AITAH For Telling My Girlfriend I’m Not Comfortable Being Intimate After Something She Shared With Me?

A 23-year-old man has been in a loving, year-long relationship with his 21-year-old girlfriend, whom he sees a serious future with. She is kind, smart, supportive, and they share deep affection when she stays over at his place for days at a time. Physical intimacy has always felt mutual and close—until a casual conversation changed everything. During that talk, she openly shared that while she enjoys being intimate with him, physical sex itself isn’t something she personally craves or prioritizes.

For her, the act is more about emotional closeness and making him happy than about her own physical desire. Her honesty shocked him, leaving him feeling uneasy about the idea that she might have been participating more out of love than genuine enthusiasm. He paused intimacy to process his discomfort, but the timing hurt her deeply, sparking accusations that he was selfish and ego-driven.

‘AITAH For Telling My Girlfriend I’m Not Comfortable Being Intimate After Something She Shared With Me?’

The relationship felt strong and affectionate until one honest conversation.

I (23M) have been dating my girlfriend (21F) for a little over a year, and I genuinely love her. She’s kind, intelligent, motivated, supportive — truly someone I see a...

We don’t live together yet, but she often stays over at my place for several days at a time. When we’re together, we’re very close and affectionate. I usually initiate...

Her candid admission shifted how he viewed their physical connection.

Recently, during a casual conversation, she mentioned that while she enjoys being close with me, physical intimacy itself isn’t something she personally prioritizes or actively craves.

She explained that for her, it’s more about emotional connection and making me happy than about her own physical enjoyment.

This completely caught me off guard. I don’t doubt her honesty, and I don’t think she was trying to hurt me — but I won’t lie, it really affected me.

It made me feel uncomfortable and conflicted, almost like I was unknowingly putting her in a position where she felt obligated rather than genuinely enthusiastic. That idea didn’t sit right...

He expressed his discomfort, but the timing and wording led to hurt feelings on both sides.

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I asked if there was anything I could do differently, but she reassured me that it wasn’t about me and told me not to overthink it. Still, I couldn’t shake...

Later that night, I realized I wasn’t emotionally okay continuing things as usual. I told her I needed to pause because I felt uneasy knowing we weren’t on the same...

Unfortunately, I chose a really bad moment to bring this up, and she was understandably hurt and offended. She told me I was making it all about myself and that...

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From her perspective, she was choosing closeness with me, and I was rejecting that. From my perspective, I was trying to respect her feelings and my own discomfort. To be...

People experience intimacy differently, and that’s valid. I’m just struggling to process this new information and how it makes me feel within the relationship. So… AITAH for needing to stop...

This situation highlights a common but painful mismatch in how partners experience sexual desire and intimacy. The girlfriend’s perspective—that sex is enjoyable primarily because it strengthens emotional closeness and pleases her partner—is valid and not uncommon, especially among people with lower sexual desire or those on the asexual spectrum. Her willingness to engage still reflects care and investment in the relationship, not obligation or resentment.

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However, the boyfriend’s reaction is equally understandable. For many, mutual enthusiasm and reciprocal desire are core to feeling truly wanted and connected during sex. Learning that his partner doesn’t crave the physical act itself can trigger feelings of rejection, imbalance, or even guilt over past intimacy. Pausing to process those emotions shows respect for consent and emotional honesty rather than ego. The conflict arose partly from poor timing and delivery, which amplified her hurt, but the underlying issue is deeper: differing libidos and definitions of what makes sex meaningful.

Long-term, couples in this position benefit most from open, non-judgmental conversations—exploring boundaries, frequency preferences, and non-sexual ways to feel close—without pressure to “fix” anyone’s wiring. If the mismatch creates ongoing distress, professional guidance like couples therapy can help both partners feel heard and valued.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many commenters validated both sides, explaining that her feelings about sex are common and not a rejection of him, while acknowledging his discomfort is legitimate.

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Evening-Onion-7497 − It sounds like, to me at least, she cares about the *emotional* intimacy that comes from s__. The physical pleasure may be lesser or unimportant,

but the emotional closeness and emotional intimacy is what she likes. She wants to feel close TO YOU, which is why she wants to have s__ with you. It’s not...

I think it’s something like this: there are activities I dont care for; there’s nothing wrong with them but it’s eh. However, someone I love wants to do that activity.

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I love doing that activity because I’m WITH THEM, they make me happy, this makes them happy. I love the activity when I’m with them, but maybe I don’t love...

CheapOrphan − Im gonna say neither of you are an a__hole and the comments section is wild lmao. I think she just didn’t convey what she meant properly.

I agree with the person that did the bowling analogy. She enjoys you and she enjoys s__, she just is saying s__ isn’t a dealbreaker in the relationship. People are...

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I’d honestly just apologize and have another conversation about it with her now. It sounds like the first time it came up was just unexpected and threw you for a...

[Reddit User] − NAH. I'm an asexual guy whose girlfriend has expressed the same reservations as you - because I'm not particularly interested in s__, she felt like it's coercive...

What worked for us was just several discussions and a lot of communication about what we wanted out of s__ and what we were comfortable and uncomfortable with.

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I don't know whether your GF is asexual or not, so I can't speak to that, but you both need to actually talk to each other rather than just assuming...

Competitive_Town_856 − I feel her 100%. It’s hard to explain but I’ll try. So for some people (for me) s__ is not something that we care about or necessarily want/need...

Basically it’s just like we do it for the sake of the relationship mostly but we would be fine with never having s__. Kind of like A-s__ual.

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Like let’s say you’re not into idk bowling for example but your partner is so you’ll go bowling and you can even have a good time doing it but you...

Hopefully that makes sense. Don’t take it as an attack on you it just is what it is. Everyone isn’t super s__ual no matter how “good/great” s__ can be it’s...

A number of users sided more with the poster, feeling that her admission created a real emotional imbalance and that dismissing his feelings was unfair.

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WildRefrigerator9479 − NTA. Did she actually use the word ego? Because that’s dismissive of your feelings. I Edit: Totally bad timing so that’s a d__k move but you’re allowed to...

CyclicRate38 − NTA but she kind of is for dismissing your feelings. Because guess what? When it comes to your feelings it is in fact all about you.

I think most men would feel the same way as you if our spouse or girlfriend told us what yours told you. I don't know how you work that out....

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HereReluctantly − My wife is similar, she enjoys s__ but it's so low priority for her. When she has s__ she enjoys it but she's not craving it and very...

People are just different. That said, if you have a high libido I'd be very concerned if I were you that s__ will taper off to dead bedroom as the...

Some comments offered neutral takes, emphasizing communication, the need for clarity, and the possibility that both are valid.

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[Reddit User] − NTA S__ is a powerful experience and part of what makes it powerful is the reciprocal nature. Finding out that while you were experiencing “love making” they...

Most people feel a great deal of love and validation from s__, knowing your partner is just not attracted to you in the same unavoidable,

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and vulnerable way that you are attracted to them reveals a power imbalance that can be very troubling. It makes the s__ual partner feel like a fool. You thought you...

S__ isn’t just a release of animalistic desire. That’s what masturbation is. S__ is something more and it is understandably difficult to want to have s__ with someone who doesn’t...

[Reddit User] − I’m confused. At first she says “I can relate to not enjoying it” and she explained that most of the time she just doesn’t enjoy having s__.

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but then later claims she enjoys having s__ with you and enjoys you. It’s not really clear what she means.

[Reddit User] − You choose a bad time to tell her, no doubt about that. But i don't blame you for losing the interest in s__ when she is only...

But of course you want her to wanna have s__ with you because she gets just as much out of it as you do. You are NTA

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This story shows how differing experiences of sexual desire can create unexpected emotional distance in an otherwise loving relationship. The man’s pause reflects a desire for mutual enthusiasm rather than obligation, while his girlfriend’s honesty highlights that intimacy can mean different things to different people. With better timing and continued open dialogue, they may find a path forward that honors both perspectives.

How would you handle discovering your partner doesn’t crave sex the same way you do—talk it through immediately, take space to process, or something else? Have you ever navigated mismatched libidos in a relationship? What helped? Share your thoughts below.

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