Difference between revisions of "Gray-A/Grey-A"

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* people who are technically sexual, but feel that it's not an important part of their lives and don't identify with standard sexual culture
 
* people who are technically sexual, but feel that it's not an important part of their lives and don't identify with standard sexual culture
 
* people who experience sexual attraction and drive, but not strongly enough to want to act on them
 
* people who experience sexual attraction and drive, but not strongly enough to want to act on them
 +
* [[Functionally asexual]]s who experience sexual feelings but do not engage in them
 
* people who can enjoy and desire sex, but only under very limited and specific circumstances
 
* people who can enjoy and desire sex, but only under very limited and specific circumstances
 
* people who experience some parts of sexuality but not others, according to a theoretical model such as [[Rabger's model|Rabger's]][http://www.asexuality.org/en/index.php?showtopic=19379]
 
* people who experience some parts of sexuality but not others, according to a theoretical model such as [[Rabger's model|Rabger's]][http://www.asexuality.org/en/index.php?showtopic=19379]

Revision as of 21:12, 5 October 2008

Asexuality and sexuality are not black and white; some people identify in the grey area between them. People who identify this way can include, but are not limited to:

  • people who do not normally experience sexual attraction, but do experience it sometimes
  • people who experience sexual attraction, but a low sex drive
  • people who are technically sexual, but feel that it's not an important part of their lives and don't identify with standard sexual culture
  • people who experience sexual attraction and drive, but not strongly enough to want to act on them
  • Functionally asexuals who experience sexual feelings but do not engage in them
  • people who can enjoy and desire sex, but only under very limited and specific circumstances
  • people who experience some parts of sexuality but not others, according to a theoretical model such as Rabger's[1]

Some people who most on AVEN would consider asexual choose to identify with the grey area instead, because they prefer a narrower definition of asexuality than AVEN's. For example, an asexual with a sex drive who prefers the nonlibidoist definition of asexuality might identify as semisexual rather than asexual.

Similarly, some people who might technically belong to the grey area choose to identify as asexual because it is easier to explain. For example, if someone has experienced sexual attraction on one or two brief, fleeting occasions in their life, they might prefer to call themselves asexual because it is not worth the bother of having to explain the one or two brief, fleeting occasions to everyone who asks about their orientation.

Terms

The most common term used to refer to the grey area is "grey-A". Other terms that have been used for the gray area include "hyposexual", "demisexual", "semisexual", "pseudosexual "low sexual intensity", "low-key sexual", "soft sexual", "nearly sexual", "not quite sexual", "halfway sexual", "asexual-ish", "sexual-ish", "sexual but not very sexual", "almost sexual", "middling", and "gentle sexual".

Some of these terms refer to specific parts of the grey area rather than the entire grey area.

Hyposexual can be used as a catch-all term for the grey area, but in standard medical parlance the term refers to a sexual person with a low sex drive.[2] This can be a lifelong condition or occur because of stress or changing hormone levels. Most professionals consider hyposexuality a sexual dysfunction, but on AVEN the consensus is that, like asexuality, it should not be treated as a disorder if it does not cause the hyposexual person any distress.

Demisexual has two closely related uses. It tends to be used by adherents to Rabger's model of sexuality, referring to people who experience secondary sexual attraction but not primary sexual attraction (however, it should be noted that Rabger's model defines asexuality as a lack of primary sexual desire rather than a lack of attraction). It is also used, more generally, to describe people who only experience sexual attraction to a single romantic partner.[3]