By Melanie Garrick and Loretta Florance
Dae and Tash have been happily dating for six months, but they also are not — and never have been — sexually attracted to each other.
The pair are part of Australia’s very small asexual community — researchers believe they make up just 1 per cent of the broader population.
“There are not many asexuals and I know probably in person about three, which shows you how rare it is,” Dae said.
“It’s hard to find someone else that is asexual because it’s not talked about.”
“Finding an asexual partner has been frankly fantastic … for a while I didn’t think I would ever find anyone,” Tash said.
Asexuality is an absence of sexual attraction. Some asexual people are in romantic relationships where sometimes they desire sex, and some are in romantic relationships where they never desire sex, and some are not in romantic relationships at all.
Sex and relationship therapist Cyndi Darnell said it was only in the last 10 years that researchers had even begun to try to understand it.
“We don’t even understand heterosexuality especially well, we think we do because we tend to use heterosexuality as the default setting … but the reality is that human sexuality has always been very diverse, it’s just that the field of sexology is relatively new,” she said.
“Our knowledge of human sexuality is still in its infancy and our knowledge of asexuality is an embryo comparatively.”
Dae said even within the LGBTQIA community, asexuality often went unrecognised or was misunderstood.