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Sex Anyone?

Cops in the bedroom


Posted: Monday, February 16, 2009
Updated: May 22nd, 2009 11:44 AM GMT-05:00

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MICHAEL WASILEWSKI & ALTHEA OLSON, LCSW
Human Factor Contributors


By the time Mike joined his department, we had been married for little over a year. Since he was low on the totem pole and an FNG (fabulous new guy) he was on shift work or permanent midnights for the first eight years. We had gotten used to sleeping alone in what seemed like a large queen size bed. The challenge began when Mike finally graduated in seniority to a COG (cranky old guy) and moved to permanent days. Suddenly our queen bed felt very cramped and small. It didn't help that our two dogs and two cats were accustomed to only sleeping with Althea. They resented Mike and often shoved him out of the bed. The most aggressive was our ten pound cat named Oreo versus 230 pound Mike who started off in the bed, but within an hour was literally shoved off. Instead of removing the animals from the bedroom, Mike chose the lesser of two battles and slept most of the night on the couch.

After a few weeks away from his bed, we decided the answer to our problem was to spend money we didn't have on a king size bed. We figured if we had more space, we could acclimate to sleeping with one another again, but in reality we filled the space with animals. We had been apart for so many years we were not used to having another person in the bed. It was bizarre getting used to each other's sleeping habits, noises, movements, bedtime, and each other's alarm clock. We had become really good throughout our marriage at spending time together while we were awake, but we had to negotiate now how to sleep with one another and when to be intimate.

From designing and leading marriage seminars at our church, and counseling others in their marriages, we know sex can be one of the biggest flashpoints for relational conflict. Negotiating a mutually satisfying sex life is crucial to a relationship. It is also an ongoing and frequently difficult task as we face stressors that constantly influence our relationship. Financial pressures, health concerns, child-rearing, and work are just a few that get in the way of sex. Plus unlike the exciting early stages of a relationship, our libidos will rarely be at exactly the same place as our partners.

Police couples, where one or both partners are a cop, are just as susceptible to problems in the bedroom (or wherever... that's your business). Many of the problems police couples face are the same Bob the banker and Linda the lawyer. There are, however, some unique challenges police couples face that can impair a healthy sex life. Since our focus here is helping cops, let's look at some of those issues.

Strange Hours and Shift Work

This was one of the biggest hurdles in the early years of our marriage, and one faced by many police couples. Simply put, for most couples both high quality and high quantity of time spent together outside the bedroom is essential before a high quality and high quantity of time will be spent together inside the bedroom. When a couple is more or less on the same schedule they more easily get that quality and quantity of time together. Once they begin living life at different times of the day, the amount of time together decreases and the quality can slide. Weekends can be especially hard. Kids' events and adult parties are missed, weddings and graduations are attended alone, and your old friends plan "couple things" together you are no longer invited. Try being romantic when you feel like "two ships passing in the night," or when one of you is tired and just wants to sleep while the other wants to be together.

Hyper-Stimulation

"I had to get the hell out of there... I thought they were all about to take turns humping my leg!" - female police officer describing the scene after her department's Special Response Team made back-to-back apprehensions of homicide suspects.
Most cops love the hot calls, and the adrenaline rush can leave your nerves ringing for hours. It is no surprise that many officers, especially the men, can channel that rush into sexual energy quite easily. Just remember, when you've had a great day, you caught the bad guy, and you're ready to go home, eat some raw red meat, and "share your excitement" with your partner, they may not be in quite the same place or know how to respond to you!

Unpredictability

A lot of jobs require shift work but few have the unpredictability of law enforcement. How often have you had to cancel plans at the last minute, or dragged yourself home, hungry and exhausted, after working several unexpected hours of overtime? We all appreciate the money, and it is not so bad to have it happen occasionally, but when unpredictability becomes the norm it can have a large impact on a relationship and a sex life.

Fear

The partner of a cop lives everyday with a certain degree of fear. You go off to work each day wearing a gun and they know exactly what that means. If you've been together for awhile they have probably seen you come home banged-up, bruised, bloody, or bandaged, and they know they will again. Always in the back of their mind is the question, "Is this the day the Chief knocks on my door?"

This small, constant fear, especially if it is not acknowledged or talked about very often, can have a huge emotional and physiological impact and can become a wall between a couple. The fear may drive a partner to be emotionally and physically distant rather than intimate.

Anger

Tension outside of the bedroom does not translate to romance inside the bedroom. Police work brings you into contact with a lot of angry, upset, stressed out people, many of whom are only too happy to project their anger onto you. It is not unusual to encounter a stream of these people all day long, nearly every day. Over time this "anger-state" becomes normalized for the officer, maybe even necessary for his or her on-the-job survival, but this will cause relationship conflict if this "anger-state" is your approach with your partner. They may experience you as critical and judgmental. Instead leave the cop at work and replace the anger with tenderness, kindness, love, affirmation, and respect.

Having a mutually sexually satisfying relationship is a challenge for most couples. Next month we will examine more of those challenges.




Althea Olson, LCSW has been in private practice in the Chicago suburbs since 1996. She has a Master of Social Work degree from Aurora University. She provides individual, couples, and group psychotherapy for adolescents, adults, & geriatrics. She is also trained in Critical Incident Stress Management and is a certified divorce mediator. Once word got out her husband is a police officer, law enforcement agencies began to refer to her.

Mike Wasilewski, MSW has been a Naperville, IL police officer since 1996. He holds a Master of Social Work degree from Aurora University and serves on the department's Crisis Intervention Team and Domestic Violence Team. Together, Mike & Althea, who have been married since 1994, provide unique training programs for police officers and therapists.

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Comments

Posted by Anonymous in Akron, Ohio
(06/01/09 - 09:23 PM)
Policemen On-Duty V.S. Policemen Off-Duty
A policeman is someone who runs straight into the line of fire, whether it be gunfire, an actual fire, a heated dispute, or an all-out fist fight. These men and women are mandated and expected to be the first-responders to any emergency and take control of every situation. The level of stress they endure is almost impossible to imagine. Law enforcement personnel are the bravest and most courageous people I know. And the sad thing is the majority of the general population do not even appreciate what they do day in and day out. Policemen are responsible for enforcing all the laws of their state and ordnances of their village, township or city. They are charged with the duty to face fear and adversity and even the element of the unknown. Policemen are not perfect but they are the best people I know; they are my brothers and sisters because I wear the uniform too.

Then, after each outrageously stressfull day, we come home and take off our prestigious badges and become 'normal' citizens again where we attempt to live our 'normal' lives. The fact is, policemen do not stop being policemen just because they take off their uniform. The stress involved in being a cop affects all policemen differently...because policemen are people too.

My whole point is this: If you are a policeman, take nothing your experience personal; do your job then understand you may or may not be the problem when you go home...because you may or may not take your work home with you. If you are a spouse or significant other of a policeman, understand what he or she goes through every day at work; be there to listen if your policeman wants someone to talk to or be there just to support he or she who may have had a really stressful day and does not want to talk about anything!








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