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No, It’s Not Weird To Be A Virgin In University

Photographed by Francena Ottley.
From American Pie to Bottoms, there are plenty of teen comedies about students trying to lose their virginities before graduating high school. Watching these movies, you might think that starting university without having had sex is something really strange and unusual. But research shows that that’s not the case at all — and that’s without getting into the complications of what virginity even means in the first place.
According to the World Population Review, the average age at which Australians first have penis-in-vagina sex is 18.1 years. But keep in mind this is an average, which means that there many people are older than 17 when they first have sex. SKYN’s 2019 Sex & Initimacy survey found that the average age respondents first had sex was 18, and that 30% of Gen Z respondents (ages 18 to 22) have never had sex. Other data shows that we're losing our virginities later: one 2016 study found that people born in the 1980s and 1990s were more likely to have had zero sexual partners at age 18 than previous generations.
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As the Cut points out in a piece appropriately titled “University Virgins Are A Mostly Silent Almost-Majority,” it’s not even unusual to graduate from university without ever having sex. That happens for about 20% of students in the United States, according to the Online University Social Life Survey. That’s one in five people.
Complicating the discussion is that fact most of these studies define “losing your virginity” as your first time having penis-in-vagina sex, which is a pretty narrow way to look at it. Plenty of LGBTQ+ folks never have P-in-V, after all. In reality, people view “losing your virginity” in a whole range of ways — such as their first time having an orgasm with a partner, their first time having consensual sex, or their first time having oral or anal sex
All that said, if you’re a university student who’s never had sex, it’s understandable if you feel a little insecure about it, thanks to all the messaging we get from pop culture. Liz Goldwyn, founder of The Sex Ed, a multimedia platform for sex, health and consciousness education, tells Refinery29, “You may be surprised to know how many mid-20s, 30s and older ‘virgins’ there are out there who feel ashamed of their status.”
If you don’t feel great about your status, she has two pieces of advice. First, rethink the concept of “virginity.” "Try to have a broader view of what ‘sex’ is — this can include oral, fingering, orgasm with a toy (with or without a partner) and more," she says. "We need to challenge what the construct of ‘virginity’ is in the first place."
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Next, try not to compare yourself to others. “Don’t compare your sexual status to anyone else (as hard as that may be) — we have to be responsible for our OWN level of comfort and desires," Goldwyn says. "That is what being sex positive is all about.”
Being a virgin in university isn't unusual — and it isn't anything to be embarrassed about, either. Plenty of your classmates have never had sex, either, even if they don't talk about it. And even if being a virgin in university was rare, there's nothing wrong with having a different type of sexual experience than someone else — no two people are the same, and that includes their sex lives.
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