#35 Thoughts about crying after sex

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Gabby
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#35 Thoughts about crying after sex

Post by Gabby » Tue May 03, 2005 3:29 pm

#35 Thoughts about crying after sex / Am I destroying my new relationship?

Ask Dr. Drew:

Q: I’ve been seeing a man for several months, and it’s been going well. Recently though, I’ve been having a tremendous urge to cry after sex. I have felt rejected in the past after being intimate with someone, but this man is very sensitive to my feelings. He has never done anything to make me feel he was going to leave and not want me any more. Where might these feelings come from? MV. Illinois

A: In my experience, this is not uncommon. Some women actually cry tears of joy after sex, but that’s a small minority. Crying usually occurs because the sex exposes an incongruence of some kind. How you feel about the relationship or yourself doesn’t match with the intense intimacy you’re experiencing.

It might be that your feelings have changed and you’re not in the relationship the way you have been before. You’re expecting very strong emotions, and they’re just not there. The sex confronts you with that emptiness and lack of love and makes you feel bad.

Sometimes people cry after sex because they expect rejection and distance. The fact that he is showing you genuine feelings is exposing deficiencies in your intimate relationships in the past, perhaps when you were growing up. You may see yourself as unworthy of such openness. Ironically, many women who feel that way actually become rejecters themselves, unconsciously sabotaging their relationships so they won't have to experience abandonment.

Finally, if you are a survivor of trauma or abuse, sex can trigger a kind of flashback. You’re flooded with by feelings and just get overwhelmed and cry.

My advice is to hang in there and see what comes of it. Don’t allow yourself to bail out because you can’t deal. If you can’t sustain it, that’s when I would recommend therapy. Drew Pinsky MD.


Gabby's Reply:

Hi MV: Get yourself to a counselor or communication-skills coach. You’re on the verge of destroying your relationship. It’s time for you to take sex to its next level—from rudimentary beginner's sex to exquisite intercourse. I'm speaking of the kind where after-climax conversations are as satisfying as the physical communications. Although you don’t mention it, the fact that you have written indicates that you have not shared these thoughts with your boyfriend. Even if you have, you have only "talked about" them as opposed to "communicated with him." The way we know this is because when the truth is told, when communication takes place, the experience is transformed. It’s complete. There is no mystery left.

For example:

You: "Gosh, I feel like I’m going to cry.”

Him: “H’mm. What’s it about?”

You: “Nothing. I don’t know.”

Him: “H,mm…” (men sometimes start with ‘H’mm’ when they are coming from nothing, not knowing, no intent to fix you, merely to be there for you.) “…what thought is associated with the experience?” The ensuing conversation would transform the experience, resulting in an expanded experience of love.

The fact that it concerns you concerns me. I have these emotional peaks all the time (even when I’m driving) however, I can eliminate the possibility that it’s about pain, or fear, or an incomplete (some unacknowledged out-integrity) by looking at the thoughts that accompany the emotion. “No pain, no grief, no guilt. H'mm, let's see, it follows a previous pleasant experience, it must be joy." However, you don’t seem to arrive at that it might just be joy. This leads me to support you in listening to your intuition which in this case triggers concern and worry.

He may very well be the best man you’ve ever dated and still be merely one of many dates in the learning curve to discovering love through intercourse. You say he is “very sensitive to your feelings,” yet,,, he doesn’t pick up on this nonverbal (very obvious) communication that’s emanating from you and gently ask, “What?" Or a gentle one-word suggestion, “breath,” to support you in breathing through the experience. If it’s hurt or sadness, the breathing allows the sadness to come out. If it’s joy the breathing allows the joy and ecstasy to bloom. In other words, because he doesn’t get this subtle communication and complete it for you and himself (get certainty) suggests that his sensitivity is partly a “sensitivity act.”

When I say "intercourse" the communication model I refer to is open, honest, and spontaneous communication, zero thoughts withheld. In such a relationship the agreement is, "The way to let me know you don’t want to continue the relationship is to withhold any thought." In such a relationship the experience you are having begs to be shared. To not do so becomes as a mote in thine eye. Your “rejected” experience of the past suggests that you might have a pattern of attracting/rewarding rejecters. If so this would be your integrity at work, in support of you getting therapy to recall the first incident, the one that runs you about rejection, so as to complete it.

Now here’s the kicker. If you have been withholding thoughts, such as the fact that sometimes you verge on crying after sex, so too has he been withholding thoughts and emotions from you. You can’t see the speck in his eye for the mote in yours. It’s a given that withholders always attract withholders, each withholding their thoughts of choice. It’s called control. There can be no sustained experience of love and joy in a relationship in which thoughts are withheld. Another way of putting it. Breathers hang around breathers. :=) Thanks Gabby

Note: This letter was among the top ten voted to be used to replace one of the least viewed of the 50 original letters.

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