Behind bedroom doors, there’s a private battle going on. One so private, that many women aren’t even telling their partners about it, let alone seeking much-needed medical attention. Instead, they’re determined to literally grin and bear it.
“It’s something I can ‘tough out’ for a few minutes a week.”
“I can sort of ignore it enough to be bearable.”
“It’s hard to ask him to stop when it hurts so I don’t say anything and then cry in private afterwards because I don’t want him to feel bad.”
“I need alcohol each time to try to relax.”
“My husband doesn’t know that making our second baby was some of the most painful sex we’ve ever had.”
But while they may try to hide it, for the one in five women who suffer from pain during or after sex — called dyspareunia — the experience is very real.
So, in an attempt to paint an honest picture of what women are really going through in the bedroom and break taboos around it, we asked the Mamamia community to talk to us, anonymously, about what their sex lives are really like.
And the results of our survey are truly heartbreaking.
Decades of suffering in silence.
More than a hundred women who’d experienced pain during sex responded to our poll.
Of those, 48 per cent were in their 30s, 38 per cent were between 40 and 69, and the remaining 14 per cent were in their 20s. But Laura Hill, a Sydney-based women’s health physio, believes the younger population may be severely under-reported.