No Wedding No Womb Part 2: Clarity and What We Can Do To Help

Yesterday’s post on the No Wedding No Womb Campaign received a lot of hits. A few ladies posted some insightful thoughts on the campaign as well as what they thought about the message that was being promoted. I admit that I am new to the NWNW movement and can not profess to support something that I have not researched in detail. I changed the title of yesterdays post from “Why I support the NWNW Campaign” to “The NWNW Campaign.”

While the founder of NWNW is not coming from a Christian perspective, I still feel that she is promoting positivity in the black community and trying to raise awareness and help people to have standards when it comes to relationships, sex and parenting. I belive that just because an organization is not Christian based does not mean that Christians can’t receive little nuggets from the message the organization is promoting.

The campaign is not preaching abstinence and is not coming from a biblical perspective but at least NWNW is trying to educate and encourage the black community as well as assist in preventing unplanned pregnancy. The org is also promoting two parent homes and that is something that the black community is severely lacking. I was told by one single mother who follows the founder of NWNW on Twitter, that her message is negative and depressing to single mothers. I am not sure if this is true because I have only read a few articles on the NWNW website. What I do know is that we aren’t helping single parents by putting them down or passing judgement on them. It is only by God’s grace that all of us who have had sex outside of marriage, did not conceive children. All children are a blessing and a gift from God, no matter what circumstance brought them into this world.  Passing judgement, tearing people down or trying to scare teens into not having sex will not work as productive long-lasting preventative measures.

I do not believe that every couple who has a child together should get married but if people were selective in who they date and had a standard to require a wedding ring before giving up the goods, more children would be born into committed two parent homes. We as a people need to have self respect, standards with regards to relationships and concentrate more on our futures and purpose in life than we do our outward appearance, material possessions and whose hooking up with who. AIDS and STDs are real and they affect the black community more than any other population. Sex isn’t worth dying for. It is best to not have sex before marriage  (read 1 Cor 6:18-20) but if you can not wait, you MUST use protection.

 There are many different components that factor into when and why people start having sex and if those issues aren’t addressed, young people will continue to be sexually active, have children outside of marriage and possibly won’t be able to receive the No Wedding No Womb message.

  • What sexual messages teens are exposed to in their home, through the media and while their out with their friends (viewing pornography) will determine how they see themselves and how they value sex.
  • Many young people are surrounded by friends, family and others in their communities that aren’t married and have multiple children. Viewing this can make young people feel like having sex and babies outside of marriage is normal.
  • When young people have been abused sexually, physically or verbally, they can start to look for love in all the wrong places and find themselves pregnant or getting someone pregnant. They weren’t trying to have a baby, but in the midst of being sexually active, a baby was made.

The question becomes, are campaigns like NWNW affective in reaching these young people who have been exposed to so much and may have unhealthy views on sex, pregnancy, parenthood and marriage? The campaign maybe affective for some and not for others. 

Each of us can do the following to promote healthy holy living: single people can spread the news to others that is ok to be single and you can be healthy, happy and content in your singlehood. Single parents can continue to give their children their all and be dedicated examples. Single parents can admit that life with children and no partner is difficult and not ideal, and teach those around them how not to end up being single parents. Those that are married can promote stable, healthy, long lasting godly marriage because many people in our society never get to see that. Everyday each of us are walking billboards. Ask yourself, what are you promoting? Pray for those around you, witness to your family and friends, let them know that God loves them and wants whats best for them. Share your testimony of how God brought you out of difficult situations and made you whole again. This is my purpose in life, to spread the good news of Christ through sharing my testimony and lifestyle with others.

Talk To The Hand: Signs That It Needs To End


“Relationships are like glass. Sometimes it’s better to leave them broken than try to hurt yourself putting it back together.”

—unknown

“Some people think that it’s holding on that makes one strong; sometimes it’s letting go.”

—unknown

“The loss of love is not nearly as painful as our resistance to accepting it is.”

—Tigress Luv

“I’m going to smile and make you think I’m happy, I’m going to laugh, so you don’t see me cry, I’m going to let you go in style, and even if it kills me – I’m going to smile.”

—unknown

“Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.”

—M. Kathleen Casey

“I don’t miss him, I miss who I thought he was.”

—unknown

You know it’s time to end the relationship when:

1. He never has any money and you find yourself paying for everything all the time.

2. You avoid his calls and he avoids yours. Your both tired of the drama.

3. Every time you go out, his eyes get to wandering to the other women in the room.

4. You do more arguing then laughing. You have nothing in common anymore.

5. He stops going to church and therefore your attendance starts decreasing also.

6. He becomes controlling and manipulative.

7. You can’t ever find him because he’s always “out with his boys” with his phone off.

8. Your investing more time and energy into the relationship than your getting.

9. Your being pressured to have sex or be sexual.

10. He continues to cheat and you continue to over look it.

11. The relationship is not glorifying God at all.

Tips To Avoid Baby Mama Drama

Every day in America 4,184 babies are born to unmarried mothers (State of America’s Children 2008 Report). With this stat we know that the odds of a woman dating or marrying a man with a child(ren) is high. Having a partner with children can be very challenging for many reasons but today’s topic is baby mama drama.

If your partner’s baby’s mama is mature, understanding, a good parent or if she has a relationship with the Lord, that’s awesome and you should consider yourself blessed!! If she’s jealous, neglectful, angry, aggressive, rude and immature, you are in for a challenge BUT nothing is too big for God. If you are in a committed relationship or married to someone who has a child with someone else, there are things that you can do to help the relationship with the child’s mother go smoothly. Below are tips on how to avoid baby mama drama. I pray the tips are helpful to you. 

To the ladies that are baby’s mama’s, please know that I’m not saying all BM’s are mean and rude. I’m trying to help those that are facing challenges in this area to make their situation better. Please hear my heart and know that I have love and respect for any woman working hard to raise her child.

10 tips on how to get along with your man’s baby mama.

1. Pray for the mother. We all know that it is difficult to be a single parent, even when the father is involved from outside of the home. We also can admit that no one wants to be the baby’s mother while another woman gets to be the girlfriend or the wife. Pray and ask God to give her strength, wisdom, peace, joy, patience and the resources needed to raise her children. See her as a soul that needs to be won to Christ if she is not saved. We win people to Christ by our love walk and example shown in front of them. So no matter what happens, don’t curse her out and get ignorant with her, that will ruin your witness.

2. Confess good things over her, the baby, as well as you and your spouses’ relationship with her. Confess that she is a good mother, she is patient and kind, she has the fruits of the spirit. Don’t call her “the crazy or evil baby’s mama.” Don’t say, “me and my husband are gonna kill each other if he don’t do something about that woman.” Speak those things that be not as though they were. Call the mother blessed, kind, peaceful, mature etc. Confess peace and blessing no matter what it looks like. 

3. Believe that God answers prayer and it will get better. If we ask in prayer, anything in Jesus’ name, we must believe that he answers prayer. Since you’re praying that the relationship between your partner and the mother gets better, you must believe that God hears you and things are changing in your situation. Whatever you need to see changed, believe that when you pray, God hears you and is working it out. If you believe, you can’t confess negativity, remember that.

4. Don’t compete with the mother. Know your role and be confident in your partner’s love and commitment to you. She is the mother, she deserves respect, but she is not the woman who holds his heart. Don’t let the pressure of the mother being his ex or the child’s mom rock you from being confident in your relationship. Be secure and don’t let her rock your boat! No man wants an insecure woman Don’t compete or compare yourself to her. Be you, do you, and let her be her.

5. Remember it’s all about the children. Sometimes in situations like these, the adults lose focus on what’s the most important, CHILDREN!! The children need love, proper raising, structure, discipline, teaching etc. Who really cares if the parents aren’t best of buds! As long as everyone is respectful and doesn’t speak ill of each other in the presence of the children, nothing else really matters. If you don’t get along with the children’s mother, do more praying than talking. Let God handle it and you let your light shine and keep your mouth closed!!

6. Walk in love and have patience. The bible tells us to love our enemies as ourselves. I’m not saying your partner’s baby’s mother is your enemy but sometimes it may feel that way! In those situations, showing her love and patience will make difficult situations easier. No one can cause drama and argue on their own. If the mother likes to push you and your partner’s buttons, lying, trying to start arguments or won’t let you see the children, stay in love and walk in patience. Consider getting a mediator or someone to help you work through the rough patches if necessary. Also, encourage him to pray about taking her to court so visitation and child support can be established and in writing.

7. Ignore the little things. This tip is simple, everything doesn’t deserve a response! If the mother makes little rude or jealous comments or the children repeat to you what she’s said, you don’t always have to confront her or even repeat it. Foolishness is foolishness and why feed into it. Pray a simple prayer for her and keep moving. You can win her to Christ by your lifestyle and love walk!

8. Look for ways that you and your partner can be a blessing to her and the child. If the mother’s car is down, encourage your partner to help transport the child where he/she needs to go. If she lost her job encourage your partner to drop a few groceries by for a while until they get on their feet again. Remember the children are both of your responsibility if you two are married, and you two want the children to have all that they need, despite how the mother behaves at times. He will be blessed for doing more than child support requires of him if there’s an important need.

9. Work with your husband to establish clear boundaries for the mother. By boundaries I mean not allowing her to call him at all hours of the night unless it’s a true emergency. Not allowing her to just drop by unannounced whenever she wants just to hangout. Encourage your husband to set boundaries with her so everyone’s roles and expectations are clear.

10. Be a team with your partner and make sure you two communicate. Make sure you support your partner in prayer, with your time by caring for and loving on his child appropriately and with a good attitude. It’s your job to be a team player! Also if you have contact with the mother, make sure she knows that you love her child and want to ensure that she’s comfortable and the child has all that he/she needs. If she knows that you love her child, she just may come around to loving you eventually!

If you enjoyed this blog post, I encourage you to subscribe to receive emails regarding future post. The subscribe button is located at the top left corner of the blog. Once you enter your email and hit “sign me up,” you will have to open your email and confirm the subscription. Thank you in advance for your support. Also please email the blog link to other ladies https://joannawillis.wordpress.com

What To Do When Your Husband’s Sex Drive Is Low

Below are two secular articles about how to handle your husband’s low sex drive. I think the tips are helpful things to consider. I would like to add the importance of prayer, loving communication, patience, compassion and seek godly counsel. There is a reason for everything. Your hubby may have physical, medical, emotional concerns that prevent him from desiring or performing often. Also, if the relationship between you two is stressful, this may decrease his sex drive. If he does not feel that he is receiving the love and respect that he needs from you, he may not desire sex from you. It could be many different reasons. I am not saying it is the wife’s fault at all. I’m saying that couples should work through either spouses low sex drive together so that they both can feel comfortable and fulfilled.

This can be a difficult thing for men to discuss so pray and ask Holy Spirit when and how to address the subject with him. Let him know how much you love him and desire to be intimate with him. Ask him how he feels and what would help him get in the mood more often. Don’t judge or criticize when he answers you. If you do that, he may not trust you enough to open up for a long time. Men don’t like to be vulnerable and when they trust us enough to open up, we have to handle them with care. Men don’t like going to the doctor but sometimes their issues could be medical. In that case, make sure you encourage them to see their doctor and even offer to company them. It maybe a good idea to talk to someone at your church about the situation as well if you need spiritual guidance and encouragement.

How to Talk to Your Husband About His Decreased Sex Drive

By: Linda Ray

1 Let your husband know your needs. Therapists at Mental Help say that many women are not accustomed to asking for what they need and want, instead expecting their mates to read their minds or just intuitively know what they need. Express your own desires for more sex, and you may be pleasantly surprised with the response.

Step 2 Make an appointment to see a doctor for a medical checkup. Accompany your husband to the doctor and listen to the physician’s explanation of the effects of any medications your husband is taking. Antidepressants and blood pressure medicine are notorious for causing decreased sex drive. Once the doctor realizes the side effects, he may be able to offer suitable alternatives that do not affect the libido. The physical checkup also may uncover a problem, such as poor circulation or prostrate problems that can affect your husband’s sex drive

Step 3 Set the stage for a romantic evening by arranging for a date night. Choose an activity such as a leisurely dinner out at a nice restaurant or a weekend away at a bed and breakfast, where you will have the opportunity to talk without distractions. Sometimes talking is easier in a new environment. The lack of stress and day-to-day interruptions will help to foster communication and may even light a romantic spark that’s been difficult to light at home

 
Step 4 See a counselor. Professional marriage counselors are trained to help couples open up to talk freely about their sex life. They can ask questions that may be difficult for you to ask your husband. A therapeutic setting can set the stage for open discussions about sex between you and your husband and allow you to uncover the reasons why he is experiencing a decreased sex drive. Counselors can offer ideas and tips on new techniques that may improve your sex life.
 
Tips & Warnings

Also checkout:

When Men Suffer Low Sex Drive

Although it contradicts all the cultural beliefs about the way men are, men can lose their libido too. The solution: Just do it. By Hara Estroff Marano, published on March 01, 2003 – last reviewed on July 08, 2005

 
If you enjoyed this blog post, I encourage you to subscribe to receive emails regarding future post. The subscribe button is located at the top left corner of the blog. Once you enter your email and hit “sign me up,” you will have to open your email and confirm the subscription. Thank you in advance for your support.

The Sex Starved Marriage: When Couples Stop Coupling

By Connie Matthiessen
CONSUMER HEALTH INTERACTIVE

An undeniable epidemic

 Self-help guru Dr. Phil ominously dubbed the sexless marriage an “undeniable epidemic.” Scores of new books and articles in women’s magazines offer advice for battling marital celibacy. Meanwhile, a recent article in Newsweek attempted to quantify the problem: “It is difficult to say exactly how many of the 113 million married Americans are too exhausted or too grumpy to get it on, but some psychologists estimate that 15 to 20 percent of couples have sex no more than 10 times a year, which is how the experts define sexless marriage.”

And the problem isn’t confined to married people: it’s an issue for many long-term couples, married or unmarried, gay or straight.

So what is going on? Contemporary society is drenched in sexual imagery, from the raunchy rap lyrics and MTV vignettes that are now an accepted part of teenage culture, to the suggestive ads that fill every glossy magazine, to the booming online porn industry. Given the Zeitgeist, it would be easy to assume that more of us are having more sex more of the time.

Not like the pictures

But that doesn’t appear to be the case for many contemporary couples. “Certainly a lot of people believe that they are having less sex than they should be having,” says marriage and family therapist Mary Ann Leff in a recent interview. “Has the problem gotten worse in recent years? Unfortunately, we have very little in the way of accurate reporting to know how much sex people were having in the past.”

Leff and other experts point out that when it comes to sex, modern couples have very different expectations than their parents and grandparents did. Baby boomers came of age in a time of unprecedented sexual openness and experimentation. “People today feel that they ought to have a satisfying sex life, and that they ought to be sexual with each other over long periods of time,” says Leff. In other words, we may not be having significantly less sex than our ancestors did; we may just be more unhappy at the dearth of it.

Still, it is a fact that many modern couples see their sex life crowded out by the relentless demands of children, work pressures, not enough time alone — and simply not enough time. Allowing your physical relationship to fall to the bottom of a frantic “to-do list,” experts say, can lead to dissatisfaction, loneliness, separation, and even divorce.

Not just how often

In her recent book, The Sex-Starved Marriage, author and therapist Michele Weiner Davis, underscores the importance sex plays in a healthy relationship: “When it’s good, it offers couples opportunities to give and receive physical pleasure, to connect emotionally and spiritually. It builds closeness, intimacy and a sense of partnership. It defines their relationship as different from all others. In short, sex is a powerful tie that binds.”

The unraveling of that tie, she adds, poses a threat to the relationship itself. “Unsatisfying sexual relationships are the all-too-frequent causes of alienation, infidelity and divorce,” says Weiner Davis. She contends that it isn’t a matter of how often a couple has sex, but how satisfied both partners feel: “A sex-starved marriage is more about the fallout that occurs when one spouse is deeply unhappy with his/her sexual relationship and this unhappiness is ignored, minimized, or dismissed.”

In the case of New Jersey couple Robert and Melinda Williams,* a husband’s dissatisfaction turned to misery — then anger and alienation. “She just wasn’t interested anymore,” says Robert. “And even though I understood the reasons why — the kids, lack of sleep — I was still hurt every time she turned me down. At one point — this was at our absolute nadir — I decided to wait until she took the initiative in bed. Nothing happened for over six months! When I finally got fed up and asked her if she knew how long it had been since we’d last had sex, she had no idea. It just didn’t matter to her at all.”

Over time, the couples’ relationship deteriorated as Robert reacted to Melinda’s rejection with distance and sarcasm and she grew increasingly impatient with his moodiness and anger. Robert decided that he wanted a separation.

New Hampshire native Benjamin Frank* has a different approach to his wife’s lack of interest in sex: he finds satisfaction elsewhere. “If it weren’t for my kids, I’d be out the door, even though there is a lot about our marriage that I appreciate,” says Frank. “But I am a sensual, sexual person, and I refuse to cut off that side myself. We’ve talked the issue to death, we’ve gone to counseling. Now I deal with the problem by having ‘no strings attached’ relationships, and indulging in pornography whenever I get the chance. This is a part of my life that I have to keep separate from my marriage, of course, and I know it creates distance. But I don’t feel like I have any choice.”

These examples might make it seem as if men were the ones most affected by a sexless marriage, but Weiner Davis says that isn’t true. Men, she says, are just as likely as women to be the member of the couple with the low sex drive — although they are less likely to admit it. “If you’ve been thinking that low sexual desire is only ‘a woman’s thing,’ think again,” she says. “Many sex experts believe that low desire in men is America’s best-kept secret… But make no mistake about it: there are millions of people, women AND men, who just don’t feel turned on.”

Try a little tenderness

Not far from therapist Mary Ann Leff’s office in Berkeley, California, students hold hands as they cross the university campus; a couple sits on a bench near the fountain, alternately kissing and exchanging whispered confidences; pierced and tattooed teens form loud, joyful clusters on Telegraph Avenue, or stop to eat and flirt at Blondie’s Pizza. Such romance and easy sexual energy is exactly what many of the couples who seek out Leff are missing.

Leff approaches each of the couples differently, depending on their individual circumstances, but she does have some general advice. “I think that people look at the amount of sex they are having rather than how deeply connected they feel,” says Leff. “For busy couples with children and jobs, sex can be hard to get to. But there are other ways you can stay connected and convey the feeling that ‘Yes, we are lovers,’ even if you are only having sex once a month.”

Leff encourages couples to find ways to develop intimacy throughout the day, not just in the bedroom at night. “Try to cultivate a sexiness with your partner, outside of the times you are having sex,” she advises. “Call each other on the phone, for example, and flirt and make suggestive comments: That builds up your juices, and it is a way of connecting. Or take the time to touch your partner, to snuggle. This will also make you feel more sexual, more attractive, more connected.”

Still, the partner who consistently refuses sex needs to examine his or her attitudes, according to both Leff and Weiner-Davis. If one member of a couple is avoiding sex because of simmering tension or unresolved differences, that person needs to communicate or risk undermining the relationship. In his book Passionate Marriage sex therapist David Schnarch argues that both partners in a relationship need to stand up for themselves and learn to ask for what they want — in the bedroom and outside it. Interestingly, separate equals exciting. Couples, Schnarch told one interviewer, “are usually locked together, emotionally fused. More attachment doesn’t make people happier, and it kills sex.”

Turning up the heat

Part of the problem may come down to a myth about sex itself. “Many people believe that they have to be overcome with desire before they have sex,” says Leff. “I think in a long-term relationship, you just have to have a willingness to be sexual. You just need to respond to your partner’s overtures. And the more frequently you have sex and it is satisfying, the more that reinforces your willingness to do it again.” In other words, simply having sex can fuel desire and turn up the heat.

Weiner Davis agrees: “Desire is really a decision. You have to decide to make having a vibrant, exciting, emotionally satisfying sexual relationship a priority. You have to continually discover and rediscover new ways to keep your sexual energy alive.” Her book offers a number of ways for couples to do just that, from buying silky lingerie to changing their approach to sex.

Above all, couples need to make time for sex, not just wait for the mood to strike. San Francisco family therapist Tato Torres says that many couples who are deeply committed to each other admit, when pressed, that they don’t take basic steps necessary for maintaining their relationship.

“If your relationship is really important to you, then you have to feed and cherish it,” says Torres. “That means being interested in each other. It means dressing up for each other. It means taking a weekend together, even if you’re convinced that you don’t have the time.” Torres says he refuses to work with couples who aren’t willing to make their relationship a priority.

Mary Ann Leff says that many people cling to the notion that to be genuine, sex has to happen spontaneously: “Somehow, scheduling sex seems unromantic. But think about it: When you were young and single, you probably weren’t entirely spontaneous. If you thought you’d be having sex that night, you brought along condoms; you didn’t wear your torn underwear. In the same way, there is nothing wrong with couples being creative about planning their sexual encounters.”

For Robert and Melinda, in the end it took the specter of divorce to get them back together. Without Melinda’s knowledge, Robert began spending all his free time searching for a new place to live. When he found an apartment and signed the lease, he went home and told Melinda that he was moving out and that they needed to sit down and tell the children. Melinda was stunned. “For the first time,” Robert recalls, “She understood how unhappy I was. By then it wasn’t just about the sex anymore: We’d gotten in the habit of sniping at each other and living separate lives in many ways.

“Then she surprised ME,” Robert recounts. “I thought she’d be relieved and readily agree to a separation, because things were so rotten between us.” Instead, Melinda’s shock gave way to a flood of tears, as she begged Robert to give their marriage one last chance. She proposed that they go to couples counseling, and for the first time in a long time she seemed to be interested in what he had to say. Overcome by her grief — and her sudden willingness to work on the relationship — Robert agreed to try a reconciliation.

“Now it’s not perfect, of course,” says Robert. “But we’ve developed a compromise that we can both live with. We’re being kinder to each other; we’re making time for each other, going away for weekends alone. We’re intimate again — on many levels.”

Deeper problems

Mary Ann Leff, who has been married for 23 years, is energetic and funny — and boundlessly optimistic about the ability of couples to resolve their sexual differences. Still, she cautions that for some couples, the problems are more complex than a change in attitude or even the threat of divorce can resolve. “It concerns me that so much of what is written on this subject simplifies the problem,” she says, adding that many couples have vulnerabilities that are reflected in their sex life. One partner may be afraid of rejection, for example, while the other is afraid of merging, which can affect the sexual connection. Therapy is often the best way for couples to work out these fears.

In addition, “sex is remarkably sensitive to what’s happening in all areas of individual and family life,” says therapist and relationships expert Judith Wallerstein. “Illness, especially surgery, as well as depression, worry, fatigue, and stress can affect a man and woman’s intimate life.” In fact, sex therapists agree that if physical or emotional issues of any type are taking a toll on your intimate life, you need to seek help. Among other things, doctors or therapists can effectively treat changes triggered by menopause and problems like impotence and premature ejaculation.

Eloisa Smith* found out the hard way that her husband had psychological problems that accounted for their dismal sex life. “I always thought that Tim had a lower libido than I did,” she says. ” It was a problem, but I thought it was something that we could work on over time.” Through a series of accidents and guilty disclosures from Tim, Eloisa learned that he was in fact spending a lot of time indulging in pornography, and that the habit had become an expensive addiction.

For Eloisa, this revelation made it hard for her to enjoy sex with her husband on the infrequent occasions when it occurred. “I would imagine the women he’d been watching and getting turned on by, and it made me feel unattractive and rejected. The fact that he would choose that over intimacy with me — that was really hurtful. It is still hurtful.”

Today, Tim is in therapy, and he and Eloisa are slowly, tentatively attempting to rebuild their sexual connection — but it isn’t easy. “I feel like we have a very long way to go,” says Eloisa.

The passionate marriage

For all the dire press reports and the widespread alarm about the phenomenon of the sexless marriage, many of people in long-term relationships interviewed for this story confessed to having sex regularly and happily.

That’s not surprising to sex therapist David Schnarch, who contends that sex between partners has the potential to become even more satisfying over time — physically, emotionally, and spiritually. In his books, Passionate Marriage and Resurrecting Sex, Schnarch offers the optimistic opinion that our sex lives can become more fulfilling as we age, not less.

Relationship expert Judith Wallerstein sees the creation of a loving and enduring sexual relationship as one of the central tasks of marriage. Part of this work, she suggests, is resolving the tensions between “I” and “we.” Wallerstein says that each partner needs autonomy, but adds that “the shared identity of marriage requires a shift from the ‘I’ of the young adult to the solid and lasting ‘we.’ ”

Carla France* was at the San Francisco kitchen table on the night when her friends were making their sexual disclosures. She remained silent, almost embarrassed — because, she told me later, her experience was so different from the others. She and her husband, Paul, would seem to have the perfect prescription for a sexless marriage: three small children, shaky finances, and brutal work schedules. In fact, they have an active sex life and a strong relationship — something that Carla attributes in part to the happiness they feel in bed.

Pamela Smythe* was also at the table that night: She was the woman who nostalgically recalled the days when she and her husband couldn’t keep their hands off one another. Since that conversation, Pamela and her husband have managed to rekindle their connection, and their story may offer encouragement for others.

Pamela says that after their second child was born, their sex life plummeted until they were making love only once every six months. “We’d always had a strong connection, but I was the one with the stronger sex drive, so I usually initiated it,” she says. “But now I didn’t want it. My husband didn’t want it. We were too tired, and we had too many kids pawing at us all the time.”

After several years of this, Pamela grew depressed. “It was a kind of a mid-life crisis. I was feeling fat and dumpy, and my husband wasn’t paying any attention to me. I felt like I was over the hill. I was thinking, ‘No one will find me attractive ever again, not even my husband.’ ”

Everything changed when Pamela met a man, someone with whom she worked closely every day on a short-term project. He was older than she was, and very married, and Pamela wasn’t interested in an affair. Still, she found herself eagerly looking forward to their times together. “We had an instant rapport, and we laughed a lot,” she recalls. “He was interested in me: my life, my ideas. Something about that little spark, that little flirtation, gave me the impetus to put energy into my relationship again.”

So Pamela began several conversations with her husband about how they could improve their relationship. These discussions were difficult at first: Her husband was defensive, even desperate to change the subject. Pamela persisted, and it turned out that he’d been feeling lonely in the marriage too, and discouraged by their lack of intimacy and virtually nonexistent sex life. They began having regular dates — and more sex. She told him she wanted him to compliment her more, and he told her that she needed to work on her snappishness and negativity.

As a result, their relationship blossomed. She and her husband are more affectionate; they hug and touch each other a lot, the way they used to, and seek each other out during the day for long talks. And they’re having great sex. “It’s wonderful to have my sex life back,” says Pamela happily, with a thrilled, slightly naughty laugh. “It makes me feel young again.”

*Not her real name.

— Connie Matthiessen is a freelance writer who lives in San Francisco. Her health stories have been carried by Hippocrates, the Center for Investigative Reporting, Image, San Francisco magazine, and many other outlets.

Find out more about the effect of stress on your sexual life .

If you enjoyed this blog post, I encourage you to subscribe to receive emails regarding future post. The subscribe button is located at the top left corner of the blog. Once you enter your email and hit “sign me up,” you will have to open your email and confirm the subscription. Thank you in advance for your support. Also please email the blog link to other ladies https://joannawillis.wordpress.com

Not like the pictures

But that doesn’t appear to be the case for many contemporary couples. “Certainly a lot of people believe that they are having less sex than they should be having,” says marriage and family therapist Mary Ann Leff in a recent interview. “Has the problem gotten worse in recent years? Unfortunately, we have very little in the way of accurate reporting to know how much sex people were having in the past.”

Leff and other experts point out that when it comes to sex, modern couples have very different expectations than their parents and grandparents did. Baby boomers came of age in a time of unprecedented sexual openness and experimentation. “People today feel that they ought to have a satisfying sex life, and that they ought to be sexual with each other over long periods of time,” says Leff. In other words, we may not be having significantly less sex than our ancestors did; we may just be more unhappy at the dearth of it.

Still, it is a fact that many modern couples see their sex life crowded out by the relentless demands of children, work pressures, not enough time alone — and simply not enough time. Allowing your physical relationship to fall to the bottom of a frantic “to-do list,” experts say, can lead to dissatisfaction, loneliness, separation, and even divorce.

Not just how often

In her recent book, The Sex-Starved Marriage, author and therapist Michele Weiner Davis, underscores the importance sex plays in a healthy relationship: “When it’s good, it offers couples opportunities to give and receive physical pleasure, to connect emotionally and spiritually. It builds closeness, intimacy and a sense of partnership. It defines their relationship as different from all others. In short, sex is a powerful tie that binds.”

The unraveling of that tie, she adds, poses a threat to the relationship itself. “Unsatisfying sexual relationships are the all-too-frequent causes of alienation, infidelity and divorce,” says Weiner Davis. She contends that it isn’t a matter of how often a couple has sex, but how satisfied both partners feel: “A sex-starved marriage is more about the fallout that occurs when one spouse is deeply unhappy with his/her sexual relationship and this unhappiness is ignored, minimized, or dismissed.”

In the case of New Jersey couple Robert and Melinda Williams,* a husband’s dissatisfaction turned to misery — then anger and alienation. “She just wasn’t interested anymore,” says Robert. “And even though I understood the reasons why — the kids, lack of sleep — I was still hurt every time she turned me down. At one point — this was at our absolute nadir — I decided to wait until she took the initiative in bed. Nothing happened for over six months! When I finally got fed up and asked her if she knew how long it had been since we’d last had sex, she had no idea. It just didn’t matter to her at all.”

Over time, the couples’ relationship deteriorated as Robert reacted to Melinda’s rejection with distance and sarcasm and she grew increasingly impatient with his moodiness and anger. Robert decided that he wanted a separation.

New Hampshire native Benjamin Frank* has a different approach to his wife’s lack of interest in sex: he finds satisfaction elsewhere. “If it weren’t for my kids, I’d be out the door, even though there is a lot about our marriage that I appreciate,” says Frank. “But I am a sensual, sexual person, and I refuse to cut off that side myself. We’ve talked the issue to death, we’ve gone to counseling. Now I deal with the problem by having ‘no strings attached’ relationships, and indulging in pornography whenever I get the chance. This is a part of my life that I have to keep separate from my marriage, of course, and I know it creates distance. But I don’t feel like I have any choice.”

These examples might make it seem as if men were the ones most affected by a sexless marriage, but Weiner Davis says that isn’t true. Men, she says, are just as likely as women to be the member of the couple with the low sex drive — although they are less likely to admit it. “If you’ve been thinking that low sexual desire is only ‘a woman’s thing,’ think again,” she says. “Many sex experts believe that low desire in men is America’s best-kept secret… But make no mistake about it: there are millions of people, women AND men, who just don’t feel turned on.”

Try a little tenderness

Not far from therapist Mary Ann Leff’s office in Berkeley, California, students hold hands as they cross the university campus; a couple sits on a bench near the fountain, alternately kissing and exchanging whispered confidences; pierced and tattooed teens form loud, joyful clusters on Telegraph Avenue, or stop to eat and flirt at Blondie’s Pizza. Such romance and easy sexual energy is exactly what many of the couples who seek out Leff are missing.

Leff approaches each of the couples differently, depending on their individual circumstances, but she does have some general advice. “I think that people look at the amount of sex they are having rather than how deeply connected they feel,” says Leff. “For busy couples with children and jobs, sex can be hard to get to. But there are other ways you can stay connected and convey the feeling that ‘Yes, we are lovers,’ even if you are only having sex once a month.”

Leff encourages couples to find ways to develop intimacy throughout the day, not just in the bedroom at night. “Try to cultivate a sexiness with your partner, outside of the times you are having sex,” she advises. “Call each other on the phone, for example, and flirt and make suggestive comments: That builds up your juices, and it is a way of connecting. Or take the time to touch your partner, to snuggle. This will also make you feel more sexual, more attractive, more connected.”

Still, the partner who consistently refuses sex needs to examine his or her attitudes, according to both Leff and Weiner-Davis. If one member of a couple is avoiding sex because of simmering tension or unresolved differences, that person needs to communicate or risk undermining the relationship. In his book Passionate Marriage sex therapist David Schnarch argues that both partners in a relationship need to stand up for themselves and learn to ask for what they want — in the bedroom and outside it. Interestingly, separate equals exciting. Couples, Schnarch told one interviewer, “are usually locked together, emotionally fused. More attachment doesn’t make people happier, and it kills sex.”

 

Turning up the heat

Part of the problem may come down to a myth about sex itself. “Many people believe that they have to be overcome with desire before they have sex,” says Leff. “I think in a long-term relationship, you just have to have a willingness to be sexual. You just need to respond to your partner’s overtures. And the more frequently you have sex and it is satisfying, the more that reinforces your willingness to do it again.” In other words, simply having sex can fuel desire and turn up the heat.

Weiner Davis agrees: “Desire is really a decision. You have to decide to make having a vibrant, exciting, emotionally satisfying sexual relationship a priority. You have to continually discover and rediscover new ways to keep your sexual energy alive.” Her book offers a number of ways for couples to do just that, from buying silky lingerie to changing their approach to sex.

Above all, couples need to make time for sex, not just wait for the mood to strike. San Francisco family therapist Tato Torres says that many couples who are deeply committed to each other admit, when pressed, that they don’t take basic steps necessary for maintaining their relationship.

“If your relationship is really important to you, then you have to feed and cherish it,” says Torres. “That means being interested in each other. It means dressing up for each other. It means taking a weekend together, even if you’re convinced that you don’t have the time.” Torres says he refuses to work with couples who aren’t willing to make their relationship a priority.

Mary Ann Leff says that many people cling to the notion that to be genuine, sex has to happen spontaneously: “Somehow, scheduling sex seems unromantic. But think about it: When you were young and single, you probably weren’t entirely spontaneous. If you thought you’d be having sex that night, you brought along condoms; you didn’t wear your torn underwear. In the same way, there is nothing wrong with couples being creative about planning their sexual encounters.”

For Robert and Melinda, in the end it took the specter of divorce to get them back together. Without Melinda’s knowledge, Robert began spending all his free time searching for a new place to live. When he found an apartment and signed the lease, he went home and told Melinda that he was moving out and that they needed to sit down and tell the children. Melinda was stunned. “For the first time,” Robert recalls, “She understood how unhappy I was. By then it wasn’t just about the sex anymore: We’d gotten in the habit of sniping at each other and living separate lives in many ways.

“Then she surprised ME,” Robert recounts. “I thought she’d be relieved and readily agree to a separation, because things were so rotten between us.” Instead, Melinda’s shock gave way to a flood of tears, as she begged Robert to give their marriage one last chance. She proposed that they go to couples counseling, and for the first time in a long time she seemed to be interested in what he had to say. Overcome by her grief — and her sudden willingness to work on the relationship — Robert agreed to try a reconciliation.

“Now it’s not perfect, of course,” says Robert. “But we’ve developed a compromise that we can both live with. We’re being kinder to each other; we’re making time for each other, going away for weekends alone. We’re intimate again — on many levels.”

 Deeper problems

Mary Ann Leff, who has been married for 23 years, is energetic and funny — and boundlessly optimistic about the ability of couples to resolve their sexual differences. Still, she cautions that for some couples, the problems are more complex than a change in attitude or even the threat of divorce can resolve. “It concerns me that so much of what is written on this subject simplifies the problem,” she says, adding that many couples have vulnerabilities that are reflected in their sex life. One partner may be afraid of rejection, for example, while the other is afraid of merging, which can affect the sexual connection. Therapy is often the best way for couples to work out these fears.

In addition, “sex is remarkably sensitive to what’s happening in all areas of individual and family life,” says therapist and relationships expert Judith Wallerstein. “Illness, especially surgery, as well as depression, worry, fatigue, and stress can affect a man and woman’s intimate life.” In fact, sex therapists agree that if physical or emotional issues of any type are taking a toll on your intimate life, you need to seek help. Among other things, doctors or therapists can effectively treat changes triggered by menopause and problems like impotence and premature ejaculation.

Eloisa Smith* found out the hard way that her husband had psychological problems that accounted for their dismal sex life. “I always thought that Tim had a lower libido than I did,” she says. ” It was a problem, but I thought it was something that we could work on over time.” Through a series of accidents and guilty disclosures from Tim, Eloisa learned that he was in fact spending a lot of time indulging in pornography, and that the habit had become an expensive addiction.

For Eloisa, this revelation made it hard for her to enjoy sex with her husband on the infrequent occasions when it occurred. “I would imagine the women he’d been watching and getting turned on by, and it made me feel unattractive and rejected. The fact that he would choose that over intimacy with me — that was really hurtful. It is still hurtful.”

Today, Tim is in therapy, and he and Eloisa are slowly, tentatively attempting to rebuild their sexual connection — but it isn’t easy. “I feel like we have a very long way to go,” says Eloisa.

The passionate marriage

For all the dire press reports and the widespread alarm about the phenomenon of the sexless marriage, many of people in long-term relationships interviewed for this story confessed to having sex regularly and happily.

That’s not surprising to sex therapist David Schnarch, who contends that sex between partners has the potential to become even more satisfying over time — physically, emotionally, and spiritually. In his books, Passionate Marriage and Resurrecting Sex, Schnarch offers the optimistic opinion that our sex lives can become more fulfilling as we age, not less.

Relationship expert Judith Wallerstein sees the creation of a loving and enduring sexual relationship as one of the central tasks of marriage. Part of this work, she suggests, is resolving the tensions between “I” and “we.” Wallerstein says that each partner needs autonomy, but adds that “the shared identity of marriage requires a shift from the ‘I’ of the young adult to the solid and lasting ‘we.’ ”

Carla France* was at the San Francisco kitchen table on the night when her friends were making their sexual disclosures. She remained silent, almost embarrassed — because, she told me later, her experience was so different from the others. She and her husband, Paul, would seem to have the perfect prescription for a sexless marriage: three small children, shaky finances, and brutal work schedules. In fact, they have an active sex life and a strong relationship — something that Carla attributes in part to the happiness they feel in bed.

Pamela Smythe* was also at the table that night: She was the woman who nostalgically recalled the days when she and her husband couldn’t keep their hands off one another. Since that conversation, Pamela and her husband have managed to rekindle their connection, and their story may offer encouragement for others.

Pamela says that after their second child was born, their sex life plummeted until they were making love only once every six months. “We’d always had a strong connection, but I was the one with the stronger sex drive, so I usually initiated it,” she says. “But now I didn’t want it. My husband didn’t want it. We were too tired, and we had too many kids pawing at us all the time.”

After several years of this, Pamela grew depressed. “It was a kind of a mid-life crisis. I was feeling fat and dumpy, and my husband wasn’t paying any attention to me. I felt like I was over the hill. I was thinking, ‘No one will find me attractive ever again, not even my husband.’ “

Everything changed when Pamela met a man, someone with whom she worked closely every day on a short-term project. He was older than she was, and very married, and Pamela wasn’t interested in an affair. Still, she found herself eagerly looking forward to their times together. “We had an instant rapport, and we laughed a lot,” she recalls. “He was interested in me: my life, my ideas. Something about that little spark, that little flirtation, gave me the impetus to put energy into my relationship again.”

So Pamela began several conversations with her husband about how they could improve their relationship. These discussions were difficult at first: Her husband was defensive, even desperate to change the subject. Pamela persisted, and it turned out that he’d been feeling lonely in the marriage too, and discouraged by their lack of intimacy and virtually nonexistent sex life. They began having regular dates — and more sex. She told him she wanted him to compliment her more, and he told her that she needed to work on her snappishness and negativity.

As a result, their relationship blossomed. She and her husband are more affectionate; they hug and touch each other a lot, the way they used to, and seek each other out during the day for long talks. And they’re having great sex. “It’s wonderful to have my sex life back,” says Pamela happily, with a thrilled, slightly naughty laugh. “It makes me feel young again.”

*Not her real name.

— Connie Matthiessen is a freelance writer who lives in San Francisco. Her health stories have been carried by Hippocrates, the Center for Investigative Reporting, Image, San Francisco magazine, and many other outlets. https://www.caremark.com/wps/portal/HEALTH_RESOURCES?topic=sexstarve

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Stop Giving The Honey Up For Free

Even though the media teaches women that they need to be skinny, desperate and aggressive to get a guy, as mature women of God, we have to work hard to reject those views and remember who we are in Christ. Our “honey” stands for our bodies but it can also stand for our time, money, heart, affection, hopes/dreams etc. When we give our honey up too fast, (before marriage) we are no longer pleasing God and the men no longer get the thrill of the chase. If a man wants something bad enough, he will work hard to obtain it, no matter how long he has to wait. You don’t have to worry about needing to give him your all in the beginning to keep him. I believe the opposite is true. Most times when we as women give in and open our legs, hearts and dreams to men too fast, they quickly leave as fast as they came. The thrill of the chase is over, we’ve made it to easy and their excitement/respect for us has diminished.

If you’re not married PLEASED don’t give your man money! Your boyfriend could be your potential husband, provider and leader of your home. How can he prepare to be those things for you if your always giving him money and supporting him? Let the man be the man. Ya’ll can help each other out but don’t carry him!!

If your man isn’t your husband, than sex, being available to 24/7, cooking/doing laundry on a daily basis and sharing bills/bank accounts is OFF LIMITS!! Stop giving the honey up for free!! If you don’t have a wedding ring AND official marriage papers, stop playing house and get your life back. These things should be reserved for married folk only. Marriage is forever, it is a life long committment. Marriage is about serving, giving, loving and so much more. If we aren’t married yet I’m giving you everything I have, what is your motivation to marry me? What do we have to look forward to?

Another way I observe single ladies giving up their “honey” is by wearing really tight, short and low cut clothes. It’s a blessing to have a good body and we all know what assets we have that were proud of BUT please be classy and leave room for the imagination!! If he gets to see EVERYTHING your working with before the relationship is even established, let alone before you get married, he may not want to purchase your honey because he’s seen it and is ready to move on to the next sexy bee. I know the summer is here and ladies like to wear cute outfits but try not to wear a free honey sign on your back. Let them wonder, let them work for it, if they want it, let them put a ring on it!!

Don’t believe the myth that  people need to try out the “honey” before buying it. When God is truly at the center of a relationship, there will also be love, trust, honesty and full committment; everything else falls into place. God is faithful. When we honor God with our bodies and lifestyle, He honors us by granting us peace, fulfillment, joy and wisdom in our relationships. You don’t have to give up the honey or try things out like living together and playing house to know if that person is the one. My husband and I did not leave together before we were married. There were things to get adjusted to but that’s to be expected. We remain patient, prayerful and understanding and therefore we get along and have peace in our home.

No one is perfect, we all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. If you have been engaging in activities that haven’t been pleasing to God or if you have lowered your standards in hopes of catching a man, it’s never to late to turn from your ways and make better choices!!

Prayer for the single lady

Dear Lord

Please forgive me for adopting some of the world’s views on men, dating and sex. Please forgive me for not living as the woman you’ve called me to be. Lord help me to trust you and your word when it comes to relationships, sex and marriage. Give me the strength to say no and to be holy. Help me to set appropriate boundaries with men. Help me to carry myself as a lady and glorify you in my words, thoughts, actions and lifestyle. Daddy, please continue to prepare me for my future mate and prepare my future mate for me. Please send me other Christian female friends who are sold out for you and enjoying their season of being single. Help me to focus more on you than on my desire for a man. Thank you Lord that in your perfect timing, a special man of God will come into my life. I love you, trust you and praise you in advance. AMEN

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It’s Our Anniversary! 2 Yrs of Love, Friendship and Intimacy

Today marks the day two years ago, that I said “I do” to the love of my life, my best friend, Eddie Willis III. I thank God for my husband. I am forever grateful for his love, selflessness, patience, compassion, desire for only me, friendship, understand, protection, provision, leadership, respect and so much more. I never knew love like this before and I never knew it could feel this good!!

We have faced challenges over the last two years but we’ve been able to work through them together with peace, praise and thanksgiving. Marriage is hard work but work that we love to do. When I was single, I couldn’t imagine what married life would be like. I often wondered how it would be leaving my parents house/covering and living with a man, serving, submitting, giving, sharing and sexing (LOL) with him for the rest of my life. Ladies let me tell you, being a wife is challenging at times BUT I LOVE IT AND WOULDN”T TRADE IT FOR THE WORLD!!

When you have a husband that loves God and honors Him with his time, body, money and lifestyle, he will love you with all that he has, willingly and with a good heart. My husband isn’t perfect and neither am I but we serve a perfect God and we strive to be like Him. With Christ at the center of our marriage, we CAN NOT and WILL NOT fail!! It’s you and me baby for life!!!

Lord have your way in my marriage. Have your way in me. Help me to be the best wife that you have created me to be and bless my husband to be the best husband that you have called him to be. Prepare us for whatever may be coming our way, good or bad. Help us to trust in you always. May we grow to be 100 years old together, still laughing, cuddling, praying, praising and making love. Bless our future seed Lord. May you expand our family in your time. Thank you Lord for blessing us everyday and always doing exceedingly abundantly in our lives. We love you. Amen!

11 Reasons To Date A Church-Going Guy

While surfing the net I came across this article about why dating church guys is a good idea.  I thought the list was interesting and pretty accurate. We all know that Christian men aren’t perfect and there are some wolf’s in church clothing BUT I do agree that god fearing, sold out for Christ men are the best to date and marry. 2 Cor 6:14 Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness? Dating is fun but for Christians it should also be an interview process. Get to know the man before you fall head over heels in love with him! Proverbs 4:23 Above all else, guard your heart, for it is the wellspring of life.

I dated a “saved” guy in high school and he cheated on me repeatedly and broke my heart. He was my first love and we met at our church. We were young and silly but I was really affected by that situation. It took me a long time to seriously get over him but once I broke free from the emotional attachment and roller coaster, I began to allow God to heal, restore and make me new again. I have forgiven him and wish him well.

Eddie was the first and only man whom I dated that was sold out for Christ and dedicated to serving/ living his life for Him. I didn’t know how to interact with Eddie at first or what to think really. I had never had a relationship with a man who was attracted to me but wasn’t trying to charm me, sleep with me or use me for something. As we got to know each other and observe each other at church, I came to see that Eddie was a man after God’s own heart. He served at church faithful, his language and behavior lined up with the word of God and he treated me, my friends and the other ladies at church like sisters and not pieces of meat. He complimented me, flirted with me sometimes, we laughed and joked together but we had boundaries in our friendship. Boundaries are VERY important in Christian friendship and courtship!! Eddie became my friend, then a year later my boyfriend, then my fiance’, then my husband and then my lover. Thank you Lord for my husband! He was definitely worth the wait!!

Question: Ladies let me know what you think about this list below. What do you agree or disagree with? What has been your experience with dating Christian men? It’s okay to be honest, just be respectful please.

1. He uses clean language. Granted, he’ll probably let slip a “frick” or a “darn,” but by golly, it’s a lot cuter than a slew of f-bombs.

2. More than likely, he adheres to the verse, “Your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit,” which means that he doesn’t smoke, do drugs or get drunk.

3. Unless he sleeps through every service, he has a high attention span. Bring up a couple of points from an hour-long sermon and see if you’re not a little bit impressed when he can discuss them in depth. Bonus points if he can connect the current sermon to the previous week’s topic.

4. He’s consistent. Getting up early on Sunday mornings to hear a sermon and sing for a couple of hours takes a good amount of dedication. Of course, we’re referring to the guys who attend service more often than on Christmas and Easter.

5. He’s a romantic. If he believes in God, there’s a good chance he also believes in destiny. He takes dating and women so seriously that he might even pray before asking you out. If he prays often in his own time, he has probably prayed for the future love of his life—which could be you—before you even met. If adorably old-fashioned guys are your thing, look no further than the next pew over. Faith And Spirituality In Relationships

6. He dresses sensibly. Since obsessing about one’s outer appearance is frowned upon in the church, its culture encourages guys to look down-to-earth, if not classy. That means no Ed Hardy and no flashy, “I’m a baller”-style outfits. Expect dark jeans, a polo shirt, and a canvas bag.

7. He probably doesn’t sleep around. No need to worry as much about diseases, excess baggage, or being compared to some past conquest. You might just be the best he’s ever had. Sure, he might be a borderline virgin, if not abstinent, but if you play your cards right, all of that pent-up energy will count for something. That being said….

8. He puts sex on a pedestal. If he’s ever read the Song of Solomon—arguably the Good Book’s most erotic piece of scripture—he probably honors an elusively spiritual aspect of sex often absent in casual encounters.

9. Your parents will love him. Here’s a guy that says grace, has marriage on the brain, and was taught to respect his elders, act like a well-mannered gentleman and get along with everybody. More bonus points if he can sing “Be Thou My Vision” with Grandma.

10. He has his own friends. Ideally, and for the most part, a church will foster a warm social environment. It’s hard not to befriend people you see every week. If a guy attends church potlucks, Sunday afternoon sports or Bible studies, he’ll have buddies to hang out with when you’re out with the girls.

11. He lends a helping hand. Very rarely will a church not have outreach activities, volunteer opportunities, or even just a need for Sunday School assistants or a set-up crew. A guy who not only belongs to, but contributes to the good of his community demonstrates a willingness to serve others before himself.

http://www.yourtango.com/200943779/reasons-date-church-going-guy/page/2

Will The Real Proverbs 31 Women Please Stand Up

Majority of Christian women have read the Proverbs 31 passage before but today I felt lead to post it in the Amplified, to get a break down each verse and mediate on its meaning. I want to be a woman that glorifies God in all things; my mind, body, soul, career, speak, actions, marriage etc. What better way to make sure I am living according to the word of God, then to study His word and discover exactly what He says a good woman is. I don’t care what the world defines a good or valuable woman as, I only care what God says. He created me, He is my source and strength, and He is my delivery. I highlighted some of the verses that really blessed me and made me think about how I wanted to be better.

Proverbs 31:10-31 (AMP)

10A capable, intelligent, and [b]virtuous woman–who is he who can find her? She is far more precious than jewels and her Proverbs 31:10-31value is far above rubies or pearls.(D)

    11The heart of her husband trusts in her confidently and relies on and believes in her securely, so that he has no lack of [honest] gain or need of [dishonest] spoil.

    12She comforts, encourages, and does him only good as long as there is life within her.

    13She seeks out wool and flax and works with willing hands [to develop it].

    14She is like the merchant ships loaded with foodstuffs; she brings her household’s food from a far [country].

    15She rises while it is yet night and gets [spiritual] food for her household and assigns her maids their tasks.(E)

    16She considers a [new] field before she buys or accepts it [expanding prudently and not courting neglect of her present duties by assuming other duties]; with her savings [of time and strength] she plants fruitful vines in her vineyard. [S. of Sol. 8:12.]

    17She girds herself with strength [spiritual, mental, and physical fitness for her God-given task] and makes her arms strong and firm.

    18She tastes and sees that her gain from work [with and for God] is good; her lamp goes not out, but it burns on continually through the night [of trouble, privation, or sorrow, warning away fear, doubt, and distrust].

    19She lays her hands to the spindle, and her hands hold the distaff.

    20She opens her hand to the poor, yes, she reaches out her filled hands to the needy [whether in body, mind, or spirit].

    21She fears not the snow for her family, for all her household are doubly clothed in scarlet.(F)

    22She makes for herself coverlets, cushions, and rugs of tapestry. Her clothing is of linen, pure and fine, and of purple [such as that of which the clothing of the priests and the hallowed cloths of the temple were made].(G)

    23Her husband is known in the [city’s] gates, when he sits among the elders of the land.(H)

    24She makes fine linen garments and leads others to buy them; she delivers to the merchants girdles [or sashes that free one up for service].

    25Strength and dignity are her clothing and her position is strong and secure; she rejoices over the future [the latter day or time to come, knowing that she and her family are in readiness for it]!

    26She opens her mouth in skillful and godly Wisdom, and on her tongue is the law of kindness [giving counsel and instruction].

    27She looks well to how things go in her household, and the bread of idleness (gossip, discontent, and self-pity) she will not eat.(I)

    28Her children rise up and call her blessed (happy, fortunate, and to be envied); and her husband boasts of and praises her, [saying],

    29[c]Many daughters have done virtuously, nobly, and well [with the strength of character that is steadfast in goodness], but you excel them all.

    30Charm and grace are deceptive, and beauty is vain [because it is not lasting], but a woman who reverently and worshipfully fears the Lord, she shall be praised!

    31Give her of the fruit of her hands, and let her own works praise her in the gates [of the city]!(J)

What I hear Proverbs 31 saying is that as women of God we need to be:

1.  capable and smart.

2. Good with our hands.

3. Wise with regards to money and business deals.

4. Spiritual leaders.

5. Motivated and not lazy.

6. Multitaskers.

7. Spiritually, mentally and physically fit.

8. Giving

9. Fearless.

10. Skillful.

11. Wise

12. Drama free.

13. Good wives and mothers.

Seek God today and ask Him to help you to sharpen some of the skills that you read in the above passage. God is faithful, He will grant you your request.

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Let’s Talk About SEX Baby!

Instead of making a list about the top 12 reasons why premarital sex is bad, I wanted to make a list about the top 12 reasons why married sex is good! Below are reasons why legal, holy sex is the best. I figured if more people knew their value/worth and knew what they could look forward to in waiting, maybe more people would be willing to wait. This topic started as a Facebook discussion yesterday on my status. The list is a collaboration of things my friends and I came up with.

Please read the list and feel free to add to it or post your thoughts.

10 Reasons why legal, holy, married sex is the best.

1) You don’t have to worry about guilt or shame because you know that God is pleased with your actions.

2) You can have passionate, experimental, worry free love making because your spouse is your best friend and you are fully committed to one another.

3) You can wake up the morning after intimacy with your spouse by your side, instead of waking up alone, feeling dirty and empty.

4) With married sex, you’re not using anyone for their body and you’re not getting used. You both want to be together and please ONLY each other.

5) In marriage, I feel safe, protected and cherished while being intimate with my husband. Premarital can cause people to feel lonely, hurt, embarrassed and stressed.

6) With married sex, you don’t have to worry about your spouse leaving you if you get pregnant or leaving you when they see someone who may look better than you.

7) With married sex, you don’t have to be self-conscious or try to impress someone with your skill or body. Married couples should have fun learning what pleases each other. I encourage couples to pray and invite the Holy Ghost into their bedroom. He will lead and guide you and assist you with ensuring your loving making is mind blowing. He will grant you that request because you are in His will.

8 Married sex is a legal, holy, uninhibited, drama free way to physically express your desire and love for one another.

9) Married couples aim to please each other and wholeheartedly serve one another (in and outside of the bedroom) without guilt or shame.

10) In marriage, you and your spouse are one and intimate in every way. You don’t have to worry about getting too close or too attached because the person may leave you. Marriage is FOR LIFE and through the good and the bad, your spouse will always be there.

11) In marriage, you don’t have to sneak around to have sex and worry about getting caught. Married sex is legal and pleasing in God’s sight.

12) Married sex is about love, trust, committment and honesty. You can be yourself and know that your spouse loves you for who you are, not just because you’re giving it up to them. Love doesn’t pressure or demand that people do things for or too them. Love is patient, kind and understanding. When your marriage is good, your sex life is GREAT!!

I just want to say that marriage is about much more than sex. I don’t want people to think that I am implying that that is all married folk do (though some wouldn’t mind that being their main responsibility ) Marriage is about love, commitment, serving one another, giving 100% to each other, communication, meeting each other’s needs, sharing money, time, raising children, working in the ministry together and so much more. Sex is important of marriage though. Sex is what keeps married people close and the bible encourages married folk to not deny one another and to come together often.

I also know that no one’s marriage is perfect, in or outside of the bedroom, and marriage is hard work. Some married folk maybe going through right now and may not agree with this list at all and that’s ok. All I’m saying is, in marriages where Christ is TRULY at the center and both people are honestly trying to live by God’s word, where their committed to him first and then each other, you will find yourself experiencing the things on this list.

I encourage each person, single or married, to abandon the worlds way of thinking about sex, intimacy and marriage, and adopt the Lord’s ways and thoughts. Read your bible, get involved at a local church, hang around other SAVED and HOLY people and watch your life be changed and blessed forever!!