Why Love is Harder in the Winter

You can’t beat Mother Nature, but you can learn to spot these pesky  relationship-­killing winter symptoms and take the necessary steps to keep  your bond going strong.

You’re Looking for a Fight

Bitchy ‘tudes have a habit of cropping up in the winter — in women and men.  Being cooped up inside together for months at a time with fewer options for  activities can contribute. But more important, the season’s shortage of sunlight  lowers our levels of the mood­-regulating neurotransmitter serotonin, says  couples therapist Barton Gold smith,  PhD, author of Emotional Fitness for  Intimacy. This makes you more cranky than in the summer, when most people  enjoy up to 15 hours of mood­-boosting sunlight a day.

If you find yourself ready to let the nastiness fly over, well, everything,  Goldsmith suggests making it a habit for you both to get outside whenever you  can…even if it’s only during your lunch break. Being in the sun (wearing  sunscreen, of course) for a short amount of time is believed to raise both  serotonin and vitamin-­D levels, which will make the two of you feel more  like making love, not war.

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