Sex after a long workday can improve your performance at office the next day
Had a long day? Have sex when you
reach home to keep up with life and career, say researchers.
A healthy sex life with your
partner could be unknowingly giving your career a boost.(Images:
Bibliophile./Facebook)
Having sex after you get home
from a hard day at the office can give your work a boost the next day, claims a
new research.
Carried out by a team from Oregon
State University, the University of Oregon, and the University of Washington,
the researchers followed 159 married employees over the course of two weeks and
asked them to complete two brief surveys each day.
The responses showed that employees
who had made time for sex at home reported more positive moods the next day
once back in the office, and this better mood in the morning led to more
sustained engagement in their work and job satisfaction throughout the workday.
The effect was seen even after
the researchers took into account marital satisfaction and sleep quality, which
are two common predictors of daily mood, and appeared to last for at least 24
hours.
It was also equally strong for
both men and women.
“We make jokes about people
having a ‘spring in their step,’ but it turns out this is actually a real thing
and we should pay attention to it,” said Keith Leavitt, one of the study’s
co-authors, “Maintaining a healthy relationship that includes a healthy sex
life will help employees stay happy and engaged in their work, which benefits
the employees and the organizations they work for.”
Leavitt also explained that
because sex triggers the release of dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated
with the reward centers in the brain, as well as oxytocin, a neuropeptide
associated with social bonding and attachment, it is a natural mood elevator
with benefits that can last well into the next day.
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The study also showed that
bringing work-related stress home from the office can have a negative impact on
employees’ sex lives, with Leavitt adding that in a world where we are constantly
connected to work via smartphones and emails, the findings highlight the
importance of switching off and leaving work back at the office.
“This is a reminder that sex has
social, emotional and physiological benefits, and it’s important to make it a
priority,” Leavitt said. “Just make time for it.”
The study can be found published
online in the Journal of Management.
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