• last year
Credit: SWNS / Mickie Wadsworth

A graduate student says they’ve never been sexually attracted to anyone despite being in a three-year relationship – and doesn’t “feel romantic love”.

Mickie Wadsworth, 24, realised they were asexual when they had sex for the first time at aged 17 and “felt meh” afterwards.

They would want to make-out or hold hands with others but said those desires disappeared when things get more sexual.

Mickie labels themselves as a sex indifferent asexual – meaning they are not repulsed by sex but feel detached from it.

For Mickie finding someone “physically attractive” is important and they are now in a committed three year relationship with their partner, David, 24, an actor.
Transcript
00:00 As an asexual person, I have never once looked at someone and been like, "I want to see you unclothed."
00:07 [music]
00:28 For those of you that don't know, asexuality is little to no sexual attraction,
00:36 but there's a big umbrella under that of identities.
00:42 It's not just like, "I'm asexual and that's it."
00:46 There's a lot of other stuff. It's a spectrum. It's very fluid.
00:51 [music]
01:20 [silence]

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