For our first married Valentineâs Day, my wife gave me a partnersâ yoga class. This was a genius idea. Yoga is one of the few fitness activities that we both enjoy, and the class was billed as an acro workshop, which was something both of us wanted to learn more about. The posters advertising the class seemed to use the term âpartnerâ broadlyâa person you wanted to do balancing tricks with as opposed to a person you make out with more often than other people. It sounded delightful.
The night of the class, we grabbed a bite to eat and walked over to the studio. My wife stopped at the front desk to check us in so I took her mat, and continued down the hall to the room where the class would be held in order to save us spots next to each other. As soon as I walked into the classroom, two things were immediately apparent: one, finding space was not going to be an issue, and two, we had seriously misinterpreted that poster. The large classroom was dimly candlelit and there were maybe ten couples around the roomâeach pair sharing a single mat, limbs casually entwined. All of the other couples were heterosexual (unlike yours truly), the women were dressed in diaphanous pants and cropped tops, or low linen pants and plunging, stretchy bras, the men were shirtless, with the exception of one other couple who appeared to be in their mid-sixties, dressed similarly to my wife and I in t-shirts and yoga pants, sitting chastely next to each other on their yoga mat, wearing similar expressions of bemusement.
I pulled myself together and claimed a spot near the front of the room, turning to face the door so I could enjoy my wifeâs face when she walked in. By the time weâd had one of those wordless conversations about the sheer absurdity of the situation, it was too late to just pack up and walk out, acknowledging that weâd clearly made a mistake. And so, we endured. We made it through almost three hours of synchronizing our breathing. Of long minutes gazing into one anotherâs eyes. Of a narrated âloverâs massageâ tutorial set to the sounds of occasional ecstatic moans from our mat-neighbors and punctuated with sloppy, smacking kissing sounds. And one, measly, acrobatic yoga pose.
Solving Sex
When we decided to get engaged, one of the easiest marriage myths for me to believeâand subsequently freak out aboutâwas how quickly our sex life would decline and how many ways there were to lose that particular aspect of our relationship if we did not take the proper precautions. In particular, once we had kids, if we didnât have a good system in place beforehand, we would never have sex again and, shortly thereafter, weâd lose each other. Weâd be doomed to an affectionate, solely child-centric marriage, falling asleep on separate couches every night while watching Fixer Upper.
My personality is such that, once Iâve identified a problem, I will solve it. Enthusiastically. With a (perceived) threat to our (totally delightful) physical relationship looming, I made a strategy, and put it into action. My underwear drawer was filled with frippery (partly because I wanted to be ready for seduction at a momentâs notice and partly because I feel like life is too short for ugly underwear even if no one sees it but me). Result: my wife would almost without fail choose laundry day to try to get in my pants.
Next, I made it a personal policy to never say no when she wanted to get naked. I still felt like this wasnât enough. I was beginning to feel like our reliance on spontaneity was chancy. I was also afraid that she wasnât taking the risks quite seriously enough. While the quality of our sex life has never been in question, the quantity could be sporadic. I was worried that in busy weeks or stressful moments, we had a tendency to let physical stuff fall off without notice, and maybe we needed to institute some sort of quota for when sex wasnât occupying a primary spot in our minds until we naturally got back on track. However, my wife didnât want to try to fix something that wasnât broken, and started to resent my micromanaging.
Some Call It Hot, Some Call It Hell
Which brings me back to our yoga adventures. When my wife suggested the class, I felt like finally, she was taking my concerns seriously and initiating something we could do together, enjoy, and then go home and⌠enjoy some more. While it was clearly working on other yoga mats, it was one of the least erotic activities I had ever participated in. In fact, had I been with anyone else, that class would have been my personal idea of hell. To say Iâm not fond of PDA would be an understatement.
My wife knew this, and as were starting the first sensual breathing exercise, she leaned over and breathily whispered in my ear, âThis is going to be the best happy hour storyâŚâ She pinched me gleefully every time we were instructed to âsink deeply into a kiss.â She poked me in the ribs while the others were moaning through their massages.
When we finally got home, I poured us each a much needed glass of wine. We sat on our separate couches and laughed with relief, jokingly assuring each other thatâwhile our love and mutual affection remained strongâwe never wanted to touch each other, or anyone else again.
The next few days after the class gave me some needed perspective. I started to see what my wife had been talking about; of course neglect was a risk to our physical relationship, but one could take it too far in the other direction as well. The class was (clearly) an experience that did the trick for some people, but it wasnât right for us. Perhaps, shockingly, a strong sex life looked different for different couples.
You Gotta Let Go To Get OFf
The first year of our marriage was, for a variety of reasons, an endurance test for both of us. We had to stay in the moment to survive for huge chunks of it. But once things settled down a bit, I was able to look back and see that we improved, and that the improvements happened slowly, and without a conscious, strategic effort on my part. We fight a little better. We handled changes and challenges with greater ease. And by the end of the first year, we enjoyed each other a little more.
Iâm starting to figure out that I have to give up a little control in a marriage and go on faith: believing that things will work out because we love each other and want to be married. I cannot be the drill sergeant of sex. Our marriage is not a recipe or a research project. Itâs not perfect, and it canât be âperfected.â The more we enjoy itâand each otherâthe stronger we are.
And Iâm hoping that this is the kind of thinking that leads to us continuing to misinterpret erotic yoga posters well into our sixties.