Is sex on the first date a turn off for this man?

I was recently asked by a woman why I thought her date from the previous week hadn’t called her. In particular, she wanted to know if he was turned off by her having had sex on the first date.

First of all: I tell everyone you can’t figure out why somebody doesn’t do something. It’s hard enough to figure out why someone does do something.

Some reasons why her date may have not called:

1. He disapproved of a woman who was willing to have sex on the first date, even though he had encouraged her to do so. This explanation, of course, is the one that occurred to her.
2. He liked her well enough to have sex on the first date with her, but not well enough to have sex with her a second time. This also seemed to her a possibility.
3. He was sick.
4. He lost her telephone number.
4. He was preoccupied with a family illness.
5. He had no money.
6. He was arrested. (And so on.)

Whether sex on the first date is acceptable depends on age

All of these possibilities, some more likely than others, have actually happened to patients whom I have known. Of course, I don’t know why this particular gentleman hasn’t called, but considering that she is 45 years old, and he is older, I don’t think it is because she was willing to have sex on the first date. In other words, whether sex on the first date is considered proper or acceptable depends on the age of the couple.

A 17 or 18 year old girl willing to have sex on the first date, would probably be considered suspect by her partner. He might consider that this meant she was promiscuous.

A woman in her mid-twenties having sex on the first date might lead some men to think she was promiscuous, others not.
If a man dates a woman in her thirties and has sex  on the first date, he is likely to think her sleeping with him meant that she was attracted to him, rather than reflecting a general inclination on her part to sleep casually with anyone.
I think women who are in their forties or older need not worry about their reputation or the unfavorable judgement of their partners if they choose to have sex on the first date.

The social rule for sex on the first date has changed for some

These observations are based on my experience with couples who live in a particular part of the country and during a particular era. In a previous century all premarital sex would have been condemned. Anyone engaging in sex outside of marriage was considered immoral. Many centuries before that the rules had changed again; and sex under most circumstances was acceptable.These social rules shift in other places. In many parts of the world, and in many different cultures, relatively casual sex is still considered immoral. Certain religious, probably most of them, come to think of it, forbid these practices.

Do what you feel is right for you

The bottom line: judging from my experience as a psychiatrist, on balance, it doesn’t make any difference whether someone has sex on the first date or not. There are some men who are encouraged and others turned off by such an early relationship.
Of course, if the woman, herself, disapproves of sex on the first date, or at any other time, she should not engage in it. I don’t think people should do what they think is wrong, no matter what the pressures are.

One other thought: there are women who do not disapprove of behavior that others regard as promiscuous. They are willing to sleep with men they don’t know very well, if the men are attractive. But they are not impervious to the attitudes of others. They are likely to feel bad if they sleep with someone and that man does not call afterwards. It is a sour feeling and one of the reasons that promiscuity is more like a stage that certain women pass through, rather than a settled inclination to behave in such a way.

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© Copyright 2014 Fredric Neuman, M.D., All rights Reserved.
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Fred Neuman, M.D. is the Director of the Anxiety and Phobia Treatment Center. After serving as Associate Director for 21 years, Dr. Neuman assumed the directorship in 1994. Educated at Princeton University and the NYU College of Medicine, Dr. Neuman specializes in the treatment of anxiety disorders. He is the author of the following books: Caring: Home Treatment for the Emotionally Disturbed, Fighting Fear: An Eight Week Guide to Treating Your Own Phobias, Worried Sick?: The Exaggerated Fear of Physical Illness, and Worried Sick? The Workbook. Dr. Neuman is also the author of numerous magazine and newspaper articles on the efficacy of Cognitive/Behavioral Therapy for the treatment of anxiety disorders. Dr. Neuman is a member of the American Psychiatric Society, The American Association for the Advancement of Science and the New York Academy of Science. Dr. Neuman is also the author of the following novels: "The Seclusion Room," Viking Press. "Maneuvers" Dial Press "Come One, Come All," "The Wicked Son," "Detroit Tom and His Gang" "Superpowers." All these books are available from Amazon.

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