Holly Richmond, Ph.D., a certified sex therapist and marriage and family counselor, explains it like this: "The typical person is going to meet someone and there is usually some degree of physical attraction we form within seconds. [With demisexuality], there’s no physical pull at all. It’s really about romantic feelings, love, and friendship, that really come first. The sexual attraction and desire would come second and is certainly not the driving force." In other words, it's totally different from Hollywood movies where people fall in lust at first sight.
Richmond also clarified that being demisexual does not have any bearing on the genders or orientations of the people you are attracted to. You can be a heterosexual demisexual, or a polygamous demisexual, and so on. Jenni Skyler, Ph.D., a certified sex therapist and board-certified sexologist, describes a relationship with a demisexual person as "a friendship that catches fire."
Here are five things to know about what demisexuality means—and what it doesn't.
The term first appeared on the internet in 2006 on an Asexual Visibility and Education Network (AVEN) forum, according to Wired. To be clear, it's likely that demisexuals have always existed, but there was no clear definition of this specific sexual identity until recently. As such, it's difficult to know just how many people identify as demisexual, but experts think it's not uncommon. "I would say a lot of women in particular operate this way," Skyler says.
Demisexual people may refer to themselves as "gray asexuals, but
Richmond says that the term has many different meanings."A gray asexual,
gray ace, gray-a, or grace fall under the big umbrella of asexuals and
demisexuals but have a different process for realizing sexual
attraction," she says. "A gray ace doesn’t view sexual attraction as
black and white (as in, yes I can be attracted to someone, or no I
cannot be sexually attracted to anyone), but rather they utilize a gray
lens that creates space for the idea of 'sometimes.'" The idea of this
gray space is reserved for people who don't usually experience sexual
attraction but might, she says. "Like all people, the process of feeling
attracted is both somatic and psychological, but gray asexuals do not
feel sexual attraction enough to conform with societal or cultural
norms."
Richmond stresses that demisexuals can and do enjoy sex but only with
people they've formed an emotional attraction to beforehand.
"[It's not that demisexual people] have some higher moral code or
ethical choices," Richmond explains. "Simply, the primary attraction is
the emotional."
"[Demisexuality] should not be pathologized in any way," Richmond says.
"It doesn’t fit into our traditional model of human sexuality, but my
thought is if it makes someone feel better to label themselves this way,
then that’s fine."
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