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9780310231141

Act of Marriage after 40 : Making Love for Life

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780310231141

  • ISBN10:

    0310231140

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2000-09-01
  • Publisher: Zondervan
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Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

The bestselling authors of "The Act of Marriage" now offer a new guide to sex after 40. The book covers a broad spectrum of key topics, including fitness, female hormone drugs, sex after hysterectomy, sex in remarriage, and Viagra.

Author Biography

Tim Lahaye is founder of Tim LaHaye Ministries and The Pre-Trib Research Center Beverly Lahaye is founder and chairwoman of Concerned Women for America and has a radio broadcast Mike Yorkey, former editor of Focus on the Family magazine, is the author or general editor of twenty-two books.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 9(11)
Introduction Why the need for this book 11(10)
Love for a Long, Long Lifetime
21(17)
The Change of Life
38(16)
The Male Menopause
54(10)
A Streetcar Named Desire
64(17)
A Refresher Course
81(13)
Great Sex at Any Age
94(10)
When You're Dealing with ED
104(15)
Don't Delay; Go Today
119(15)
No Laughing Matter
134(14)
``In Sickness and in Health''
148(11)
The Temptations
159(13)
Exercise and Nutrition for a Healthy Sex Life
172(15)
Questions and Answers
187(13)
The Critical Component
200(16)
A Couple with Hope
216(11)
Appendix: The ``Act of Marriage After 40 Survey'' Results 227(24)
Notes 251(4)
Index 255

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Chapter One
Love for a Long, Long Lifetime
Many people as they grow older--notice I didn’t say old--poke fun at their diminishing ability to perform sexually. For instance, one of my favorite jokes goes like this:
The following are the three stages of a couple’s love life--
1. Couples in their twenties have sex triweekly.
2. Couples in their thirties try weekly to have sex.
3. Couples in their forties, fifties, and sixties try weakly to have sexual relations.
Those of you crossing the threshold into the middle-age years may hear that there’s “a lot of will but no way.” But don’t you believe it. Sex begins upstairs in the mind God gave you, so if you think you’re too old for sex, you’ll act accordingly. This would be a shame because we believe couples can--and should--enjoy a vibrant sex life until they are well into their seventies, even their eighties. Psalm 90:10 reminds us, “The length of our days is seventy years--or eighty, if we have the strength.” To “have the strength,” we must take care of our bodies by exercising moderately, eating the right foods, and taking nutritional supplements. (I’ll have more to say about this later.)
One of our major themes in this book is that you can continue to love your spouse in physical and amorous ways that will be even better than during those first few sexually adventurous years of marriage. It is possible to enjoy an active, satisfying sex life well into your seventies and eighties. Affection, warmth, and sensuality do not have to deteriorate with age and can actually increase in the midlife years.
Sex in later life is sex for its own sake since our childbearing years are in our rearview mirrors. We make love for pleasure, release, communication, and intimacy. Since the midlife years are marked with fewer responsibilities on the home front (the kids are grown and gone or about to leave the nest), many find this era a time of exhilaration. We lose a step physically, but we more than gain that back with experience. Playwright George Bernard Shaw had it right when he correctly stated, “Youth is wasted on the young.”
Sex can remain interesting, fulfilling, and exciting in the forties, fifties, sixties, and beyond. Older women rarely lose their physical ability to reach an orgasm, and many older men exhibit a capability for erections and ejaculations. We can expect the body to slow down gradually in sexual response, however, and for sexual desire to lessen, especially for women.
The fact that you have chosen to read about this topic suggests that your sexual relationship is important to you and your spouse. Based on that interest, we will attempt to answer several fundamental questions in The Act of Marriage After 40:
• What are satisfying love relationships like in the midlife years?
• In what ways does the act of marriage change as spouses grow older together?
• How can the sexual relationship improve in the second half of marriage?
To begin our discussion, let’s debunk these common myths about sex in the midlife years.
Myth #1: Couples should expect to lose their ability to make love after they reach a certain age
We all know that males reach their sexual peak in late adolescence--between the ages of eighteen and twenty. A young male can ejaculate three to six times a day. We also know that after this sexual peak, males show a steady decline in their sexual ability to climax throughout the rest of their lives.1 A male’s ability to make love will not drop off a cliff when he hits forty, fifty, sixty, or seventy; instead, it’s a steady descent. Picture a Boeing 757 following a “glide path” into Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, and you get the idea.
On the flip side, women reach their sexual peak ten, twenty years after men when they are in their late thirties and remain on that plateau through their sixties, after which they may show a slight decline in sexual response capability.2 Fred Stoeker, coauthor of Every Man’s Battle: Winning the War of Sexual Temptation One Victory at a Time, once looked forward to the time in his marriage when he and his wife, Brenda, would experience a “sexual nirvana” when his wife’s peaking line of desire crossed his descending path. If only physical relationships were that simple, Fred says. “In the end, it wasn’t the match of ability or desire that mattered so much, but accepting the fact that there would likely be no match. Men and women are different, and understanding those differences was the key to sensitivity and tenderness for us,” he said.
One of those differences is that, biologically speaking, women experience little sexual impairment as they age. Many women feel that sex is more enjoyable after menopause since there is no risk of becoming pregnant. Others feel their sexual assertiveness increase because they feel comfortable in a stable marriage. Since men and women achieve emotional maturity in the midlife years, they can pave the way toward a superior intimate relationship.
Myth #2: The quality of sex declines for men and women in the midlife years
Your body certainly changes with age. A twenty-year-old man can be erect in five seconds, while it takes a fifty-year-old male half a minute. Maybe a septuagenarian needs several minutes of manual stimulation to become aroused. While an older man may take longer to achieve an erection, he often gains more control over ejaculation because he can sustain his erection longer. With more control, he can take his time to bring his wife to orgasm before intercourse.
The biggest difference is the “rebound,” or the refractory time, before sex is again possible. At a male’s sexual peak (in his late teens or early twenties), he could orgasm as many as three to six times in one night. Older men need twelve to twenty-four hours before they are capable of ejaculation--sometimes several days. We need to keep our eyes focused on how good the sexual experience can be, not how many sexual experiences one can have.

Excerpted from The Act of Marriage after 40: Making Love for Life by Tim LaHaye, Beverly LaHaye, Mike Yorkey
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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