Meet
Wendy Strgar
Making time for love is an important barometer of the commitment and
sustainability of your relationship. When you consider the
outrageous scheduling hoops we agree to without qualm in our work
setting or even more intense in managing our children's activity
calendar, it makes you wonder, how the idea of scheduling intimacy
could still be so taboo.
Yet, taboo it is; with an overriding belief that sex and intimacy are
somehow tainted if they are not spontaneous and immediate. This
belief system, connected to the shame and guilt we carry around from
our adolescence when we could only describe a make out session if we
could first say, "I don't know how it happened, but suddenly we were
just doing it..." We can only fully embrace our
sexuality if it just happens to us, planning for it forces us to claim
the most unpredictable and to some degree uncontrollable part of our
life.
There are a lot of good reasons to start including love time in your
regular schedule. Leaving love to the spontaneous in a life that
is overbooked with commitments to family and careers, means that our
love often gets the lowest ebb of our energy. Most of us arrive
at our bedrooms exhausted, finally turning away from the last email,
the last bill to be paid, the last dish to be washed, the last
light turned off. Even the most spontaneous among us can barely
muster the energy of imagining a wild interlude at that moment.