11-15-2010, 02:02 AM
Well, lowering is one thing, but removing your sex drive altogether is quite another thing.
I can imagine the motivation for lowering is to be more compatible with your partner.
The motivation for removing your sex drive is, to me, unfathomable. I can only imagine that there are circumstances surrounding the desire that should really be addressed first. It may be, I'm guessing, that, for example, you find the acts somehow shameful and if you remove the desire to commit those acts them then the shame is removed. In that case you'd be removing the symptom, but not the cause.
So, if you can provide more detail then you are likely to get better advice. And, more importantly, advice that is less likely to harm you. Suppressing natural desires can lead to other problems.
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I can imagine the motivation for lowering is to be more compatible with your partner.
The motivation for removing your sex drive is, to me, unfathomable. I can only imagine that there are circumstances surrounding the desire that should really be addressed first. It may be, I'm guessing, that, for example, you find the acts somehow shameful and if you remove the desire to commit those acts them then the shame is removed. In that case you'd be removing the symptom, but not the cause.
So, if you can provide more detail then you are likely to get better advice. And, more importantly, advice that is less likely to harm you. Suppressing natural desires can lead to other problems.
Sent from my HTC Desire using Tapatalk