My strategies for avoiding séx had run out and so, as the inevitable happened, I simply hoped my boyfriend could not tell that I was enduring, rather than enjoying, our encounter.
John was a virgin when we met, so I assume he did not realise how strange and dysfunctional our perfunctory couplings were.
We'd
abstain for months until, finally, he'd start bribing me with gifts to
go to bed with him. But I loathed it. I dreaded the foreplay, and the
act itself repulsed me. I could only bear it by focusing my mind on
something else.
It's
not that John was a particularly inept lover - he wanted very much to
please me - nor was this a terminal case of bedroom boredom. The problem
is that I have always detested séx: the idea of it, the fact of it, and
the repellent notion that society seems to revolve around it.
I
am 29 and I have had three lovers, two of whom I lived with. I have
tried to quell the disgust I feel at the prospect of séx, but have
failed repeatedly to do so.
There
is nothing physically wrong with me - doctors have confirmed this - and
I am not afflicted by guilt. My parents had a healthy and open attitude
to séx. There is no dark incident lurking in my past that would explain
my abhorrence: I have not been abused nor mistreated, and I have never
been coerced into having séx against my will.
I
am not gay, and I feel no physical attraction towards women. I do not
think anything is 'wrong' with me, although perhaps my attitude would
have been considered less freakish if I had been born in the Victorian
era.
I
just hate séx, and have decided I will never put myself through the
torture of it again. I am in my physical prime, but my sex life is over.
I wish it were not so. My tragedy is that I want to be 'normal'. I
crave the companionship of a man. I would love to be married; to build a
home, to enjoy the comfort and domesticity of a life-long relationship
with a partner I could cherish. I want to love and be loved.
I
do not find men themselves abhorrent. On the contrary, I appreciate
their looks and enjoy their company. I like cuddles, I don't mind
kissing and I yearn for affection; but nothing more than that.
I
have researched internet sites and discovered that only one per cent of
the population is, like me, asexual. Of these, half are men and a
smaller proportion is gay.
So
I have resigned myself to the fact that there is scant chance of my
finding a man I love who, like me, wants a celibate relationship.
I
have not discussed my lack of libido with my parents - in a sense, this
article is my 'coming out' - but I know it saddens them that the
wedding and grandchildren they yearn for have not been forthcoming.
Perhaps
they believe I just haven't met the right man yet. I can assure them,
however, that I have persevered with sex for long enough to know that
for me it is a misery and a penance.
Why should I endure it, just to make other people happy?
I
have known since my teenage years that I am different from my peers. I
grew up in Buckinghamshire, where I still live with my parents, and
attended a girls' grammar school.
While
my friends were devouring teen fiction and sniggering over the
salacious nuances in it, I was immersed in animal stories. I found
séx-education lessons alien and embarrassing: I did not see how they
could ever apply to me.
When
my friends started pairing off with boys, I could not identify with
them. While they bought make-up and made covert visits to Ann Summers
shops, I enjoyed ballet and my beloved pets.
One
by one they lost their virginity, and described the fact to me in
dreadful detail. I couldn't see how any of it applied to me, but
reassured myself that once I had a boyfriend, everything would fall into
place.
It didn't.
My best friend, Stephanie, introduced me to Adrian, her boyfriend's
pal, in the summer of 1999, when I was 16. Adrian was 19 - sweet, funny
and slightly overweight. I liked him: we shared the same interest in
trashy TV, and he didn't seem to mind that I was a bit of a nerd.
I
decided I was going to lose my virginity to him as quickly as possible,
to silence my friends - who considered me abnormally prudish - and to
be like everyone else.
So,
three months after we started going out, I slept with Adrian for the
first time on his rumpled bed at his parents' house, one afternoon when
they were both at work.
There
was no romance, but I didn't want that. I wanted to get it over and
done with, as you would some tedious chore. Adrian, who'd had two
previous relationships, knew it was my first time. He was kind and
patient, but he hadn't bargained for the level of fear and panic I felt.
Afterwards, I felt only revulsion, but I was determined to persevere.
I
stayed with Adrian at weekends, making sure séx was the first thing on
the agenda when I arrived, so we could get it over with and progress to
things that were interesting and fun.
But
each encounter confirmed that I was repelled by it. I learned to fake
pleasure but afterwards, while Adrian slept, I stared at the ceiling and
silently cried.
Eventually,
realising the true nature of my feelings, he was angry and hurt. We'd
been together for nine months; I was due to take up a place to read
anthropology at the University of Surrey, in October 2000 and it seemed
the right moment to separate, so we did.
But I felt distraught; convinced there must be something physically wrong with me that was preventing me from enjoying sex.
The
doctor gave me a check-up and did several tests, all of which confirmed
my hormone levels were normal and that there was nothing physically
untoward. Still, though, I continued to feel like a freak, an outsider.
NOT TONIGHT, DARLING
Some 62 per cent of men said they turn down séx more frequently than their female partner, according to research.
At
university, I was lonely and miserable. It seemed everyone else was
having lots of fantastic sex, when all I wanted was a cuddle and a
companion.
After five months there, I could stand it no longer. In February 2001, I moved back home to my parents.
My friends from school had all paired up and gone off to pursue their dreams, and my sense of isolation deepened.
When
I met John, my next boyfriend, three years later, I think I just felt
grateful that anyone wanted me. He was a friend of a friend. I was 20;
he was 23, worked in retail management and had never had a girlfriend.
We were two lonely people, and he was almost absurdly grateful that I was taking an interest in him.
So
we started seeing each other - and I steeled myself for the inevitable.
After a month or so, when I felt I could procrastinate no longer, we
slept together. It was every bit as awful as I had feared.
However,
a shared dread of loneliness and a need to conform propelled us into a
relationship. We rented a two-bedroom terrace together, acquired two
cats, and for much of the time life was fine.
I
started work in the same DIY store as John - I'm still there now - and
in my spare time wrote teen fiction and poetry, which remains my real
passion.
In
the evenings we ate together, then curled up on the sofa watching films
on television. My parents hoped for a wedding and grandchildren, but I
knew that neither would happen.
The problem, of course, was séx. The idea of it remained abhorrent to me, and I found 1,000 reasons to avoid it.
Although
John and I only had sex once every three or four months, I found it so
repellent I ceased even to fake enjoyment. Poor John would have done
anything to please me, but I could never tell him that the only way to
make me happy was for us both to take a lifetime's vow of abstinence.
Remarkably,
we stayed together for seven years but, inevitably perhaps, John
finally left me for another woman. I just felt relieved that it had
ended, and that the charade was over.
At 27, I went back to live with my parents, feeling disillusioned and convinced of my weirdness.
I
sought help from a psychosexual therapist. She said: 'If you hate séx
and you're fine with that, you have no problem. If you don't want to
hate it, you do have a problem.'
I
had a problem. So I visited the therapist for six weeks, but talking
about séx made me squirm with discomfort and eventually I realised it
was pointless to continue. I stopped going to the sessions.
I
had assumed there was something about me that needed to be fixed. It
didn't occur to me that I could just accept the way I was.
And
then, in July 2011, I met Owen in a local bar. He was tall, slim and
athletic, with curly hair and a beard: close to my idea of physical
perfection in a man.
He
seemed shy, which was a good fit for me, and was working as a barman
while he studied for an engineering degree at London University.
Meeting
him ignited a spark of optimism in me. Owen was so attractive, I even
nurtured a hope that if I had séx with him, my revulsion might finally
evaporate.
I
dared to believe he might change me; that all I needed was to be with
someone like him and then I would become a normal, functioning
partner.When we started dating, I felt happy and full of hope. And when,
after just two weeks, it became obvious we would have séx, I was
neither fearful nor tense. Actually, I was looking forward to it.
But as things progressed, the old dread and revulsion consumed me. I felt confused and angry: why was I such a freak?
I
didn't know what to do, who to talk to or where to go. I felt lost. So
what did I do? I dissembled, as I had so many times before. I'd become
such a proficient actress that I don't think Owen suspected my true
feelings.
We
moved in together two months later and I was prepared to play at happy
families. Sometimes, I even initiated séx because I wanted so much for
him to love me.
But
it was all a sham. We broke up last April, after eight months together,
just as I had begun to find excuses for not sleeping with him. There
was housework to do; I had a headache.
How could I tell him the truth: that he was gorgeous, but I found intimacy repulsive?
So,
once again, I am back living with my parents. Loneliness haunts me.
Although I go through the motions of a normal life - I occupy myself
with ballet classes, gym, Pilates and the odd outing to the pub - I know
I do not fit in.
You
may wonder how I can be so sure, at 29, that I will not change. My
response is: would you ask a gay person the same question? I make the
parallel because it used to be thought that gay people could be treated
or have therapy to make them heterosexual. It didn't work any more than
it would 'cure' me of my asexuality.
My
friends are few, and most of them are engaged or married. I do not tell
them I find séx disgusting. Why should I? They would only regard me
with puzzlement and disbelief. Certainly, none of them could empathise
with me.
I
haven't discussed my problem with anyone. Whenever female friends have
discussed séx I played along, pretending I shared their interest in it.
John
knew I hated sleeping with him - we were together too long for that not
to have been obvious - but it became the elephant in the room. We
didn't discuss it; I think we both feared that would make the problem
worse.
Seven
months ago, I began to wonder if anyone else shared my problem. I
stumbled on a website called Asexuality Visibility & Education
Network. Actually, it was a comfort to discover there are others in the
world who never want to have séx
And by writing this article, I hope more people will be emboldened to admit they feel the same way as me.
But
there aren't many of us, and I know my chances of finding an asexual
partner - a man I love but who never wants to have a physical
relationship - are remote.
Still,
I hope that one day I may discover him and marry. I do not want
children of my own. The idea of carrying a baby repulses me as much as
the act of procreation itself. I feel it is unnatural.
People
say that, as I get older, I may change my mind. I wish I could say
there was a glimmer of hope that I would, but I have absolutely no sense
of a biological clock ticking. If ever I do want children, I will
adopt.
My
mind is made up: I will not have séx again. This may consign me to a
lonely life, but it is better than deceiving a man I love.
A relationship based on such a sham is the ultimate lie.
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