How High Should One's Sexual Wanting Be as a Motivator to Get Married?

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SomeDisciple

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2021
1,829
817
113
#21
Or you being honest and say 15, that could potentially break the relationship),
That's the point! Why would you lie or hide the truth?

If you are engaged to somebody, how difficult is it to be like "Hey, if we're going to go through with this, I'm a low testosterone guy. I think you're the most beautiful thing I've ever laid eyes on, something something something "I feel emotions for you", but that doesn't always translate into physical passion for me, and I just want to know if that's okay with you." And then she says "Oh, thank god you told me, because I would totally kill you and marry another man that actually wants to have sex with me".

People go into marriage with expectations of what it will be. How can masking your expectations be "love"?
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,177
113
#23

What did I just read? 🤔

The result of a spouse not being faithful in the marriage bed can be unfaithfulness (it’s a risk, scripture itself says so). Part of marriage is intimacy, and if the man isn’t getting it from his wife (that’s an ugly way to put it, forgive me), what can he do? Practice celibacy? No, he got married because, in part, he was not gifted with the gift of celibacy (as scripture also says).

Of course we know adultery is not justified, it is sin. However, consider cause and effect. There are repercussions to our actions or lack thereof. There has to be within the confines of the covenant of marriage a clause pertaining to intimacy. Self control is not complete abstinence. Self control does not imply celibacy. It is suggested to be used for short periods of time to pray and seek the Lord. That’s it, not to be in a life long covenant where a spouse is not sharing in the marriage bed. That isn’t self control, that’s abstinence.

But this goes back to @seoulsearch and how much of a motivator is intercourse when it comes to marriage? If intercourse is an expectation, you better be with someone that has a good sex drive. That intercourse is something on their mind. That they, as scripture says, burn with desire, lol. Not someone who is, let’s say, asexual.

It goes back to being equally yoked.
he just has to wait until shes ready again. Periods and headaches pass...they dont last forever. Just because she may not want intercourse every single day or hour doesnt mean shes being unfaithful lol
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,177
113
#24
anyway why are we talking about this

its not like people hump every time they see or touch each other. If you cant control yourself dont use a woman as your outlet. Its like you control anger right, you dont use your wife as a punching bag just cos she's there.

I dont think its a good idea to marry a sex offender or paedophile for example.

God certainly can teach you how to best express love and intimacy at appropriate times with the person He wants you to be with.
 

Icedaisey

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
1,398
475
83
#25
Hey Everyone,

A recent post about marriage being God's holy outlet for sexual expression had me thinking about this question.

This is the reply I made to that particular post:

"It's a funny thing.

This leads into the discussion of how high a person's motivation to marry is based on a desire/need/compulsion for sex and how high it should be when influencing them to seek or marry a spouse.

We all know the infamous passage that tells us it's better to marry than to burn with passion (1 Corinthians 7:9,) but on the flip side, there have been many, many people on the forum over the years (usually in the Family Forum) who admitted to marrying specifically in order to deal with/have an outlet for their passion -- and it never seems to work out well.

I can't think of a single brave soul out there in the time I've been here who stood up and said, "YES!!! I was burning with passion before my marriage, I found myself a most reliable and usable outlet, oops, I mean, er, spouse, and bingo! Now all my flames have been tended to! Hallelujah!"

I wonder if there are couples out there who have found this to be their reality? And if they would be brave and kind enough to tell us that it actually exists?

I'm certainly not saying that the Bible or God's Word is wrong.

I'm just saying, what are we missing in that why does it seem to go so horribly wrong for so many people who are just trying to follow what the Bible says?

There are a lot of people who married thinking that they were walking into God's holy sanctions for a proper sexual outlet, and have found themselves to be utterly miserable."

And so, my intrepid fellow CC'ers... What do YOU think?

* How high should sexual motivation be when seeking someone to marry? 20%? 40%? 99.99+1/2%?

I'm pretty sure very few people would want to be proposed with, 'Hey there, how about you taking up this once-in-a-lifetime offer to be my Ultimate Holy Sex Outlet, 'til death to us part!"

And if anyone out there would actually LIKE to hear someone to ask for their, uh, hand, in marriage this way, well kudos to them for being honest!

In the time I've been on this forum, I don't think I've ever seen a married person proclaim: "I'm here to tell all you poor single people: Marriage REALLY DOES satisfy ALL my sexual needs and curiosities, even far BEYOND my wildest dreams!!!"

Shoot. I'd love it if married couples actually WERE able to tell us this!!

But I understand that it's too personal for most to talk about. And if what they've really found is a harsh reality, I wish there were people who could be honest enough with us to just tell it to us like it is: "I'm telling all you singles out there, brace yourself to be disappointed, and here's why..."

I have to wonder if marriage is like any other form of customer service? The people who are happy with their service aren't usually the ones who speak up -- it's usually the ones are unhappy with their service and have things they would drastically like to change. And I'm certainly not shaming anyone for that.

Anyone who's read my posts for a while knows that the thing I'm always after is People's Realities vs. Obeying the Rules. Yes, we are to obey the rules -- I'm not even trying to argue that.

But what I want to know is, why does life often wind up being so challenging, or downright miserable, for so many who try their best to follow the rules?

And better yet, what can be done about it, if anything?
If you believe marriage is for the rest of your life, getting married so that you can finally have sex according to God's plan, is a guaranteed way to fail in your marriage.
 

Roughsoul1991

Senior Member
Sep 17, 2016
8,784
4,453
113
#26
Hey Everyone,

A recent post about marriage being God's holy outlet for sexual expression had me thinking about this question.

This is the reply I made to that particular post:

"It's a funny thing.

This leads into the discussion of how high a person's motivation to marry is based on a desire/need/compulsion for sex and how high it should be when influencing them to seek or marry a spouse.

We all know the infamous passage that tells us it's better to marry than to burn with passion (1 Corinthians 7:9,) but on the flip side, there have been many, many people on the forum over the years (usually in the Family Forum) who admitted to marrying specifically in order to deal with/have an outlet for their passion -- and it never seems to work out well.

I can't think of a single brave soul out there in the time I've been here who stood up and said, "YES!!! I was burning with passion before my marriage, I found myself a most reliable and usable outlet, oops, I mean, er, spouse, and bingo! Now all my flames have been tended to! Hallelujah!"

I wonder if there are couples out there who have found this to be their reality? And if they would be brave and kind enough to tell us that it actually exists?

I'm certainly not saying that the Bible or God's Word is wrong.

I'm just saying, what are we missing in that why does it seem to go so horribly wrong for so many people who are just trying to follow what the Bible says?

There are a lot of people who married thinking that they were walking into God's holy sanctions for a proper sexual outlet, and have found themselves to be utterly miserable."

And so, my intrepid fellow CC'ers... What do YOU think?

* How high should sexual motivation be when seeking someone to marry? 20%? 40%? 99.99+1/2%?

I'm pretty sure very few people would want to be proposed with, 'Hey there, how about you taking up this once-in-a-lifetime offer to be my Ultimate Holy Sex Outlet, 'til death to us part!"

And if anyone out there would actually LIKE to hear someone to ask for their, uh, hand, in marriage this way, well kudos to them for being honest!

In the time I've been on this forum, I don't think I've ever seen a married person proclaim: "I'm here to tell all you poor single people: Marriage REALLY DOES satisfy ALL my sexual needs and curiosities, even far BEYOND my wildest dreams!!!"

Shoot. I'd love it if married couples actually WERE able to tell us this!!

But I understand that it's too personal for most to talk about. And if what they've really found is a harsh reality, I wish there were people who could be honest enough with us to just tell it to us like it is: "I'm telling all you singles out there, brace yourself to be disappointed, and here's why..."

I have to wonder if marriage is like any other form of customer service? The people who are happy with their service aren't usually the ones who speak up -- it's usually the ones are unhappy with their service and have things they would drastically like to change. And I'm certainly not shaming anyone for that.

Anyone who's read my posts for a while knows that the thing I'm always after is People's Realities vs. Obeying the Rules. Yes, we are to obey the rules -- I'm not even trying to argue that.

But what I want to know is, why does life often wind up being so challenging, or downright miserable, for so many who try their best to follow the rules?

And better yet, what can be done about it, if anything?
Most long lasting relationships takes having much in common. Obviously a high sex drive will not do well with a low sex drive. And of course, sex is not the only thing to a relationship but it is one of God's design for intimacy and building a family. So it is important and many divorces often are the cause of money or sexual immorality.

I married young, right out of high school and still married with the women I met in high school. The sex drive in the early twenties was high on both sides and the results came 3 kids.

The highs and lows of parenting caused sex drives to be high or low and often times it was opposite for us. This created tension as for example I may had been exhausted and my spouse felt I wasn't attracted to her. It was stuff like this we had to work through. Now in our thirties it is beginning to level out as kids are growing out of the infant stage.

As for satisfaction, yes marriage provides better sexual satisfaction.

Read this-

About 88 percent of Americans say they are happy or reasonably content with their married sex. And three-quarters report that their sex lives are reasonably fulfilling. That’s according to a national poll of 1,001 married Americans commissioned by Parade magazine.

In researching for my book His Brain, Her Brain: How divinely designed differences can strengthen your marriage, I found stunning research that shows:

  • Sex is better in marriage
  • Sex is better among religious or spiritual couples
  • Sex is not better if you cohabit
https://www.imom.com/poll-shows-sex-within-marriage-is-more-fulfilling/

My marriage fits this conclusion. It is probably because if you both conform to be like Christ then you also both wish to unselfishly serve the other with their desires in mind. You also intimately grow into a trusting relationship, where you easily learn what works and what doesn't.

When scripture says they become one flesh, it is both spiritual and physical. You are now acting as one. The oneness I would say it is what makes the religious marriages sex life better than all other ways. The spiritual is without guilt and completely free to live into God's design.

Unfortunately, this topic is not spoken on much in the church. God has a lot to say on the topic of sex and it isn't just about sexual immorality. If you live in God's design, you will be satisfied.
 

Kireina

Well-known member
Aug 26, 2020
1,439
1,365
113
#27
Sexual wanting to be a motivator to get married ? ...My answer is ....I hope no one marries for that reason...because the hard truth is that we will never find ultimate relief,satisfaction and joy from another person...

Ultimate satisfaction is found only in Christ...True Joy is found only in Jesus 😇 If your heart is not satisfied in the Lord...you will never be satisfied even if you'll find a great spouse for that purpose...

If we marry to satisfy or to have an outlet to release our sexual thirst... our marriage will going to be miserable...why...? Because everytime we find our release and the sexual desire disappeared already lust wont be enough for you to want to give your spouse a second glance...because we feel no love for them...

And what happened when the spouse becomes incapacitated by injury (accident) or chronic illness ? I wonder how many husbands or wives will decide to stay... since they got married because they wanted an outlet(sexual outlet) 🤔 I guess none... maybe there is (don't know 💁 )...A marriage based on "your longing for self satisfaction " will never become a successful marriage but will only lead to a painful separation and will leave the ill /injured spouse broken and alone. That is so painful 😐
 

BenFTW

Senior Member
Oct 7, 2012
4,834
981
113
33
#28
@seoulsearch This thread led to me researching this topic, lol. There is so much out there. I read one article that actually emphatically stated that “cutting off sexual intimacy in marriage is sin.” But I guess you are more so focusing on the motivation in getting married and how much of that motivation should be the marriage bed.

This isn’t the same as the importance of that intimacy within marriage, but understanding it’s importance in having and contributing to a long and lasting covenant, we can then put it in its proper place (in respect to the question the OP raises).

If sexual intimacy is necessary for a prosperous marriage, then it’s contributing factor in the decision to get married should be included. You don’t get married to a woman you don’t want to make love to (unless you’re a narcissist and you’re trying to check things off your list of accomplishments; there is literally a blog about a woman who dealt with this).

The question again is, how much of a factor is sexual intimacy in the decision to get married? Well, it obviously has to do with attraction. We don’t marry someone we aren’t attracted to, and attraction generally has to do with sexual attraction. At least for men. Maybe for women it’s more like protection and security? But women too consider appearance. Either way, it most definitely is a factor in the decision to getting married and one that shouldn’t be ignored for the sake of a prosperous marriage.

I know for me, it isn’t something I’ve even thought of (how important is sex for me). To me, it was a given. In marriage you have sexual intimacy. It was assumed. You find someone you love, are attracted to, and as a result of that love you share in the marriage bed. I am not even thinking of “let me get my needs met”, I just assumed they would be, mutually. So while all I said above about the importance of sexual intimacy in marriage, and attraction to your spouse is important, I am not actively considering my “wants.”

Why do I want to get married? Cause I want to love someone, and be loved, and have a family filled with love who know and serve the Lord. Sexual intimacy is just assumed in the equation.

So in answer to the question you’re posing… it is a factor in respect to attraction (subconsciously), but for me at least, it is assumed that those desires will be met as a natural result of love. Maybe thats naive? And it’s not like, “Oh I need these sexual desires met.” They just… will be. I don’t think of my spouse to be as someone who has to fulfill some sexual fantasies. We will enjoy each other, simply. 🤷🏻 I am not considering the wants because in my eyes they are a part of the package of what marriage is.
 
Nov 26, 2012
3,095
1,050
113
#29
Most long lasting relationships takes having much in common. Obviously a high sex drive will not do well with a low sex drive. And of course, sex is not the only thing to a relationship but it is one of God's design for intimacy and building a family. So it is important and many divorces often are the cause of money or sexual immorality.

I married young, right out of high school and still married with the women I met in high school. The sex drive in the early twenties was high on both sides and the results came 3 kids.

The highs and lows of parenting caused sex drives to be high or low and often times it was opposite for us. This created tension as for example I may had been exhausted and my spouse felt I wasn't attracted to her. It was stuff like this we had to work through. Now in our thirties it is beginning to level out as kids are growing out of the infant stage.

As for satisfaction, yes marriage provides better sexual satisfaction.

Read this-

About 88 percent of Americans say they are happy or reasonably content with their married sex. And three-quarters report that their sex lives are reasonably fulfilling. That’s according to a national poll of 1,001 married Americans commissioned by Parade magazine.

In researching for my book His Brain, Her Brain: How divinely designed differences can strengthen your marriage, I found stunning research that shows:

  • Sex is better in marriage
  • Sex is better among religious or spiritual couples
  • Sex is not better if you cohabit
https://www.imom.com/poll-shows-sex-within-marriage-is-more-fulfilling/

My marriage fits this conclusion. It is probably because if you both conform to be like Christ then you also both wish to unselfishly serve the other with their desires in mind. You also intimately grow into a trusting relationship, where you easily learn what works and what doesn't.

When scripture says they become one flesh, it is both spiritual and physical. You are now acting as one. The oneness I would say it is what makes the religious marriages sex life better than all other ways. The spiritual is without guilt and completely free to live into God's design.

Unfortunately, this topic is not spoken on much in the church. God has a lot to say on the topic of sex and it isn't just about sexual immorality. If you live in God's design, you will be satisfied.
I haven’t taken a survey or anything but I assure you that the Parade Magazine results are inaccurate. Based on comments of just about every dude I’ve every known and many women I’ve known, 88% is not the number…not even close.
 

MatthewWestfieldUK

Well-known member
May 13, 2021
871
498
63
#30
I could be wrong about this, but the kicker is, a couple isn't going to find out if their drives/desires/frequency is compatible until AFTER they get married, and by then, it's "too late" if/when there are major problems.

For instance, I've read about people who have been sexually abused (and it's a sadly common occurrence these days,) and the person might believe they will be totally gung-ho about an active sex life with their spouse.

But then... They actually married... and find out that each time, they're reminded of the abuse. And they start to withdraw, blame their spouse, then resent and avoid them.

I've had a few discussions with men whose wives accused them of raping them each time, because every time they tried to be close to one another, it reminded her of past abuse, no matter how hard he tried to be loving.

So here you have a situation in which the wife sees her husband as an abuser, and the husband can't get close to his wife, or he is accused of being a sexual predator. Or the other way around, as it seems to be about as common for guys to be sexually abused as girls these days.

These are the kinds of stories I hear regularly.

And all the church can say is, "You have to have communication! You need to go to Christian pre-marital (and after marital) counseling! You need to be open and clear about your expectations BEFORE the marriage!"

That's all fine and dandy advice.

But it's just not cutting it for a good number of people who are suffering in situations such as this, and people aren't given permission to talk about such things openly without being condemned back into, "Just follow all the rules, do everything the church leaders tell you to do, and if it still doesn't work out, you obviously aren't trying or didn't try hard enough."
I think you may be right where problems have come from a younger age or before marriage and they start to damage the marriage 2. If you don't have a partner who is willing to understand and talk it can be very isolating.
I am shocked that even in this room it is being discussed
 

Roughsoul1991

Senior Member
Sep 17, 2016
8,784
4,453
113
#31
I haven’t taken a survey or anything but I assure you that the Parade Magazine results are inaccurate. Based on comments of just about every dude I’ve every known and many women I’ve known, 88% is not the number…not even close.
I hate to be technical but how can you assure inaccuracy without proving it? Conduct your own survey and post the results otherwise it is simply your perspective.
 
Nov 26, 2012
3,095
1,050
113
#32
I hate to be technical but how can you assure inaccuracy without proving it? Conduct your own survey and post the results otherwise it is simply your perspective.
I’m sure I could conduct a bias survey to prove my point like everyone else does. Based on divorce rates, cheating spouse rates, porn addictions and comments made by friends and peers, the number is not close to 88%. How not close to 88% is subjective.
 

cinder

Senior Member
Mar 26, 2014
4,328
2,361
113
#33
I’m sure I could conduct a bias survey to prove my point like everyone else does. Based on divorce rates, cheating spouse rates, porn addictions and comments made by friends and peers, the number is not close to 88%. How not close to 88% is subjective.
But comments made by friends and peers doesn't even come close to a representative random sample of the entire US population. We don't know how close the study came to getting that quality of a sample, but it's likely better than what you come up with just surveying friends and peers. That's why they do formal surveys after all, because all our personal experiences are biased and you can try to counteract a lot of biases with good survey design. It's also possible that you live in an area where marriage and / or marital satisfaction is lover (ok that's a typo too good to delete but it's supposed to be lower) than average. Also, how often do married people talk about their sex life when they're perfectly happy with it? Those just aren't conversations you hear often because there's nothing to talk to outsiders about.

Other comment on the survey (in general because I haven't found all the sample conditions, sample size, really all the stuff you need to have confidence in the findings of a study) would be that it's likely a snapshot in time of how people feel about their marriages right now rather than the whole history of whether their marriage has always been good or not. So you could get someone like @tourist in the survey who is happily married now, but hasn't always been so and has his stories to tell about a bad marriage too. That doesn't invalidate the survey, but might explain why, as different relationships that used to be happy go through crisis, it seems like marriages are constantly failing.
 

Roughsoul1991

Senior Member
Sep 17, 2016
8,784
4,453
113
#34
I’m sure I could conduct a bias survey to prove my point like everyone else does. Based on divorce rates, cheating spouse rates, porn addictions and comments made by friends and peers, the number is not close to 88%. How not close to 88% is subjective.
It was supposed to be bias. A national poll of 1,001 married Americans.
Married is a bias as in the poll was not to include single people, etc.

The last data I saw was that divorce rates have actually fallen but many people are also not getting married nowadays.

So if the married population is low within the US then it very well could be 88% which is a great testimony for Gods Word.

Porn addictions and comments made by friends and peers doesn't necessarily follow as porn addiction doesn't necessarily mean the individual is not happy in the marriage especially with how much culture has normalized porn. It could simply mean they struggle with addiction.

Friends and peers, well that is hardly enough people to have reliable results.
 

SomeDisciple

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2021
1,829
817
113
#35
When scripture says they become one flesh, it is both spiritual and physical. You are now acting as one. The oneness I would say it is what makes the religious marriages sex life better than all other ways. The spiritual is without guilt and completely free to live into God's design.
I agree with most of what you were saying, but I think we should be careful with this. Especially where somebody has a holdover marriage from before conversion where their spouse is a non-believer; you are not one spirit because of marriage- you can be one flesh, that is, loving your spouse as your own flesh, and the marriage bed is sanctified, but you cannot be one spirit with a non-believing spouse. If both husband and wife are believers they are one spirit, but not through their marriage.
_____________________________________________________________________________________

But on topic- Love is sanctified always, but sexual intimacy is sanctified only in marriage. If you don't want that kind of intimacy, then you don't need marriage. If you want that kind of intimacy, then you do. It's really that simple. Sex is a huge motivator for marriage. You should not get married to just anybody just so that you can have sanctified-sex. That's stupid. But if someone is not wanting sexual intimacy in their life and they are trying to get married... I'm kind of suspicious as to why.
 

Roughsoul1991

Senior Member
Sep 17, 2016
8,784
4,453
113
#36
I agree with most of what you were saying, but I think we should be careful with this. Especially where somebody has a holdover marriage from before conversion where their spouse is a non-believer; you are not one spirit because of marriage- you can be one flesh, that is, loving your spouse as your own flesh, and the marriage bed is sanctified, but you cannot be one spirit with a non-believing spouse. If both husband and wife are believers they are one spirit, but not through their marriage.
_____________________________________________________________________________________

But on topic- Love is sanctified always, but sexual intimacy is sanctified only in marriage. If you don't want that kind of intimacy, then you don't need marriage. If you want that kind of intimacy, then you do. It's really that simple. Sex is a huge motivator for marriage. You should not get married to just anybody just so that you can have sanctified-sex. That's stupid. But if someone is not wanting sexual intimacy in their life and they are trying to get married... I'm kind of suspicious as to why.
Your right, I wasn't speaking about unbelievers as I was sharing a personal truth with a Biblical truth.
 

Kojikun

Well-known member
Oct 5, 2018
4,658
2,719
113
#37
Hey Everyone,

A recent post about marriage being God's holy outlet for sexual expression had me thinking about this question.

This is the reply I made to that particular post:

"It's a funny thing.

This leads into the discussion of how high a person's motivation to marry is based on a desire/need/compulsion for sex and how high it should be when influencing them to seek or marry a spouse.

We all know the infamous passage that tells us it's better to marry than to burn with passion (1 Corinthians 7:9,) but on the flip side, there have been many, many people on the forum over the years (usually in the Family Forum) who admitted to marrying specifically in order to deal with/have an outlet for their passion -- and it never seems to work out well.

I can't think of a single brave soul out there in the time I've been here who stood up and said, "YES!!! I was burning with passion before my marriage, I found myself a most reliable and usable outlet, oops, I mean, er, spouse, and bingo! Now all my flames have been tended to! Hallelujah!"

I wonder if there are couples out there who have found this to be their reality? And if they would be brave and kind enough to tell us that it actually exists?

I'm certainly not saying that the Bible or God's Word is wrong.

I'm just saying, what are we missing in that why does it seem to go so horribly wrong for so many people who are just trying to follow what the Bible says?

There are a lot of people who married thinking that they were walking into God's holy sanctions for a proper sexual outlet, and have found themselves to be utterly miserable."

And so, my intrepid fellow CC'ers... What do YOU think?

* How high should sexual motivation be when seeking someone to marry? 20%? 40%? 99.99+1/2%?

I'm pretty sure very few people would want to be proposed with, 'Hey there, how about you taking up this once-in-a-lifetime offer to be my Ultimate Holy Sex Outlet, 'til death to us part!"

And if anyone out there would actually LIKE to hear someone to ask for their, uh, hand, in marriage this way, well kudos to them for being honest!

In the time I've been on this forum, I don't think I've ever seen a married person proclaim: "I'm here to tell all you poor single people: Marriage REALLY DOES satisfy ALL my sexual needs and curiosities, even far BEYOND my wildest dreams!!!"

Shoot. I'd love it if married couples actually WERE able to tell us this!!

But I understand that it's too personal for most to talk about. And if what they've really found is a harsh reality, I wish there were people who could be honest enough with us to just tell it to us like it is: "I'm telling all you singles out there, brace yourself to be disappointed, and here's why..."

I have to wonder if marriage is like any other form of customer service? The people who are happy with their service aren't usually the ones who speak up -- it's usually the ones are unhappy with their service and have things they would drastically like to change. And I'm certainly not shaming anyone for that.

Anyone who's read my posts for a while knows that the thing I'm always after is People's Realities vs. Obeying the Rules. Yes, we are to obey the rules -- I'm not even trying to argue that.

But what I want to know is, why does life often wind up being so challenging, or downright miserable, for so many who try their best to follow the rules?

And better yet, what can be done about it, if anything?
Being an almost life long porn addiction and having experienced sex, I can unfortunately say sex although enticing lacks the same thrill. For awhile I believed getting married would solve this problem but I am now realizing my addiction has cost me much more than I thought and its almost impossible to be satisfied with dating or probably marriage. Since my standards on physical looks is unrealistic for a person of my features and build (a nice way of saying im ugly and shallow) I cant imagine finding anyone that fits the bill and when I think I do they just ignore me or I find out there are taken. Im at a loss at to what to do and I doubt even my addiction ending will make it better.
 
Nov 26, 2012
3,095
1,050
113
#38
It was supposed to be bias. A national poll of 1,001 married Americans.
Married is a bias as in the poll was not to include single people, etc.

The last data I saw was that divorce rates have actually fallen but many people are also not getting married nowadays.

So if the married population is low within the US then it very well could be 88% which is a great testimony for Gods Word.

Porn addictions and comments made by friends and peers doesn't necessarily follow as porn addiction doesn't necessarily mean the individual is not happy in the marriage especially with how much culture has normalized porn. It could simply mean they struggle with addiction.

Friends and peers, well that is hardly enough people to have reliable results.
If you are watching porn then there’s a strong chance you are living vicariously through the “actor”. People who are satisfied, enjoy there own experiences more than needing a surrogate to live through. Honestly I hope that number is accurate. Either there are lots of couples being fulfilled or the lack of interest in sex is escalating. Praise the Lord!
 

SomeDisciple

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2021
1,829
817
113
#39
Im at a loss at to what to do and I doubt even my addiction ending will make it better.
Be not unbelieving, but believing. If you fill up on poisonous food it will spoil your appetite for healthy things. Even listening to too much junk media can spoil your appetite for hearing the word of god. Separating yourself from bad things makes room for the good. Call on the name of the Lord, and believe.

Being an almost life long porn addiction and having experienced sex, I can unfortunately say sex although enticing lacks the same thrill.
Of course. The industry is propped up by hell... The entire idea behind it is so that you will imagine that life without it, or that marriage could not possibly be better.
When you say you've "experienced sex" I assume you mean fornication. That's not a good way to measure what your intimate life would or could be in marriage either. Also, it brings disaster.

I cant imagine finding anyone that fits the bill and when I think I do they just ignore me or I find out there are taken. Im at a loss at to what to do
That's easy enough. Pray for a better imagination.
 
Feb 10, 2014
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#40
I would rather commit sexual sin out of marriage than to rush into a marriage that ultimately leads to divorce. Jesus did not condemn sexual temptation to nearly the extent he condemned divorce.