Challenges

- Chronic stress raises cortisol levels, which may weaken your sex drive
- Sex is a stress reliever — it increases feel-good hormones, including endorphins
Does too much stress ruin your love life? It’s entirely possible. Chronic stress raises levels of the hormone cortisol, which may weaken your sex drive. Stress can also lead to headaches, depression, loneliness, fatigue and even indigestion — all of which dampen desire.
When stressed out, we’re also less likely to focus on healthy habits, such as exercising, sleeping well and eating right. That kind of self-neglect can further dampen libido.
Stress is on the rise, statistics show, and that may be affecting our sex lives. In 2022, roughly 32 percent of Americans ages 50 to 59 had gone without sex in the past year, up from 18 percent in 2018, according to Nick Wolfinger, professor in the Department of Family and Consumer Studies at the University of Utah, who analyzed data from the 2023 General Social Survey, conducted biannually by the University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center. Forty-five percent of respondents in a 2023 AARP study said they were not having sex as often as they wished.
“When someone manages stress poorly, it affects all areas of their life, and they may avoid sex altogether,” says Kristen Lilla, a certified sex therapist in Omaha, Nebraska. And according to a new Kinsey-Match survey, the desire for a fulfilling sex life doesn’t end at age 50.
As stress increases, sex life decreases
Seventy-five percent of Americans said they’re experiencing at least one symptom of stress in the American Psychological Association’s annual “Stress in America” survey, released in October 2024. Of those respondents, 35 percent cited fatigue and 14 percent noted a change in sex drive; and 9 percent of men blamed stress for erectile dysfunction.
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