Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think a sexless relationship can work long term

56 replies

sweetieplease · 30/01/2024 22:32

Relatively sexless. Perhaps twice per year ? Even if baby has been conceived ?
One partner disinterested in sex generally and the other has a strong libido.

OP posts:
HalloumiGeller · 30/01/2024 23:12

Nope, pls don't kid yourself that this will work.

KnowledgeableMomma · 31/01/2024 00:23

sweetieplease · 30/01/2024 22:38

The relationship has lasted some six years. Many reasons for it lasting so long.. mostly practical and lack of options and opportunity for both people. A rare intimate moment caused pregnancy. Could this turn things round?

Having a baby tends to make things (strained relationships) worse. Children are stressful and cracks that are already in a relationship start to widen. Children are not glue and should not be responsible for holding a sinking ship above water.

Saschka · 31/01/2024 00:31

sweetieplease · 30/01/2024 22:38

The relationship has lasted some six years. Many reasons for it lasting so long.. mostly practical and lack of options and opportunity for both people. A rare intimate moment caused pregnancy. Could this turn things round?

You are only still together due to “lack of other options”??

Unless you are marooned on a desert island and the lack of dating options is permanent and irrevocable, then no I don’t think this would work. One of you is going to fire up Tinder at some point and find another option.

Danlerl · 31/01/2024 00:37

Yes. Overtime the person with the high sex drive, will no longer have the feelings as they become used to being celibate and rejected. The urge does of course come back but it has to pushed aside. It's tough but try tolook at the positive side of relationship.

egowise · 31/01/2024 00:45

No. It killed me.

My sense of self, my self esteem, my whole being. Gone. Relationship of 12 years, no desire for sex for 9.

I am so much happier since I left, even though I still don't have sex.

PToosher · 31/01/2024 01:18

The non-low libido partner will either ask for an open relationship, a separation or will outsource sex.

Firefly1987 · 31/01/2024 01:27

No it'll only be working for one partner and the other one will most likely resent not having their needs met.

HenndigoOZ · 31/01/2024 01:39

I think it eventually poisons the relationship. The high libido partner feels it’s the duty of the low libido partner to fulfil them and they will feel personally rejected and unloved, even if there are understandable reasons such as tiredness, hormones etc on the part of that partner.
I know a couple who tried to solve it with an open marriage but that didn’t work either and the high libido partner ran off with the third party brought in with the blessing of the low libido partner.

LurkingAndVenting · 31/01/2024 01:39

Pretty well same as @egowise ... I'm recently separated from my DH and ... while its not the only reason why ... one of the reasons is that he's been willing to be intimate with me ... maybe a total of 6 times since 2011. And that 2011 date remains bright in my mind because that was when we conceived our last child... and that took some major handiwork from my side. He's otherwise just not into me. I regret taking so long to leave him.

Icouldseetinsel · 31/01/2024 03:04

Only if both partners have similar sex drives. I mean there are people out there who are asexual and never have sex but of course they can have long happy relationships if they find a partner who feels the same.
But I think iyou both have very different sex drives then no... it won't work because resentment will build... I mean obviously in long term relationships you'll have periods where your sex drive fluctuates and maybe yours and your partners won't align perfectly all the time... but bottom line is whether you view that as something temporary or to work on... or you just don't ever want to have sex again regardless of how your partner feels.

TheOriginalEmu · 31/01/2024 03:11

It can work if both parties are good communicators.
there are ways to manage a mismatched sex drive including: non-monogamy, other sexual acts that both are happy with, managing your sexual urges by yourself, etc.

but it does require a lot of work. Anc chucking a baby in the mix rarely helps.

Calamitousness · 31/01/2024 03:17

The addition of a baby is not known to help any marital situation. But, I would say. If it’s the woman with a high libido then it may dampen it for a while.
also if it’s the male partner with low libido and he’s not gay has he had his testosterone levels checked?

cordeliachaseatemyhandbag · 31/01/2024 06:14

I'd assume one party was getting sex elsewhere.

Which I see no ethical problem with in this scenarios

jeaux90 · 31/01/2024 06:40

Nope. I have always seen it end badly.

Squashinthepinkcup · 08/07/2024 08:26

sweetieplease · 30/01/2024 22:38

The relationship has lasted some six years. Many reasons for it lasting so long.. mostly practical and lack of options and opportunity for both people. A rare intimate moment caused pregnancy. Could this turn things round?

My DH and I have very different libidos, always have. We've been together 8 years, married 5, have 2 children. He could quite happily go months without it, I would be happy with multiple times a week. His lack of libido was actually rather a blessing when our babies were super small, it was nice not to feel the pressure that some women seem to experience. Now everyone is getting a good amount of sleep and finding a balance with time to exercise, date nights etc it's picked up again. We find a middle ground. I've no interest in seeking anything outside of our marriage and neither does he. We have a very communicative and respectful partnership.

I'm not sure what counts as long term in terms of relationships but it's working for us.

Thepeopleversuswork · 08/07/2024 08:49

No. There’s a huge imbalance here. The high libido partner is going to check out and seek it elsewhere.

If you both had very low libido it could conceivably work but in these circumstances not a chance.

Out of interest what is the point of being in a relationship with someone you never have sex with? Why go through the grief, hassle and limitations of a relationship if there’s no sex?

OneTC · 08/07/2024 08:57

It just depends how much the sex drive person wants to be with the non sex drive person. I reckon someone that will willingly go without sex is probably pretty rare but it's not impossible.

Squashinthepinkcup · 08/07/2024 09:03

Thepeopleversuswork · 08/07/2024 08:49

No. There’s a huge imbalance here. The high libido partner is going to check out and seek it elsewhere.

If you both had very low libido it could conceivably work but in these circumstances not a chance.

Out of interest what is the point of being in a relationship with someone you never have sex with? Why go through the grief, hassle and limitations of a relationship if there’s no sex?

In my case, I had no interest in marrying or having children at all. I was very happily independent and single. Then one day I met this guy and it was like a gong went off in the core of me 'this is it, this is the guy you're meant to spend the rest of your life with'. Honestly, we're so vastly different in every single way that it's not been the easiest of choices. But, I'd still choose him every day. Sex is only a portion of everything a relationship is, and for what the rest of it brings me I'm willing to make compromises.

Thepeopleversuswork · 08/07/2024 09:13

@Squashinthepinkcup

Of course sex isn’t everything. But long term relationships are often tedious, demanding and restrictive. They can make your life feel unbearably stifled even with someone you adore.

Sex is one of the perks. I can’t see how the benefits of a relationship would outweigh the downsides if there was no sex.

Tippet · 08/07/2024 09:16

Certainly, depending on communication about how it works when two people have irreconcilable libidos. I know two longterm couples where the wife makes her own discreet extramarital arrangements for sex with her husband’s knowledge.

Dweetfidilove · 08/07/2024 09:20

If the lack of sex doesn't kill the relationship, the resentment will. I imagine the constant rejection and the constant squashing my needs would drive me to madness.
Wouldn't be the relationship for me.

BananaLambo · 08/07/2024 09:21

Having been in a sexless marriage where I was the one with the higher libido it is absolute torture and not sustainable in the long term. While I was faithful during the marriage it too every ounce of willpower I had not to seek sex elsewhere. I’m now in a relationship where we’re much more compatible and I am so much happier. While sex isn’t a ‘necessity’ in the same way as eating and breathing, it is like art, or a really delicious meal or music - it makes our lives so much richer and more pleasurable.

BobbyBiscuits · 08/07/2024 09:23

If the one with high libido can kind of train themselves not to be horny very often, or they can get by with wanking, then I guess it is possible. I'd say it'd work more if neither had much sexual desire or need for it.

Universalsnail · 08/07/2024 09:23

No this absolutely will not work.

It would work if both people are not interested in sex.
But if one person has such low libido they will only have sex twice a year and the other a high libido this will cause upset and tension because the person with the high libido is not having their needs met in the relationship whatsoever.

It's not really ok to insist on a monogamous relationship but then only be prepared to have sex twice a year. A compromise from both parties absolutely must be made for the relationship to be healthy.

VolkswagonHippy · 08/07/2024 10:19

It can if the high libido person is able to refrain from becoming resentful.