My experience with it has been more recent and not anything to do back in the affair days.
There are some studies that show that part of female sexuality is not just that we tend to be responsive in our desire but that many of us need to feel like we are really doing it for our partner. Though I think a similar conclusion could be made if they did a similar male study. We want to be able to turn on our partner and have that feeling they crave us.
So yes, to me it felt a bit like rejection, even though I understand it’s a medical condition. Logic and feelings some times do not line up. However, I am of an age where I can have intimacy for the sake of closeness. But I do still want passion, it’s one of the fun parts of life and marriage.
It’s difficult sometimes to have passion if you feel your partner is not there. And I dont necessarily mean an erection, it’s more so the lack of it makes it not fun for him. I too need to feel sometimes like he is just on the edge to reach mine. And if he is battling his own biology then yes that can be a little off putting.
There is communication however, and assurance and viagra has been effective. Sometimes now he doesn’t even need it. And going in that journey with him has shown him that I too will fight for our sex life and we have had to work through a lot of it together in order to have a good result.
Rejection is something men seem to experience more often in the bedroom and can relate to. Their wife may not have the same libido. Men often see the lack of libido a statement of their desirability. To me, it was helpful to understand his point of view. While we have always mostly well matched libido wise, he still often needed it a little more often than me but would become frustrated if I didn’t orgasm every time. Sometimes he would make it his mission and that made it not so fun because I would try and force my body to cooperate. So I can relate to what you are saying.
I guess what I am saying is the feelings of rejection for both men annd women are probably common and natural. It seems to often be biggest the response by either gender. If she was willing to communicate and be vulnerable there are ways a man with ED can make his wife still feel special and desired, and ways a woman can show love and understanding in the midst of changing dynamics. I would often say, how about if we just enjoy being naked together, that physical touch can be just about bonding rather than orgasms, after all neither of us are spring chickens . He learned to be okay with that and we would kiss and caress each other. Sometimes he would perform other things for me, but it was okay just letting it be that regularly. And him being okay with it helped me be okay with it.
He has mostly recovered after about a year. It was triggered by a diabetes med that he eventually changed to another kind. Aging and medical issues call for creativity, a feeling of it’s us united to work through it. I think your wife’s feelings are natural, but no excuse for an affair and likely exacerbated by her avoidance of anything where vulnerability was required.
Also most women do not have orgasms from PIV intercourse only. And if that is needed there are toys for that. A ws is built with a greater need for external validation but a hard penis is not the only way that can be achieved. So my husband would make sure he was still touching me and flirting with me, which took me telling him that’s what I needed. He was prone to pull those things out when he wanted sex, he had to learn to use those tools more consistently and that they aren’t just for getting sex.
Not sure if this helps as it sounds like your wife has more work to do.
[This message edited by hikingout at 4:22 PM, Tuesday, October 14th]