Post written by Zen Family Habits contributor Corey Allan. Follow him on Twitter.
If you’re honest with yourself, you’ll admit that while children are in the home the marriage relationship often seems to be thrown to the background.
The schedule revolves around them – feeding, changing, bedtime, bath time, homework, and on it goes.
It is inevitable that just when you think the kids are asleep, and you make a move with your spouse, the baby starts crying or a child ends up standing at the foot of the bed. Passion wanes. Time for adventure disappears.
It is, however, possible to capture time with your spouse before passion fades.
Here are a few ideas:
1. Establish a schedule. This is not only great for the kids and their development; it also helps create time for each other. This could be done as simply as scheduling a weekly dinner or lunch date. A coffee break together. Or a regular sexual encounter together (scheduling this does not lessen the passion and heat despite the lack of spontaneity; you can be spontaneous during the encounter). By having something scheduled, you create room for anticipation.
2. Utilize babysitters or family members. There are many very capable teenagers out there interested in earning a little bit of money while you take your spouse out for the evening. The beauty of this option is the kids get someone new to play and interact with, while you get a break together. Be sure to plan out the evening away in order to ensure you don’t return home until after the kids are in bed asleep. That way, if the date has gone well, there will be the possibility of being invited in for an uninterrupted “nightcap.” To create a greater flow towards the end of the date, look for a babysitter that either drives or can get to and from your home easily. An even better option is to utilize family members that live nearby.
It’s amazing to me the number of couples I have met that have not had their kids stay over night with family members or friends. Not only do you and your spouse benefit from this time, your kids do as well. They experience an expanded range of people who love and care for them. This can set a foundation for greater self-confidence and growth as they develop. It also begins to create a village mindset in the raising of your children.
3. Secret signals or code words. It is often difficult to have conversations that may lead to deeper more intimate connections when you are interrupted every five minutes by one kid tattling on the other or needing something from you for their homework or wardrobe.
This can be overcome by creating another language or codes to use with each other.
This language or code should be based on whatever you would be saying to each other if given the opportunity. If this type of language is not part of your normal dialogue, then it would need to be created all together. It could be as simple as lighting a candle that is centrally located in the home as a signal one of the parties is interested in an encounter.
Whether the encounter is sexual or emotional is up to you.
Or it could be as complex as learning a second language. How great of a motivation would it be if you were trying to woo your spouse in another language? And if your kids begin to understand the language, they would only discover more about the love and desire you have for your spouse. There are far worse things they probably already know about you.
4. Be a lover to your kid’s other parent. As your kids grow older, there is nothing wrong with informing them of your plans to be alone with your spouse. You don’t have to give all the details, but claim the time you want to spend with your spouse and let the kids know they are not invited to join or interrupt.
When your spouse and the marriage are a priority, the kids benefit.
I have always believed that the best thing you can do for your kids is to love your spouse. Let them also appropriately see you love them as well. Hold hands, talk, hug, kiss, sit by each other, and cuddle in front of your kids. They may be jealous that they aren’t getting the attention, but in time, they’ll be glad you paved the way for their relationships.
Kids in the home present some obstacles to passion in marriage, but they aren’t the only reason passion wanes. By overcoming the hurdles of kids, you are faced with what else may be going on in the marriage.
The kids can provide a buffer for a stale marriage. If that’s the case, more work will need to be done individually and relationally to address the other concerns.
Marriage is work.
But the things in life that require work are more valuable and more worth it.

15 brilliant commentsadd a comment
These are good, really do-able ideas – thanks. We don’t have family nearby or even in the same country but do use babysitters every now and then. It’s amazing the difference it makes when we do get out as just the two of us…..and we don’t talk about the baby the whole time like everyone seems to suggest you do! It’s good to reconnect and be as a couple like we used to be. It always makes me feel so much happier and invigorated afterwards.
My husband and I are getting away for TWO days over Thanksgiving weekend, and my in-laws will be staying with our three children. It’s been so long – I can’t wait!
Jamie
I love your posts, Corey! I see romance and sex become a “drag” for so many new parents, and it makes me sad. Your ideas are easy enough to make a difference – I’ll be sure to pass this on.
My kids are getting older. Two are out of the house and now our “baby” is 10.
My relationship with my wife is changing and improving. I’m not at all sorry that our relationship took a back seat to our kids when they were younger. It’s actually consistent with our core values.
Maybe I’m a nut. Maybe I’m the only one who feels this way but we thought there would be time for ourselves and now there is. It’s all good.
Things seem to be unfolding as they should.
As a father, the best thing I can do for my son is to love his mother.
I love it! I totally agree that the number one priority in our households must be our marriage and serving our spouse well. When the marriage (including the sex life) is healthy, the children absolutely benefit. Thank you for sharing some good, practical ways to keep the intimacy alive when the little ones are around!
Corey –
Great post! Thanks for the thoughts.
We are ‘one of those couples’ who haven’t taken our kiddo over to Grandma’s house to spend the night just yet. The two of us have gone back and forth on it – we go on date nights with them watching him, but this would make it a bit easier on us to not to have to wrap up the date to go pick him up!
I recommend training your kids to have sleepovers from the age of 2 – or younger if you can find someone who’ll have them! Great for the kid and life-changing for parents. It’s perfectly normal to want time out from your kids from time to time. Schedule it, look forward to it and do it. Regularly:)
Wow, I find all this “leave your kids with other people” kind of surprising. Not all of us live in communities with really close friends and or family. I have no family near me and would have to know a family inside out, upside down, round and round before my child could sleep there. I’d rather leave my diamond engagement ring and open safety deposit box before I’d leave my children. Our kids are the most precious gifts we are entrusted with and I feel the risk is too high for the benefit of one night alone. And without getting too personal, your kiddos don’t need to be out the house in order to have some good lovin’ (wink).
I would not want to leave my kids with anyone, maybe when they are bit older, both are 4 and under. We have alone time after kids go to sleep for night. It works for now. Will it work in future? Not sure, so far so good.
something Ive found too is the kids love it when dad just gives me a peck on the cheek or a quick hug,it shows love to the kids and its a good solid background for them to build upon,when they see that’s it not a embarrassing thing to do as we were brought up to believe and its good to express your feelings even love.
I don’t think all kids are ready to be left with other people from a young age. My kids were all about 3 or 4 before they were ready, and we have friends with children who are 6+ who are still working on making an overnight happen.
We do a lot of date nights at home, since we don’t have family closeby and can’t afford a regular babysitter. ($10/hr!) It can be just as fun and romantic.
When we do have family visiting or the opportunity to be alone we jump at it though.
We had the pleasure of being able to go on our only vacation together since we’ve had children this past summer. It made me realize how much we need that time. I’m trying to make plans for another trip next year.
Lots of thoughtful comments.
Date nights aka spending “uninterrupted” (even when they are supposed to be in bed, we still get the odd “I can’t get to sleep” etc etc) time together is so important isn’t it?!
We were lucky enough to have in-laws that lived closed by when we had our first baby….l really appreciated being able to walk hand in hand down the road for an hour or two – somehow someones holding something when your out and about with the baby!?
Now we just make do with our weekly date nights at home. :-)
I think this is so important. even without kids, romance and sex can sometimes go by the wayside due to career/schedules/school etc.
I like this post! I’m a stepmum with fulltime kids and know the importance of spending time with my partner. The kids see us greet each other each day when we come home with a cuddle & kiss and hear us asking about our days. I think it is important to show the love and affection, especially entering a broken family.
We also have movie night where we all cuddle up & watch a movie, with the kids always very sleepy at the end of the movie. Makes for uninterrupted time once they’re in bed!
We also have a no TV night each week where after the kids are in bed we do something together, whether its playing a game, cuddling up and reading, making plans about the house/section, talking of our dreams & ambitions. This time is really important to us!