Candace Cameron Bure of “Full House” and “Fuller House” fame is known for being one of the most devoutly Christian actresses in Hollywood. That’s why it came as a surprise to many when she credited her “spicy” sex life as the secret behind her nearly-25-year marriage to former professional hockey player Valeri Bure!
“I think it’s important. You’ve got to keep it up. The longer you’re married it’s so easy to take each other for granted. You know each other so well that you forget, so you have to keep it spicy,” Cameron Bure, 45, said on Daily Blast Live. “I love that. My husband and I do. That’s one of the reasons we’ll be celebrating 25 years of marriage.”
When asked what advice she would give couples in a sexual slump, Cameron Bure said, “Just do something unexpected. Maybe lay in a way you don’t normally lay. He’ll be like ‘woah.’ You’ll surprise him!”
This isn’t the first time that Cameron Bure has opened up about her sex life with her husband.
“Hey, it’s been 24 years, so if you’re still having good sex that is a plus!” the actress told Closer Weekly back in December. “Keep learning things about your spouse.”
Cameron Bure went on to say that after two decades together, “it’s so easy” to “fall into patterns,” which is why she’s always trying to find new ways for them to bond.
“I also think that you should keep dating your spouse,” she added. “It can get monotonous at home.”
“[Sex] is something to be celebrated as a Christian,” Cameron Bure said on the “Confessions Of A Crappy Christian Podcast” back in November. “Sex doesn’t stop once you get married. Sex is the blessing of marriage and I hate when Christians are like, ‘No! You have to pretend like you’ve never had sex’ and ‘We only know that you’ve had sex three times because you’ve had three children.’”
“So sometimes there’s a skew about sex that — within the Christian community — that I get really sad about,” she added. “Because if we are to promise ourselves for one another and preach saving yourself for marriage, then sex needs to be celebrated within marriage and it’s not to be shameful.”
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