For years, I saw sex as a competitive sport. Then I realised how empty I felt

[editorial note: I am lolbanned from the boys' thread, so I offer this gift for them here, in the spirit of community generosity]

For years, I saw sex as a competitive sport. Then I realised how empty I felt​


Cornelia Holzbauer


I am still a proud member of the anti-slut-shaming community, but I am happier since giving up casual encounters
Mon 4 Mar 2024 09.00 GMT


Until recently, I used sexual encounters the same way others might a glass of wine after a long day, or some chocolate after a meal – before you know it, one glass can quickly turn into two or three, or a chocolate bar a day.
Having been single for almost five years, I found myself increasingly viewing sex as a competitive sport. It became a means to an end – an orgasm, a stress relief, a cure for boredom or loneliness. One time, I joked with my friends that I “masturbated with his body”, referring to my latest conquest.

I had been keenly aware of my casual approach towards sex for a while, but I didn’t see it as a problem – I was never addicted to sex and had long been a proud member of the anti-slut-shaming community. I lived by the mantra: “Singles deserve intimacy, too.”

In hindsight, it’s clear that I was confusing sex with intimacy. I thought: “Just because I am not in a relationship, doesn’t mean I don’t get to have all the sex my heart desires.” But what started as an empowered “I am different, I wear my nymphomania as a badge of honour” journey soon snowballed into saying “yes” when I should have really said “no”.
Last summer, I slept with a man with whom I had a rare, electric chemistry. But at 7am, after about four hours of sleep, he woke me rudely and asked me to leave – he told me he “couldn’t sleep” while I was there. I gathered my stuff and left, after asking him to book me an Uber. Five minutes into the ride, the driver informed me it had been cancelled. When I called the man to ask what had happened, he said I “had been cold to him” upon my departure. My jaw fell to the floor as I found myself stranded somewhere in Upper Manhattan.
Last autumn, I met a man via a dating app and slept with him on the first date. After we were done – it was already 3am – he declared that he’d have to go home now. Taken aback, I inquired why he wouldn’t just stay over and leave in the morning. His response: “Sleeping next to a woman is too intimate. I’d risk her falling in love with me.”
I can think of at least 10 more similar situations where I felt belittled, sidelined, slut-shamed or all of the above. But what haunts me the most is that I know I have done the same to some of my sexual partners in the past. My numbness led me to believe that this was normal behaviour in the jungle that is otherwise known as casual sex among singles.
My unhealthy relationship with sex came to an unceremonious end with the help of social media and a good cry. In November, inspired by the social media trend “Dating Wrapped”, where singles post slideshow presentations summing up their year of dating, I counted the number of people I had bedded in the last year – 20. I was shocked by the relatively high number, considering almost none of them had made me feel fulfilled, excited or empowered.

Many of those encounters had been so forgettable that I had trouble recalling how I felt during or after, or found myself zoning out and thinking of something else while doing the deed. I had sometimes said “yes” to sleeping with someone simply because they asked, even if I wasn’t attracted to them.



Looking back, there was no one big lightbulb moment that led me to quitting casual encounters. (That might not have worked anyway; going cold turkey after years of bingeing may lead to relapses.) But sitting at the Thanksgiving dinner table surrounded by my happily married parents and my sister, her fiance and toddler, I found myself sobbing uncontrollably. The juxtaposition between my life and theirs suddenly dawned on me: “I can’t remember the last time someone I liked held my hand or hugged me.”
I knew I needed to stop having sex with anybody other than myself – a realisation born out of pure exhaustion. I now have one rule for my current existence: I won’t sleep with anyone for whom I don’t have romantic feelings. It’s been almost four months since I had a sexual encounter (what I used to call a “dry spell”), and I am feeling cleansed. The “sugar” and “toxins” are leaving my body – or rather, my mind – and I am clear and focused. It’s a whole new world for me, and I feel excited, dedicating the time I used to spend recruiting my next lead, and later crying to my therapist, on my career instead.
Of course, there are withdrawal symptoms. They usually kick in when I encounter a sex scene in a TV show or movie, or when I witness a friend going home with someone after a night out. But I am starting to realise that sex is not a numbers game and that intimacy and sex can be entirely different things.
While my body is closed for business, my heart is open for romance.
  • Cornelia Holzbauer is a health and wellness journalist based in New York City
 
Woman moment. You love to see it.

Last summer, I slept with a man with whom I had a rare, electric chemistry. But at 7am, after about four hours of sleep, he woke me rudely and asked me to leave – he told me he “couldn’t sleep” while I was there. I gathered my stuff and left, after asking him to book me an Uber. Five minutes into the ride, the driver informed me it had been cancelled.
Fuckin chad as fuck.
 
Based on her LinkedIn, she is 28 or 29.

It's not like she was a prize to begin with, but considering her status as a mediocre woman approaching 30 when the dating scales begin tipping in the favor of males, it's not hard to read between the lines.

She is approaching the wall, and her face already looks like she ran into it long ago. Hard. This is pure desperation from a future wine auntie cat lady realizing she spent her most advantaged years as a girl being a hedonistic whore instead of securing a good mate. Her years to realistically start a family are presently measured in single digits, most likely, and her biological clock is well aware of that.
 
Let's take a closer look, shall we?

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I’m healing. I quit casual intercourse last year and decided to tell The Guardian’s 88 million readers. In this story, I bare my soul — it is a confession, a declaration, and a hopeful look to the future, all in 1,000 words.

I hope reading it will help other singles out there feel seen — the ones who have potentially experienced trauma, who are equally exhausted by the dating hamster wheel, or who feel pressure to participate in dating culture with their bodies.

Last year was quite difficult for me romance-wise. It was probably one of my loneliest years, even though I was and remain surrounded by a colossal group of friends who genuinely love me.

Being single in a metropolis like New York can seduce you to buy into the ‘hustle culture’ — and while that relates to work, it can also blow out of proportion (no pun intended here) and flood over into your personal life. Let’s be honest: I started collecting notches on my bedpost at some point.

I need a massive breather.

My body is closed for business while my heart is open for romance. But for now, I am dancing on my own.

This is a new world to me — I am excited to enter it.

Read the full story at the link in my bio or type into Google “The Guardian Why I Quit.”

Thank you to @lucypasharobinson for editing this from London and to @guardian for letting me write this personal essay. I am humbly joining the class of ‘Why I Quit’ columnists.

Image by the wonderful @000kvn — this was the third time I had the honor of posing for him. We wanted to visualize a vibe of calm empowerment — I think we delivered. I look like I’m fine with not having casual sex.

Seems to me that the years are catching up to her, and she just can't ignore the biological clock ticking right next to her ear.
 
Holy shit how are you not going to include a picture?
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This fetching woman is what we call a last call 10. At 3am with a heavy buzz on all the features seem right but waking up next to her is like waking up to your prize horse's head at your feet.

That dude woke up looked over and was like, "Please be a natal woman..." checked, breathed a deep sigh of relief, and then asked her to leave because her snoring was destabilizing his building.
 
That dude woke up looked over and was like, "Please be a natal woman..." checked, breathed a deep sigh of relief, and then asked her to leave because her snoring was destabilizing his building.
Depends if she's a natal woman or a (((natal woman))) and at least her snoring didn't collapsed the building... yet.
 

For years, I saw sex as a competitive sport. Then I realised how empty I felt​

No shit sherlock. Its like the second wave of Feminism was just a marxist plot to destabilize the family. Or a bankers plot to destabilize the family and get more women in the work place so they could buy their own homes and rent their own apartments.
 
We have a mess of women that grew up thinking their 20s will last forever. Your 20s is not fun party time, it's to set the stepping stones of the rest of your life in place. Society is fooling women into thinking they can wait until the absolute last moment to find a suitable husband and have some children, they think 32 is a good time to be looking for a life partner, no sweetie, that was a decade ago.
More women than they'd like to admit want a family. "It's not every womans dream to be a mom" yeah but it's the majority. The other half think they can coast on like this woman for the rest of her life, also false. If you aren't having children you better have something else incredibly fulfilling going on. That number is miniscule.
We are going to see an uptick of very sad and lonely older women soon.
 
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