Do Men Need To See Other Men Desire Their Partner? Or Is That Just a Woman Thing?
This is one interesting email from one of our readers...
How important is it for your husband to see you being desired or checked out by other men? Does this influence how attractive HE thinks you are? And if you’re the type who doesn’t attract much male attention (I am fairly attractive, and fit, especially for my age, but I don’t get checked out a lot)…is it OK or advisable to set something up so that you do get the attention? Yes, I’m talking about paying someone to pay you attention. I don’t know that I would actually ever go through with something like this – but I wonder what you think of the idea. Nothing extreme – nothing that would cause an argument or a fight…just enough for my husband to notice someone is paying attention to me.
Find your soulmate on LatinoLicious
As I get older – 40s – it seems I get less attractive while he gets MORE attractive and garners more female attention than he ever has. I want him to think/feel that other people may be interested in me too…that he isn’t the only one. Is this a crazy idea?
Gina
This is one of the craziest emails I’ve yet to receive, specifically because the woman writing it doesn’t sound crazy. However, my dear Gina, your remedy for your situation has to be one of the weirdest ideas I’ve ever heard.
“Yes, I’m talking about paying someone to pay you attention…Nothing extreme – nothing that would cause an argument or a fight…just enough for my husband to notice someone is paying attention to me.”
I’m not going to get into whether your assertion is true – that you get less attractive to other men while he gets more attractive to other women. Regardless, if you perceive it to be true, that’s all that matters. You haven’t provided any information about whether your marriage is strong, your sex life is satisfying, or whether your husband still seems to desire you. If the answer to any of the above is no, your marital issues run far deeper and certainly cannot be filled by slipping a twenty to a cute guy a restaurant to flirt with you.
However, presuming you have a decent relationship, the issue here is more about your insecurity, and the extreme lengths you are willing to go to in order to address it. You’re talking about paying someone to desire you because you think it’ll make you more desirable to your husband.
How about you just talk with your husband? I mean, he is the only one you’re sleeping with, ‘til death do you part, you know?
If I have a problem with my wife, I don’t talk with my wife’s mother. I talk with her.
All of this begs the question about what kind of relationship you have that you think it would be easier to pay someone to flirt with you instead of talking with your husband about the fact that you don’t feel desired and suggesting how he could make you happy. Remember, if he’s your husband, he WANTS you to be happy and but probably has no idea how insecure you’re feeling at this time.
Finally, I want to address the first part of your question: whether men feel more desire when other men check out their partners. Not so much. But your belief in this stems from the fact that you’re a woman who assumes that men operate in the same fashion. In fact, women are the ones who value men who appear more desirable to others. According to the linked article from Psychology Today:
“Marta Meana, a researcher at the University of Nevada, has argued provocatively that the organizing principle of female sexuality is the desire to be desired. In her view, the delicate, tentative guy who politely thinks about you and asks if this is okay or that is okay is a guy who may meet the expectations of your gender politics (treats me as an equal; is respectful of me; communicates with me) and your parents’ preferences, but he may also put you into a sexual coma—not despite these qualities, but because of them.
Female desire, according to Meana, is activated when a woman feels overwhelmingly desired, not rationally considered. Female erotic literature, including all those shades of gray, is built on this fantasy….Despite what is commonly believed, then, Meana argues that female sexuality is more self-centered than male’s…Male fantasies focus on giving satisfaction, not on receiving it. Men see themselves in their fantasies bringing the woman to orgasm, not themselves. Women see the man, set aflame by uncontrollable lust for them, bringing them to ecstasy. Men want to excite women. Women want men to excite them.”
Anecdotally, this would seem to be true. Which is why I get ridiculous emails like this from women who truly think, in their heart of hearts, that their relationship is crumbling if their boyfriend doesn’t see them as the hottest woman on the planet. While I couldn’t care less how many guys my wife has a crush on, as long as she makes me feel desired in the bedroom.
Your thoughts, below, are appreciated.
4 responses to "Do Men Need To See Other Men Desire Their Partner? Or Is That Just a Woman Thing?"
Leave a reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
-
Jcc555 says:Posted: 12 Mar 19
I have never been the jealous type when other men make eyes at any woman I'm with my confidence and male prowess in myself grow cuz I know who she's coming home with
Reply to this comment -
exoticone1 says:Posted: 09 Mar 19
Respectfully, no one should ever call a person’s thoughts or genuine question about the opposite sex as weird or crazy. Women do not know what men think about most issues, that is because we are WOMEN not men!!! I too was under the belief that when your man see’s other men being attracted to you, that increased your man’s desire for you. And YES, there ARE MANY men who want the “HOT WIFE” that all men desire to have but can’t! So the answer to my sister’s question is a resounding NO, your thoughts are NOT weird or out of the ordinary at all. I believe it depends on where you live. In Southern California, men are obsessed with the “Hot Wife” image and are completely turned on by the fact that other men are attracted to their wife.
Reply to this comment -
iamunique41 says:Posted: 09 Mar 19
I don't NEED to see another man desire my partner, but if it happens, I feel a little bit superior - as I feel it shows that we as a couple are confident in our relationship, and happy to show it. Bottom line is that complete honesty with your partner is the key - don't be afraid to raise anything or discuss things between yourselves. If you both are comfortable with each other, there is nothing that you cannot discuss.
Reply to this comment
Interesting, but the reality is, there are a lot of men who enjoy seeing other men desire their lady, knowing full well she is going home with him. This has been expressed to me by many men, who are invigorated by their desire for her rather than being jealous of it. Secure men indeed!!