Get plenty of exercise
If you want to be "hot-blooded," then improve your
circulation. Physical fitness can increase blood flow, which in theory can make
sex more pleasurable since sexual arousal for both men and women involves
increased blood flow to the genital area. And that can increase desire
itself—if it feels great, you tend to want to do it more.
Exercise boosts endorphins, which lift your mood, and it can
increase your energy. Not to mention that being toned makes some people feel
sexier.
Eat a
healthy diet
Arteries clogged with saturated
fat don't bring as much blood to the genital area for arousal purposes. Hence
the correlation between heart disease and erectile dysfunction.
But excess weight also messes with your hormones. "Obesity can shift the
balance between estrogen and testosterone," says Michael Krychman, MD,
executive director of the Southern California Center for Sexual Health and
Survivorship Medicine in Newport Beach, Calif. And low testosterone can bring
down your sex drive.
Nutrition counts too. For example, an iron deficiency can lead to fatigue,
which in turn can lead to low libido.
Manage
your stress
"How about a simple
vacation? How about communicating with your partner?" suggests Irwin
Goldstein, MD, director of San Diego Sexual Medicine and editor in chief of The
Journal of Sexual Medicine. "People are overworked and stressed, and they
translate their overworked, stressed lives to a lousy sex life."
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