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Iris Krasnow

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Separate Bedrooms Can Steam Up A Marriage

Posted: 05/04/2012 8:39 pm

What's the real secret to making love last? Readers often ask me this question based on my research for "The Secret Lives of Wives: Women Share What It Really Takes To Stay Married." One common theme in relationships that achieve longevity underscore that this old saying appears to be true: "Absence makes the heart grow fonder".

Yes, time apart does seem to help keep the fires stoked.

I'm not just talking about regular girls nights out or taking separate vacations. Women and men often use the word "mystery" as an essential component of sustained romance and love. Many couples I interviewed keep that mystery alive through separate bedrooms and separate bathrooms that separate their sex lives and annoying personal rituals.

"Naked flossing and a jiggling belly is NOT pretty," one wife of 20 years told me. "Hardly puts you in the mood to want to jump someone's bones."

"I can come and go as I please," adds another veteran wife. "I arrive for lovemaking and leave for the snoring."

Here are some thought provoking insights on how two bedrooms can rock your love life from a husband name Al in Marin County. Al wrote me the below dispatch after reading my Huffington Post Weddings piece called "Help! I Hate My Husband" that talks about how irksome habits can swiftly extinguish marital bliss:

My beloved Mary is upstairs right now taking a private nap in her own bedroom. We've been together for 18 years and we credit the fact that we have our own personal spaces to the success of our stable and loving relationship.

We each have always had our own bedrooms and our own bathrooms. We sleep together when we want not because we have to and I consider this essential. We also remain much more private about bathrooms and nudity. Most of our friends, after living together for a while, begin to use the bathroom together and are often naked as they dress. From the beginning, Mary and I agreed that we would preserve the shyness we had as teenagers and remain discreet with our nudity around the house. This allows us to reveal our nakedness when we truly want to and preserves the sexy attractiveness of nudity for fun and frolic. Thus nudity remains exciting and does not become mundane.

When people first meet and fall in love they usually have their own homes with their own bedrooms and are discreet about nudity and their bathroom business. We have found that in preserving that original environment from which the love and passion sprung to be very, very sexy. Why copy archaic traditions that often lead to dysfunctional marriages? When nudity and bathroom activity becomes commonplace it seems humdrum rather than sexy.

Fun and sexiness and love dissolves over time if you have to give up personal privacy. It is very healthy for a relationship to be able to retreat into a satisfying feeling of seclusion by simply going into one's personal bedroom and closing the door.


My architect husband tells me that more clients are asking for separate quarters when designing new homes or in the re-design of older homes. The National Homebuilders Association predicted this trend in a survey conducted in 2007 in which a panel of experts was asked questions about "The Home Of The Future", one of which addressed separate bedrooms. The panel's prediction at that time was that the demand for dual master bedroom suites "would increase significantly for upscale new homes".

"When we released that survey we got responses from all over the world," says Stephen Melman, director of economic services at the National Association of Homebuilders based in Washington, D.C. "People were wondering why American couples might not want to sleep together. It isn't about whether they love each other. Perhaps the couple has incompatible work schedules. One person is a TV anchor or a nurse and has to get up at 4 a.m. and the other is an attorney who isn't expected at work until 10 a.m. Maybe there is a health issue: the husband has a sleep apnea machine and the wife can't sleep with the buzzing all night. Or maybe this couple just wants to keep some mystery in their marriage.

"If you can afford it, the luxury of separate master bedrooms is certainly one way to keep that mystery."

For those who can't afford to build a new wing to steam up their marriages here's a cheaper alternative. Until her husband died after 60 years of marriage one wife used to undress behind a six-foot tall rattan Oriental screen splashed with florals that stood in her bedroom. She explains how she didn't want "sagging flesh to hang out. I always wanted to seem beautiful". So she would limit her exposures of nudity like Al advises, and emerge slowly from behind the folding screen, decked in a silk negligee as if she were a bride on her honeymoon.

"Our bedroom kept that romantic atmosphere," says this woman who is now in her 90s. "We always had magic."

Other secrets to making love last can be found in this blogger's book "The Secret Lives of Wives." Connect with her on: www.iriskrasnow.com

 
FOLLOW WEDDINGS
What's the real secret to making love last? Readers often ask me this question based on my research for "The Secret Lives of Wives: Women Share What It Really Takes To Stay Married." One common theme ...
What's the real secret to making love last? Readers often ask me this question based on my research for "The Secret Lives of Wives: Women Share What It Really Takes To Stay Married." One common theme ...
 
 
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hharrison22
12:06 PM on 05/29/2012
LOVE this article! My husband and I just began sleeping in separate beds. Neither of us sleep well when we sleep together because I'm a WWF wrestler in my sleep so we just fight all night long. Finally, I was like- where's the rule that says we have to sleep together? I talk about my entire experience here:

http://www.themommypsychologist.com/2012/05/28/im-done-sleeping-with-my-husband/
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Melia HayesBiedscheid
Liberal, atheist and patriotic!
08:51 AM on 05/31/2012
Have you considered having a sleep study done? Research this: periodic limb movement disorder. I have it and my symptoms are very similar to yours. There is a medication that helps. Separate bedrooms has saved our marriage of 32 years. When one of us gets the urge it's "your room or mine?"
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Pointless Agony
Currently an undergrad at the University of Tennes
12:07 PM on 05/25/2012
As a conservative Christian, I am opened-minded to this sleeping arrangement. Nudity is something like porn. At first, merely pictures can stimulate a man to an orgasm, but later on he would need sound and video to become erected.

This mental stability may be the same for marriage nudity. By not seeing the spouse nude 24/7 can keep the mystery of how does your spouse look behind that sex business suit, or how does your spouse's abs and chest look under that collar shirt. Albeit, for me to be completely convinced that this can work I would need to talk to a pastor about it first.
10:38 AM on 05/24/2012
I can completely understand the author's perspective and those who enjoy this sleeping arrangement. For me, after seeing how my husband kept his bathroom a hot mess while we were dating, one of my "conditions" on marrying him was being able to have separate bathrooms. It may seem petty or stupid to someone on the outside but this arrangement prevents me from being irritated or feeling resentful about him leaving the bathroom a disaster EVERY morning. This makes him happy because I'm not nagging him about cleaning up after himself and I'm happy to have a bathroom that is just the way I want it. It keeps us from being mad about something really small that could potentially fester into something big. :D
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Pointless Agony
Currently an undergrad at the University of Tennes
12:13 PM on 05/25/2012
Well, thats a problem because if you have to get separate bathrooms over a small problem then what are you going to do for a huge problem? Separate all together? I think not. If your spouse doesn't love you enough to simply clean up behind himself for your comfort then that is a sign of selfishness.

What if my wife builds a house with separate kitchens because I'm too selfish to wash the dishes? Sounds ridiculous. In a marriage there are sacrifices and compromises, and your husband should be mature enough to simply clean up after himself for himself, and for the love of your comfort.
02:11 PM on 05/25/2012
It's not a problem because we are both happy with it; and just because he is messy doesn't mean that he doesn't love me enough. LOL. My husband loves me plenty. Smh... Every relationship is different and all I was saying is that people should decide for themselves what type of living arrangements work best for them. Don't assume that couples don't love each other enough or are less mature than others. Good luck with your marriage, I'm very happy with mines! :D
12:24 AM on 05/10/2012
Yeah. I'm about to try this...with the bedrooms in different zip codes. I'll let you know how it works out...
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07:31 PM on 05/08/2012
I'm 71 years of age and buried 3 husbands in my lifetime. I found that so long as the love and passion for each other is still there, the husband and wife can sleep however they want in their own home.
11:04 AM on 05/08/2012
Why are so many commenters missing the point? This article isn't advocating separate sleeping because of deprivation, apnea, etc. issues.

Krasnow is advocating this as a tactic for keeping marriage "steamy." As if it's all-or-nothing, all "jiggling bellies" or hot mysterious interludes. People's bodies age and sag. Don't want to see it? Don't partner. To put this out there as a trend or must-try strategy is a. inane b. does a disservice to the human aspect of real relationships. Which are about love, vulnerability, sex, contact, intimacy, sharing, touch. Not mystery and hiding.

Quoting "Al" as some kind of proof that it works? Give us a break. His whole goal is to fetishize nudity as only being about sex, and to preserve the naivete and shyness and hiding of teenage-hood? Really? That's the more "archaic" tradition, not sharing a bed with your mate.

Sharing a bedroom doesn't mean you need to floss naked or use the bathroom in front of someone. You sure don't have to build your own wing to maintain privacy. No wonder other cultures think we're crazy and more than a bit spoiled.
08:27 AM on 05/08/2012
Twin master suites in every home! Try searching for real estate with twin master suites and you'll find scarce few. I love that architects and builders are responding to this market segment; however, the issue is that the homes have reduced marketability when it comes time to sell. The vast majority of buyers look for a 3-4 bedroom 2-3 bath house for their 2.5 kids leaving the twin master suites in the MLS to whither and die.
Nonetheless, I'm still looking.
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Joseph Arechavala
08:13 AM on 05/08/2012
Hate to pop your theory, but this isn't the case with everyone. My wife and me were forced by her health issues to sleep separately for 6 years. It didn't "spice up" our marriage. Now that we were able to afford an adjustable bed so she can sleep with me, things are much better.
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GBoyson
All the fit that's news to print
04:05 AM on 05/08/2012
'Many couples I interviewed keep that mystery alive through separate bedrooms and separate bathrooms.'
Many couples I know can't afford such luxuries. Still it must be nice in Wonderland.
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mech126
Science, and government are "NOT" the enemy...
03:39 AM on 05/08/2012
My wife and me kind of do the same thing, she goes to work at 2 AM in the morning, has to be there at 3 AM, now me, i love the night so i say up and help her get ready, and i get to tuck her into bed which is so much fun, so i kind of agree with this, and we have been together for 19 years, and i love her more today then the first day i meet her.....
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lenguss
02:43 AM on 05/08/2012
I guess that watching or hearing your spouse take a dump does somewhat depress one's urge for sex, that is, if you're an immature quasi-adult who does not regard the spouse as a human being. Anyone who requires 'mystery' in their lives after the first week of marriage is probably headed for divorce. The rest of us welcome intimacy in all its intimate and gross details.
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Christina Belcher
12:44 AM on 05/08/2012
I don't see anything wrong with whatever people prefer. I have been married for twenty years. And for about five years we have been sleeping apart. Why? Because my husband snores terribly. I wake up a hundred times next to him.Plus, he loves to be covered with his blanket like a burrito. We steal the blanket from each other. Then, he loves to have a fan on which drives me nuts. He also loves his bedroom super hot. I love to sleep in a cool place.

Anyways, I cannot imagine sleeping next to him because we want to murder each other without enough sleep. We are intimate all of the time, so this has not impacted that at all. Frankly, I can't imagine how much rest people get sleeping next to each other. But then, maybe they sleep really calmly.
12:03 AM on 05/08/2012
I think this point of view is concentrating on the sexual part of marriage, almost entirely. Sex is over rated. Romance, modesty, kindness, humor, wit, consideration, serving, giving, etc.....are all usually under rated, especially romance.
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08:58 PM on 05/07/2012
Sounds good in theory but in all the instances I know of separate bedrooms, when it comes to a sex-life ... it's double or nothing.
08:43 PM on 05/07/2012
A few years ago my father went to a better place.He moved in with the blonde down the street.