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Blame it on seven year itch for the lost spark in relationship

Research has found that the feeling of missing spark in a relationship has something to do with the famous seven-year itch phenomenon. This is related to the feeling that happiness has nose-dived in the love

India TV Lifestyle Desk London Published : Nov 29, 2016 10:21 IST, Updated : Nov 29, 2016 10:21 IST
Blame it on seven year itch for the lost spark in
Blame it on seven year itch for the lost spark in relationship

Research has found that the feeling of missing spark in a relationship has something to do with the famous seven-year itch phenomenon. This is related to the feeling that happiness has nose-dived in the love life after spending considerable amount of time with each other.

For those who are unknown to the seven-year itch, it is a psychological term that suggests that happiness in a relationship declines after these years.

In a study of women's sex lives over a period of seven years, those whose relationship lasted the duration experienced the greatest loss of sexual desire.

The study, published in the journal Psychological Medicine, found that women who were in the same relationship at the end of the time period as at the beginning were found to have a level of sexual desire that was 53 per cent lower than it was when asked seven years previously.

"But those who were in a different relationship after seven years -- or were single -- had a higher libido," found the researchers who surveyed some women in 2006 and returned to the same sample in 2013.

"The most pronounced observation for sexual desire was that women who were in the same relationship throughout the observation period had the greatest decrease in sexual desire," lead author Annika Gunst from University of Turku in Finland was quoted as saying in a Daily Mail report.

Moreover, women who found a new partner reported "somewhat lower decreases" while women who were single at the end of the period reported "stable sexual desire".

"Women who had a different partner from when they were first asked had a 28 per cent drop in desire, while women who were single had the same level of sexual desire as when first asked," the study found.

Sexual satisfaction fell by 42 per cent for the women in the same relationship, rose for women in new relationships by 30 per cent, but fell for single women by 30 per cent, the findings showed.

 

(With IANS Inputs)

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