Invite the Shadow into Your Bedroom

We’ve all been there: When a sex drought hits a relationship, it’s never fun. It weighs on the relationship—but also each person in it individually—emotionally and mentally. No one expects the honeymoon phase to last forever, but when the once-thrilling, sexy spark dims, it can feel devastating. Where can we go from here? In this Q&A with Goop.com, Barry Michels and Phil Stutz weigh in.

Q: When couples tell you they aren’t having enough sex, what’s usually the reason?

Barry Michels: One of the most common complaints we hear as therapists is that couples aren’t having enough sex. We’ve heard every explanation in the book:

  • “Between our jobs and kids we’re too exhausted.”

  • “There never seems to be time.”

  • “My wife used to be hot but not so much anymore.”

  • “If I have to hear my husband fart one more time I’ll rip his eyeballs out.”

But really, these are just excuses.

The truth is, there’s something about modern life that actually leeches sex out of relationships. To understand this fully, you first have to delve deeper into the nature of sex: It isn’t just a physical act; it’s about passion—that hungry excitement you feel inside toward someone.

To feel passion, you have to let go of control—and that’s where the problem lies. Most of modern life requires the opposite of letting go; it’s about trying to control things: You have to find the right spouse; your kids have to behave right and be admitted to the right schools; you have to find a house in the right neighborhood, take the right vacations, even drive the right car. All of this requires a lot of money, which means you also need to have the right job and the right connections. The list goes on and on.

The more your life becomes about control, the less passionate your life—and your relationship—become. In a weird way, when life is about getting things “right,” then letting go of control actually becomes threatening. Passion becomes an enemy that’s going to overthrow your well-ordered life; you resist it without even realizing it.

“The more your life becomes about control, the less passionate your life—and your relationship—become.”

—BARRY MICHELS

This sets up an inner, unconscious conflict: You long for passion, but you don’t dare let yourself feel it. If you step back from this conflict, you realize that the real danger isn’t passion—it’s this inner conflict. If you don’t resolve it, the results are terrible: Either the passion comes out in an ill-advised, impulsive way that can destroy your relationship, or the passion goes underground forever; your life loses its juice.

One of the saddest things in the world is to see a couple sitting at a restaurant not speaking to each other through the entire meal; you sense the dead space between them; they lost the spark such a long time ago they’ve given up hope of ever recovering it.

Q: Once a relationship has lost its passion, is it possible to get it back?

Barry: Yes—if you want more passion in your relationship, you have to get in touch with a part of yourself you usually keep under wraps. It’s the part of you that isn’t trying to control things—it doesn’t care about keeping up appearances. In fact, the essence of this part of you is that it’s out of your control.

What’s the connection between that part of you and sex? If you think back to the best sexual experiences you’ve had, they all have this quality: It’s a little out of control; it feels like another part of you is taking over, and that part of you is looser, more improvisational, and more passionate than your everyday, put-together self.

Phil Stutz: Barry is talking about a part of you called the Shadow. The Shadow was discovered by the psychiatrist Carl Jung and it embodies whatever qualities you feel aren’t “right”—qualities that endanger your organized, controlled existence; it’s messy. Everybody tries to hide their Shadow because they feel embarrassed and threatened by it.

“Where people fail each other is between the times they have sex.”

—PHIL STUTZ

If you want to have a good sex life, no matter how long you’ve been together, you need to nurture and create a space for the Shadow; you need to let yourself be vulnerable and bring it into the bedroom with your partner. Ironically, even though you’re embarrassed of it, the Shadow is the part of you that can have passionate sex, get close, and be intimate with someone.

In working on this, every interaction with your partner matters: Each time, you’re either going to bring your Shadow out or hide it inside. When you hide it, that drains the relationship of its passion.

And part of what “bringing your Shadow out” means is that you have to express interest in your partner all the time, not just right before you want to have sex. Where people fail each other is between the times they have sex. When you pass by your partner in the kitchen, you might want to touch them, look at them sexually, tell them they look great, etc. This needs to be done all the time.

You can read the full article, How to Have More Sex, on Goop.com.




Previous
Previous

The Secret to Loving Your Body

Next
Next

The Power to Reconcile Guilt Lies in Empathy