Thank you for your answer. I understand.
If anyone has any other opinion/experience, please share it.
I've heard it said that you will feel the same emotions in marriage while courting - safety, love, trust, etc. and marriage magnifies these emotions. Also, the negative emotions that comes with relationship problems, like dissatisfaction, offense, poor communication etc are also magnified in marriage. Dissatisfaction is particularly magnified, because you have no other options for the nature of your vows and commitment. Which is why selecting a spouse - and having realistic expectations - is a very serious matter.
As someone else said, sex can be void of emotions. No two people have the same soul, and there are various levels of maturity in all souls, and various personalities in individuals, and along with that comes various likes, dislikes, hobbies, talents etc. I do believe the soul and spirit are involved in sex along with the body, and your passions are wrapped in these. In my opinion, these are all interconnected, but depending on the couple, can be divorced from one another when in a sexual union.
Tintin made the comparison to Trinity. The Father, Son, and Spirit WERE separated at one point, particularly at the Cross. Not meaning to open a can of worms, but while Jesus was on earth, He was apart from the Father, but yet still with the Father. To use this analogy, I submit that it's possible for only one or two of these human layers to be engaged in sex while another is not - but the human/body still remains literally as one.
Different combinations of spiritual, soulful, and physical tastes results ultimately in the fact that not just any man and woman put together can just "make sex work" just because they physically fit together. I've heard it said don't worry about chemistry before marriage - you have the equipment, that's pretty much all you need. I don't agree, because the "equipment" is not all there is to compatibility. Dissatisfaction is one of the top five issues among married couples, and sometimes leads to adultery and divorce. If just having the "innie and the outie" was all there was to satisfying sex life, it doesn't makes sense that it is such an issue - esp when some couples with this problem try to work it out with great difficulty. I'm not saying what a couple should do to prevent this, only that they should pray and talk honestly and thoroughly about what would be best for them.
That's is a personal choice. I can vouch for what Molly said. Not all sex is the same. I wasn't a virgin before I got married, and even so I had very, very little experience with it. My first lover felt good - at the time - but the spiritual and soulful bond was not there. I wanted to be with him, but now I know it wasn't deep, true love but co-dependency. I was not grounded in faith, nor did I know what I wanted in life. As for him, I can't say for sure. But he wasn't ready for a commitment, and he didn't treat me well, either.
My husband did wait for me, and I can tell you this much: A woman or man that is ready for a serious relationship/commitment, AND (this is key) insync with you in other deep matters, will wait for you if you ask them. As the spirit and soul isn't all there is to compatibility, the relationship will not survive on the body/sex alone either. So it makes sense that someone who is truly right for you wouldn't reject you on sex alone. With whatever boundaries you set (some choose not to kiss, whatever works for the couple) someone who is serious will wait.
To anyone who have given up or lost their virginity, I wish that you not be tormented as I was. It hurt enough for what it was. But the honeymoon fantasy that had been fed to me - that I forfeited - made the pain far greater than it should've been. Saving sex for marriage was taught to me as something literally so precious, it was implied that not being a virgin would taint a future marriage, or make it less meaningful. That is rubbish.
The union is not defined by what you've done physically in your past, it is about what you and your spouse are as one. Being a virgin doesn't guarantee a successful marriage. As someone else said, it has an extremely short life - and then there's life after the honeymoon. What happens from there on out defines the quality of your marriage, not whether you were a virgin or not.
This is what I was told: Before God, you are a spotless virgin in Christ - even though you have done this. Objectively, you may have sinned, but so far as your faith is concerned, it can still transform you into that suitable match for someone else... you're not "damaged" goods for a future marriage. Chances are your future spouse won't be a virgin either. Please don't think of yourselves that way.