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TheBrideInBlack
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Thu Jun 16, 2005 8:10 am


ASEXUALITY NEWS


This sticky will be for the latest asexuality news (international possibly?) as well as older records. A few people could be in charge of updating it once in a while. There's not a lot of asexuality news, so this sticky might be inactive from time to time.
PostPosted: Wed Jun 22, 2005 3:53 pm


[ Message temporarily off-line ]

Xumbra
Vice Captain


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 9:11 pm


http://www.straight.com/content.cfm?id=11124

I don't like this article as much though.
PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 8:48 pm


Great, now there are comic strips about asexuality: http://www.qwantz.com/index.pl?comic=565

Here's the comic:

User Image - Blocked by "Display Image" Settings. Click to show.

Haha, dinosaurs.

Xumbra
Vice Captain


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Wed Jul 13, 2005 11:34 pm


[ Message temporarily off-line ]
PostPosted: Sun Aug 07, 2005 11:29 am


http://kyw.com/special/local_story_216105757.html
Quote:
Asexuality

Aug 4, 2005 11:00 pm US/Eastern
PHILADELPHIA (KYW) Some people are coming out of the closet, but they're not gay. They are asexual and they say their lack of a sex life is as normal as having sex.

David Jay considers himself an average guy. �I go to my work everyday. I like to work out. I've got a whole slew of friends," he said.

Victoria Glancy considers herself average too. She likes to read, is writing a novel, and is excited about her new boyfriend. �We're incredibly mushy and obnoxious and we drive all our friends crazy," she said.

There is one difference. She and her boyfriend have no interest in having sex - ever!

Jay has no interest either: �Sex is never a thing that it made sense for me to do."

They are a couple of the growing number of people declaring themselves asexual. Jay even started a website - AVEN - Asexual Visibility and Education Network.

�People just started pouring in from all over the world with similar experiences saying, ya know? I'm not interested in sexuality. I don't experience sexual attraction,� he said.

Many people consider a lack of sex either funny or pitiful like in the upcoming movie "The 40-Year-Old Virgin." To asexuals, no sex is no joke and nothing to hide.

CBS 3�s Natasha Brown reports there are so many questions swirling around this issue. Is asexuality really an orientation? Is it an undiagnosed health problem or could it be spawned by an emotional problem?

Licensed Sex Therapist Dr. Chris Fariello of the Council for Relationships explains: �They're people who perhaps they believe their hormone levels are off or they have low testosterone. In some cases, that's true.�

He says not all asexuals turn out to have a physical or emotional problem. �I certainly think that asexuality needs to be studied a little bit more so that we can learn to understand it and certainly accept it as a distinct form of sexual orientation,� he said.

Glancy says she doesn't need research to know she's fine. �I�m in a relationship. I met him on the site. He's asexual as well. there's just a level of intimacy there," she said.

It�s intimacy without sex.


(© MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc., All Rights Reserved.)

Xumbra
Vice Captain


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Tue Aug 16, 2005 10:36 am


[ Message temporarily off-line ]
PostPosted: Fri Sep 02, 2005 9:45 pm


http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3136367,00.html

Quote:
Trend: Saying no to sex

Young, attractive, gainfully employed, socially active - and uninterested in sex: Surveys indicate incidence of asexuality in population is 1 percent. Sexologist Dr. Michal Zaides believes it’s closer to 10 percent of adult population. Is asexuality new social trend, or was it always there and just now coming out of closet?

Ilana Messer

A popular Israeli entertainer, recently interviewed by a women’s magazine admitted she has not had sex for more than a year because she doesn’t date and doesn’t have a steady boyfriend.

She is pretty, has a nice figure, interviewed well and does not see her current solitary status as a big deal or something requiring therapy. She is also not embarrassed that she is sexually abstinent at this time.

Teri Hatcher , one of the stars of the successful American television series, "Desperate Housewives," admitted in an interview: “I have had no time in the last half year for a sex life. I am busy with filming and don’t date. It’s OK with me. I am not upset about it.”

And Mrs. Bush? What did Laura really mean when she recently said in front of scores of television cameras that her husband goes to bed early, like 9 p.m., and leaves her alone opposite the television?

"Cosmopolitan" views asexuality as a new social trend that has come out of the closet. In its last issue it quoted a number of film stars, models and businesswomen who said that they have not had a sexual partner for months. They did not speak about a lack of passion or emotional suffering but simply that, "this is the situation at this time."

Angelina Jolie told the reporter that “I have had many periods without sex. Even now, I am in a kind of interlude. I have no energy to be with any other man but my son.” Even Madonna admitted that she goes to bed now with a good book.

Do all these interviews indicate that these woman are going through a dry spell or more reflecting the fact that sex is no longer a priority for a growing group of people?

Its confusing

Asexuality is not just a woman’s issue. David Jay, an American from Missouri, set up an Internet forum for people who believe they are asexual. He explained that this was a new concept. He said everyone is healthy of mind and body.

They work and have social lives but have no desire to have sex with others. He denied that they were monks or are celibate for religious or other reasons.

“We just don’t feel that a sex life is that important or at least not a priority,” Jay said.

The Internet site started with 50 people and now has some 2,500. A month ago it launched a dating site with one condition: Applicants can hug, even kiss and fondle, but no sex please.

Fear of failing

Cosmopolitan quotes two surveys done last year in England indicating that 1 percent of those asked said they are not sexually attracted to anyone.

“Only 1 percent?” says Dr. Michal Zaidas, psychologist and sexologist. “I believe the incidence of asexuality in the West and including Israel is as much as 10 percent.”

Zaidas differentiates between two types of asexuality: The first is among people from 18 to 50, who have never had sex or masturbated. This may constitute 1 percent of the population. Then there are those people of the age when they are supposed to be sexually active, who don’t have sex for long periods of time - 10 years and more - often because of a personal crisis. Among this group are many married couples.

“From my experience,” said Zaidas, “there are many people over 30 who abstain from sex. I am not including people with problems or people who suffer from depression. I am talking about active people, who work, study and are successful. They function very well, belong to different social groups and have no sex in their lives.”

The main reason for avoiding sexual relations is the fear of failing.

It happens to 20-25 year olds as well. If on the basis of a failed attempt, a man has fears that he isn’t good at sex - he will prefer to pass on the entire business. Zaidas says that, “in a way, it reminds one of the person with two left feet who won’t dance because he is afraid of everyone laughing, or those who would not dare to try painting because they haven’t got a stick of talent. The abstinence from sex is a kind of emotional impotence. They are people with deep performance anxiety and prefer not trying at all. Slowly, the body gets used to this and adapts itself.”

Sexual frigidity

Zaides dispels the myth of sexual frigidity. She says its possible to check testosterone levels and determine if sexual abstinence is based on low levels of hormones. In her opinion one’s sexual temperament develops when we believe there is a chance for sex.

“We all have the potential to experience sex - but if you are convinced you are going to be a total failure, then you don’t even try,” she says.

Women who avoid

“Many women are afraid of rejection,” says Zaidas. “Even young women - maybe because of an early negative experience or pain. They avoid sexual relations in order not to humiliate themselves. Regarding famous women mentioned in the article - they know the expectations of them, to be sex kittens. They cannot allow themselves to fail.”

Abstinence as ideology

“It becomes an ideology,” Zaidas says. “It’s the reason people go into deep denial regarding their sexuality. They are not opposed to sex, quite the contrary. They see sex as important but they are not willing to settle for something less than fantastic. There is a reverse ideology at work here: At first, they attach great importance to sex, exaggerated even. It has to be superlative. When it isn’t and it's just bodily functions between two people more or less successful, they have to emotionally equip themselves to handle it and conclude that sex is not their thing. They just rationalize it away.”

Xumbra
Vice Captain


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Wed Sep 07, 2005 6:36 pm


http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A4455263

I love this article.

Quote:
Asexuality

For humans, being asexual does not mean having an ability to clone yourself on the spot like an amoeba. For the most part, it also does not mean to have no sexual organs. So what, exactly, is it?

The definition of Asexuality is a lack of sexual attraction.

A study published by the New Scientist magazine in October, 2004 estimated that 1% of the human population is asexual, and confirmed the existence of asexuality in both humans and other animals.

Asexuality As An Orientation

Asexuality is seen by most asexuals as an orientation in its own right. After all, there is sexual attraction to the opposite gender, the same gender, and both genders, so why not also neither gender?

Some asexuals do not consider asexuality an orientation because it is more of a lack of orientation. They do not feel that they have a sexual orientation at all.

As asexuals are a sexual minority, this places asexuality firmly within the 'queer'1 movement. However, many asexuals lead a conventionally straight life and some individual asexuals do not feel they are a part of the 'queer' movement at all.

Shortened Name

As all other orientations have a shortened name, so does asexuality. Commonly it is 'A' although some people prefer 'Ace'.

Why Call It Asexuality?

Many people wonder why asexuality is so called, as they reason that an asexual person would not wish to define themselves in relation to sex or a sexuality. However, imagine being asexual, having no sexual attraction to either gender, for your entire life. People will be interested in why you aren't dating, so they ask 'Are you hetero, homo or bi?' What can you say in reply? 'I'm not sexual' is the answer, but then you have defined yourself in relation to sex. Simply saying 'None of the above' will prompt the question 'So what are you then?' to which you have to reply with the aforementioned answer.

Love

Asexuals are capable of love. Romantic attraction is separate from sexual attraction, and it is something that many asexuals feel. Some asexuals talk of a 'romance drive', meaning that they feel compelled to form a close romantic relationship with a partner.

A romance drive is not connected to sexual attraction or behaviour, it is more of a desire to form a close relationship with someone. This is possible just as it is possible for parents to love their offspring in a non-sexual manner.

Romantic Orientation

Asexuals who have a romance drive can also identify themselves as straight, gay or bi, depending on the gender of person they usually feel romantically attracted to. Romantic orientation is different to sexual orientation, so a gay asexual person remains asexual even though they prefer to form relationships with the people of the same gender.

Asexual Relationships

Most asexual relationships would be looked upon by outsiders as just being very close friends, and indeed in a lot of cases that is true. These asexuals form close friendships with people, but feel no need to go any further. However, for some asexuals a relationship is a lot more than just friendship. These asexual relationships can be very intimate, but the intimacy is not sexual in nature. Asexuals in these relationships consider that they are 'more than just friends' with their significant other, so close is their relationship.

Some asexual relationships can also include physical contact of a sexual nature2. Most physical asexual relationships focus more on hugging and stroking than sex, however there are asexuals who do enjoy sexual sensations and acts.

Many sexual people do not understand how a relationship can work without sex as they see sex as a necessary expression of love. For asexuals, sex is not an expression of love at all and to many the idea that it is seems foreign. To help differentiate, if sex is a necessary expression of love, then prostitutes are the most loving people in the world.

Sex

Just because someone is asexual doesn't mean they don't have sex or can't enjoy it: asexuality only means that they are not sexually attracted to people. A good proportion of asexuals have tried sex. As asexuals are otherwise normal people they are physically capable of sex, and some asexuals enjoy sexual arousal. Those asexuals who do have sex or masturbate do not think about people during the act; some enjoy the sensation, some have a fetish, and some just let their minds wander and work out what tomorrow's dinner will be or when the car should next be serviced.

Many asexuals who try sex find it disappointing, and some find the idea of sex absolutely repulsive. Many asexuals do not masturbate and derive no pleasure from any sexual act.

Sexual Arousal

Many sexual people find the concept of sexual attraction difficult to separate from the concept of sexual arousal and assume that they are the same, and therefore anyone who experiences sexual arousal must also experience sexual attraction. This is not true. As an example, many sexual people are sexually aroused by leather, but they are not sexually attracted to leather.

Sex Drive

Some asexuals do have a sex drive. This idea can also be difficult for sexual people to understand. A sex drive is a desire for sexual arousal, not a desire to feel sexual attraction. The difference here can be highlighted by masturbation: people who masturbate by the application of their hand or other object do not feel sexual attraction to that object, but do it because they feel a need for arousal.

Some asexuals who have a sex drive satisfy themselves only by masturbation; these can come under the title of autosexual. Autosexual does not mean that a person loves themselves sexually, merely that they have no wish to have sex with another person, but still feel the desire to experience arousal. Other asexuals who have a sex drive prefer to satisfy themselves by sharing sex with a partner.

Sexual Relationships

It is entirely possible for an asexual to have a sexual relationship. As stated above, some asexuals do enjoy the sexual sensations and therefore will happily engage in a sexual relationship. Some asexuals are not too bothered about sex, but will go through with it because they like giving pleasure to their partner, and others will because they love their partner and are willing to have sex in order to stay with them. Not all asexuals, however, will be willing to do this. Many do not enjoy any sexual act at all (including kissing), so no matter how much they love their partner, sex will be totally out of the question and they have rigidly defined and defended no-go zones.

Marriage

Many asexuals are in sexual marriages, and there are just as many reasons for an asexual to marry as there are for sexual people. In many cases marriage has happened because the asexual person assumed that they must be sexual, since they have never heard that it is possible not to be sexual. Then there are those who love their partner so much they are willing to compromise by having sex just to stay with their partner. Some want children and want their children to grow up in a traditional family group, and some have been forced into it by their religion and family.

Why Are Asexuals Making Such A Fuss?

A lot of people, sexual and asexual alike, do not understand why some asexuals are making such a big deal out of what they see as a non-issue. If you feel no desire for something, why shout about it? There are no a-football groups.

Being Asexual

The world is sex-mad. Sex permeates every part of the world, it is in songs, books, films, radio, television, adverts, billboards, comics, art and shops. Couples are everywhere, and most people talk about sex and sexual relationships every day. Our culture is screaming at everyone to find their perfect mate, settle down and start a family. Many people, not just asexuals, are constantly hounded by family and friends asking when they are going to find a partner and settle down. For some asexuals it is difficult to relate to most entertainment and many friends because either courting or sex are such large parts of them. In this climate, it is very difficult to ignore the fact that sex and sexuality exist. All that may not be obvious to sexuals, but to asexuals it is blindingly obvious.

Isolation

Because of living in such an over-sexed culture that is today's world, many asexuals feel isolated. As asexuality is so rarely heard of and is largely unknown, young asexuals growing up notice that they are different to their peers and assume that they are horribly broken, deficit in some way, and need to be 'cured'. This can lead to self-loathing and withdrawal from society. It often leads to experimentation with sex when the asexual concerned has no sex drive, and individuals can often emerge traumatised.

Another reason for isolation is religion. Certainly, mainstream Christians do not have a problem with asexuals, but some see sex as a gift of God that should be used. Many other religions (Mormons, Islam) see it as the duty of all humans to procreate and view not wishing to do so as a sin.

This isolation is why many asexuals feel that they need to spread the word - they have gone through years of self-hate, traumatising sexual experiences, and being told repeatedly that they need medical help. When they hear about asexuality, having found that they are not abnormal after all, they do not want anyone else to have to go through it too. Spreading the word, of course, means making a fuss to get yourself seen and understood by media.

Why Do Asexuals 'Come Out'?

Many families and friends constantly hound both sexuals and asexuals to find a partner, and often to settle down and have children. For some asexuals this can be completely out of the question. Many asexuals find it easier to blend in with society by pretending to be sexual, by nodding in agreement of Kylie being hot, or by laughing at sexual jokes, and in this case they are effectively hiding the truth. In any case, 'coming out' can be very helpful for asexuals, as if their family and friends understand then they will no longer be hounded to pair up or be expected to join in sexual conversations.

For some asexuals it is not an issue, either they are lucky enough to have very accepting (or asexual) family and friends, or they just never find themselves in a situation where they are expected to discuss sex.

What Causes Asexuality?

Nothing is yet known to cause asexuality. Examples of common assumptions of causes are:

* Abuse - Abuse is not known to cause asexuality. It may cause repulsion, hatred or fear of sex, but not asexuality. Almost all abuse victims turn out to be sexual, and those who don't weren't sexual to begin with.

* Hormonal or Chemical Imbalances - While some drugs do repress libido, and pregnant and pre-natal women lack a sex drive, hormonal problems are rarely the cause of asexuality. Many asexuals have gone through rigorous tests which conclude that their hormones are completely normal.

* Genes - Scientists may have found a 'gay gene' which increases the chances of the carrier being gay. There is no known 'asexuality gene' but the possibility does exist.

* Social Recluse - Asexuals are normal people. Some of them are popular, some aren't, some are extroverts, some introverts, and of course some are very withdrawn. It is possible that there is a higher percentage of asexual introverts than sexual introverts, but that is probably caused by the asexuality: most people naturally become withdrawn from the world if they don't fit in. In Internet asexual communities most of the asexuals are introverts, but this is probably because all the extroverts are out and too busy with their social lives to visit the Internet very much. This is noticeable in a great majority of Internet communities including h2g2.

* Fear Of Relationships - Also trust issues. A fear or relationships or a lack of trust does not lead to a lack of sexual attraction. These issues are separate to asexuality. They can coexist with asexuality, just as sexual people also have these problems.

Some not-so-commonly touted reasons:

* Premature Birth - The theory was that premature babies may not have had their full quota of sexual hormones while in the womb. This one was quickly ruled out as research showed that although many asexuals were premature, some were full term and many others were beyond full term.

* Oldest Child - An Internet poll with 53 respondents interestingly shows that 49% of asexuals are the oldest child in a family. This should not be taken as any evidence, however, as there is simply not enough data collected on the subject.

* Death of a Loved One - As a child, the death of a family member or close friend can be very traumatic, and it was speculated that this could lead to asexuality. However, most children who have suffered a loss grow up to be sexual.

What Asexuality Isn't

On first hearing about asexuality many sexual people fail to comprehend what asexuality is. So here are common misconceptions about asexuality:

* Celibacy - Celibacy is a choice not to have sex. Asexuality is not a choice but an orientation, and whilst some asexuals do not have a sex drive, others do.

* A disorder - Asexuality is just another orientation. Whilst some people still have a problem with the existence of more than one orientation, it is widely accepted that there are more. Asexuals are just like any other people, and come from all walks of life, all countries, and all religions. Asexuals are just as mentally balanced as the rest of the human race.

* Homosexuals in hiding - Asexuals are not claiming to be asexuals because they are homosexual and don't want to admit it. Homosexuals who don't want to admit it, like asexuals who don't want to admit to it, tend to claim that they are heterosexual. To claim to be asexual would draw close scrutiny of their sexuality and sex life, which is the last thing someone who wants to stay in the closet wants.

* A late bloomer - Asexuality is usually a lifelong thing; if you are born asexual you will stay asexual, and most asexuals do. Most, because as with other sexualities, some people do drift into a different sexuality. It is possible to both become asexual having been sexual, and become sexual having been asexual. If you are 13 and haven't felt sexual attraction then you could be a late bloomer. If you are 20, you are very probably asexual.

* Frigidity - Frigidity is sexual unresponsiveness. Asexuality is an orientation, and those asexuals who have a sex drive do enjoy sex. It is, of course, possible to be both asexual and frigid, but neither implies the other.

* Sexual repression - People who are sexually repressed are still sexual, however deeply they have buried their sexual feelings. Asexuals are not sexually repressed, but merely feel no sexual attraction.

* Fear of sex - Asexuality is an orientation, not a fear. Some asexuals have and enjoy sex, others do not because they have no sex drive.

* Only for women - Both men and women can be asexual. Currently the statistics show that more asexuals are women, but that could be simply because less men wish to admit to it.

* Nature's way of controlling population - This was also thought of homosexuals, but studies have shown that even in endangered species there are homosexual specimens. Other studies have shown that the existence of homosexuality is an evolutionary advantage as it means there are a few adults around without offspring who can devote more time and energy to looking after nephews and nieces, and the same could be said for asexuality. There is no reason to believe that asexuality is a way of controlling population, particularly as some asexuals do enjoy sex and do have children.

* A hormonal problem - Although this may be true for a small number of people, it is not the case for most asexuals. Many asexuals have gone through many tests to identify hormonal problems, to find that levels were completely normal.

* Social retardedness - Asexuals are normal people. Some of them are popular, some aren't, some are extroverts, some introverts, and of course some are very withdrawn.

* Ugliness - Asexuals do not choose to identify as asexual because they are ugly or 'can't get any'. Just like the rest of the human race, some asexuals are beautiful, most are average, and some aren't so good-looking.

* Pickiness - It is not that asexuals are very picky about who they date. Many just don't feel the need to date anyone, and those who do date are only picky about sexual activity.

* Religiousness - Some asexuals are religious, some very religious, and others are not at all religious. Some statistics suggest that asexuals are more likely to be religious.

Asexual Responses To Common Statements And Questions Made By Sexuals

When an asexual 'comes out' to a sexual person, there are many responses widely reported by asexuals that shows that the sexual person just doesn't understand or wasn't listening. These are some of those responses and some asexual replies:

* Asexuality doesn't exist. Why not? How can you know someone better than they do? What makes you the authority on other people's feelings?

* Are you gay? Possibly, but not necessarily. See above 'Homosexuals in hiding' under 'What Asexuality Isn't'.

* You need to see a doctor. Asexuality is not a medical problem, nor is it a disorder. See above 'A disorder' and 'A hormonal problem' under 'What Asexuality Isn't'.

* Were you abused? Asexuality does not seem to have any obvious causes. Abuse can obviously lead to repulsion, hatred or fear of sex, but not to asexuality.

* You don't know what you're missing. Some asexuals do have sex, some do masturbate. Some asexuals with no sex drive have tried sex. They do know what they're missing and are quite content that they're not having it. Those asexuals who have not tried sex realise that they don't know what it's like, but they have no desire to find out. One such asexual remarked it's like algebra. I understand the concept, but have no interest and indeed asexuals will draw an analogy with many things - baseball, synchronised swimming, playing a harmonica, or sky-diving. They understand what it means and how it's done, but have no interest in anything to do with it.

* You just haven't met the right person yet, or you're just a late bloomer. Asexuality is for life, not just for childhood. See above 'A late bloomer' under 'What Asexuality Isn't'. Most sexuals are aware from their early teens that they are sexual, and most know what their orientation is. Surely an asexual person, just the same as heterosexual person, is allowed to state that they are asexual when they are. Just because they might not always be doesn't stop them being asexual at that point in time.

* No, really, everyone's sexual. You just haven't met the right person. Everyone isn't sexual, asexuals are not sexual. For many asexuals, the right person wouldn't want sex either.

* You've obviously never had me, f'naar f'naar. Anyone who does not find you sexually attractive is not likely to date you just to find out if you can make them find you sexually attractive. Asexuality, like heterosexuality, is not something that needs to be 'cured'.

* You must be very religious. Asexuality is nothing to do with religion. Some asexuals are religious, some aren't. See above 'Religiousness' under 'What Asexuality Isn't'.

* It's unnatural. If it was unnatural it wouldn't exist, but there are scientific studies of other animals to prove that it does exist3.

* You're just making it up to make yourself feel special. If someone were doing that, surely they would choose something that didn't open them up to criticism? Many asexuals have been laughed at and even shunned for letting people know of their asexuality. Anyone needing to feel special is probably insecure and will not want that to happen.

* OK, that's fine. Hurrah, you understand! You're wonderful!



1 Queer does not just mean homosexual men. Queer envelopes all sexualities that are not heterosexuality.
2 For the purposes of this article a 'sexual act' includes kissing, and touching and stroking regions that normal friends do not.
3 If you persist in objecting to things because they are unnatural, perhaps you should stop using all modern commodities (like shops, supermarkets, electricity, clean water, toilets, vehicles, soap, clothes, etc) as they are all entirely unnatural.
PostPosted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 10:39 pm


http://www.wfmynews2.com/news/article.aspx?storyid=48824

Quote:
No Sex, No Problem
There's a new movement in which members openly declare their lack of interest in ever having sex.

Undated -- David Jay considers himself pretty much an average guy.

"I go to work everyday. I like to workout. I've got a whole slew of friends," says David. Victoria Glancey says she leads a pretty basic life, too. She likes to ready, is writing a novel and is excited about her new boyfriend.

"We're incredibly mushy and obnoxious and we drive all our friends crazy," says Victoria.

But while Victoria's gushing affection may seem typical of any budding relationship, there is a difference. She has no interest in having sex, ever! David can understand that. He has no sexual desires either.

"Sex is never a thing that it made sense for me to do," says David.

David and Victoria are part of a growing number of people publicly declaring themselves 'asexual'. David even started an online discussion forum called the Asexual Visibility and Education Network.

"People just started pouring in from all over the world with similar experiences saying, ya know, 'I'm not interested in sexuality; I don't experience sexual attraction," says David.

The group now has more than $4,000 members. They sell T-shirts touting their lifestyle and hand out pamphlets explaining that they're normal and perfectly happy with their lives.

"There are asexual people who are old, who are young, who are male and female," says David. He says some asexuals are happy on their own. Others, like Victoria, are interested in romantic partners, minus the sex.

"I am in a relationship. I met him on the site. He's asexual as well. There's just a level of intimacy there," says Victoria.

Experts say the causes of asexuality are unclear.

"We haven't had any serious empirical or scientific investigation of people with this claim," says Edward Laumann, a human sexuality expert.

Laumann says before people label themselves asexuals, they should first rule out reasons for lack of libido or a dip in desire, like hormone deficiencies and other medical conditions or even deep rooted emotional issues.

"There are plenty of reasons why people become uninterested in sex. They can have a bad love affair, they could have been treated badly," says Laumann.

But both David and Victoria say they feel fine, and know there's nothing about them that needs to be fixed.

"I'd just like everyone to know, ya know, that we're normal, we're not bizarre," says Victoria.

"There's a lot more to life than sexuality", adds David.

WUSA

Xumbra
Vice Captain


The MoUsY spell-checker
Crew

PostPosted: Sat Sep 24, 2005 7:31 pm


This isn't new, but since the first post saids "older records as well", here you go:

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/10/24/1098556297656.html
Quote:
Be it vice or virtue, sex is over-rated
October 25, 2004

For many, the bedroom dance has too many complications, writes Hilary Burden.

Apparently A-pride is the latest new sex club. But the difference is that this A stands for asexual. According to a recent New Scientist report in the US, it's seriously cool to be asexual. You can buy the T-shirt, join the messageboards at http://www.asexuality.org with 1700 or so registered members, shop online, or wear the slogan-printed G-string. Although only limited research exists, one survey suggests that just 1 per cent of the population are asexual. Apparently these are people who don't experience sexual attraction; never have, never will.

Quite why they're so keen to be out there when there's nothing to be out there about is not only a troubling contradiction but also adds to the suspicion they're just desperate for attention. Asexuality as a sexual orientation reeks of not having your cake and eating it. Saudi Arabians, Japanese and Cubans are signing up to AVEN (Asexual Visibility and Education Network) founded by American David Jay in 2001, who admits to liking girls but only ever hugging them.

While asexuals may be only a small proportion, of far more interest are all the happy singles not having sex. This group is much larger and growing; what's more, they don't need a support group, exist without having to make a statement, have a USP, or wear the logo.

Not having sex isn't about laziness, dysfunction, celibacy, lack of desire or opportunity, bitterness, or taking a position. It's not about refusing all sexual favours in a Lysistrata pact. Not having sex is just a statement of fact and the thing about facts is they have nothing to prove and cannot be sexed up. So here it is again, unadorned: many happy singles aren't having sex.

Why? It's just that enough relationships have soured for many grown-ups to know it's got to be pretty good to be worth it next time. Who wants the aggro, the health risk, the letdown, the fake intimacy, the second guessing, the whole commitment phobic ritual-c**-charade that goes with getting close to someone in a modern world built on false hopes, lost faith, quick fixes and the lies of those to whom we are entrusted?

The thing is, after 50 years, people have become cleverer than the pill. If someone doesn't look like "getting" - or understanding - you, why would you choose to have sex with them? We are our own contraception now.

Sex, one of the building blocks of life, might be in full view on billboards, pop videos and magazines, but it's not happening in many bedrooms. Why worry about the decreasing marriage rates, the rising divorce statistics, the child-free relationships, the singletons, when many people are happily not even getting to first base? Unless you're Hugh Grant, in an individualistic world, great sex is not a matter of life and death, but bad sex is just not worth it. Instead of negative equity, could this be a case of negative evolution?

There are other forms of "not" that may otherwise be seen as forms of withdrawal from the world, but are just nots. Such as: not marrying, not working for a company, not living in a city, not taking the job promotion, not believing in God, politicians or lawyers, and not watching TV.

Some might call it anarchy, but that's too strong a word. You could say it's a beta way of life, where the nots are taking over from the haves.


http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/No-sex-please-Im-not-into-it/2005/04/15/1113509924438.html
Quote:
No sex please, I'm not into it
April 16, 2005


Let's talk about sex - or maybe not. For those who identify themselves as asexual, there's nothing quite as dull as the pleasures of the flesh, writes Deborah Smith.

Like many young men, Michael enjoys cricket, parties and reading. But having sex, says the 22-year-old university student, is about as much fun as "watching paint dry".

Social pressure to date girls during his teens meant that he ended up having sexual relationships with half a dozen young women. "But it wasn't very fulfilling," he recalls. And three years ago he realised he did not want to have sex ever again.

Michael, from Launceston, well remembers the first time he put a label to his sexual orientation. Rumours were circulating that he was interested in men, because he had stopped dating girls. "Are you straight or gay?" a female friend asked him at a party. "I said, 'I'm neither. I'm asexual'," he recalls.

To him the term aptly expressed the fact he was not physically attracted to people of either gender.

Now that he's thought longer about it, Michael also likes to describe himself as "biromantic". He is keen to have a romantic relationship with either a man or a woman.

How would it work? There would be no intercourse, but physical closeness, he says. "I'm not particularly into kissing, but I'm hooked on massages ... And the emotional intimacy is what I would see as being ideal."

Michael may not be the rarity most would think. Some surveys of sexual behaviour indicate there could be almost as many people who are asexual as are gay. But in a society where sex is all pervasive, asexual people tend to be invisible.

Kerry, a 21-year-old university student in Sydney who has never kissed nor masturbated, realised she was different in primary school when her girlfriends developed crushes on boys. Not wanting to be the odd one out, she pretended she felt the same way. "Each year on the first day of school I would pick a boy so I could say I liked him and I wouldn't be teased," she recalls.

As her teen years passed with no increase in interest she assumed she must be a "late bloomer". For a brief period, she also thought she might be gay."But then I realised I didn't like girls either. It was a matter of elimination."

Kerry accepted the term "asexual" for herself in the final year of high school. A search of the internet led her to a website called Asexual Visibility and Education Network, or AVEN, which was set up by David Jay, an American in his early 20s who has also never experienced sexual attraction nor had sex.

"It was definitely a relief," says Kerry. "I realised I wasn't alone."

In the first study of asexuality ever published, Anthony Bogaert of Brock University in Canada last year analysed the responses of 18,000 people in Britain from a 1994 survey on sexual attraction. He found a "surprisingly high" number - 1 per cent - agreed with the statement "I have never felt sexually attracted to anyone at all". His results were published last year in The Journal of Sex Research and reported in New Scientist magazine.

While homosexual behaviour has been observed in more than 450 species of animals, sheep have provided the best evidence so far for asexuality in the animal kingdom. Three different American teams in the 1990s found that about 10 per cent of rams showed no interest in ewes. Up to 7 per cent tried to mount or sexually interact with other rams. This left 3 per cent of rams that were sexually inactive.

Australian research on people comes up with a similar figure. Dr Juliet Richters, of the University of NSW, says that 6 per cent of people in an Australian survey of almost 20,000 people said they had never had sexual intercourse. Of the declared virgins, about half were under 20 years old, and so likely to have sex later in life.

Richters says the remaining 3 per cent that will never have sex was probably an underestimation, because a further 2 per cent refused to answer the question.

This sexually inactive group could include people from happily celibate nuns to those who are too sick, poor or unattractive to form a relationship, and who do not want to pay for sex or have a casual fling. Others may fear intimacy or have been put off sex by repressive parental attitudes.

But the group is likely to include asexual people who simply don't want any sex, says Richters. "It seems clear to me there is a huge range in how interested people are in sex, from those who hardly have it to those who are biting the wall if they don't get it every day. Most are in the middle."

Professor Marita McCabe, of Deakin University in Victoria, says people have different levels of drive in many facets of life, such as work or sport. "Sex is a drive and falls into the same category. If you're not interested in sex, why should you be?" It isn't a problem unless one partner's lack of interest is causing problems in a relationship, or making people feel bad about themselves, she says.

While AVEN is promoting A-pride, asexuality seems unlikely to become a big movement. "It's not like it's a wild and crazy thing," admits Kerry, a conservatively dressed young woman with a passion for reading who wears her auburn hair in a tight ponytail.

She has a busy life combining uni with weekend work and volunteering at a community radio station and is not desperate for a relationship. "If it happens, it happens." Her hope is society will come to regard asexuality as normal and people will stop telling her she just hasn't found the right man.

Michael, who is tall but a little overweight, says he gets asked out on quite a few dates. If someone makes a pass at him in a bar he "runs the other way", he says. "But if I'm at uni and someone shows signs they want to have sex with me I have a coffee with them and say, 'It's nothing personal, but I'm not interested in that facet of life."'

He wants people to realise that "a lack of physical drive doesn't mean a lack of emotional drive".

Asexuality has slipped under the scientific radar. The pharmaceutical industry has focused on people who want sex, but can't get satisfaction. And studies on the genetics of sexuality have focused on homosexuality.

It was recently suggested, for example, that genes linked to male gayness may have survived because they make the men's female relatives more fertile, after it was found that gay men's sisters, mothers and maternal aunts have more children than usual.

A complete lack of oestrogen in men has been linked, although only in five cases worldwide, to a low libido.

Both Kerry and Michael are not particularly fussed whether it was genes, hormones, societal factors or upbringing that led to their lack of interest in sex. "I'm perfectly happy being who I am," says Kerry.

As for Michael, "It's not boring. I find it much more interesting to do a lot of reading about philosophy and the emotional side of life."

Several young Australians contacted by the Herald via AVEN, however, said they had changed their minds since registering on the website. "Asexuality in my life was a time of transition, albeit an extended one," said one young man. Said another: "I realised it isn't for me. I can't control my urges."

Dr Hera Cook, a historian, says that in a different age, when sex wasn't used to sell everything from cars to washing machines, asexual people would not have felt as out of place. She says there is a lot of evidence the fertility decline in the late 1800s and early 1900s, before effective contraception was available, was due to people not having sex.

A lack of interest in intercourse was not portrayed as a problem for women then. An asexual man could have lived an easy life, with difficulties only arising if his wife wanted children.

"Today we think about more sex as better sex," says Cook, who is affiliated with the University of Sydney. The emphasis during the past 40 years has been on rejecting the sexual repression and prudery that dominated the first half of last century.

But that public system reflected the private beliefs of many. "There was a tremendous amount of support for it."

Cook has spoken to several people who have been in relationships where they have not had sex for up to five or six years. "My experience is people only start to talk about it at the time when their relationship is about to end."

Kerry and Michael have told their friends and family that they are asexual, but both were not ready yet to "come out" publicly and have their surnames used in this article.

Kerry, who has two siblings with a normal interest in sex, informed her parents by leaving an information sheet from the AVEN website in the esky her parents were taking on weekend trip. She says they were concerned she might have been trying to protect herself from relationship disappointments.

Michael believes having a father who is gay was one of the reasons he was open to thinking laterally about his own sexuality. "My parents are OK about it as long as I'm happy."
PostPosted: Fri Oct 21, 2005 11:53 pm


http://www.insidebayarea.com/timesstar/localnews/ci_3139860

Quote:
Article Last Updated: 10/21/2005 01:20 PM
Not everyone has to have it. Not everyone even wants it
Emerging community of asexual people talk about a life without sex

Donna Tam - CORRESPONDENT
Inside Bay Area

Twenty-five-year-old Mark Hoemmen doesn't want to get laid.

He doesn't go on dates. He has never even kissed a girl.

And that's how he wants to keep it.

"I'm not into saliva exchange," he said.

The UC Berkley graduate student may be attracted to women, but he doesn't like sex. If a woman comes on to him, he actually feels a little turned off.

Hoemmen is one of the 5,300 members of the Asexual Visibility and Education Network (AVEN), an online asexual community that is growing. Members of the community say they just don't want to have sex.

Today , Hoemmen and AVEN's creator, David Jay, will meet with other asexuals from the Bay Area for a hike and picnic. Hoemmen wants asexuals to feel less alone and have a supportive social network.

Although AVEN welcomes everyone to learning more about asexuality, this weekend's picnic is a small social event for AVEN members only. Some participants are not out yet and are sensitive to outsiders who may just be curious about their lifestyle.

Jay, 23, started AVEN in 2001 to promote public awareness and provide a place for asexuals to talk about their experiences. AVEN members can post on discussion boards and write about their perspectives. The site encourages asexuals to use AVEN as a tool when educating family and friends.

Just as people use terms like straight, gay and bi, Jay and his community identify with the term asexual. To promote asexual pride, AVEN also sells asexual t-shirts with slogans like "Asexuality: It's not just for amoebas anymore," and "No sex, please!" Coming out to family and friends carries the same anxieties and fears as someone who is gay may feel.

When Jay was 14, his friends began to be interested in sex.

"I didn't get what the big deal was. I sat around thinking I was a late bloomer. As a kid I was taught sexuality is this big scary thing-it would take your life, rip it to shreds, and take it to the wind," he said. "I waited and waited around, but nothing was happening, so I began to think about what I am."

Although he had questions about what he felt and where he fit into society, he never questioned his lack of interest in sex. Jay said he doesn't need to have sex to know that he's not interested in it.

"Sexual people don't have to have sex in order to know that they're sexual," he said.

"Thirteen-year-olds don't need to have sex to know they want it."

According to AVEN, each asexual will have a different experience with sexuality. Some experience physical arousal and may masturbate, but do not connect it with sexual attraction to other people. Some may have sexual desire, but it is so little they can ignore it.

While most people can use sexual feelings to distinguish between intimate relationships and friendships, asexuals have to navigate an entirely different arena in which sexual intimacy has lesser value.

Dr. Christopher Carrington, who teaches a class called Variations of Human Sexuality at San Francisco State University, has never heard anyone using asexuality as a sexual orientation.

He does not think that it is biologically possible for a person to not have sexual desires.

"It doesn't fit-doesn't fit what we know about the human creature," he said.

He suggested that there may be underlying mental or emotional issues like sexual violence or abuse. Family history, social relationships and religion should be looked at as well, he said.

But Hoemmen, who is Catholic and has known about his asexuality since he was 7, said it's just the way he is.

"I was never really confused...what I am hasn't changed," he said.

Maggi Rubenstein, a sexologist and a dean at the Institute of Advanced Study of Human Sexuality in San Francisco, thinks a larger study on asexuality is needed. Earlier this month, she had invited Jay to give a lecture on asexuality to her students at the institute.

"Frankly, I hadn't considered his point of view seriously until we talked," she wrote in an email, referring to Jay.

Jay and the Institute have discussed the possibility for new research. Jay hopes having more exposure to the asexual community will allow sexual people to have a different perspective on sex.

He thinks most people exert tremendous energy into their sexual life even if it results in pain. Jay said people should rethink this emphasis on sex.

"Sit down and decide where sexuality is really needed in your life."

For more information on meet ups in the Bay Area, contact Mark Hoemmen at (510) 229-0014. AVEN is online at http://www.asexuality.org.

Xumbra
Vice Captain


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 8:30 pm


http://www.asexuality.org.nz/index.htm

Quote:
The Asexuality Aotearoa New Zealand (AANZ) website has been specifically created to provide information for the asexual community of Aotearoa New Zealand. AANZ aims to increase the awareness and visibility of asexuality in Aotearoa New Zealand and to encourage the formation of asexual groups throughout the country.


New asexuality community in New Zealand. Might want to check it out.
PostPosted: Fri Nov 25, 2005 7:43 pm


http://www.dailynorthwestern.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/07/14/42d5ec261a577?in_archive=1

Quote:
The America's Intelligence Wire, July 14, 2005 pNA
Northwestern U.: COLUMN: Asexuality removes awkwardness of dating.
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2005 Financial Times Ltd.

(From University Wire)

Byline: Gemma Mangione

Woody Allen once said love is the answer, but while you're waiting for the answer, sex will raise some pretty interesting questions. And anyone who's ever suffered the hazards and hassles of the Northwestern dating scene will tell you there's always more questions than answers here in Evanston, Ill.

So what happens if you take sex out of the equation completely? According to a recent New York Times article, a growing number of people have done just that. Self-described as asexual, they say they are completely content living their entire lives without ever having sex.

Imagine: total disinterest in and apathy toward all things sexual. We live in a country that almost impeached its president for being unable to say no to an eager intern in a beret, where sexual performance-enhancing drug companies sponsor Major League Baseball games and where everyone knows exactly to whom Britney lost her virginity. And yet, asexuals are unfazed. I am impressed.

It seems Darwinian to me -- an emotional "survival of the fittest." Like asexuality is the latest evolution in the sexual spectrum, designed to sidestep all the drama that comes from being physically intimate with someone else. Consider how asexuals would fare here at NU. The one-night stand, the walk of shame, the warm beers as foreplay and the follow-up phone call that never comes ... these would all be nonentities.

I suspect use of thefacebook.com would escalate dramatically, since at this point it's already replaced direct interpersonal contact with things like "walling" and "poking." Though the poking would probably have to go, since without the sexual subtext, it's really kind of a hostile gesture.

Still. It's pretty naive to assume relationships would be entirely uncomplicated with the sex part out of the way.

A statement by the Asexuality Visibility and Education Network online says "sexual or nonsexual, all relationships are made up of the same basic stuff." And even without sex at NU, we'd still have our cramped conversations about absolutely nothing at the Deuce (R.I.P. Keg), our overachieving academicians devoted to Plato or Pythagoras and pretty much no one else. Both of which, while endearingly familiar, can be pretty lame.

According to the Times article, some clinicians say denying the "natural drive" for sex can hardly be considered normal. But any NU student will tell you there's certainly no single standard of normal here. That's why we've got so many more questions than answers for dating, sex and everything else.

And let's please keep in mind, as one user put it on the AVEN message boards, that "normal IS just a stereotype." ((Distributed via M2 Communications Ltd - http://www.m2.com))

BaneHaven


Xumbra
Vice Captain

PostPosted: Thu Jan 05, 2006 10:10 pm


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