So I’m Not a Virgin Anymore

I donā€™t even know what song was playing. If you read my previous article you know that that was kind of a big deal for me.

He didnā€™t love me and I didnā€™t love him so for the sake of protecting my feelings I lowered all expectations. It was naĆÆve of me to expect the fictional fireworks, but I’d be lying if I denied part of me wanted that. Ā We had hooked up before and I had shut down his advances because I was nervous, scared even.

I keep on wondering what made this time different. Maybe it was because of the hug he gave me when he walked into my room. Maybe it was the jokes that he cracked while I laid my head on his chest. Or maybe it was the promises he made of all of the Pinterest worthy things we would do after.

Regardless, it happened.

There wasnā€™t any dedicated foreplay, whispers of sweet nothings, or really any indication that he felt anything for me, but I wanted him so badly in that moment that it didnā€™t matter. Initially, the sex felt great until my mind convinced me otherwise. Heā€™s using you,Ā circled around in my head — but I ignored it and tried to re-focus on the way that he held my hand. We went for a few rounds and he finished each time and each time the voice in my head grew louder. I silenced it, distracting myself with the way he traced lines over my skin and played with my hair.

Iā€™ll be the first to admit that I am clueless on a Cher Horowitz level when it comes to intimacy, so I took these as signs that he had to care about me. That even though virginity is a construct, he acknowledgedĀ what I had “given” to him. At least, I chose to believe this as I lay awake, my mind too chaotic to sleep as he snored beside me, his arm wrapped around my body. I forced myself to believe this until even the morning when I realized he had left without saying goodbye.Ā 

I finally started to stop believing it when he Snapchatted me a random picture that had nothing to do with our night. When I saw her stumbling to his room with another girl the day later, I realized how childish I had actually been.

I grew up Catholic, therefore the guilt of premarital sex hung above my head. I allowed the shame I was taught in church to steal away my appetite and interrupt my sleep.

Things got a little better when the dam of emotions broke and I finally gave a tearful confession to my less religious mother who assured me that I hadnā€™t done anything wrong. That what I did with him was natural. I was an adult, after all. Something I sometimesĀ forget.

For the sake of complete transparency, I will admit that I am not sure if I regret it or not. I turn it over and over in my head and I canā€™t decipher the emotions that come along with the thoughts. I do wish that I wouldā€™ve taken more time to get to know who he genuinely was so that I could have spared myself the feelings of disappointment.

And though this retelling of events was a total bummer, itā€™s true what they say… you never forget your first anything.

 

PhotoĀ courtesyĀ of the STAA Collective.Ā 

 

I’m a 22-Year-Old Virgin

I have a weird relationship with sex, in the sense that I donā€™t really have one at all.

A few traumatizing years of private catholic school, cheating parents, andĀ  premature exposure to some pretty terrifying porn gave me an aversion to sex that lasted well, until now.

When I was 16 years old I made a promise to myself and, I guess, the universe that I would lose my virginity to the hook of the Disclosure and Sam Smith song “Latch.” Iā€™d had the whole thing planned out; the stuff of fanfiction dreams.Ā The person would be taller than me, have a nice car, dress nicely, and the most important requirement of all: theyā€™d be in love with me.

Six years go by and the song at the top of the charts isnā€™t “Latch” anymore. In fact, Disclosure announced their hiatus after I graduated high school and now here I am on a college campus… still a virgin.

Obviously people donā€™t know this until I tell them, but when I do, Iā€™m naturallyĀ asked, “Why?”

When I was a teen I would answer with, “I donā€™t want to go to hell for premartial sex,” — but that wasnā€™t me speaking. It was the scary nuns that taught a bunch of kids nothing about sex ed and everything about the immaculate conception. The real answer was uncovered after a few intense therapy sessions coaxed it out of me.Ā 

After wondering why I squirmed and grew quiet when my friends spoke of their hookups, I was discovered that among issues of body image and self confidence struggles, I held a deep-seeded fear of intimacy. I couldnā€™t fathom the thought that sexĀ wasnā€™t always the stuff of fairytales and One Direction fanfics. It required physical and emotional connection. I feared the thought of sharing my body with another person. Iā€™d seen, of course, historically and firsthand the power that sex had over people and the power that it did not.Ā 

How you could ā€˜giveā€™ away part of yourself to someone and not have it matter at all — or have it matter too much — I still canā€™t seem to grasp. Iā€™m not afraid of the act, Iā€™d gotten to the “do you want toā€¦?” portion a handful of times, but Iā€™ll always answer coyly or with a kiss to distract them.Ā 

I become paralyzed when I think of the influence they might gain over me after we have sex.Ā Iā€™d been the background character in enough peopleā€™s love stories to know aboutĀ the term “dickmatized”, and I believed it truly existed. Iā€™d waited this long, would finally losing my virginity to someone put me in a more vulnerable position?Ā 

“That is your anxiety talking,ā€ my therapist would tell me. Was it? Or was it my brain picking apart my true personality?

Only recently have I grown curious about having a sexual relationship. How could I not? It was all around me. The media, group messages, private messages, finsta posts all raging about one thing: sex. Sometimes my curiosity is so severe that I think I might combust. Other times I write it off with a shrug and think to myself, Whatā€™s another 22 years?

I donā€™t mean it, of course, as Iā€™m actively on dating apps and a little too quick to text back someone Iā€™m interested in. However, I’m decidedly not in a rush to have sex for the first time, not anymore.

Iā€™ll keep on telling my therapist about the person who kissed me three months ago and how I wish Iā€™d thrown caution to the wind and just went for it. Sheā€™ll keep listening to and telling me why she thinks I didnā€™t go all the way. Iā€™ll heed her advice as I always do, but stay content with the fact that Iā€™m learning how to be ready. And soon, Iā€™ll know when I am.

In the meantime, “Latch” is still an excellent song to loop.Ā 

 

Art and photos by Lucia Rosenast.Ā