entertains, educates & inspires marriages
Find Marriage Answers
sex advice
How To Have Fantastic Sex Without Feeling Sexy
Embracing your sexuality when you don't feel sexy can be complicated, but here are a few tips to bring that sexy back.


Pixabay
Sometimes you need to embrace the feeling of connection even when you don't feel like connecting.


If your partner tells you they think you look sexy, believe them!”
When you're struggling with feelings of body dysmorphia, it can be hard to think of your body as a source of sexual pleasure.

Your partner is probably still tempted to think of it that way. Even when your sexuality and your ability to express it is deeply important to you, feeling bad about your body or uncomfortable with how you see yourself in the mirror can make it harder to enjoy that sexual expression.

It doesn't have to be an either/or, feeling sexy/not feeling sexy paradigm. Here are three simple tips to start feeling better about yourself.

1. Recognize and take note of when you feel sexual, even if you don't feel sexy. You may look in the mirror and think "ugh," but still think "mmm" when you see your partner. You can feel sexual desire and sexual openness even when you're not experiencing yourself as sexy.

2. Enjoy feeling desired, even when you don't feel desirable. If your spouse tells you they think you look sexy, believe them! This is a person you care about. It's a person you have sex with, and so presumably a person you trust. Hopefully you trust them not only to be honest with you, but also to have your best interests at heart. If this is true, take them at their word.

3. Don't put the burden of feeling sexy between you and pleasurable sexual play. Sure, it's nice to feel sexy, but it isn't essential. If that one feeling is absent, it doesn't need to stop you from enjoying the pleasure and connection you want. It's easy to fall into the trap of believing that feeling sexy is another expectation you're not meeting. However, that expectation only exists in your head. Give yourself the gift of accepting your own feelings of desire, and being open to the desire of your partner.

Dr. Elizabeth Anne Wood is a SUNY Chancellors Award-winning Professor of Sociology at Nassau Community College in Garden City, NY. She is also Senior Strategist for Woodhull Freedom Foundation, the nation’s only human rights organization working full time to protect sexual freedom as a fundamental human right. She earned her Ph.D. at Brandeis University in 1999 for a study of gender, power, and social interaction in strip clubs, and has written critically about sexuality and society ever since. You can follow her on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.


Over 1 million couples turn to Hitched for expert marital advice every year. Sign up now for our newsletter & get exclusive weekly content that will entertain, educate and inspire your marriage.





Pin It

Connect with us:        

Leave a Comment

Over 1 million couples turn to Hitched for expert marital advice every year. Sign up now for our newsletter & get exclusive weekly content that will entertain, educate and inspire your marriage.



The Formula for a Magical Union: 10 Tips for Bliss

Fighting Fair: The 7 Secrets to a Successful Relationship.

How to Keep the Magic Alive: 5 Ways to Energize Your Marriage

3 Ways to Stop Feeding Emotional Eating

You’ve Got the Power: 4 Ways to Embody Courage and Confidence







Get Featured