
Male
sex life suffers if partner is 'too close to his friends'
Middle-aged
men are more likely to have a poor sex life if their wife is close to their
friends because it undermines their masculinity, a study has found.
Researchers
concluded that the social networks shared by men and their female partners
could have a link to erectile dysfunction.
The study,
from Cornell University, found that in middle aged and older men, when the
woman gets on better with his friends than he does his sex life suffers.
The
phenonomon was dubbed "partner betweeness", in which a romantic
partner comes between a man and his friends.
Prof
Benjamin Cornwell, who led the research, said: "Men who experience partner
betweenness in their joint relationships are more likely to have trouble
getting or maintaining an erection and are also more likely to experience
difficulty achieving orgasm during sex.
"There
is a bit of a gate-keeper aspect that probably troubles some men."
The study found partner betweenness
undermines men's feelings of autonomy and privacy, which are central to
traditional concepts of masculinity.
This can in
turn lead to overt conflict or problems with partner satisfaction and
attraction.
The authors
said there was nothing wrong with the wife organising most of their social
activities because females tended to be more organised.
But they
added that reducing a man's contact with his friends to the point that a couple
only socialised together was not healthy, suggesting that so called "boys
nights" could, in fact, be a good thing.
"They
key issue is whether it reduces his contact with his friends while it increases
hers, for example she alters his social schedule to the point that his contact
with his friends increasingly occurs in the context of couple’s dinners,"
he said.
"A
man’s ability to play a round of golf or to have a few drinks with a friend who
has only a passing acquaintance to his wife or girlfriend is crucial to
preserving some independence in everyday life.
"If he
has to bring his wife along every time they meet, or his wife starts
monopolising that friend, that’s when problems may arise.’
The team
used data from more than 3000 people aged 57 to 85 to make their findings,
reported in the American Journal Of Sociology.
Prof Edward
Laumann, of the University of Chicago, who was also involved in the study,
added: "The results point to the importance of social network factors that
are rarely considered in medical research - network structure and the
individual's position within it.
"He
needs to have someone to talk to about the things that matter to him, whether
its football, politics, what car he is going to buy or worries about his health
or his job.
"The
important thing is that he can let it all hang out and know that what he says
isn’t going to get straight back to his wife."
The
researchers analysed data from the 2005 National Social Life, Health and Aging
Project, undertaken in Chicago.
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk
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