• @Ziglin
    link
    12 months ago

    Maybe I seperate love and sex a bit too much (or just more than average)? When I have romantic feelings it doesn’t make me want to sleep with the person they’re directed towards. But I also would likely not decline an invitation to engage in such acts (and given enough time might eventually ask on my own) but until some sort of mutual attraction has been verified I just avoid thinking of them in a sexual way.

    • @samus12345
      link
      English
      32 months ago

      Sounds like you might be on the asexual spectrum.

      • @Ziglin
        link
        12 months ago

        That one’s a spectrum too???

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      22 months ago

      When I have romantic feelings it doesn’t make me want to sleep with the person they’re directed towards.

      It doesn’t make me want to necessarily sleep with them either, but rather stay up late having sex with them. And maybe after sleep.

      But this idea of asexual romantic attraction makes about as much sense to me as saying “When I am hungry it doesn’t make me want to eat food.”

      When I say I have “romantic feelings” for someone, the feeling I’m referring to is a combination of love and sexual desire. Even when I was a kid and would sort of push down or repress sexual thoughts because in my head it felt wrong or inappropriate, what I was feeling was sexual desire and love.

      My understanding of the term “romantic” has always been euphemistic, based in an understanding that it would be weird and rude to just tell someone you’re crushing on that you love them and you want them to love you too and you want to put your mouth on their genitals because you think you could make them feel really good and you want to physically intimate to be vulnerable with them because vulnerability is a part of of not just physical but emotional intimacy and you want them to share their feelings and feel open to you and so on and so on you get the idea.