Questions about arousal
Posted: Mon May 27, 2024 12:37 pm
So, as someone who missed a lot of the early traditional introductions to the concepts of sex and sexuality in general, there’s a lot that I’ve had to figure out through context and extrapolating from the way other people talk about things. For the most part it’s worked well enough, but I’m at a point where I feel like I need to clarify some things, specifically in regards to the concept of “arousal”.
Arousal, in a sexual context, is a term that seems to be used interchangeably with several other words to describe a wide variety of distinct feelings, urges, and phenomena. As someone who likes to be able to express precisely what I mean, that level of ambiguity tends to be frustrating for me, and I’d like to have some way to communicate these more specific ideas.
For a start, I think it might be helpful to essentially list just some of the various ways that I’ve seen or heard “arousal” defined or used to mean:
Which of these various definitions is most universally applicable to the term "arousal"? What would be effective ways to express the others? Are any of these definitions fundamentally flawed to the point where what they're describing isn't an extant phenomenon, or are there more accurate terms for those that can't be accurately categorized as "arousal"?
Arousal, in a sexual context, is a term that seems to be used interchangeably with several other words to describe a wide variety of distinct feelings, urges, and phenomena. As someone who likes to be able to express precisely what I mean, that level of ambiguity tends to be frustrating for me, and I’d like to have some way to communicate these more specific ideas.
For a start, I think it might be helpful to essentially list just some of the various ways that I’ve seen or heard “arousal” defined or used to mean:
- A conscious, deliberate desire for sexual stimulation
- A psychological, but not necessarily conscious, desire for sexual stimulation
- A physiological urge to seek out sexual stimulation
- A denotation of the magnitude/progress of ongoing sexual stimulation
- A (potentially uncomfortable) physiological state that disappears after achieving sexual release
- A mental state or tendency towards thoughts about sex or of a sexual nature, without any inherent drive to seek out direct sexual stimulation
- A state (mental or physiological) brought about by sexual thoughts, images, ideas, or other similar indirect stimuli, which creates an urge to seek out additional sexual stimulation, direct or indirect.
- A tendency to seek out or focus on images, thoughts, or other indirect sexual stimuli, whether on a short or long-term basis.
Which of these various definitions is most universally applicable to the term "arousal"? What would be effective ways to express the others? Are any of these definitions fundamentally flawed to the point where what they're describing isn't an extant phenomenon, or are there more accurate terms for those that can't be accurately categorized as "arousal"?