
Darkover
Archangel
- Jul 29, 2021
- 5,573
Let's talk about a form of sexual repression that hardly anyone acknowledges — the kind that doesn't come from religion, family guilt, or internal shame…
but from reality itself.
From living in a world that doesn't meet your needs.
From spending years — sometimes your whole life — invisible, untouched, unwanted.
From being alive in a body wired for connection, intimacy, and affection… but being systematically starved of all of it.
This isn't the kind of repression you chose.
You didn't decide to "abstain," or "focus on yourself," or live like a monk.
You simply ended up in a life — or more accurately, were thrown into one — where your sexual needs, emotional desires, and longing for closeness have nowhere to go.
No partner. No touch. No affection. No intimacy.
Just a locked-in, slow-burning ache — day after day, year after year.
And the worst part?
No one talks about it.
Society pretends this pain doesn't exist.
If you bring it up, you're labeled bitter, entitled, "incel," toxic, broken, defective, or just told to "man up" or "be patient."
They don't get it.
Because this isn't just sexual frustration — it's emotional isolation.
It's waking up every day knowing your needs will go unmet.
It's watching others form bonds, touch, kiss, love, fuck — while you sit on the sidelines, like a ghost.
You try not to care.
You try to bury it, numb it, outgrow it.
But that hunger doesn't go away — it just mutates. Into shame. Into rage. Into a deep, hollow emptiness you carry everywhere.
People say "repression" and imagine someone guilty about their urges.
But what about the kind of repression that comes from deprivation?
What about when the environment itself is the enemy?
When you're never chosen, never desired, never given a chance — and so your body becomes your prison, and your mind turns on itself?
That kind of repression isn't abstract. It's a slow psychological death.
It makes you question your worth.
It makes you feel less than human.
And the longer it lasts, the more it becomes not just something you're enduring —
But something that's defining your whole existence.
there's another kind of repression no one talks about.
The kind that's not internal.
The kind that's not chosen.
The kind that's forced on you by a cold, indifferent environment that offers you nothing.
This is sexual repression through deprivation — when the world around you refuses to meet your needs, ignores your existence, and leaves you trapped with natural, burning desire and absolutely nowhere to put it.
You didn't repress yourself.
You were repressed by the world.
By rejection.
By isolation.
By being constantly unwanted, overlooked, or flat-out invisible.
While other people talk about love, dating, affection, or even casual sex as if it's just part of life, yours has been a reality of watching from behind a wall of glass — years go by, and you remain untouched, unfelt, unloved.
You feel broken, not because you are — but because you're human, and humans are wired for connection, for closeness, for sexual and emotional intimacy.
To be denied that year after year becomes a psychological wound.
A wound no one sees.
A wound most don't believe exists.
And when you talk about it? You're shamed. Laughed at. Mocked. Told to "get over it."
You're labeled "bitter," "weird," "incel," or "entitled."
But it was never about entitlement — it was about being forgotten. Being excluded.
Living a life of involuntary celibacy, involuntary touch starvation, involuntary abandonment.
That's not a "dry spell." That's a form of suffering.
You try to numb it.
Distract yourself.
Tell yourself it doesn't matter.
But the need is there. The ache is there.
And when it's unmet for too long, it becomes a form of silent torment — the kind you carry in your bones.
Not having your sexuality reflected or responded to by the world doesn't make you a pervert.
It makes you human living in deprivation.
This isn't about obsession with sex. It's about the total absence of touch, affection, intimacy, and acknowledgment.
It makes you question your worth.
It makes you feel inhuman.
And it can crush your self-esteem until you don't even recognize who you are anymore.
If this speaks to you, you're not alone — even if the world tries to make you feel like you are.
You didn't choose this pain.
It was inflicted by neglect, by a world that kept you locked out while pretending everyone has access.
That repression is real.
That deprivation is real.
And the damage it does — psychologically, emotionally, even spiritually — is very, very real.
You're not broken for needing.
You're broken because you were starved.
And that truth deserves to be said — out loud.
but from reality itself.
From living in a world that doesn't meet your needs.
From spending years — sometimes your whole life — invisible, untouched, unwanted.
From being alive in a body wired for connection, intimacy, and affection… but being systematically starved of all of it.
This isn't the kind of repression you chose.
You didn't decide to "abstain," or "focus on yourself," or live like a monk.
You simply ended up in a life — or more accurately, were thrown into one — where your sexual needs, emotional desires, and longing for closeness have nowhere to go.
No partner. No touch. No affection. No intimacy.
Just a locked-in, slow-burning ache — day after day, year after year.
And the worst part?
No one talks about it.
Society pretends this pain doesn't exist.
If you bring it up, you're labeled bitter, entitled, "incel," toxic, broken, defective, or just told to "man up" or "be patient."
They don't get it.
Because this isn't just sexual frustration — it's emotional isolation.
It's waking up every day knowing your needs will go unmet.
It's watching others form bonds, touch, kiss, love, fuck — while you sit on the sidelines, like a ghost.
You try not to care.
You try to bury it, numb it, outgrow it.
But that hunger doesn't go away — it just mutates. Into shame. Into rage. Into a deep, hollow emptiness you carry everywhere.
People say "repression" and imagine someone guilty about their urges.
But what about the kind of repression that comes from deprivation?
What about when the environment itself is the enemy?
When you're never chosen, never desired, never given a chance — and so your body becomes your prison, and your mind turns on itself?
That kind of repression isn't abstract. It's a slow psychological death.
It makes you question your worth.
It makes you feel less than human.
And the longer it lasts, the more it becomes not just something you're enduring —
But something that's defining your whole existence.
there's another kind of repression no one talks about.
The kind that's not internal.
The kind that's not chosen.
The kind that's forced on you by a cold, indifferent environment that offers you nothing.
This is sexual repression through deprivation — when the world around you refuses to meet your needs, ignores your existence, and leaves you trapped with natural, burning desire and absolutely nowhere to put it.
You didn't repress yourself.
You were repressed by the world.
By rejection.
By isolation.
By being constantly unwanted, overlooked, or flat-out invisible.
While other people talk about love, dating, affection, or even casual sex as if it's just part of life, yours has been a reality of watching from behind a wall of glass — years go by, and you remain untouched, unfelt, unloved.
You feel broken, not because you are — but because you're human, and humans are wired for connection, for closeness, for sexual and emotional intimacy.
To be denied that year after year becomes a psychological wound.
A wound no one sees.
A wound most don't believe exists.
And when you talk about it? You're shamed. Laughed at. Mocked. Told to "get over it."
You're labeled "bitter," "weird," "incel," or "entitled."
But it was never about entitlement — it was about being forgotten. Being excluded.
Living a life of involuntary celibacy, involuntary touch starvation, involuntary abandonment.
That's not a "dry spell." That's a form of suffering.
You try to numb it.
Distract yourself.
Tell yourself it doesn't matter.
But the need is there. The ache is there.
And when it's unmet for too long, it becomes a form of silent torment — the kind you carry in your bones.
Not having your sexuality reflected or responded to by the world doesn't make you a pervert.
It makes you human living in deprivation.
This isn't about obsession with sex. It's about the total absence of touch, affection, intimacy, and acknowledgment.
It makes you question your worth.
It makes you feel inhuman.
And it can crush your self-esteem until you don't even recognize who you are anymore.
If this speaks to you, you're not alone — even if the world tries to make you feel like you are.
You didn't choose this pain.
It was inflicted by neglect, by a world that kept you locked out while pretending everyone has access.
That repression is real.
That deprivation is real.
And the damage it does — psychologically, emotionally, even spiritually — is very, very real.
You're not broken for needing.
You're broken because you were starved.
And that truth deserves to be said — out loud.