Anonymous wrote:My husband's ex DIL proclaimed she was asexual to divorce our son. After she slept with half the town during their marriage.
She has since remarried.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Meh! In my culture, unmarried children who have not finished their education or have started on their career path are not even supposed to have any sexual feelings or associate with opposite sex. We pretty much grew up without having any boyfriend/girlfriend. When we were in our 20s, we got more freedom and then we were married. Our emotional and sexual relationship happened with our spouse and it was the most powerful thing at all.
Nobody cares about your culture, it's irrelevant. Especially when you can't even be bothered to identify the culture--not to mention that it is clearly not the culture of the country that OP (or apparently you) are living in.
Anonymous wrote:As an ace adult, the best advice I have is to support her.
Never make any statements such as "Perhaps covid affected your romantic learning..." or "You should explore if your low estrogen production and BC pills are related to your asexuality."
I would 100% encourage her to seek out a psychiatrist who deals with LGBTQ sexuality (I say psychiatrist in case meds are needed for the anxiety issues). They will help her explore her new sexuality in the proper format without making it seem like they are trying to "fix" something that is "broken" within her.
I spent most of my life feeling terribly broken because I didn't feel the same way towards the opposite sex (or even same-sex!) as my peers. I had no idea about asexuality until I was in my sophomore year of college and took a Psych course. Learning about asexuality caused me to have a literal lightbulb moment and everything clicked for me. I honestly cried because it was so freeing to realize I wasn't broken or weird, I simply had another label. It was also freeing to be able to stop forcing myself into different relationships and faking everything, which I had been doing because I thought if I tried hard enough or long enough, I'd be "normal."
I'm 40 with a husband and 2 kids. I'm married to another romantic asexual. We love each other very much but have zero sexual desire for each other (or sex in general). We did artificial insemination for both pregnancies.
Anonymous wrote:Meh! In my culture, unmarried children who have not finished their education or have started on their career path are not even supposed to have any sexual feelings or associate with opposite sex. We pretty much grew up without having any boyfriend/girlfriend. When we were in our 20s, we got more freedom and then we were married. Our emotional and sexual relationship happened with our spouse and it was the most powerful thing at all.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the low estrogen thing sounds like a factor. Not that she needs to change anything, but having a BMI too low to produce hormones is not normal or healthy.
Anonymous wrote:As an ace adult, the best advice I have is to support her.
Never make any statements such as "Perhaps covid affected your romantic learning..." or "You should explore if your low estrogen production and BC pills are related to your asexuality."
I would 100% encourage her to seek out a psychiatrist who deals with LGBTQ sexuality (I say psychiatrist in case meds are needed for the anxiety issues). They will help her explore her new sexuality in the proper format without making it seem like they are trying to "fix" something that is "broken" within her.
I spent most of my life feeling terribly broken because I didn't feel the same way towards the opposite sex (or even same-sex!) as my peers. I had no idea about asexuality until I was in my sophomore year of college and took a Psych course. Learning about asexuality caused me to have a literal lightbulb moment and everything clicked for me. I honestly cried because it was so freeing to realize I wasn't broken or weird, I simply had another label. It was also freeing to be able to stop forcing myself into different relationships and faking everything, which I had been doing because I thought if I tried hard enough or long enough, I'd be "normal."
I'm 40 with a husband and 2 kids. I'm married to another romantic asexual. We love each other very much but have zero sexual desire for each other (or sex in general). We did artificial insemination for both pregnancies.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. If it were me, and I was in this situation with a DD this age, I would plan to spend a ton of time with her this summer and try to get to the bottom of what is going on. You state that she has a lot of anxiety; I would start with helping her work to alleviate that. Exercise, healthy eating, fun job this summer, some travel - what can you do to help her get back on track and get her anxiety under control?
And don't forget - these are the Covid kids who suffered so much during the lockdowns. We are going to be dealing with things like this for years to come.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. If it were me, and I was in this situation with a DD this age, I would plan to spend a ton of time with her this summer and try to get to the bottom of what is going on. You state that she has a lot of anxiety; I would start with helping her work to alleviate that. Exercise, healthy eating, fun job this summer, some travel - what can you do to help her get back on track and get her anxiety under control?
And don't forget - these are the Covid kids who suffered so much during the lockdowns. We are going to be dealing with things like this for years to come.
There is nothing to be sorry for and nothing to deal with because OPs DD does not have sexual feelings for anyone. She is not broken.
I’m guessing it didn’t occur to you that some of her anxiety could be stemming from the fact that she keeps getting messages that she should WANT to be some kind of sexual, that she’ll end up alone, etc.