Who Stole Your Sex Life?
by Sheila Bridge
GoodBookStall Review:
Great to hear sex out in the open (pardon the pun) and you don't even need to be married to read this book. In fact, if you are not married and in your late teens then I would highly recommend this book to read. We are so surrounded by sex and most of it ungodly, that this book can be used as a worthwhile tool to help you get a biblical perspective on God's greatest gift to you in your marriage and believe me - if you have been holding out for sex within marriage and you enter into marriage with lots of baggage about your sexuality you would have preferred to have read this book before you got married. Bridge identifies how some sexual hang ups can be a result of different areas of your life both past and present, for example she touches on childhood perceptions from our parents, negative sexual experiences that hinder us, the single status and the wonderful media who lie to us constantly and have women everywhere feeling like they are doing something wrong. Even for married women she speaks about how the husband can contribute or even be the cause of an unsatisfying sex life. The book offers tips, biblical truth and hope to restore your sexuality, but like everything in your Christian walk you will need to put the effort in to change those tapes of lies about sex to tapes of Godly truth about making love. Don't be afraid to read this book (or even go and buy it) it may just change your sex life and wouldn't that be something to shout about (pardon the 2nd pun).
Reviewer: Zoë Stevenson (19/12/07)
Great to hear sex out in the open (pardon the pun) and you don't even need to be married to read this book. In fact, if you are not married and in your late teens then I would highly recommend this book to read. We are so surrounded by sex and most of it ungodly, that this book can be used as a worthwhile tool to help you get a biblical perspective on God's greatest gift to you in your marriage and believe me - if you have been holding out for sex within marriage and you enter into marriage with lots of baggage about your sexuality you would have preferred to have read this book before you got married. Bridge identifies how some sexual hang ups can be a result of different areas of your life both past and present, for example she touches on childhood perceptions from our parents, negative sexual experiences that hinder us, the single status and the wonderful media who lie to us constantly and have women everywhere feeling like they are doing something wrong. Even for married women she speaks about how the husband can contribute or even be the cause of an unsatisfying sex life. The book offers tips, biblical truth and hope to restore your sexuality, but like everything in your Christian walk you will need to put the effort in to change those tapes of lies about sex to tapes of Godly truth about making love. Don't be afraid to read this book (or even go and buy it) it may just change your sex life and wouldn't that be something to shout about (pardon the 2nd pun).
Reviewer: Zoë Stevenson (19/12/07)








