“I haven’t had sex since 2014.”
This is the claim of a woman I met recently, who calls herself an “incel”; a term which refers to anyone who has gone without sex for a prolonged period, involuntarily. If you Google “incel”, you’ll find information on men’s groups who complain they can’t get laid because women are “bitches”. Of course.
But by definition, Alison (whose name I’ve changed for her privacy) is also an incel. She’s a 33 year-old, heterosexual, single woman, and she meets the criteria because she hasn’t had a sexual encounter with another person in four years. And not by choice.
The last time Alison had sex was with her partner of seven years, three months before they amicably separated.
“I was so prepared to go on a single sex spree to celebrate,” Alison laughed.
“But the reality was that I was totally crap at talking to guys. I still am. I’m nervous and weird.”
Alison said she went out regularly with her friends, who were great wingwomen, but she always lost her nerve when it came time to seal the deal. The same thing happened to her when chatting online.
“I thought I’d feel free, but actually, I think I felt overwhelmed with indecision.”
Which meant that Alison began to lose hope of even having a one night stand, pretty quickly.
“When I finally found someone to talk to who wasn’t a total idiot, I’d eventually lose them. I’d excuse it by saying I’m a crap flirt, but really, I’d just chicken out.”
Real talk: How do you have a one night stand? Rachel Corbett, Mia Freedman and Jessie Stephens discuss on Mamamia Out Loud.
Alison believed that body confidence was the main reason for her nervousness, especially as she grew older, and one year turned into two, two into four.
“The world keeps telling us that the older we are, the less attractive we are. That’s what I’m thinking about. Guys all want women in their 20s. That’s their ideal.”
This, however, doesn’t mean that Alison hates herself.
“The strange part is that I feel good in myself. I feel sexy. Alone in my bedroom with sexy lingerie on, I think I’m hot. But I just don’t think men would look at me like that now.”
People, such as religious figures, can learn to live celibate lives, but Alison has found that her interest in sex hasn’t waned.
“I still want it as much as I always have. I masturbate almost every day. I’ve spent so much money on sex toys to try to replicate the feeling – but using them makes me cry afterwards, because it’s just not the same.”
One of the hardest parts of the celibacy has been the disappointment.
"Coming home night after night, alone - it's soul-destroying. I've failed again. I've wasted all this time and money getting dressed up and feeling amazing and still, I come home to an empty bed."
Alison admits she got tired of the high before a night out - shaving her legs, even setting out candles, in the hope of bringing someone home - and then the crash of walking into her bedroom at 2am, "alone again".
The other part Alison has struggled with is, of course, the lack of intimacy and affection.
"There are times when I've woken up in the middle of the night and haven't been able to stop crying, and I know it's because I just desperately need some love. I need someone to touch me."
Alison has, as she puts it, "read every article on the internet about how to deal with loneliness, but there's only so many 'warm baths' you can take."
"Sometimes, you just need a man on you and inside you."
Her frustration has led Alison to recently seek professional help. She asked her GP if there was a drug, such as an anti-depressant, to help suppress her libido, so that she didn't have to worry about not getting any, anymore. The doctor told her that wasn't the solution.
"The doctor told me, 'You're not depressed - you're deprived.' That made me finally realise that I do need help - I need to talk to someone about why I don't have any confidence when it comes to men.
"Because sex is a basic human need, and I can't live like this forever."
Top Comments
So if a woman hasn't had sex for four years and isn't okay with that, then sex is a basic human need. But if a man hasn't had sex for four years and isn't okay with that, then he must feel he's entitled to sex. Seems like a double standard to me.
Sounds like the entirety of my 20's (well and my 30's up to now). Except at the start she had a long term partner.
6 years is my longest "break". I was aware it had been a long time, but it wasn't until I realised that in the time between me having sex, a friend and his partner had moved to America, gotten married, spent a couple of years there, decided to move back and had 2 kids that it crystallised as "you have a problem. This ISN'T normal."
But the thought crystallising and actually doing something to remedy it are two very different things. I've had some of the women I'm friends with tell me after the fact "she was into you, why didn't you try anything?" but I honestly think that part of my brain is wired wrong or something, I've never ever been able to pick up on the signs, it's never "she's flirting with me!" I just assume "well, she's friendly."
And between listening to my sisters and our friend and reading articles here, I know well enough that being friendly or polite does not equate to being interested. And on that one I'd rather stay quiet and be lonely than be another oblivious, obnoxious guy, not knowing how to read the situation. Because both scenarios end the same way, with me going home alone again, but one has me being alone AND people thinking I'm an arsehole.
I have a few friends who have been celibate longer than six years, but, while I don't bring it up, they seem to be comfortable with this choice.
You don't sound like you are, entirely - have you ever considered going to a sex worker to 'circuit break' the situation?
Brush away any cobwebs or nerves on that side of things and then look for something a little more emotionally intimate?
I had a girlfriend for a short time when i finished high school, but it turned out other medical problems i have made sex slow and painful (my hips and spine didn't get the right amount of blood flow when mum was pregnant so the bones grew in wrong shapes that don't fit together properly). After 6 or so months she said she liked me, but sex with me is boring and not fun, so she moved on.
I've been to see sex workers a few times over the years actually, thinking a similar thing, that it could be a mental wiping clean of the slate and restart. But i end up not enjoying myself still and leave thinking "well, that wasn't fun, it actually hurt and now i'm really sore AND it cost hundreds of dollars... why am i bothering?"
I'm not sure if it's i'm not explaining my situation to the SW's correctly or something, but no matter how much i try to explain "this is what my health issues are, these are the parts of my body that if you put pressure on will REALLY hurt, please be aware of it" they all seem to follow a similar/the same, porn like pattern (massage, oral, them on top, doggystyle, fin).
At this point, i don't think it's even the sex i miss (how could i miss something i've never enjoyed i suppose), it's just having someone to come home too, cuddle at night or wake up to. Spend your time with.
13 unbroken years of going to bed and waking up alone is pretty soul crushing