Post
by the_nap_ster » Fri Sep 28, 2012 6:15 pm
I'm a young woman who had some of the same feelings you do about wearing the mask. But the denial passes (hopefully) and then you figure out what works for you.
Some suggestions:
-- Let your husband see you in the mask. People will respond to things the way you teach them to respond. It always kills me when women say to their husbands "Look at this fat spot on my hip! Isn't it hideous?" Because I promise, he NEVER NOTICED that spot, and now you've essentially TAUGHT him to look at you in an ugly way. Why do that? I presented my mask as kind of adorable, and my husband found it (and still finds it) kind of adorable. My mask is decked out with hot pink strap covers and hose cozies, and even I think it's adorable. It's like wearing a cast. If you act like it's something to be ashamed of, it will be. But most people just notice it and think, oh, a cast. (Unless you dress it up, in which case they'll think "What a FABULOUS cast!", which is sort of my attitude to life. )
-- If you and your husband enjoy middle-of-the-night sex, and/or it's important to you for him to know that you're open to sex even when you're sleeping with the mask, teach him how to unclip the mask. My husband reports the sexiest thing ever is me waking him up by unclipping his mask, because he knows exactly what is coming next. It is a very powerful non-verbal signifier of intent, if you let it become one. The key here is letting him know how to undo the mask, and most importantly, WHY you're showing him. Talking about it is a form of foreplay in itself! This conversation can be the beginning of some great things.
-- Finally, the most powerful sex organ is our minds. Do you wear any clothes to bed? Is it weird for you to take them off for sex? It's not, right? It's just part of the experience. And so too is it with a mask. Some of us wear glasses, some of us have bum knees, and some of us use CPAP. Whatever, no big deal, we all have fragile human bodies. Keeping that in mind can help just about anything.
I wish you the best, and please know that adjusting to this is a process. Feel free to vent or reach out for help here whenever you want!