We left the party at 1:00 AM, tired but buzzing with a different kind of energy. We held hands in the Uber ride home—a small gesture that had gone missing somewhere around year three.

The next morning, the "party hangover" wasn't just physical. It was a realization. We had been treating our marriage like a maintenance project—something to be managed—rather than a relationship to be enjoyed.

A serious academic approach might include:

  • Counterarguments: Many therapists warn that introducing group sex into a struggling marriage is risky and rarely a “cure.”
  • We haven't solved every problem. The dishes

    Private Eye issue 1436 (January 25, 2017) featured a satirical, first-person account titled "The Orgy That Saved My Marriage," which parodies modern relationship trends through a humorous, mundane lens. The article likely used a sensationalist headline to contrast the absurdity of an orgy with British social conventions, presenting the marital salvation as an ironic, shared experience. For more details, visit the Private Eye official shop.

    However, based on standard academic and publishing conventions, this appears to be either:

    If you are looking for an academic paper on a topic related to non-monogamy, marriage therapy, or sexual experimentation (e.g., consensual non-monogamy, swinging, or its effects on marital satisfaction), I can help you in the following ways:

    The keyword “Private 25 01 17” in our notes refers to the date of the event and the private invite list. We didn’t use apps. We used a private signal chat with two other couples we met at a kink-friendly workshop. Both couples had been together for over a decade. Both were stable. Both were also bored.

    We agreed on strict rules, written on a shared Google Doc:

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