My peers invariably cringe at my interest in adult sexuality. Discussions of the matter are almost always met with expressions of disgust (“Ew, stop!”), light character defamation (“You’re twisted.”), or a swift change in conversation.

A few things probably best explain their responses. Sex—just a general topic of discussion—tends to be at once deeply fascinating but explosively taboo. As a culture, we have adopted a sort of ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy about the whole business, which, of course, stifles dialogues about sexual health for almost everyone at any age. To complicate matters, we also place a high social premium on youthfulness. So naturally, conversations about sex and aging represent the paragon of almost everything that is ungodly in this country.
“The United States are much less pro-aging and pro-sex than other countries,” offers Barry McCarthy, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, certified sex therapist, and author of Rekindling Desire. “Consequently, the general message sent to older adults is: ‘You’re not supposed to be sexual – sex is for us (the young), not for you.’ For most people, it is embarrassing to think about people over 60 being sexual. It’s perceived as wrong.”
Charles Emlet, Ph.D. and Social Work Professor at the University of Washington – Tacoma agrees: “It’s easier and significantly more comfortable for us,” he says, “to imagine older adults as asexual, heterosexual, or at best—monogamous. But the science tells us that this just isn’t the case.”
These myths we propagate about late life sexuality— however comforting to our collective consciousness—are just that: mythological, untrue.
“With aging,” emphasizes McCarthy, “sexuality has a range of roles, meanings, and outcomes. And many of its features – desire, pleasure, eroticism, and satisfaction—can actually improve.”
It appears that sex not only continues into the third act, but— like a fine wine— also evolves in its complexity, flavor, and very constitution with age. Cheers.
No Doubt, Sexual Function Changes with Age

Few can (or do) deny the effects aging has on sexual function– and the data don’t either. Findings from a nationally representative study of older adults support that prevalence of sexual activity does decline with age: from 73% among those aged 57 to 64, to 53% of respondents between 65 to 74, down to just over a quarter (26%) among adults 75 to 85 years.
These data aren’t particularly surprising. After all, many people—particularly women—lose their sexual partner as they age. Poor health interferes with many aspects of sexuality. Plus, physiologic changes can affect the sexual response of men and women.
For women— the transition to menopause drastically reorganizes the endocrine system and often complicates sexual function. Resultant reductions in estrogen and testosterone (among other hormones) can lessen vaginal lubrication, elasticity, and sensitivity. Clinically, these hormonal changes translate to difficulties with arousal and desire, increased pain (vaginismus), or inorgasmia—inability to reach orgasm.
“There’s no doubt sex changes in later life,” explains McCarthy, “but when couples can learn to overcome the challenges of aging, they feel like they’ve really beaten the odds and that’s a real plus.”
For men, one such challenge is erectile dysfunction (ED). The most prevalent sexual problem among older fellas, ED occurs when the parasympathetic nerves to the penis don’t release enough Nitrous oxide. While estimates vary, around half of men over 40 experience some form of ED, with various physiological conditions—including diabetes, vascular and kidney disease, atherosclerosis—commonly implicated.
“One of the myths about sexuality in later life is that the only genuine sex is intercourse, and if you can’t have intercourse [because of ED], you have to stop being sexual,” McCarthy explains. “When older couples stop being sexual, it is almost always the man’s decision—because he falls into a behavioral cycle of anticipatory anxiety, performance-oriented intercourse, embarrassment, and ultimately sexual avoidance. He says to himself, ‘I don’t want to start something I can’t finish.’”
McCarthy continues, “But the idea that intercourse is the essence of sexuality just isn’t true.”
Sex Doesn’t Have to Retire with You—and It Doesn’t
Despite the precipitously aging population, and a massive market for drugs and devices aimed at treating its sexual problems, little information on the sexual behavior of older adults actually exists— in part because we are so terribly uncomfortable exploring it.
Among the few studies available on the matter, however, it appears that many older adults are anything but retired from sex.
Cross-cultural studies of couples in five countries—Brazil, Germany, Japan, Spain, and the United States—for example, demonstrate that couples continue to seek and value intimacy throughout their 60s and into their late adulthood.
Findings from a nationally representative sample corroborate this, indicating that a majority of older adults (78% of men aged 74 to 85, for example) engage in spousal or other intimate relationships and regard sex as an important part of life. A substantial number of individuals also reported having vaginal intercourse, oral sex, and masturbating even into the eight and ninth decades of their lives.
“The real question,” explains McCarthy, “is not if older adults are having sex. The question is whether sexuality is playing a positive 15-20% role in their lives—how and if sexuality is energizing them in new ways.”
Another heartening study finds that many older adults consider sexual activity essential to their well-being, happiness, and quality of life. Some are even finding their later years to be an exciting time to explore new dimensions of their sexuality.
Consistent with Dr. Laura Carstensen’s theory of socioemotional selectivity, the findings support that a sense of impending mortality can inspire some older adults to cast aside their sexual inhibitions and the stereotypes that once constrained their behavior when they were younger.
“I’ve had many older clients tell me: ‘I like being sexual with my partner so much more now than when I was younger. The sex is more genuine, more human, more interactive. We take our time,’” notes McCarthy.
Change Isn’t Bad, It’s Just Different

While sexual function may be reduced, research shows that sexual satisfaction remains quite high throughout adults’ 60s, 70s, and 80s.
“Desire is the core issue,” argues McCarthy, “and there is no illness or disability that takes away sexual desire; illness and disability just change sexual function. I believe most adults can learn how to adjust to the new level of function,” he explains.
One way of meeting the challenges of aging involves shedding beliefs of sex as an individual, orgasm-based performance in favor of attitudes embracing sex as a teamsport.
“Seeing the partner as an erotic, sexual friend—a teammate—is a key predictor of healthy sexual function for adults over 60,” explains McCarthy. “When we’re younger, sex is typically easy and predictable. But with aging, sex becomes increasingly more partner-based as physiological, physical, and psychological challenges arise within the dyad.”
ED-related complications best illustrate this idea.
“Men, for example, typically begin their sex lives as autonomous, sexual functioners,” he says. “Particularly when they are younger, men can experience strong, consistent, and reliable erections without a partner’s help.”
But such is typically not the case for most men after 60, when autonomous erections are less reliable and the need for partner stimulation becomes critical, aruges McCarthy.
“For the perhaps the first time in their adult lives,” he explains, “many men begin to recognize sex as an erotic, cooperative, team-based exercise – not an individual, performance-oriented, orgasm sport.”
As a result, the focus shifts off intercourse and onto intimate, pleasure-oriented touch.
“For many older adults, these changes say: ‘You need me now in ways that you didn’t before, when you were younger and your erections could happen without me.’ So, intimacy grows,” McCarthy explains.
“Through touching and being touched, we are affirming and being affirmed,” he adds. “That’s why, though sex is not the most important thing in life or even in a relationship, it can be emotionally expensive to the couple when they stop being sexual. When touch is lost, so too is part of the couples’ sense of connection and vitality.”
Clinical Implications

For this reason, when working clinically with older adults, McCarthy emphasizes the importance of recognizing that ‘one size never fits all’ and clarifying that there isn’t only one way to be sexual.
Promoting openness to asynchronous and erotic scenarios—like mutual masturbation, manual and rubbing stimulation—particularly when sex does not flow to intercourse, is critical he says. Encouraging couples to embrace psychological techniques, behavioral health habits, medical inventions, and psychosexual skills can also help individuals and couples to cultivate and maintain desire, pleasure, eroticism, and satisfaction into later life.
“The idea that one size never fits all is even truer when you age,” explains McCarthy. “There isn’t only one way to be sexual, because the essence of sexuality is giving and receiving pleasure, across the lifespan, in various ways.”
But before we can promote sexual openness, warns McCarthy, clinicians have to be able to talk about sex.
“The majority of practitioners are really uncomfortable talking about it,” he says. “Like dying, sex is just one of those topics that doctors don’t want to discuss. Part of that, of course, is personal discomfort. The other part is that sex and sexual problems are complicated and often can’t be solved with a single intervention,” he adds.
That means it’s also very important for clinicians to ask patients questions, and ask them early.
“When you ask questions like: ‘When in your relationship did pleasure, eroticism, desire, and satisfaction function best?’ or ‘Now that you’re older, how are those things operating in your relationship?’, ‘Do you want to talk about it?’ – you are signaling to your clients that you are an approachable, askable clinician. You’re modeling openness for your clients,” argues McCarthy.
And while clients may not always answer these questions, they at least deserve the opportunity to be asked, he says.
“They’re still human after all.”
This post was originally published at Psychology Today.
References:
Carstensen, L. (1992). Social and emotional patterns in adulthood: Support for socioemotional selectivity theory. Psychology and Aging, 7, 331–338.
Heiman, J., Long, J., Smith, S., Fisher, W, Sand, S., & Rosen, R. (2011). Sexual satisfaction and relationship happiness in midlife and older couples in five countries. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 40, 741–753.
Lindau, S., Schumm, L., Laumann, E., Levinson, M., O’Muircheartaigh, C., & Waite, L. (2007). A study of sexuality and health among older adults in the United States. New England Journal of Medicine, 357, 762–774.
McCarthy, B., & Pierpaoli, C.M. (2015). Sexual Challenges with Aging: Integrating the GES Approach in an Elderly Couple. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 41(1), 72-82. DOI: 10.1080/0092623X.2013.831004.
Hello ! I am an AGNG Student at the Erickson School of aging and this particular post sparked my attention. It resonates with me because I was one who often shied away from not only discussion about sex but especially older adults having sex. As I have gotten older and also taken part in this class I have learned that just like sex being normal in younger adults it is just as normal in the aging community. Sex is not just essential for reproduction but as you age and your body changes, sex becomes helpful in other aspects as well. Sex can be linked with better health and even happiness in older adults which is how it relates to the content that I have learned through out the few aging courses I have taken . I think that it is important for doctors along with patients to be able to talk about sex freely and more comfortably.
I am a student at the Erickson School of Aging, currently enrolled in AGNG 320. This post is extremely insightful and highlights what I believe to be a serious social problem in the U.S., especially. Statistics actually show that older adults (65+) are more sexually active than their middle-aged counter parts. This is beneficial for a number of reasons, but the most important of which in my opinion is that sexual activity in older adults drives strong social and emotional bonds, which can be as beneficial in aging as exercise– something the course I’m enrolled in as highlighted. This topic, as the author of this post clearly articulates, is considered taboo in the U.S. Not only speaking in regard to the general population’s activity, but sexual activity in older adults is even more so taboo. Real social and public health change needs to occur for this topic to be more widely discussed, because it is important that older adults not only feel comfortable discussing it with their physicians– but also that they know it is beneficial for their health.
I am a student at UMBC and I have learned a lot throughout the years about aging and how to maintain a healthy lifestyle. Surrounding yourself with a good social support group is always important for a healthy life. Also having good relationships with the people you love and seeing them often is beneficial to your health. I am very interested in sexual health, I think sex and relationships are a very important part of ones life. I find it very interesting that elders get even more sexual while aging and that can be beneficial to their health as well. Society thinks that people’s sex drive decreases due to age and it is not true. Elders engage in sexual activity sometimes even more than young adults which is mind blowing for some people. I definitely agree that physicians should pay more attention to this. Somehow doctors are being more openminded when it comes to elders and their sexual lives. In the article it is stated that there’s definitely some changes to the human body when we get older that might make sex harder or even impossible, this is another reason why physicians should pay more attention to this topic and help the patient with whatever discomfort, or problem she/he is going through as to the changes in their bodies due to age.
Hello, I am currently a student in an Aging 200 class at the Erickson School of Aging at UMBC. I have been learning a great deal about maintaining well being throughout the life-course and I chose to read this article because it seemed like something I haven’t really exposed myself to. I am passionate about sexual health and knowledge, but have never really delved into the realm of the sexual changes and adjustments that older adults experience. I can attest to these topics being relatively taboo in our society, which could contribute to my lack of knowledge about them. I absolutely agree that physicians should be conscious of the fact that a good number of their older patients are potentially sexually active and create a comfortable open space to disclose any questions or concerns they might have. It seems especially important for those who have been intimate in the past but have become stagnant. As the article points out, “though sex is not the most important thing in life or even in a relationship, it can be emotionally expensive to the couple when they stop being sexual”. (Pierpaoli, 2016) It seems however that times are changing and there are more physicians who are comfortable discussing issues such as depression and incontinence than their predecessors. Hopefully, the topic of sexual health in the older adult years is not so taboo in the office as it still seems in our society.
A sensible comment and outlook. Keep going Taryn!
My most erogenous Zone isn’t between my legs, it is between my ears. I agree that the most erotic thing going is the quality of the relationship. My partner and I are insatiable touchers. We both concur, our bodies seem to love each other. Neither of us expected or looked for this, but our desire to have touch remain in our lives insured it. Sexual expression is part of a larger continuum of expression that starts with aural sex then proceeds.
This is a great topic, if only it were less clinical and more humane. I would like to imagine a bunch of old people talking together about loving and how it sometimes goes into sex. Orgasm is a great Mystery!
“My most erogenous Zone isn’t between my legs, it is between my ears.”
Yep, me too. No better turn on than an intellectually stimulating conversation! And yes to touch, touch, touch, and the continuum of expression.
Yes, and in short, Harold and Maude: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mz3TkxJhPc
Oh, that was a stupid, icky movie … and way, way a long time ago. Yuck! And not because of the woman’s age … it was just a bastardized version of “elder sex.”
I LOVED that movie; still do.
And I’m not alone; thus: “The reputation of the film has increased greatly; Rotten Tomatoes, which labeled the film as “Certified Fresh”, gave it a score of 86% based on 42 reviews, with an average score of 7.6/10. A consensus on the site read, “Hal Ashby’s comedy is too dark and twisted for some, and occasionally oversteps its bounds, but there’s no denying the film’s warm humor and big heart.”[14] In 2005, the Writers Guild of America ranked the screenplay #86 on its list of 101 Greatest Screenplays ever written.[15]”
More here on wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_and_Maude
Just goes to show how tastes differ 🙂
I’m with AmazingSusan on this one. No film transcends ageism like Harold and Maude.
Yay Kevan – we’re on the same page 🙂
Yes, and we need to begin to be comfortable speaking and asking questions .