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This is what happens to your body when you stop having sex

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
March 4, 2018 at 20:48
This is what happens when you stop having sex.Source:istock
This is what happens when you stop having sex.Source:istock
WHILE many of us probably couldn’t imagine a life without sex, chances are you’re going to go through a dry spell every once in a while. Here’s what happens to your body when you stop.

WHILE many of us probably couldn’t imagine a life without sex, every now and then it’s natural to experience a “dry spell”.

So what effect does stopping sex have on your body?

According to The Sun, it will inevitably take a toll on your body and general psyche if you go from regularly having sex to a bonk-free existence.

And perhaps unsurprisingly, it’s women who seem to come off worst ...

LOSS OF LIBIDO

According to Sari Cooper, LCSW, a certified sex therapist, some people who refrain from sex begin to feel more sluggish, with less vitality and hunger for sex.

He told Reader’s Digest that some of his clients describe the scenario as “out of sight, out of mind”.

But it’s not the same for everybody. During a fallow period, some people begin to find the idea of sex more desirable.

Some people who refrain from sex begin to feel more sluggish, with less vitality and hunger for sex.
Some people who refrain from sex begin to feel more sluggish, with less vitality and hunger for sex.Source:istock

II GETS YOU DOWN

The lack of physical contact sex brings can leave some people feeling seriously down in the dumps.

“When people have sex they’re usually having skin-to-skin contact, and this kind of contact is the first primal way we as humans get comforted [as babies with our mothers],” Mr Cooper explained.

“Sexual connection give partners loads of skin-to-skin caressing and touch, and can help to regulate one another’s moods,” — generally through the release of the feel-good hormone oxytocin.

Thankfully, studies suggest a lack of sexual activity is not going to cause clinical depression.

YOUR VAGINAL WALLS CAN WEAKEN

This is primarily a problem for women who are going through the menopause.

If you radically reduce the amount of sex you have as you get older, the walls of your vagina thin out and can lead to painful sex when you finally get back into the sack.

As a result, the North American Menopause Society has recommended having regular penetrative sex to help vaginal health during menopause.

The lack of physical contact sex brings can leave some people feeling seriously down in the dumps.
The lack of physical contact sex brings can leave some people feeling seriously down in the dumps.Source:istock

LOSS OF LUBRICATION

If it’s been a while, the vagina can struggle to lubricate itself when you start having sex — again a more common side-effect for older women.

It’s down to a lack of the hormone oestrogen.

Dr Lauren Streicher, author of Sex Rx: Hormones, Health, and Your Best Sex Ever, explained: “If you take a young woman who’s 20 or 30 years old she’s going to have plenty of oestrogen around to make sure those tissues stay healthy, elastic, and lubricated when she’s not having sex.

“If you take someone who’s 60 and has no oestrogen, she has lost that piece of it.”

WORSE PERIOD PAINS

Bizarrely, having sex during your period is actually a good way of lessening menstrual cramps.

“The uterus is a muscle and many women will actually have a uterine contraction when they orgasm, which will cause the blood to expel more quickly, which will in turn decrease menstrual cramps,” Dr Streicher said.

“Also, there may be an increase in endorphins, which also will help with menstrual cramps.”

Not having sex could cause an increase in your stress level.
Not having sex could cause an increase in your stress level.Source:istock

YOU COULD FEEL MORE STRESSED

For some people, getting jiggy in the bedroom is their way of de-stressing.

If that’s the case, not having sex could cause an increase in your stress level.

But it’s not the same for everyone, as Dr. Streicher pointed out that for some women, “sex is actually stressful for a variety of reasons: It may be painful, or it could be one more thing on their to-do list”.

YOU MAY GET FEWERS UTIs

So it turns out it’s not all bad news.

Sex is responsible for potentially increasing the risk of recurrent bladder infections due to the spread of bacteria that can occur, according to Dr Streicher.

And the journal American Family Physician stated: “Frequency of sexual intercourse is the strongest predictor of recurrent urinary tract infections.”

A priori, less sex equals less sitting on the loo wincing in agony.

This article originally appeared in The Sun and has been republished with permission.

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