Delaying Sex Makes Better Relationships
Delaying sex makes for a more satisfying and stable
relationship later on
Couples who had sex the earliest — such as after the first
date or within the first month of dating — had the worst relationship outcomes.
"What seems to happen is that if couples become
sexual too early, this very rewarding area of the relationship overwhelms
good decision-making and keeps couples in a relationship that might not be the
best for them in the long-run,"
The intricate nature
of sex
Past research on sex and its link to relationship quality
has revealed two different paradigms. In one, sex is
considered essential to a developing relationship since it allows partners
to assess their sexual compatibility. Following this line of thinking, couples who
marry before testing out their sexual chemistry are at risk of marital distress
and failure later on.
The opposing view posits couples who delay or abstain
from sexual intimacy during the early part of their relationships allow
communication and other social processes to become the foundation of their
attraction to each other. Essentially, early sex could be detrimental to a
relationship, skewing it away from communication, commitment and the ability to
handle adversity, this thinking suggests.
And past studies have shown the sex-relationship link is a
complex one. For instance, a 2004 study of nearly 300 college students in
dating relationships showed that when couples were highly committed, sex was
more likely to be seen as a positive turning point in the relationship,
increasing understanding, commitment, trust and a sense of security. However,
when commitment and emotional expressions were low, the initiation of sex was
significantly more likely seen as a negative event, evoking regret, uncertainty,
discomfort, and prompting apologies.
Sex comes early
nowadays which is very bad
In the new study, Busby and his colleagues looked
specifically at timing of sexual relations. They recruited 2,035 heterosexual
individuals who had an average age of 36 and were in their first marriages. Participants
reported when they first had sexual relations with their current spouse; they
also answered communication questions, which evaluated how well they could
express empathy and understanding toward their partners, how well they could
send clear messages to their partners, and other questions.
Other items on the questionnaire focused on relationship
satisfaction and stability, with the latter gauged by three questions: how
often they thought their relationship was in trouble; how often they thought of
ending the relationship; and how often they had broken up and gotten back
together.
Individuals were categorized as either having:
- Early sex (before dating or less than one month after they started dating).
- Late sex (between one month and two years of dating).
- And those who waited until after they married.
Relationships fared better and better the longer a person
waited to have sex, up until marriage, with those hitting the sack before a
month showing the worst outcomes.
Compared with those in the early sex group, those who waited
until marriage:
- Rated relationship stability as 22 percent higher
- Rated relationship satisfaction as 20 percent higher
- Rated sexual quality as 15 percent better
- Rated communication as 12 percent better
"Curiously, almost 40 percent of couples are
essentially sexual within the first or second time they go out, but we suspect
that if you asked these same couples at this early stage of their relationship
– 'Do you trust this person to watch your pet for a weekend many could not answer
this in the affirmative' – meaning they are more comfortable letting
people into their bodies than they are with them watching their cat,"
Busby said.
He added that those couples who wait to be sexual have time
to figure out how trustworthy their partner is, how well they communicate, and
whether they share the same values in life "before the powerful
sexual bonding short-circuits their decision-making abilities."
Right now, the team is repeating the study on a larger
sample in a longitudinal design – in which participants are followed over time.
"We are particularly curious about people who report wanting to wait to be
sexual but then they don't follow through on their beliefs, this may be a unique
group with unique outcomes,"
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