This is Room #5 in my Social Anxiety At Home series.  If you are new around here, you might refer back to the intro post, where you can also find links to the individual rooms as they become live.

This is actually the first post for this series that I wrote.  I was originally planning to make this a series about Social Anxiety in Marriage, but soon realized that it needed to be more.  This room scares me the most to post.  I’ve read through it a hundred times, wondering if I should write it differently, since it doesn’t exactly match the other rooms.  But I’m going to be brave and leave it as I wrote it originally.  Then I’ll go hide in my closet until the dust settles…


My husband and I have been together for over 26 years and have had fairly regular sex almost all that time.  You’d think that after that much time having intimate relations with the same person and neither of us having anything to compare to I’d be completely comfortable in the bedroom.  That would be one of those assumptions that the saying “You know what you do when you assume” applies to.

Now, I can’t say how he feels, as I’m trying my best to stop doing the “reading minds” cognitive distortion, but I know there are times that I feel completely awkward and uncomfortable.  I realize this is a very personal topic and I’m hoping my husband never comes across this post, as I’d hate to embarrass him.  However, I must be absolutely clear that everything in this post is about my anxious thoughts, not reality.  Maybe someday I will get to the point where I can share these thoughts with him (would probably be the healthy move), but for now I’m writing it out to help myself (and maybe you) see this situation for what it is.  Social Anxiety, not reality.  Here we go…


After a busy week of volunteering for school field trips and forcing myself through more social interactions than I’ve had in the last month, all I want is a day to recharge.  For me that means sleep, scrolling Instagram, blogging, reading, and generally being alone.  Thankfully, hubby has work to be doing for school and has disappeared into his study and I’m left to do exactly what I have planned.

And then it happens.  I go into the living room to let a dog outside and he comes out of his office with that look in his eye.  The one that says “let’s get frisky.”

“Hey, there,” he says as he puts his hand on my waist, wiggles his eyebrows suggestively, and moves in for a kiss.  I know it’s coming, but his “No one’s home, if you’re interested.  It’s okay if you’re not,” makes me feel like I should to be interested.  It has been awhile, given our busy schedules, and I’m due with my period soon, so if I say no today it might be a long while before the opportunity will arise again.  

In my mind, I feel like I have to say yes.  That I should want to say yes.  What does it say about me that I’d rather go to my room and read a book about other people having sex rather than have sex myself?  So of course, I walk into the bedroom and begin to disrobe.

“With or without toys?” is his question.  He’s recently been adding the use of vibrators.  On the one hand, they are effective.  On the other, I feel uncomfortable saying they are more effective than just regular sex these days.  So I simply say “Doesn’t matter to me” and leave the decision up to him.  Because I fear my decision would be the wrong one.

“You’ll probably get more out of it if we do, since it’s been awhile.”  While he’s most likely come to this conclusion because he’s afraid he’ll finish too fast, it doesn’t stop me from feeling like that’s an indication that I’m lacking in some way.  When I look at it logically, I know that’s not right.  He’s simply being a thoughtful partner that wants me to have as much pleasure as him, if not more.  He really is mindful of me and not at all selfish in bed.  Which sometimes feels like too much pressure.  Today is one of those times.

There’s not a lot of foreplay involved in married sex.  Sure, we may not leap right to penetration, but most of the time we’re both naked before we even get in the bed.  Today is no exception.  He reaches for me and begins to kiss me lovingly.  Instead of fizzy bubbles of anticipation, all I can think about is our smells.  I am uncertain, but I am pretty sure he hasn’t brushed his teeth this morning.  I think about suggesting it, but don’t want to offend him.  Besides, I hate the taste of his toothpaste.  I try to get my mind off of that and start wondering if I used deodorant this morning or if I forgot.  Or maybe it’s him that needs to.  Really, why am I noticing so many smells when I should be focusing on how things are feeling.  Wrong sense to focus on, brain!

He starts up the vibrator and it does the trick of moving my focus to the right one of my five senses.  Only, it’s apparently been awhile since it was charged, and it dies before we really get going and my mind slips out of “the zone.”  Of course, he’s got a backup and takes the time to make the switch as I lay there wondering if he can smell me.  

His lips meet mine again and I try not to flinch at the smell of our combined breath.  Really, what is my problem?!  I’m relieved when he leaves my mouth and decides to give my breasts some attention.  But then his chin digs into my breast and I hold my breath through the uncomfortable sensation and wonder if it’s an indication that something is wrong if my breast is tender.  I’m due for a mammogram.  Will it find a lump?  My mother had breast cancer, maybe it’s genetic.

Focus.  I’m having sex, not a mammogram.  I like it when my breasts get attention.  What’s wrong with me? He’s going to be offended if I can’t get there.  He’s going to think he did something wrong and it’s totally not him.  It’s me. He’s wonderful and patient and way too good for me. How can he even be attracted to me right now?  I’ve gained so much weight in the last few years.  There’s no way he thinks this body is hot.  It’s just that he is horny in general, not for me specifically, I’m sure of it.

“What do you want?” He asks.

“I don’t know?”

“What do you need?”

“I said I don’t know.”

“Well, they can be two different things.”

I don’t know how he doesn’t know exactly what’s going through my mind.  Surely he knows I’m not completely in the moment.  He tries.  When he does enter me, with the vibrator still in, hoping to get me to climax, I flinch.  “Too much?”

“Maybe a little.”

He adjusts things and the next thing I know, he’s done.  And apologizing that he finished and I didn’t.  I try to assure him, “Seriously, it wasn’t you.  It was me.”

And that’s the end of it.  We don’t talk about what happened because I’m way too embarrassed. We clean up and move to our opposite sides of the house, going back to our own worlds.

Has he moved on, not even thinking about it, or does he think he did something wrong?  Is he offended that I wasn’t more into it?  Will he think I’m not attracted to him?  I totally am, I swear!  I wasn’t lying when I told him it was me.  Something inside my anxious brain wouldn’t shut up.  I couldn’t shut down the anxiety long enough to enjoy the moment.  Which makes me even more anxious.

You know, I read romance novels occasionally and the sex scenes are so different from my experience.  But all because of me, not my husband.  It’s my brain, not the mechanics.  I’ve noticed that when I can quiet my brain and give all of my attention to the sensations of the moment, that’s when sex is great.  But my brain gets in the way much too often.  I wish I had a magic wand that would quiet those thoughts and let me focus on how I feel physically instead. What is it that makes the difference?  How can I shut down the anxiety and be my honest self?  Why haven’t I figured it out in the last 26 years?


Comments

7 responses to “Social Anxiety At Home – Bedroom”

  1. Good for you for posting about this! My guess for what he’s thinking, if he is thinking about it, is that he’s being self-critical for not lasting long enough to make his wife climax.

    None of my sexual experiences have ever been anything remotely like romance novels. There have been technical difficulties, accidental elbowing, farting, messiness…

    1. I guess romance falls more in the Fantasy genre than Realistic Fiction for most people.

      1. I agree.

  2. Hey, well done for being so candidly honest about your experiences. I don’t normally reply to posts because I don’t have the time, but this one broke my heart. Mainly because of what you said about the steamy novels.
    Firstly, nobody goes around talking in detail about their sex lives, so nobody really knows what goes on behind closed doors. Secondly, I can guarantee that those who do, are not telling the truth and are trying in some way to appear more, ‘with it’ than others. They are just insecure and basically lying.
    Please, please remove your mind from those influences that are making things worse – namely the novels, films and TV programmes.
    I’m going to be very candid with you: in films and dramas, when you see a camera shot of the woman’s underwear, is the crutch of her knickers ever stained? Does her bra have crusty deodorant marks around the armpit? When they wake up, with their noses toughing each other tenderly, does either of them say, “Hey your breath stinks!” Do either of them have dribble at the sides of their mouths or on the pillow? Do they have crusty eyes? Has a pimple formed on her cheek overnight? Is their hair all dishevelled? Is the bed wet?
    When she sits up, her sexy negligee is never crumpled and her breasts are so perky that it seems she is wearing two invisible bras.
    Back to the night before…in these programmes the man often flings her against the wall and she closes her eyes and exhales in pure ecstasy. That is ridiculous and pure entertainment.
    Stop watching films with sex scenes in – which I know is practically 80% of most movies these days – and stop watching dramas, even the great comedies like Big Bang Theory, Friends, Desperate Housewives, & Ally McBeal. All the sex scenes on television and in books are fantasy. Everybody looks at them and thinks there is something wrong with their own lives. Poppycock.
    Does the woman, halfway through foreplay, suddenly exclaim that she forgot to give the teenager a door key? Does she ponder about whether she can hear rain and think, “Oh no, the washing is still on the line and everything’s gonna get soaked!”?
    The only reason you are struggling with all this is because your mind is dominating you at the moment. And then you go into the fear of fear. You are scared that you will be scared and then you actually feel scared because your body is not responding the way you feel it should.
    You are a woman and a woman who needs much time to refocus her mind. Stress, tiredness, past ‘failure’ in the bedroom and a million other things are the reasons why you are going through this. But there is no way that you are alone in this. And I’m sure great number of men are going through similar experiences also – but that is hardly talked about openly.
    At the end of the day, couple’s fumble and get sore and their hands get tired and they lose focus and they get irritated with themselves that they simply cannot switch off.
    Stop thinking that things are your fault. They are not.
    One: You are human – therefore imperfect.
    Two: You live in an imperfect world – many situations go wrong.
    Three: You are a woman – you warm up in a different way and anxiety makes it worse.
    Four: You suffer from anxiety anyway – you have correctly identified that this makes things worse.
    Five: Your introvert-ness makes it difficult to discuss things with your hubby properly.
    Six: He is imperfect because he also is a human and a man and from what you describe, he is not aware of how you are feeling and should be more discerning.
    Seven: You are body conscious, so if you are not feeling sexy or attractive or totally happy with yourself, that will also be having a big impact on you.
    Instead of thinking of reasons to avoid these situations in the future, consider showing him the post and then ask him if when that time comes around again, if you could both just lie together and communicate. Just positive stuff about how you feel about each other and affirmations that being close together is as important as the act itself. It probably wont solve the sensation problem overnight, but at least you will have had time to lie with him be alone with him and hear him talk to talk tenderly and understanding and he will appreciate that you are willingly letting him get his fix even though you are currently not doing so yourself.
    You also need to recognise that he is not the answer to your insecurities. Know for yourself that you are attractive and worthy of love and attention. Easier said than done, I know, but I needed to remind you of that.
    I know it is hard, but you should congratulate yourself. You not only have shared one of the most deepest, most private secrets, but you have done it publicly.
    I wish you all the best with this and I’m looking forward to making time to peruse your other posts.
    In the meantime, remember, you are not alone – things can change – they may take longer than you want, but try to enjoy the journey you are going thought in just being close.
    All the best!

    xx

    1. Everything you say is exactly what I try to tell myself. Anxiety just tends to tell me a different story. Thank you for taking so much time to respond.

  3. justalitnerdxx Avatar
    justalitnerdxx

    Thank you for sharing your experience in a candid manner. Anxiety is awful but I guess it means we’re warriors since each day we show up where we can.

    I’m single and never had a relationship but I often imagine a future with a partner and having sex and emotional intimacy and already think “omg! No way!! I’ll look like a flailing swamp monster. I couldn’t possible do -that- because I have too many marks on my skin, fat rolls, smell funny. Would we even make eye contact? Oh gosh it would be awful. They’d be repulsed by me or sadistically amused and hurt me. I wouldn’t survive. Best not get close to anyone ever…”

    Though hearing stories from those with social anxiety with partners and family does help me as a form of mental exposure therapy if that makes sense? I am realising that my anxiety will probably never go away entirely but that people can have a fulfilling life and close relationships with others and a family, despite the underlying unease and sometimes outright fear.

    Anxiety is a liar and you are worthy. We all are. Thank you again for writing this post and for keeping on being a brave and lovely person:)

    1. This was the hardest post for me to hit publish on. But I did it in hopes of showing someone out there that they aren’t the only one that feels this way. Social Anxiety is more than just not liking to speak in public or go to parties. It sneaks into every moment of our lives. I’ve found it easier to manage when I recognize it is there. It never goes away, but acknowledging it can help me to do things even when I’m scared.

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