<p>People are happiest about their sex lives after a year into their relationship, and thereafter the frequency and passion in the action between the sheets gradually declines, a new study says.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The researchers questioned 3,000 people aged between 25 and 41, asking them on several occasions to rank their sex lives.<br /><br />An analysis of the results showed that people were happiest about their sex life after a year into their relationship, marieclaire.co.uk reported.<br /><br />And contrary to popular belief, having children doesn't have a noticeable effect of the quality of a couple's sex life, the study found.<br /><br />"We did not find that having children played a major role in a couple's sexual satisfaction," said study's lead author Claudia Schmiedeberg from Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich.<br /><br />She added that this is "remarkable" as research has shown that "sexual frequency is heavily influenced by the existence and age of children".<br /><br />Rather than children, arguments were to be blamed for a decline in sexual activity, with couples asserting that more quarrelling led to less sex.<br /><br />So if you want a great sex life, try to put the fights on hold, the findings suggest.</p>
<p>People are happiest about their sex lives after a year into their relationship, and thereafter the frequency and passion in the action between the sheets gradually declines, a new study says.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The researchers questioned 3,000 people aged between 25 and 41, asking them on several occasions to rank their sex lives.<br /><br />An analysis of the results showed that people were happiest about their sex life after a year into their relationship, marieclaire.co.uk reported.<br /><br />And contrary to popular belief, having children doesn't have a noticeable effect of the quality of a couple's sex life, the study found.<br /><br />"We did not find that having children played a major role in a couple's sexual satisfaction," said study's lead author Claudia Schmiedeberg from Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich.<br /><br />She added that this is "remarkable" as research has shown that "sexual frequency is heavily influenced by the existence and age of children".<br /><br />Rather than children, arguments were to be blamed for a decline in sexual activity, with couples asserting that more quarrelling led to less sex.<br /><br />So if you want a great sex life, try to put the fights on hold, the findings suggest.</p>