Scott's Main Coaching Areas: Public Speaking & Media Coach/Trainer, Coaching Women and Relationship Coaching.
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The Brain in Love: 12 Lessons to Enhance Your Love Life By Daniel G. Amen, M.D.
BOOK: Based on Dr. Daniel Amens cutting-edge neuroscience research, The Brain in Love shares twelve lessons that help you enhance your love life through understanding and improving brain function.
When is it too soon to have sex? By Coaching Circles Staff Writer
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Almost everyone really really likes sex. Men and women have roughly equal sex drives, according to a study published in the late 70s that surveyed both genders in 93 societies. So why is it an issue deciding when to take the plunge with a new partner?
Karen, 32, is still feeling reverberations from a short relationship she had months ago. "Generally, I've slept with men too soon," she confesses. With Doug, someone she'd known through church for almost a year, she'd waited until the sixth date.
"I tend to want an emotional connection to go with the sexual attraction," she says "but sometimes I get ahead of myself and act on the chemistry before I'm sure the emotional connection is there on his side." As Karen puts it, Doug had been pursuing her "very aggressively on a physical level." When they went to bed, it was fun and spontaneous, but then he didn't want her to stay the night. And he never called again.
Now of course there are couples who have sex right away and a fabulous relationship follows. According to Judith Coche, Ph.D., associate clinical professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, the key is to determine before you become intimate whether you have the same goals: casual sex with no strings attached, or a lasting relationship.
"Talk about this," says Coche. "Once sex gets into the picture, it's almost impossible to keep your reason intact." "If someone dodges your questions," she adds, "take note. This is life planning. Don't be afraid to let the person know what you want."
"What's important is not how many dates you've had with someone as much as your mutual readiness," says Coche. "If you say to someone, 'I think something could really develop here, but the time isn't right for me yet,' that's a powerful statement.
Most people will wait. If not, they're looking for something superficial. When couples do wait a bit, it deepens the relationship. If you start out with a friendship first and get enough of the foundations in place to feel very safe with each other as people and then add the passion, knowing the attraction is there, the richness of the experience is something people say is different from anything else they've ever experienced."
Bad Reasons for sex too soon
A need for sex.
You want the person to love you.
Social pressure to perform.
Nothing more to talk about.
Boredom.
A curiosity to find out if there's any chemistry.
You want to make someone else jealous.
To persuade your partner to leave his or her current partner.
You're challenging a dare.
An attempt to solidify the relationship.
“Male Sexual Issues” by AAMFT
Couples today expect more out of sex and intimacy than in any point in history. free
“This is Your Brain on Love” By Susan Brink - Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
When you're attracted to someone, is your gray matter talking sense - or just hooked? Scientists take a rational look. free
You and I
Have so much love
That it
Burns like a fire,
In which we bake a lump of clay
Molded into a figure of you
And a figure of me.
Then we take both of them,
And break them into pieces,
And mix the pieces with water,
And mold again a figure of you,
And a figure of me.
I am in your clay.
You are in my clay.
In life we share a single quilt.
In death we will share one bed. free
You and I
Have so much love
That it
Burns like a fire,
In which we bake a lump of clay
Molded into a figure of you
And a figure of me.
Then we take both of them,
And break them into pieces,
And mix the pieces with water,
And mold again a figure of you,
And a figure of me.
I am in your clay.
You are in my clay.
In life we share a single quilt.
In death we will share one bed. free
The Brand You
BOOK: Reveals fifty ways to reinvent yourself along with the tools needed to meet the challenges of a wired world.
Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life
BOOK: Johnson writes on a handful of current neuroscience concepts with the potential to transform our thinking about emotions, memories and consciousness.
Non-Adversarial Communication: Speaking and Listening from the Heart
BOOK: "A must read if we are going to make a better world." ~ Randall Huntsberry