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The key to marriage survival after a baby: sex

 
Published July 29, 2015

In my experience, everything about parenting is counter-intuitive. I remember being pregnant on tour with my first young adult novel and trying to get through the San Francisco airport, garbage can to garbage can. I waited for the wave of nausea to pass until I could make it to the next one, all the while my writing partner, Emma, stood anxiously by saying, "I think you need to eat something." I shook her off. Was she insane?

When we made it to the gate the only food option turned out to be Burger King. Emma bought me a Whopper while I contemplated suicide. She had to practically force-feed me on the plane, but within seconds I felt better.

That was my first big lesson. The second came when my daughter started walking — then running — and everything became optional. Would she put her pajamas on? Would she brush her teeth? It was anybody's guess. What finally got her to the sink, while I gripped the bathtub's edge to keep from screaming — or pouring myself a shot of mouthwash? Singing badly at the top of my lungs. The last thing I felt like doing, but as soon as I made a game out of cooperation she was happy to oblige.

Time to be blunt: Sex works very similarly after children.

What's intuitive is to get as much sleep as humanly possible. What's counter-intuitive is to engage in any activity that requires any kind of output and that only pushes off sleep — even for five minutes.

Also, when your energy is being pulled in so many different directions it's so tempting to take something — anything (showering?) off the table. Add to that the feeling that after being touched and excreted on all day long your body does not feel like a "wonderland." But, many years in, I cannot emphasize how important it is to override your exhausted impulses. Prioritizing sex is the number one advice I give to expecting mothers. Because it's the thing that reboots the computer and reminds you that this person is your soulmate and not someone the government assigned you to survive an experiment in sleep-deprivation.

In the long-term it's important because you can't just put your marriage on auto-pilot for two decades, think you'll go get a drink after dropping your last kid off at college, and expect to pick up where you left off.

Having the occasional nighttime babysitter will not throw your child's sense of attachment into chaos. After all, what gives kids a deep sense of security in the long term? Having parents who enjoy each other.

A quarter of the parents at my daughter's daycare are already divorced. Those folks also happen to be the couples who scoffed at me initially when my husband and I would run into them on the weekends without our daughter. They were the ones who said "We never go out without our child." Or, "We've never spent a night away from our child." The same ones who later confided at birthday parties that they'd stopped having sex. And then who eventually split.

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Now — did they stop having sex because they irrevocably stopped getting along? Or did the tensions between them become irrevocable because they stopped being romantic with each other? I do not have the answer for that. But my wish for you is that you don't ever need that answer, either.

Nicola Kraus is the co-author, with Emma McLaughlin, of The Nanny Diaries. Their latest novel, How to be a Grown Up, is about a 40-something mother finding herself again. Kraus wrote this column for the Washington Post.