The user, a 22-year-old male, describes an incident with his 23-year-old girlfriend of seven months regarding their sexual experience. During intimacy, the girlfriend suddenly became silent and minimally engaged halfway through the act.
The user initially thought this silence might be related to a stated preference of hers to appear unconcerned during sex. However, afterward, she confirmed the experience was unenjoyable for her. When questioned why she did not stop, she claimed she wanted him to enjoy it, leading to a disagreement where she accused him of making everything about himself. The user is now questioning his stance that sex should be mutually enjoyable.

My partner and I just had sex and she found it unenjoyable and when I asked why she didn’t stop it she got mad at me what do I do?







As renowned relationship therapist Esther Perel explains, “When we are in a couple, we are constantly negotiating the tension between the need for security and the need for adventure.” This situation highlights a breakdown in negotiating the safety and vulnerability required for shared sexual pleasure.
The girlfriend’s behavior suggests a pattern of prioritizing appeasement or avoiding conflict over expressing her true needs during sex. By remaining silent and enduring an ‘unenjoyable’ experience, she failed to establish a necessary boundary regarding her own physical and emotional needs. Her subsequent reaction—accusing the user of making everything about himself—is a common defense mechanism that shifts blame away from her own inhibited communication. The user’s reaction, while stemming from a valid belief that sex should be mutually enjoyable, was poorly timed; addressing the issue immediately after she expressed dissatisfaction, rather than during a neutral moment, escalated the situation.
The user’s action of questioning her lack of enjoyment was appropriate, but the execution led to defensiveness. Moving forward, both partners require a framework for non-confrontational feedback. The user should approach this by validating her feelings first (e.g., acknowledging her desire for him to enjoy himself) before clearly stating the principle: mutual pleasure requires mutual communication, and silence prevents that.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.















The core conflict centers on the expectation of mutual enjoyment during sex versus the partner’s attempt to prioritize the user’s pleasure, even at her own expense. The user feels justified in expecting reciprocity in enjoyment, while his partner reacted defensively to this assertion, framing it as selfishness.
The central question is whether the user is wrong to believe that sexual activity must be enjoyable for both parties, or if his partner’s decision to endure an unenjoyable experience to please him complicates this expectation. How should this fundamental difference in sexual communication and expectation be navigated moving forward?







