Any number of factors that put stress on the marital relationship can contribute to sexual dysfunction in both men and women. In this situation cialis is the best helper. We are speaking in this chapter, of course, about men, but stress is stress regardless of gender. Also, we are speaking generally here about sexual relationships between marital partners, which is the most common situation that physicians like myself see in our practices. However, the basic facts and situations discussed obviously apply to relationships outside the traditional marriage as well.

Here are a number of partner-related factors that can adversely affect a man’s erections:
Post-cohabitation erectile dysfunction: Often, the first incident of erectile difficulty occurs when a man and his partner decide to marry after living together happily and successfully for a long time. For some men, this event marks the end of a carefree life and the beginning of a commitment to an anxiety-provoking relationship.

Pregnancy: Some men fear that their own sexual desires can be harm of intercourse to the wife and future baby. Becoming a new father can also trigger erectile difficulties. Completely changed household schedules and a likely decrease of privacy and shared social activities frequently add to the potential for erectile dysfunction.
Marital fights: It should surprise no one that arguments with one’s sexual partner frequently precipitate erectile problems.

Sexually assertive wife: When the wife becomes more sexually assertive and asks her husband to be a better lover, he may feel threatened. Her behavior usually follows some event(s) that reveals what she may have been missing sexually. For example, she may have read an article or book, talked with a friend, or a professional, or seen a program on television. The husband may react to his wife’s increased sexual expectations by worrying that he can no longer satisfy her. And the more he worries about performance, the more likely it is that such anxiety will become a self-fulfilling prophecy of sexual dysfunction.