Primary and secondary attraction are a couple of those terms. Primary attraction, as I understand it, is sexual attraction that's rooted in that which is immediately apparent about a person- the way they carry themselves, their smell, the clever things they say, all that kind of stuff. Secondary attraction- again, as I understand it- is attraction that develops over time, and is rooted in a relationship.
These terms are usually used to help explain demisexuality. Demisexual folks only develop secondary attraction.
So as these terms have been bouncing around in my mind as of late, I realized that I'm kind of... the opposite.. of demisexual.
Primary attraction isn't actually that rare for me to come by. Lots of people can seem at least moderately shiny to me upon first meeting. Where things fall apart for me is when that novel shininess fades away, and I'm left without any secondary attraction to keep that interest going.
The way that this has manifested in my life has been that my sexual interest in people- people who I really, really love!- consistently drops off within a couple of months. So far as I've found, there's no nice way for that to happen. There aren't cute greeting cards that say, "Yeah, I mean, you smelled really nice! But you're just not sexually interesting to me any more. I still care about you though! Let's still hold hands!"
So I'm pretty well left with two options.
I can have a series of sexual relationships that we both know are going to last a couple of weeks, or if we're lucky, a couple of months. Adding sexual partners is a pretty big emotional investment for me, so on the whole, that's not going to be a very fun option. I can get the occasional kick by making out with folks who, for any number of reasons, aren't on the table as long-term partners, but that's about as far as I'm inclined to go down that road.
Or I can opt to move really slowly into new sexual relationships, until I have a solid feeling that I'm experiencing more than just primary attraction. That also gives me a chance to decide if I feel good about making that emotional investment in them. If I'm still feeling it after the shiny-newness has worn off, game on!
I'm not quite sure what it is that keeps things sustainable. This is where the primary/secondary attraction model seems to break down for me. When I have a sustainable sexual attraction to somebody, I don't think that the root of that attraction is the non-sexual parts of the relationship. I care about my sexual partners, and enjoy spending time with them, but it's not like they're The One(s), by any means.
It's an imperfect model in my case, but an interesting one nonetheless. It's certainly given me a different lens to look through.
I'm not quite sure what it is that keeps things sustainable. This is where the primary/secondary attraction model seems to break down for me. When I have a sustainable sexual attraction to somebody, I don't think that the root of that attraction is the non-sexual parts of the relationship. I care about my sexual partners, and enjoy spending time with them, but it's not like they're The One(s), by any means.
It's an imperfect model in my case, but an interesting one nonetheless. It's certainly given me a different lens to look through.
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