Sex, Anxiety and OCD

They don’t show sexual anxiety in the movies

Kate Warrington
4 min readApr 7, 2022
Sexual anxiety
Photo by Sydney Sims on Unsplash

This article is part of the column Overthinking Everything at She Explores Life.

I rarely find the sex scenes of TV shows and movies relatable. Particularly those of zealous lovers or steamy hookups. The reasons for this vary. One is entertainment’s tendency to favor fantasy over reality. Sex on the screen is perhaps meant to look different, better even, than sex in real life. It occasionally embraces the less sexy, awkward elements but sexual anxiety — and I’m not just talking about sexual performance anxiety — is rarely portrayed in ways that feel truly real.

The thing that strikes me as most notable, or different, is how easy sex looks on TV. There are some exceptions, but for the most part, sex is presented as something that happens swiftly with little forethought and often no real consequence. Every once in a while there is a character who gives us a sliver of vulnerability. Maybe they hype themselves up in the bathroom beforehand. Or we feel for them when the experience doesn’t go quite the way they’d hoped. But other times, everything seems to go completely and totally right.

As the characters move seamlessly onto the next scene, flaunting an air of casual confidence, I’m often sitting on the couch wondering why I too can’t be cool about sex. Anxiety

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Kate Warrington
Kate Warrington

Written by Kate Warrington

Writing about mental health, sexual wellness, OCD and other musings. Follow @katewarrington on Substack and @warrington_kate on Instagram

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