Hey Deja! In addition to all of the wonderful insight and questions Heather has mentioned here (that I also am finding helpful to think about), it can also be important to remember that: EVERYONE has things they’re insecure about.
Even if someone you meet has sexual/relationship experience, you likely won’t be going out with someone who has zero insecurities, so it might help to know that you’ll also be dealing with someone who has some fears related to sharing certain things about themself with you too. And there are even people, like a close friend of mine, who have insecurities for the exact opposite reason— because they have a lot of sexual experience and are worried that someone would judge them for that. Personally, I don’t care if someone has a lot of experience (I actually think it can be a positive thing!), but this is something that my friend was worried their inexperienced date would judge them for.
Also, presumably since you’re going to be telling a potential partner about your inexperience after you’ve spent some time together, this means that by that point they’ll already have gotten to know all of the great things about you that make you the wonderfully unique person you are— this makes someone more likely to be understanding and supportive of the things that make you feel ashamed.
And if it makes you feel any better: I’m a queer person in my late twenties who has very little sexual experience, and I don’t yet have long-term relationship experience, which can definitely bring up feelings of shame and insecurity for me at times. But the last person I dated (we broke up for reasons not related to my inexperience) was someone who had gotten to know me for a bit before learning about my inexperience, and they were super understanding and didn’t judge me for it. I also learned in sharing my inexperience with them, that they had started queer dating at a “later age” themself; and even though they had quite a bit of experience with long-term hetero relationships, they hadn’t had long-term experience with queer relationships, and were judged for that by other people, so they were able to understand where I was coming from.
All this is to say, there absolutely ARE people who won’t judge you for your lack of experience, and the only way I was able to find that out was by letting myself open up to this person, after I had learned that they felt like a safe-enough person to share my dating history with.
Now that I’m actively dating and looking for a partner again, sometimes I get scared that maybe I won’t find anyone else that would be understanding of my inexperience/other things that I feel insecure about. But then I remember that:
1. If someone is really right for me, they’re gonna be able to hold ALL parts of me in their mind — wonderful parts and messy parts — and still value me as a partner based on all the positive things I have to bring to a relationship, because they like me for me
2. Even if they find my inexperience (or other things I’m insecure about) to be too much of a turn-off for them, that doesn’t mean that I’m undesirable in general— it just means I’m not right for *that* person
3. I haven’t met every single person in the world, or every eligible queer person in my city, so the odds of ZERO people being understanding of my sexual/relationship inexperience are highly unlikely, and
4. I also have things that are deal-breakers for me, that wouldn’t make me think less of someone, but would just show me that we’re not compatible. (As an example: I recently turned someone down, because I learned that they don’t like cats— because I have a cat of my own who’s like a child to me, it’s really important for me to be with someone who also likes cats. I didn’t think they were a bad person for not liking cats — in fact, I thought they seemed pretty cool — I just knew that we weren’t right for each other!)
(Sidenote: maybe it could be helpful to write down all the positive things that you could bring to a relationship to serve as a reminder that, “Hey, I’m actually a catch who has some great stuff to offer!”)
All of this is to say: I think Heather’s questions are fantastic to think about, and I just want to let you know that you’re not the only queer person to have similar insecurities, who has been judged by others for it in the past, but who has still been able to find potential partners who are understanding of my inexperience anyway.
You won’t know if someone will be cool with your inexperience unless you tell them— you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take!