6 Resolutions Sex Therapists Want You to Make This Year | Men's Health Magazine Australia

6 Resolutions Sex Therapists Want You to Make This Year

It’s easy to make the same New Year’s resolutions year after year: Eat less junk food, exercise more, and stick to a budget. The point is, we are slacking on making resolutions that are actually fun—like having more sex.

 

Vowing to make the New Year hotter can transform your love life. Even sex therapists make these steamy resolutions. “At the beginning of last year, I resolved to initiate sex more often because I usually leave it to my partner,” says Dr Jess O’Reilly, resident sexologist and relationship expert for Astroglide.

 

“He doesn’t complain, but I see the toll it takes on relationships at work, so I wanted to be proactive.”

 

Because resolutions usually centre around change, they can promote sexual growth—and that can boost your relationship with your partner and your libido, says O’Reilly. Ready to get started? Here are six expert-approved resolutions you should make for a steamier 2017.

 

1\ Tell Your Partner How You Want Sex To Feel

 

“Telling your partner how you want to feel during sex is easier to do than revealing each and every detail of your explicit fantasies (not that you shouldn’t share those too). … For example, maybe you want to feel desired or enjoy a sense of reckless abandon? Tell your partner how to make you feel that way. You can certainly share the entire fantasy, but don’t ignore the associated feelings—they’re the driving force behind it.” —Dr Jess O’Reilly

 

2\ Put Yourself First

 

“Don’t just look to please your partner without sharing what excites you. You deserve to have a fulfilling experience too.” —Dr Jane Greer, author of  What About Me? How to Stop Selfishness From Ruining Your Relationship.

 

3\ Spend 15 Minutes A Week Turning Yourself On

 

“Create a 15-minute window once a week where you and your partner commit to generating arousal that may lead to desire—and maybe sex. However this exercise isn’t meant to lead to sex every time. It’s about generating arousal. Studies show that in long-term relationships, desire shifts from spontaneous to responsive, and desire responds to arousal. During those 15 minutes, you can make out, take a shower together, watch porn, or read erotica.” —Dr Ian Kerner, author of She Comes First

 

4\ Outline What You Will and Won’t Do In Bed

 

“Create three lists of what you would like in bed, things you’d like to try, and things you definitely will pass on. On the first list, write down all the sexual things you know you like or are pretty sure you’d like if you tried them. Basically, all the things you’d say yes to. Then do the same for the things you might be into trying and the things you’re not willing to give a go. This adds up to a thought-provoking and insightful profile of your sexuality, which helps you learn specifically what your desires and boundaries are.” —Dr Carol Queen, staff sexologist for Good Vibrations

 

5\ Play Out Your Favourite Fantasy

 

“Discuss your favourite fantasies with your partner. This will increase emotional intimacy and potentially help you cross off one of the sexiest to-dos on your sexual bucket list. Most couples note that they feel an increased sense of trust with their partners when they discuss and/or act out their most intimate desires.” —Dr Kat Van Kirk, licensed marriage and family therapist and certified sex therapist

 

6\ Spend Time Focussing on Sexy Memories

 

“If all you think about are unsexy things like work, kids, and other obligations, how are you ever going to feel sexy? Start sexually empowering yourself by focusing on the times you felt incredibly turned on. Then, try to feel the emotions attached to those memories. This can have powerful results in reprogramming your subconscious mind and flooding your body with feel-good endorphins. Your brain doesn’t know whether you’re thinking sexy thoughts or experiencing awesome sex!” —Dr Ava Cadell, author of NeuroLoveology

 

The article 6 Resolutions Sex Therapists Want You to Make This Year was originally published on MensHealth.com

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