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One of the great burdens which our Romantic culture has imposed upon long-term relationships
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is the idea that love and sexual fulfillment must always, if things are working as they should, fit neatly together.
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This beautiful and hugely convenient idea raises a passionate hope
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that over many years two people will not only like and help one another,
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manage their domestic finances reasonably well, perhaps raise a family, have enjoyable holidays,
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understand one another's problems, schedule cleaning rotas, put up with each other's failings,
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see each others' parents and friends and pursue their careers in harmony, but they
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will also be devoted and exciting sexual partners, endlessly entwining and recombining,
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sometimes being gentle and slow, at others, brutal and urgent, travelling together on a shared, life-long erotic adventure.
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It's this sublime idea that begins to torment us when – as is the
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case in almost every relationship – sex starts with time to get at once less intense
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and less frequent, more cautious and more frustrating, more at odds with daily life
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and eventually definitively more daunting as a prospect than reading a book,
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watching the news together or simply going to sleep. This can appear nothing short of a catastrophe,
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a sign of monstrous failing and very often a prelude to a break-up. And yet the problem
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is not ours alone. It is simply that almost everything that can make love go well seems
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primed not to make sex go well – and vice versa. We are afflicted by a fundamental misalignment
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in the qualities of character and spirit required by good sex on the one hand and
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successful love on the other. A relationship cannot survive in the long term without tenderness, soberness,
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practical intelligence and selective resignation. We have carefully to fathom another's motives,
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explain our moods, overcome hurts and sulks and assume a mantle of predictability.
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Sex on the other hand, in its most dramatic, thrilling versions, demands that we be heedless, decadent,
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perhaps cruel or untenably submissive. It can involve the crudest language and
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moments of sublime degradation. In having to suffer from feelings of inadequacy around what happens
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in long-term love, we are the victims of major cultural failure: the failure of our surrounding
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culture to continually stress a realistic picture of an unavoidable tension between
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two crucial yet incompatible themes of existence. In a wiser world, we would collectively admit
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that the very rare cases where love and sex did run together were astonishing exceptions
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with no relevance whatsoever to most of our lives. We would instead learn to pay admiring
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attention to those who had accepted with a reasonable show of dignity and grace that
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the natural price of long-term togetherness is a decline in the quality and frequency of sexual contact –
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and that this is, in a great many cases, a price very much worth paying.
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Our Sex book explores how sex truely operates,
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demonstrating that far from thinking about sex too much, we haven't begun to think about it nearly enough.