Just before her 30th birthday, British journalist Hephzibah Anderson spotted her college boyfriend ring shopping with another woman ... and was startled to realize that he'd been her last meaningful relationship. Deciding that it was time to give up on flings and get serious about finding love, she decided to do the unthinkable: She gave up sex.Well, for a year, at least.
By taking the focus off of the physical and putting it on to the emotional, Hephzibah hoped to figure out what she hoped to get out of real, lasting love ... and what had been taking her so long to find it. We asked her a few questions about her new book, "Chastened," a brutally honest chronicle of her (sorta) sexless year.
Lemondrop: A lot of people go long stretches without having sex, and it just sort of makes them cranky. What was the hardest part of your chaste year?
Hephzibah Anderson: True! And I'd certainly had that experience myself prior to embarking upon my year without. But what made this so different was that I'd chosen it. Consequently, far from being the archetypal "dry spell," it became an incredibly fertile time of self-discovery, clarity, creativity and deep, emotional connections. All that was ample compensation for what I was missing, which isn't to say it was easy. Spring -- when even the pigeons outside my office window were getting flirty -- was particularly tough. Some of what I learnt along the way was hard to accept, too. For instance, until I stepped back from the sexual fray, I hadn't realized how emotionally guarded a decade of dating had left me.
Do you feel like you lost out on any opportunities by not sleeping with some men? Do you think any of them were off-put?
Not at all. In fact, it became a good litmus test. If a guy absolutely couldn't get why anyone would do such a thing and wasn't curious to find out, it told me he lacked a certain inquisitiveness that made us incompatible in the long run.
In the book, you bring up a lot of feminist theory, but isn't the idea that women who have casual sex narrow their chances of finding true love like, well, the least feminist thing ever?
To me, what's unfeminist is women denying aspects of their female selves. Sure, women repressing their sexual desires falls into that category, but that's not what I'm advocating. For me, stepping back from sex was about rediscovering its meaning. It wasn't about using sex as a bartering chip to snag myself a ring, it was about taking the time to find and savor romance. I think that a lot of women misconstrue equality to mean the right to match guys hook-up for hook-up. Sure, that works for some, but there are plenty of women out there who are repressing their emotional needs for fear of scaring men off and seeming "needy." Is that feminist? Really?
In terms of improving your chances of finding love, don't you have to be just a little suspicious of a guy who wants to leap into bed on the first date? If all you're after is physical sex, fine, but if it's something more multi-dimensional and enduring that you're searching for, you have to wonder why the hurry. Why is he rushing things, unless he figures he has someplace else to be?
I don't really know any guys who aren't religious who would be OK with not having sex. Isn't it sort of an expected part of a healthy relationship?
Absolutely. Sex is an important part of an intimate relationship -- I'm not arguing otherwise. But I think we misuse it sometimes, to create the illusion of intimacy in a dating scenario, to dodge an awkward conversation in a relationship. If you do that too often, sex loses some of it power. I do think that timing is important, too. In certain circumstances, you can short-circuit a potentially meaningful connection by rushing to have sex. Once you've been to bed with someone, the stakes are higher. There are some conversations you feel just too vulnerable to have naked. I actually know plenty of attractive, sane, non-religious guys who would welcome the chance to slow the pace if they saw a future with that person. In my experience, guys tend to be far more evolved when it comes to intimacy and emotions than pop culture gives them credit for.
What was the biggest difference you noticed about dating as a chaste person?
It was more fun -- there was tons more romance, the world in general became a more sensual place, there was even a bit of seduction (though that only went so far, of course). On the whole, less really did become more -- even the brush of a hand could feel delicious. I was also able to better assess guys, and I think I even began to be attracted to a different type of guy during the course of that year. I started noticing men who were quieter, less flashy, less overtly sexy, I guess.
If you had met the guy of your dreams during your year of chastity, would you have quit?
Midway through, I did in fact re-encounter the man who'd semi-inspired my journey by telling me that he wasn't in love with me. As I describe it in the book, his return presented some serious temptation. Of course, it also made me realize how my dreams had changed. But in answer to your question, no, I don't believe I would.
Do you feel like you cheated at all by having an "everything but" policy? Why not take sex totally off the table?
Far from cheating, my lenient-seeming rules made the year infinitely more challenging. It's easier to rule out everything than head a little way down that road, then hit the brakes. Taking sex off the table totally would have made that year into a one-off stunt. As I said, I'm not anti-sex. I was looking to rediscover what I needed from physical intimacy, to separate my own desires from what seemed to be expected of me by my peers, the media, society. Most of all, I wanted to emerge with a viable way of pursuing love into my 30s -- one that was a little less of a roller coaster, a little more graceful, a little more successful.
The ending of the book is a little ... ambiguous. Do you feel different about it now that some time has passed?
Such is life, right? And without totally giving away the ending, I will say that finding myself in the situation you hint at gave me the chance to realize just how much the year had changed me. I think that its real impact has taken some time to be felt, which is why the book's epilogue revisits lots of the questions my journey raised with the benefit of hindsight. It also describes how my relationships -- not just with men, but with friends, family, work, my own body even -- have differed since.
Do you have any regrets? Anything you'd do differently?
No real regrets, though I do wish I'd taken the time to step back and figure some of this stuff out sooner.
Hephzibah Anderson is an author and journalist in London. Her book, "Chastened," is available now from Viking Press.












Comments:
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Friday 02 July
By Star
You make sense ES! very wise words ,)
Friday 02 July
By Wes
I thought this was a fantastic article. Can't understand all of the hostility (in the other comments) toward Ms Anderson and her book. It's cool to see how some self-discipline can bring about a mature change in perspective. Anyone who's given up something either for religious reasons or athletic training or whatever can relate to her experiment.
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Saturday 03 July
By SJS
Too true.... I gave up coffee for capachinos... I'm so proud... Never look back... Thats my motto..
Friday 02 July
By ANDRE WASHINGTON
BECAUSE OF DEMOGRAPHICS,MORE WOMEN THAN MEN, WE FACE AN EVER INCREASING SITUATION WHERE WOMEN ARE BECOMMING MORE VOCAL ABOUT WOMEN ISSSUES, WHICH IS QUITE BORING TO THE AVERAGE MAN. ONE SPENT 80 MIILION DOLLARS AND STATED SHE WOULD ELIMINATE SOCIAL SECURIETY, AND MEDICARE. OBVIOUSLY SHES BEYOUND A MID LIFE CRISIS.M SICNE SHEEBA, AND SOLOMAN, ITS BEEN ESTABLISHED THAT WOMEN ARE NOT SUITED TO RUN A COUNTRY, LET ALONE HER OWN HOUSEHOLD. THEY ARE DEFINTELY FROM ANOTHER PLANET. GOD HELP US IF A WOMAN EVER BECOMES PRESIDENT. IN THE MIDDLE OF A NUCLEAR HOLUCAST SHE WOULD PROBABLY HAVE A HORMONIAL CRISIS
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Friday 02 July
By MARY ACC
YOU SOUND PRETTY STUPID
Friday 02 July
By johnny33405
She certainly is proving it. Self serving lecher inside she is.
Saturday 03 July
By ReveDeuTrois
ANDRE look this is about people who can actually HAVE sex and choose not to. You write like someone beyond 80, so give up the prozac before you go blind, it isnt helping your right hand anyway. Men's issues by comparison are the truly boring ones....balding, erectile dysfunction, paunch, prostrates, nail fungus, not asking for directions and kill the whole family as a result, flatulance, cum mold under the family computer desk, etc etc. Yes a woman will be president and you will HATE IT all the way from the grave where you will be long rotten and well rid of.
Friday 02 July
By texvoodoo2
So let me see if I got this straight. She gave it up to her previous boyfriends, but now, she's not going to have sex with her current boyfriends in a quest to find true love? Yeah, good luck with that darlin.
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Friday 02 July
By Mark
She should have just gotten married. Then she wouldn't of had sex for 2 years!
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Friday 02 July
By Joe
Who really cares about her sexual hiatus... The crap that passes for literature or even news in this day and age is incredible ...........
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Friday 02 July
By KESSCLANN
I THINK CLINTON GOT HIS COCH SUCKED AND JIZED ALL OVER SOME FAT SKANK WHORE WILE HE WAS SHOVEING A STOGIE UP MONICAS REEMED OUT SLOPPY GASH AND THAT WASENT ZEX ITHER OK SHURE THIS SLUT IS A LIAR
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Saturday 03 July
By MK(2012)
Sounds like we have a few trolls...
Friday 02 July
By MARY ACC
THIS IS A LAUGH...TRY 35 YEARS WITHOUT SEX....HAHA ONE YEAR, 10 MONTHS, 6 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS? iTS ALL SO FUNNY TO ME. BE HAPPY FOR THE TIME YOU DO HAVE SEX BECAUSE ALL TOO SOON, ITS GONE, WHEN YOU LOSE YOUR SPOUSE FOR INSTANCE, OR WHEN ILLNESS PREVENTS IT, OR FOR ANY OTHER FORSEEN REASON.
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Friday 02 July
By eeeliana
wow! what a big deal, I gave up sex for 3 years do a story about me.... :P
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Saturday 03 July
By B
A year with out sex, what's the big deal? It's called Marriage.
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Friday 02 July
By Tyler
Many people go up to a year without sex after a hurtful relationship, it's nothing news. We all just don't write about it. Going the rest of your life without sex is another story. But wait does pleasuring yourself count as gettin' some? You're still being sexual or does she just not touch herself at all. If you're playing with yourself I can see easily getting through a year without doing it with someone else.
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Friday 02 July
By Tee
I am sorry but I don't get it, are we supposed to give her a medal for that? Oh so, she did not have sex for one year, ergo she must be featured in an article because she is practically saint!!!!!!!!!!
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Friday 02 July
By Capt.Joe
What absolute drivel!!!!!!
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Friday 02 July
By SAM
WHO GIVES A SHIT ABOUT YOUR SEX LIFE. WHY DON'T YOU GO PISS UP A ROPE.
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Friday 02 July
By Teresa
Whatever happened to saving sex for marriage? Abstinence until marriage and then only having sex with one's husband or wife is the Biblical mandate and is the only 100% way to avoid STDs and being pregnant out of wedlock.
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