A husband is concerned about his wife's increased use of a vibrator, leading to a decrease in intimacy between them. He feels humiliated and rejected.
Experts advise against blaming the vibrator and suggest focusing on improving communication and understanding the wife's needs and preferences. They emphasize open dialogue and mutual exploration of desires.
The solution emphasizes open communication, mutual respect, and a shift in perspective away from jealousy towards understanding and appreciation of the wife's needs.
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Dear How to Do It,
Nearly a month ago, my wife, āLuisa,ā bought a high-end dildo vibrator.
The trouble is that ever since, she seems to have forgotten I exist. I canāt count the number of times Iāve tried to initiate sex only for her to turn me down. Yet a few hours later, I can hear an unmistakable hum when sheās in the bathroom. When I confronted Luisa about it, her excuse was that she didnāt feel like having sex at the time I did. Her response to my suggestion that we set aside specific times for sex with each other was that āscheduling is unromantic and kills spontaneity.āĀ This is humiliatingāI feel like Iām competing for my wifeās affections with a sex toy!Ā Other than arranging for it to find itās way to the dumpster, what can I do?
āReplaced
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Jessica Stoya: Thereās obviously a disconnect in the relationship between the letter writer and his wife. There is something going on. Why didnāt Luisa, a few hours after she turned him down for sex, go to him and say, āHey, now Iād like to have sex. What do you think?ā Has that kind of interaction gone poorly in the past? Has our writer responded to Luisa circling back with, āWell, you didnāt want me earlier and now I feel rejected?ā I donāt know, but putting all that frustration on a perfectly innocent vibrator, to the point where he wants to walk it out to the dumpster, is not helpful.
Rich Juzwiak: I think thereās a clichĆ© at hand of like, oh, that sex toy is going to replace me somehow. This is an anxiety that people often have, but I think that itās very wise of you to look more into the past and think about what other situations this dynamic could apply to. How is our writer treating Luisa in bed? Does he care about her pleasure? Is he generous? Is he reciprocal? Does he make her feel good about herself? Is he overly critical? All of this stuff matters. Weāre dropped in the middle of this situation without any context, and I think that instead of worrying about Luisa and her vibrator, this is an opportunity to look inward.
Jessica: I actually do want to worry about Luisa and her vibrator a little bit.
Rich: OK, letās do it.
Jessica: Drawing on my own lived experience and several letters that weāve received over the years, some people, including women, although this is counterintuitive as far as the cultural messages we get, often or sometimes just want a mechanical, bodily function style orgasm. So Iām wondering if thereās a lack of communication thatās leaving our writer in the dark. Perhaps Luisa is saying, āNo, I donāt want to have sex,ā and the subtext is because I donāt want to get super sweaty, messy, and have it take an hour and a half, and whatever else. But then a few hours later is like, oh, but my clitoris is screaming at me and I can make it be quiet if I take my vibrator to the bathroom and take care of this in five to seven minutes.
Rich: I think that a similar rule or guideline that I have when it comes to hooking up with a member of couple should apply here, which is you have toĀ be cool with the boyfriend of the guy that youāre hooking up with. Iām speaking from a gay perspective, as usual. At minimum, you have to just be cool with each other. Thereās no stated rivalry because itās just going to end up not working out for you most of the time. The relationship already exists, youāre coming in as a stranger or something close to it. Sometimes itās better to be friendly with the guy.
I think the writer should make friends with his wifeās vibrator, or at least offer to do so, instead of resenting it. Itās clearly something that she is enjoying and likes it. Offer to be there with her, maybe talk to her about it. Treating the vibrator as a good thing because itās giving your partner pleasure and release is really going to help you more than expressing jealousy or contempt for this machine.
Jessica: Itāll be a lot easier for our writer to make peace with the vibrator if he understands what the vibrator does for Luisa, and thatās really going to require an information-gathering conversation. That conversation has to come from an actual place of genuine curiosity because the faintest whiff of, āWhy the vibrator and not me!ā will cause an argument and push them apart. Instead ask Luisa: What does the vibrator do for you?
Rich: I think thatās true. Even if weāve misjudged this scenario and he has actually done everything as a partner and a sex partner and just all of a sudden, his wife decided to do this, and even if itās hurtful on a very fundamental level, I still think curiosity and the affirmation of her pleasure is just going to make this conversation easier to have.
My Son Played With My Husbandās Lego Set. The Way He Punished Him Horrified Me So Much That Iām Now Living at My Sisterās. A Woman at Work Refuses to Come to the Office for Team Meetings. You Will Understand Why Iām Mad in a Second. Help! I Canāt Believe the Disgusting Thing My Father Did at My House. I Demand an Explanation. This Content is Available for Slate Plus members only I Manage the Household of a Wealthy Family. The Mom Has a Wasteful Compulsion Thatās Taking Over My Workdays.Jessica: In an ideal world, Luisa would be telling her husband already, āI donāt know. My hormones are shifting around. All of a sudden, the only thing that works for me is intense clitoral stimulation.ā And sheād also be inviting the husband into sexually intimate situations, making time for him, and extending other invitations for other forms of intimacy. Thereās almost certainly stuff Luisa could be doing better as well, but pointing that out to start wonāt get this conversation very far.
Rich: Certainly not leading with that.
Jessica: No.
Rich: What you want to do is facilitate the conversation. You donāt want to shut it down. You donāt want to have it be an immediate point of contention because itās going to be that much more difficult to get through that issue and then come around to the underlying desire and perhaps sexual issues that have facilitated the situation at hand.
Be generous and certainly do not throw your wifeās vibrator away. Thatās her toy and she likes it.
Jessica: Think of the planet.
Rich: Totally. Donāt create waste.
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