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Extra Whipped Cream and Sexual Pursuers

Pursuers are not powerless to change the sexual dynamic and create better sex.

I asked for extra whipped cream when I bought an ice cream sundae with my family last weekend. Piles of whipped cream and mounds of fluff came out positively billowing on top of the melting soft vanilla covered in hot fudge. I was surprised. I always ask for extra whipped cream and I've never had floating clouds of it on anything I've ever ordered. I was happy but then I told myself it was a fluke and would probably never happen again no matter how often I asked. I'm a pursuer. Some would say that I'm never satisfied, that whatever I get it's never enough. I would probably agree.

Maybe you're hoping to hear of the kinky things I did with that whipped cream. After all this blog is about sex. Actually, it made me feel too fat to have sex. But I'd like to explain what a sexual pursuer does that aids connection and what they feel.

Sexual pursuers initiate sex. They risk the first kiss. They present the "pleasure plan" over and over to their partners hoping to make the marriage intimate, playful and warm. Whipped cream is only one of their mildest fantasies. In their heart of hearts, sex fills them with love and generosity toward their partner. Making love both energizes them, soothes them and confirms their raison d'etre. Sex is love embodied.

Sexual pursuers are improvers. Most sexual pursuers tell me they leave the bed filled with ideas and thoughts about ways sex could have been better. Every time they are secretly wishing for an 11 on the scale of 1-10. They wish for the earth to move, for transcendent feeling, to crawl inside him and mentally merge just when his body enters theirs or vice versa. They are tuned into every sigh and silence, wondering if his/her experience is as good as theirs. They'd love instant, seamless sexual connection that doesn't need working at it. What do they fantasize about? More intensity.

Pursuers may seem hard to please. When their head lolls and you've rocked their world, they only feel entitled. When it's just so-so and your body or their body didn't do what it's supposed to or the kissing was a bit ho-hum, sly criticisms creep into their heads. "I've told you the way I like it; why don't you remember?" Blaming thoughts like, "you seemed distracted; you were about you; you weren't tuned into me; you didn't excite me much, " want to come out of their mouths. Worried thoughts like gremlins become obsessions, "It's been too long since the last time. Maybe he doesn't love me; maybe she's not attracted to me; it's a fluke that it was good, yada, yada..." We almost believe all the hype about casual sex as meaning that others are having supercalifragilisticexpialidocious sex EVERY! SINGLE! TIME! Tumbling into the place of Not Enough, that creeping empty feeling starts to turn sour in our stomachs and we are fantasizing about the ice cream man who really understood us.

Pursuers tend to feel empty. They think their partners starve them and control sex. They feel helpless. They wish their partners would know without being told how to be their perfect lover, the superior seducer, the informed toucher. To tell someone what we want spoils the fantasy of being taken care of by an omniscient other. To not have reciprocal sexual initiation shakes our faith in our partner's love and desire for the marriage - shakes it hard. Our narcissism is wounded when there's hesitation, distraction or "otherness" in our significant other.

Wanting sex is good. Wanting great sex is good. Anxiety about not getting enough sex or not getting it "good enough" sabotages the will of the distancer to want to meet the needs of their partner. Demanding perfection - perfect sex, perfect communication, perfect understanding - even if only in our minds - pressures the relationship. Managing to not crowd the Between-Space forms a vacuum that will pull our distancer toward us.

Resolutions for sexual pursuers - 1) Bite your tongue against the in-the-bed critique. 2) Find two positive things to say about every encounter and then shut up. 3) Make a positive statement out of your criticism - we don't have sex often enough could translate to: I want to make love to you 3 times a week! 4) Appreciate your partner's partial efforts which will gradually shape and encourage movement toward the great relationship you want. 5) Thank them for their partial movement and small improvements that get them closer to your orbit. 6) Listen carefully for your distancing partner's quiet requests about the sexual relationship.

Next Post - For the Sexual Distancer!

Link for more help from Laurie Watson with SexTherapy in Raleigh, Cary, Greensboro and Chapel Hill, NC. Laurie’s book Wanting Sex Again is available on Amazon!

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