Mismatched libido: how to handle it.
When two people in a relationship want sex at different rates. The most common pattern in long-term couples.
Most long-term couples have some kind of libido mismatch. That is normal.
The mismatch turns into a problem when neither partner has tools for it. With a few tools, this is one of the more workable issues couples face.
Sources at the bottom.
Two kinds of desire
Researchers describe two patterns. Spontaneous desire arrives on its own. Responsive desire arrives in response to physical contact, emotional safety, or context.
For many couples, one partner is more spontaneous and the other is more responsive. The responsive partner is not low-libido. They just need different conditions.
How most mismatches play out
These are the patterns we see most.
Different baseline rates
One partner wants sex three times a week, the other once. Most common pattern.
Different time-of-day preferences
Morning person versus evening person.
Different initiation patterns
One partner always initiates, the other rarely does. The non-initiating partner is often responsive-dominant.
Different intensity preferences
Both want sex, just want different kinds.
What we know from research
Basson 2000 described the responsive-desire model. Couples who explicitly recognize and accommodate it report higher satisfaction.
Where to start
Run these in order.
Have the conversation
Out loud. Say it directly: I want sex more than you do. Lets figure out what works for both of us.
Read on responsive desire
Talk about the spontaneous vs responsive frame. Naming it does substantial work.
Try a calendar
Pick a frequency you can both live with. Block it on the calendar.