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More people are coming out as Aegosexual – here’s what it means

As discussions around sexuality become more layered, so does the vocabulary used to describe them. One term now drawing attention is aegosexual, an “identity-less” experience that’s defined by “disconnection.”

With gender and sexuality now part of everyday conversation, it’s no surprise that a growing number of new labels are finding their way into the mainstream.

 

Aegosexuality, part of the asexual spectrum, describes people who experience arousal or desire without wanting to engage in sexual activity.

At its core, the identity centers on a disconnect between experiencing attraction and wanting to personally act on it.

‘Disconnection’

The concept was first introduced in 2012 by Canadian psychologist and sexologist Anthony Bogaert, who originally referred to it as “autochorissexualism.” Bogaert described the experience as an “identity-less sexuality,” that’s “characterized by a disconnection between their sense of self and a sexual object or target.”

In practical terms, someone who is aegosexual may enjoy sexual thoughts, fantasies, or erotic material, yet feel detached from the idea of being involved themselves. The attraction exists, but the desire for personal participation does not.

Mental disorder

However, Bogaert’s original framing placed autochorissexualism within the category of “paraphilia.”

Paraphilia is a term used to describe intense sexual interest in atypical objects or behaviors and, according to the American Psychiatric Association (APA), can be classified as a mental disorder.

In fact, the APA explained that paraphilic disorders – some that “cause psychological distress, injury, or death” to “unwilling persons” – include voyeuristic disorder, sexual masochism disorder, sexual sadism disorder, and pedophilic disorder.

Some studies even suggest that certain paraphilic disorders, particularly pedophilic disorder, are “merely impossible to fix,” and only curable with “incarceration.”

Misunderstood

This early classification has since been widely challenged. Advocates and researchers argue that aegosexuality reflects a sexual identity within the asexual spectrum rather than a mental disorder, and that its initial categorization contributed to long-standing stigma.

At the time the concept first emerged, asexuality itself was often misunderstood, explained clinical sexologist Dr. Elyssa Helfer. As a result, identities associated with asexuality were frequently mischaracterized or pathologized.

While awareness of diverse sexual orientations has grown over the years, stigma has not entirely disappeared – particularly when earlier classifications continue to shape public perception.

One persistent misconception is that aegosexuality is the same as voyeurism but experts stress that the two are not equivalent.

Voyeurism, which is often considered a fetish or kink, typically involves deriving sexual pleasure from watching others, often without their knowledge.

Aegosexuality, by contrast, is understood as a sexual identity. According to Helfer, the key difference lies in participation versus fantasy. Aegosexual individuals may experience arousal or fantasies involving others, but without the desire to engage directly in those experiences.

‘Removed from the reality’

Many people who identify as aegosexual have turned to online forums to describe the disconnection in real life, their accounts often emphasizing the separation between the “self and subject of arousal.”

“For me this means it’s never me participating in the daydreams or scenarios I think about. I might be ‘viewing’ things from a first-person perspective, but it’s as a character rather than as myself,” one Reddit user wrote. “I am never actually involved, not as myself. That’s the disconnect between the self and the subject of arousal. Enjoying the idea of a situation but only as long as I’m removed from the ‘reality’ of it.”

A second described the boundary even more directly: “You’re aroused by erotic material and you enjoy that arousal, but it stops being erotic the moment you are included in the material. So, you’re fantasizing about two characters having sex and it does it for you, but the same thing including yourself is not erotic anymore.”

Another user explained “the fantasies are made highly unrealistic, as adding realistic elements would make it less/not appealing.”

For many, simply having language that accurately reflects how they feel is meaningful. In a landscape where labels continue to evolve, aegosexuality offers a way to describe attraction without participation, desire without action, and arousal without involvement.

What do you think about the many labels describing sexuality? Please let us know your thoughts and then share this story so we can hear from others!

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