• Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    The first thing that often comes to mind is I have honeymooner’s nose. It’s a medical condition where my nose stuffs up whenever I’m aroused, which is like having the libido equivalent to Pinocchio’s nose. All my BF’s find out and are all like “wait, so you didn’t have a cold all this time” and people go from under-suspecting I like things to over-suspecting I like things.

    Despite this, this leads to another thing that comes to mind, being that I’m asexual. I can technically tolerate physical time with a guy if I prepped, but I don’t “want” it, look forward to it, or enjoy it. It’s just a long ass chore. I do have fetishes… an ice fetish, probably the third thing about me that would surprise any guy I would date. But body to body connection does nothing, hence the asexuality label. If my honeymooner’s nose acts up around a guy, it’s because they somehow triggered the fetish.

    • Goun@lemmy.ml
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      7 months ago

      Shit, this is so weirdly interesting. Is it possible for you to explain how can an asexual person get aroused? I’d have imagined those things were kind of connected? Or is sex just a fetish we have but you don’t? How does this work?

      • currycourier@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Varys person to person, but for me I find that the idea of sex is really hot but the reality is just…not as exciting.

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        It helps to think of it in terms of the etymology. If you’re homosexual, you’re interested in the same gender, and if you’re bisexual, you’re interested in both genders, which means if you’re asexual, you’re interested in neither gender. However, it doesn’t mean you’re interested in nothing, as that’s not necessitated. This confusion is where the terms “libidoist asexual” and “nonlibidoist asexual” come from, the latter being one with absolutely no drive and the former being one where a trigger can pop up in a random place that is itself mutually exclusive from one’s experience with human relations.

        It’s also the hallmark of an asexual if physical experience is not necessary. The norm among humans is that, once a certain age is reached, they become dependent on physical satisfaction. There exists a scale I document though that goes from dependency to feeling averse. This is why it’s often stressed it’s a spectrum, but the rule of thumb is you are considered asexual if you can pass as perpetually physically satisfied without any work.