Irritable
Male
Syndrome
 

Sex, Love, and Intimacy: How Much is It Worth?


Carlin and I just returned from a retreat in Hawaii with 18 other couples led by Joyce and Barry Vissell. We had known about the Vissell's work for many years, but had never attended any of their offerings. Prior to attending the gathering there were two things that recommended them to us. First, they have excellent people skills. Joyce is a nurse and Barry is a psychiatrist whose main interest since 1972 has been counseling, healing, and teaching. They are the authors of five deeply-moving books on relationship, family, and healing.

The second thing that encouraged us to attend was the success of their own marriage and the emphasis they place on family and community life. "We have not only been married since 1968 and have three children," they tell us, "but we have made these relationships a sacred priority. We feel our work reflects our love of each other and family."

They live with their three children, four golden retrievers, five cats and one horse, at their home and center on a hilltop near Santa Cruz, California. Like all of us they have had their struggles, but they have come through them with a loving and intimate relationship that is intact and growing ever deeper.

Carlin and I have been together for 25 years. We've had our ups and downs and felt we were entering a new phase of our relationship. We wanted support and specific tools we could use to break free of old, unhelpful, patterns and develop new skills for loving and living. But the workshop was expensive, both in time and money. We talked long and hard about whether we could afford it. How does one put a value on such things as a "relationship workshop" or "couple's counseling" or "psychotherapy"? More about that shortly.

We decided to go and sent in our money before we could change our minds. We were not disappointed. We spent a week with other couples learning to love ourselves and each other. We realized that so much of our time as a couple had been spent working out our issues in isolation from other couples. Being with Joyce and Barry and the other couples, along with Charley Thweatt who provided wonderful, heart-inspiring music, brought us to new depths of caring and love.

For couples or individuals who would like to learn about the Vissell's work you can visit their website at www.sharedheart.org. You can reach them directly at barryandjoyce@sharedheart.org or phone 1-800-766-0629.

So, back to the question of money. How do we decide how we spend it? Do we invest in the stock-market, a retirement account, gold coins? Should we send it to people who say they can improve our relationships? With an investment like the stockmarket we are putting in money and hoping to get back more money in return. Its easy to measure success. Do we get back more than we invest?

But how to we measure the value of intangibles like love, marriage, and sex? As a social scientist I've often wondered whether we could do a study and get some answers. Well the study has been done and it's quite enlightening. Conducted by Andrew J. Oswald of the University of Warwick in England and David G. Blanchflower of Dartmouth College, their research paper is titled Money, Sex, and Happiness: An Empirical Study. Using data from surveys of 16,000 Americans, they were able to determine the economic value of such things as marriage, divorce, and sex.

Despite popular opinion, the study found that having more money doesn't mean you get more sex. No differences were found between income levels and the frequency of sex. And the Sex in the City view of life is not supported by the research. Married people report 30% more between-the-sheets action than single folks.

What's the economic value of more sex? According to the study findings, they estimate increasing intercourse from once a month to once a week is equivalent to the amount of happiness generated by getting an additional $50,000 in income for the average American. Tell that to your partner when they're too busy making money to make love.

All of a sudden the few thousand dollars we spent on the couples retreat sounded like an extremely wise investment. A number of the couples were struggling to keep their marriages together. Was it worth the cost of attending? Well, the study showed that divorce translates to a happiness depletion of $66,000 annually.

Many of the couples at the Vissell's retreat were middle-age and older. Most of us weren't having intercourse as often as we did when we were younger. Were we left out of the economic bonus pool? Not a bit. The biggest economic bonus of all was for deepening our relationships. In fact, the economists calculate that a lasting marriage equates to happiness generated by getting an extra $100,000 each year.

So next time you're thinking that you can't afford to work on your relationship, remember the numbers:

Divorce = -$66,000

More sex = +$50,000

Enduring marriage = +$100,000

Happy Valentine's.

©2010 Jed Diamond

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Wealth can't buy health, but health can buy wealth. - Henry David Thoreau

 

Jed Diamond is the internationally best-selling author of seven books including Male Menopause, now translated into 17 foreign languages and his latest book, The Irritable Male Syndrome: Managing. The 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression. For over 38 years he has been a leader in the field of men's health. He is a member of the International Scientific Board of the World Congress on Men’s Health and has been on the Board of Advisors of the Men’s Health Network since its founding in 1992. His work has been featured in major newspapers throughout the United States including the New York Times, Boston Globe, Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, and USA Today. He has been featured on more than 1,000 radio and T.V. programs including The View with Barbara Walters, Good Morning America, Inside Edition, CBS, NBC, and Fox News, To Tell the Truth, Extra, Leeza, Geraldo, and Joan Rivers. He also did a nationally televised special on Male Menopause for PBS. He looks forward to your feedback. E-Mail. You can visit his website at www.menalive.com



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