Most successful relationships are as a result of strong intimate bond between couples - physically and emotionally.
Couples who lack both emotional and physical intimacy — admiring, appreciating, touching, kissing, caressing, holding, hugging — are at risk, according to relationship experts.
It is said that sex is an integral part of any relationship, so what happens when the desire to have sex more often decreases? do you look outside for another solution?
Most successful relationships are as a result of strong intimate bond between couples - physically and emotionally, and sex takes a little percentage of that. Which means a marriage can survive even when couples aren't having sex but are deeply connected to each other.
Samantha Burns of YourTango lists 11 ideas to help reconnect with your partner when sex isn't involved:
Take a nightly stroll around the block, hand in hand.
Give each other a ten-minute massage before bed.
Sit in a park on a shared towel so you’re forced to cozy up.
Send a flirtatious text message that builds anticipation, or one that just lets your partner know you're thinking about him/her.
Lay in bed for twenty minutes of pillow talk when you first get home from work, before total exhaustion kicks in.
Reminisce about your first date or the first time you slept together.
Cook dinner while dancing to music around the kitchen.
Spend four uninterrupted minutes staring into each other’s eyes without talking, then reflect on the experience.
Exercise together — couples who sweat together stay together.
Make out like you did in the beginning and watch the butterflies flutter back.
Every night, express gratitude for one thing your partner did that day — no matter how small the act (examples are doing the dishes, grocery shopping, sending a loving text, planning a vacation, a kiss goodbye that morning).
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