Baby boomers: are they more sexually adventurous?

Turns out, getting older actually makes for a more satisfying sex life

by Cathy Gulli on Friday, September 3, 2010 8:34am - 0 Comments

Heide Benser/Corbis

The romantic comedy It’s Complicated could double as a case study of what it means to be a baby boomer today. Jane, a divorced businesswoman played by Meryl Streep, is dating her architect and sleeping with her ex-husband. “I have so much energy recently, probably as a result of all the sex I’m having,” she clucks to a roomful of her girlfriends, who are titillated at the news. “Turns out I’m a bit of a slut!”

That punchy scene had audiences roaring: “they virtually cheer,” wrote David Gritten in the Telegraph earlier this year. It also became a social touchstone: “Once again the baby boomer generation is dictating its own rules as it gets older,” wrote Gritten, “in this case, living out the exquisite little secret that you can be 60 and still have a splendid sex life.”

In fact, several surveys over the last couple of years demonstrate that baby boomers—that massive group born between 1946 and 1965, of which there are 10 million in Canada—are plenty frisky. Forty-one per cent of middle-aged Canadians considered themselves “sexually adventurous,” according to a 2009 survey by Leger Marketing for Eli Lilly, maker of anti-impotence medication. Nearly half of boomers reported shedding their sexual inhibitions since turning 50, and feeling sexually satisfied. In the U.S., 85 per cent of male boomers and 61 per cent of female boomers surveyed by a polling firm said that sexual satisfaction was “critical” to their relationships and quality of life, according to AARP, which advocates for the over-50 crowd. And a 2008 survey on a British lifestyle website for older adults found that 37 per cent of single boomers would have sex on the first date—double the number for Generation Xers.

In this, the first of a three-part series examining the well-being and lifestyle of baby boomers, Maclean’s explores their sex lives, and discovers that as they age, “their sexuality is not diminished,” says David McKenzie, a sex and relationship therapist in Vancouver. Despite the stereotype that getting old means forfeiting intimacy or combatting sexual dysfunction, experts say that there are a number of aspects of middle age and later that actually make for a better sex life.

Just ask Dr. Gerald Brock, a urologist and sex medicine specialist in London, Ont. He sees 2,500 patients a year, mostly baby boomers. While more and more men visit him for treatment of erectile dysfunction now that drugs are available, Brock says that with age many other men are liberated from a problem they had when they were younger: premature ejaculation, which affects one in three men across all ages. “As you get older, there tends to be more of a delay and greater control,” explains Brock, which means that intimacy doesn’t have to be rushed. “So that aspect of sexual function improves with age.”

Women, meanwhile, often see Brock because of vaginal dryness or discomfort during sex. But he says these issues can often be remedied with common products such as personal lubricants. As menopause sets in, women no longer worry about getting pregnant, continues Brock, who is a professor at the University of Western Ontario. They usually become more “in touch with their bodies and comfortable explaining to their partner what works for them and what doesn’t.” This may explain another positive impact of aging on sex: “As women get older, their ability to reach orgasm can actually be enhanced,” says Brock, “and the ‘quality’ of the orgasm can be enhanced as well.”

There are also lifestyle changes occurring among boomers that enable better sex lives. Many of them are achieving financial freedom, scaling back on their careers or retiring. That means more opportunity for spontaneity, and time to spend with a partner at home, over romantic dinners or on vacation. “Boomers have sexual intimacy opportunities that are non-conventional,” explains Brock. “It doesn’t have to be first thing in the morning or just before bed. It can be little retreats during the day as well.”

Boomers are also enjoying a new-found freedom from raising children, says Barbara Mitchell, a sociology and gerontology professor at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C. “The kids have left home, and now they can refocus the spotlight on their relationship.” The opportunity to rediscover themselves can be invigorating—many start exercising, pampering themselves and reconnecting with their sexuality.

This can boost the chemistry between a couple, says McKenzie—or it can highlight the need for a new start. Some spouses feel like strangers after the kids move out and work is over. “Suddenly, they’re forced on each other,” he explains, and they don’t like it. As a liberal-minded lot—boomers, of course, shaped the sexual revolution of the ’60s and ’70s, with its free love and sexual empowerment ethos—they appear less fussed about breaking it off when the time is right. That may help explain why people over 50 have the highest divorce rate, notes Mitchell.

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  • GUEST

    YES!

  • mh0111

    Hubba hubba.

  • satisfied at 55

    Having the time of my life at 55. My new male friend at 63 is a breath of fresh air, wild and crazy guy and so in touch with my body it amazes me!

    • true north

      Practice makes perfect……

  • Jacquie

    Judging from what I know about some folks who were born a lot earlier than 1946+, things were pretty much the same with many of them. They just didn't make as much noise about it. I guess you could say they were more shy, and kept their sexcapades a bit of a secret, in case they shocked their own parents and children. History will prove that the beat has been going on for centuries.

  • Jack

    I am pre baby boomer and headed for my 76th birthday this month. I must admit, I have slowed down to about 60 times a year, but still enjoy it tremendously!

  • Guest

    Actually young people still find the idea of older wrinklies banging away and yapping about it to be….well….
    er…..How about privacy and modestry, BabyBoomers? THAT would be something new for y'all to explore.
    From a Gen Y

    • boom

      tough luck, kid

    • Zoomer

      No wrinkles on this sexy senior!

    • cbombast

      Meanwhile, your generation throws the likes of Tila Tequila and the Kardashians at them.

      When TMZ produces pictures of 60 yo women getting out of a car with the baby factory in full view, you will have a point.

  • Ariadne

    I can't wait to get old!

    • true north

      Yeah, It certanly has its ups and downs.

  • sursum

    I was brought up in 50's Toronto in an area where the Golden Gheto was on one side and the Italians on the other and between Italian fathers and Jewish mothers we were kept chaste for too long!

  • madeyoulook

    In this, the first of a three-part series examining the well-being and lifestyle of baby boomers, Maclean’s explores their sex lives…

    Memo to Maclean's Marketing Dept: You make this one the last of the three-part series, and you tease 'em with it during the first two.

    • Jimmy Fallon

      Yeah baby, I'm in to teasing!

  • Mary

    As a sexually active soon to be senior, I agree with most of the premises of this article….but must add one observation, from the years I spent dating to meet my present partner.

    Sexual liberation is all very well…….but emotional liberation becomes just as important, if the mature woman (or man) has also grown intellectually. I met a lot of guys over 50 looking for "chemistry" without the philosophy…let alone any good conversation or indications of general depth of character.

    That is also a hold over from the 60's….all glitsy and "liberated" in appearance….but not necessarily in possession with any political or social sophistication. Sex on the first date? At 55?

    It all seemed rather mechanical and narcissistic to me….and it certainly didn't turn me on. So while I do believe people are sexual for their entire life……..I haven't always found that the "free love" generation was as liberated as they liked to think.

  • happily married

    It only burns as much energy as climbing two flights of stairs? Maybe if it's over in 30 seconds…

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