Things that may be affecting your sex life (and how to improve it)
Although it may be very tempting to resolve our lack of sexual desire with a pill or other momentary stimulant, there are aspects of our lives that may be affecting our sexuality without us being aware of it. Sex doll play important role to increase the interest of man in sexual activities.
- A medication
Perhaps you started a medical treatment and one of the drugs you are taking has among its side effects the reduction of libido.
According to Diabetes UK, a charity dedicated to helping people suffering from this disease in the United Kingdom, both men and women “may experience sexual dysfunction caused by physical factors or by a medication they are taking or both.”
In fact, medicines against high blood pressure and depression can affect sexual desire and the possibility of getting an orgasm.
That is why it is important to ask the doctor what kind of side effects the medicines prescribed for you have and what other options can be explored if they affect your libido.
It is also important to know that there are diseases that affect blood flow and sexual response such as diabetes and heart and kidney diseases.
- Problems of self-esteem and self-imposed expectations
Not feeling attractive or sexy may be playing a key role in the way we approach our sexuality.
In the case of some women they also influence (in the way they are perceived) the changes that occur in their bodies during pregnancies and after births or caesarean sections: scars, weight gain, stretch marks, in some cases focal incontinence after childbirth traumatic.
* The incontinence that few want to talk about and that affects women more than men
And the arrival of children is a variable that can affect the intimacy of the couple, in some cases dramatically.
* Why are women more likely to lose their sexual appetite than men and how to get it back?
For genders, weight gain or hair loss can influence the sensation of feeling less desirable.
- Negative experiences in the past that we have not addressed
Although sexual desire is natural and biological, cultural, religious, social and family factors also influence the way we assume sexual relations.