There is a huge misconception that all women have the same level of sexual or physical need. In reality, desire is extremely individual and influenced by many factors:
- Hormones (which naturally change with age)
- Personality type (introverted vs. extroverted)
- Stress levels and mental health
- Life priorities (career, education, caregiving, etc.)
- Past experiences and emotional associations
Some women naturally have a strong desire for intimacy, while others have very little or none at all. Both experiences are normal variations of human biology and psychology.
There is no “correct” level.
🧘♀️ 4. Long-term absence does NOT damage the body
One of the biggest myths is that lack of physical intimacy causes physical or psychological harm.
However, research does NOT support claims that abstinence leads to:
- illness
- hormonal imbalance by itself
- permanent emotional damage
- reduced lifespan
What can affect mental health is not the absence of intimacy itself, but:
- feeling unwanted or rejected
- loneliness
- lack of emotional support
- unresolved stress or trauma
In other words, the problem is emotional context—not physical absence.
🌍 5. Many people live fulfilling lives without intimacy
Around the world, there are many people who live without physical intimacy for different reasons:
- personal choice (asexuality or celibacy)
- religious beliefs
- focus on career or education
- life circumstances (loss of partner, long-term single life)
- health conditions
And many of them report:
- high life satisfaction
- strong friendships
- meaningful personal goals
- emotional stability
This shows that fulfillment is not dependent on physical intimacy.
🧠 6. What actually determines well-being
A woman’s well-being is shaped far more by:
- mental health
- emotional support system
- financial stability
- sense of purpose
- physical health habits
- stress levels
- self-esteem
These factors have a much stronger impact on happiness and longevity than sexual activity.
A person with strong emotional grounding can thrive without intimacy, while someone emotionally isolated may struggle even if intimacy is present.
💡 7. When absence becomes emotionally difficult