Advice

Sexual Desire

Anonymous
Question

I’m a teen girl, and although I’ve never even kissed anyone, I have a weirdly high amount of sexual⁠ desire⁠. It’s not me wanting to have sex⁠ with a specific person, I just feel horny all the time and masturbate a lot. I feel like a stereotypical teenage boy with out⁠-of-control hormones⁠ (especially since I’m a lesbian⁠). I’m scared there’s something wrong with me.

Is there something wrong with you? Absolutely, definitely, no. 

First things first, let’s dispel some myths. There is widespread normalization of cis hetero teenage boys feeling horny. We see this in all kinds of media, in casual conversation, in phrases like “boys will be boys” used to excuse sexual assault⁠. In teenage girls, queer⁠, and trans folks, developmentally typical desire⁠ and arousal⁠ is taught to be hidden away and often labeled as abnormal. It can create shame, silence, and isolation. It is both blatantly untrue and a very influential myth that women just don’t have sexual⁠ desire like men do. The less we feel like we can talk about something, the less we’re probably seeing it on a social level! 

So, I wonder: what does WEIRDLY high mean to you? What does masturbating “a lot” mean? 

Something I’ve observed both from working here and from having been a gay⁠ teenage girl is that a lot of us struggle to accept our sexual desires. Lesbians (of all ages and experience levels) face some especially severe stereotypes and stigma around desire. In media, there are tropes of predatory lesbians and extreme sexualization of lesbians. I remember random boys coming up to me at school and asking if they could watch (as in, watch me and my at-the-time girlfriend have sex⁠), comments from friends about not wanting to change in front of me, and feeling like it was way too inappropriate to kiss my girlfriend in public. I felt like the culture around me interpreted my gayness as being an out⁠-of-control horny sex monster, so any level of libido⁠ was automatically TOO MUCH

Patriarchy and similar systems of power work so well and stick around so persistently because these ideas are ingrained into our own heads. There is a very effective political strategy we are seeing in pretending that queer folks are sexually aggressive⁠ or predatory, to keep us from public spaces and restricting our autonomy⁠. It is not so hard to internalize that messaging. A way to challenge internalized ideas like this is to ask yourself: whose voice is this thought? Does it belong to me, or is it my mom, a politician, my friend, someone on Instagram? 

I urge you to honor your feelings. If you are feeling uncomfortably high amounts of sexual desires and masturbation⁠ isn’t cutting it, feel free to enter the legions of horny people channeling that into writing, art, or inspired readings of homoeroticism in Shakespeare, just to name a few.

You are probably going to keep seeing messaging that women just don’t have desires like men do. But, they totally, absolutely do. Your desires are yours, and I hope they lead you to much pleasure and joy. 

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    The news is full of the wrong ways to try to have sex. Forever we’ve seen high profile men – almost always men – chasing people for sex, abusively. For the last few years, some high-profile men have been held at least a little accountable for it, which means it is not always swept under the rug anymore. But now that the abuse is more visible, if you stare into that abyss long enough, it might start to stare back at you. You could end up lying on your bed wondering if being a guy while being horny is somehow inherently tainted and gross. Most of us want to find someone or a few someones, for relationships or hookups, but right now, looking at some of that foulness, it might feel like trying to find a partner is a minefield of red flags because men’s sexuality is inextricably abusive.

    It isn’t.