREE!

This book will help you BOTH find happiness and fulfillment.
Just click here to begin having the marriage of your dreams!