Gender and Sexual Identity were big topics between 2010 and 2020, mostly with people under 20 and the conversations about gender identity, and binary or nonbinary sexuality.
Those between 20 and 40, which are the primary working group in the USA between 2010 and 2025, mostly stayed out of the conversation as things like sexual health, sexuality, orientation, hygiene, and consent are often covered between the ages of 12 to 15 in the USA within the pubic school system, however; this can be as early as 8 to 11 years old for those with early onset puberty, which often requires a special class and an examiner for eligibility of a disability representative.
This is mostly because the world is going towards low energy, low metabolism human existence, longer lifespans, older thresholds for family planning, and demilitarization.
One of the signs of heavy militarization that is usually considered irresponsible, is early onset puberty. This is often combined with teenage pregnancy, high levels of human aggression in both adolescents and adults, and dysfunctional civilian quarters that are based on pillaging, stealing, fraud, assault, and disrespect for all forms of government and authority.
Things like hormones in food additives are often used to disguise the areas where the abnormal versions of militarization are occurring and this can lead to people under twenty that are heavily sexualized and have violent vocabularies but don't actually participate in the behaviors that are of concern to various governments. They are usually under lifelong observation and monitoring due to threats to the human gene pool. Propagation and time lapses in genetic group distribution are important terms to follow.
Gender Identity
Gender Identity is defined as the gender that most closely resembles a persons expression of masculinity or femininity (effiminism) rather than the gender that is documented on their birth certificate or through physical biological representation. Overall as used in these conversations, sex and gender are the same thing and the preferred term is gender.
Sex as a descriptor of gender is often a term from the 1960s or before that is no longer concise or able to be used with brevity.
Sexual preference, is things like positions, frequency, single partner, multi partner. Sex always refers to intercourse in modern conversations and older documents are usually updated to a current language and vocabulary to avoid confusion and circular reasoning.
Sexual Orientation, is things like straight, gay, lesbian, heterosexual, bisexual, pansexual, homosexual, or newer orientations that have existed in the past like celibate, abstinent, and asexual.
Overall, sexual orientation is the type of people or things a person likes to have sex with and sexual preference are the things a person likes to do when having sex.
Some of the things a person might like to have sex with can include toys or medical devices, thoughts, or fantasies or humans, of a specific gender, and even multiple humans; at the same time, or separately but within the same time period such as 1 month, 6 months, 12 months, or 2-3 years. This is covered in various privacy rights including medical rights, sexual expression rights, place of origin, and cultural expression.
If a person is not oriented towards someone for sexual expression, it is not necessary to discuss sexual preference as this can be considered human aggression when the topic is asked to be avoided or not directed towards them and the conversation persists to a point of stress and anxiety.
Orientation and preference are often confused with each other because there is some overlap with some of the designations or implied preferences such as gay, lesbian, or celibate.
Post 2020, gender is discussed as:
Gender Expression
Gender Representation
for example
Conceptual Gender Expression
Biological Gender Expression
Biological Gender Representation at Birth
Biological Gender Representation post Surgery
Physical Biological Gender
Conceptual Biological Gender
Physical Gender Expression or Representation
Conceptual Gender Expression or Representation
The point is, that mostly conceptual gender is the gender expression or that a person identifies with in their mind; physical gender is the human anatomy of a persons gender.
These human language updates are mostly rooted in conversations regarding binary and non binary expression in under 20 year olds between the years 2010 and 2020.
Sexuality
Even with clarifications on orientation, gender, preferences, lifestyle, and anatomy. Sexuality is not fully defined by these terms alone.
Often times, sexuality is based on feeling good about sexual decisions; this does not fully explain the meaning of sexuality however. Besides expression, gender, and preference; sexuality can include things like times, dates, weekends, clothing, scents, stress levels, and time distance since adverse events. Even consensual participation in sexual activity can be considered human aggression if the partner knowingly requests participation during a time that is known to be stressful, aggravating, agitating, or unharmonious for the partner they are requesting participation with.
Asexuality has helped define forms of sexuality for those that chose abstinence as a form of contributing to the reduction of human overpopulation.
from aven, types of asexuals
- thinks about sex only in romantic terms. Opportunity for romance often does not present itself.
- deals with hormones and sexual desires as an instinctual human behavior, but does not act on those desires.
- Seeks emotional connections only and does not feel a need or experience desires for physical intimacy.
- Will allow a partner to be intimate with them.
- Will allow a partner to be intimate with others but has expressed their desire that the partner not form emotional connections during physical intimacy
- Will not allow partner to be intimate with others and consensually remain in the relationship. And will not be physically intimate with their partner.
- Does not experience sexual desires or a need for emotional connections
- Can be sexually active as a consensual agreement.
- Is unable to be sexually active, even with consensual agreement due to physical inability.
Similarly, sexuality can be multifaceted in all kinds of different people that have their own unique orientation, preferences, desires, drivers, motivators, and requirements of consent.
Overall, most adult areas have a requirement that physical intimacy be consensual and non-aggressive in reaching an agreement even if the physical interactions may include rough play occasionally, regularly, or often.
Some examples of sexuality include things like the following in order to facilitate agreement to intimate physical interactions:
- Dinner, Movie, and Time Together before review of a proposal to be intimate.
- A requirement to know each other for a certain period of time prior to considering an agreement for intimacy such as 1 month, 6 months, 1 year, or more than 5 years.
- Shared interests such as hobbies or pass times that can be shared together during periods of intimacy
- Having the same or similar type of work and schedules such as professional, office building, business park, retail, food services, or job role.
- Being able to pass an examination for risk of biological contamination and detection of active infections.
- Being honest about risk levels with sexual preference or orientations outside the agreed upon intimate behaviors
These intimacy specifications or requirements are not necessarily inclusive of the entirety of the list. Some people may have a requirement that only 1 or 2 items on the list be agreed to before an agreement to intimacy, and others may require the entire list be part of the intimacy specifications in additional to other requirements not on the list, but that will be provided for review prior to review of agreement for an intimacy proposal.
Sexuality is often defined as the things that make a person feel good about their decisions to participate in sexual behaviors they are comfortable with and that have been consensually agreed to by their partner or partners.
Age Groups
Age is often described in modern intimacy conversations as an estimate or indicator of experience which is more accurate with people in similar orientation and preference groups and somewhat arbitrary in people from different groups.
Traditionally Monogamous Couples of any orientation
- 1 partner between 16 and 24
- 1 partner between late twenties and 40s
- Possible 3rd marriage after 60
- Periods of abstinence in between marriages
Traditionally Polygamous Partners, often hetero, lesbian, or gay
- 1-2 partners per year between 12 and 16
- 3-5 partners per year between 16 and 24
- twenty five to fifty
- less than twelve partners per year with increasing periods of celibacy with age
- less than six partners per year and starting to date 1 person for periods of 2 to 3 years
- 12 to 24 partners per year with at least several months of rest from sexual activities every few years
- 12 to 48 partners per year between the ages of 25 to 50, and settling into a handful of single person or small group relationships until death or no longer able to physically participate.
Modern Age Groups
- First sexual contact between 12 and 16.
- First sexual contact between 17 and 22.
- First sexual contact between 25 and 30.
- Less than 5 partners before 20.
- Less than 5 partners before 30 or 40.
- Less than 40 partners and settled in a relationship by 40 or 50.
- Relationships averaging 2-3 years, 4-5 years, or 8-12 years.
- Short periods of celibacy and abstinence during partner interviews while single.
Modern Promiscuity Groups
Follows similar patterns to Traditionally Polygamous Partners or Modern Age Groups with lower numbers, better data tracking, more health exams for reduction of disease, participation is based on consent and non aggression, with informed consent period for new participants. Numbers as high as 15-25 partners or more per month for up to 20 to 30 years.
Theoretical upper limits are 4-5 partners per day for approximately 325 to 345 days per year. Often this is with very low birth rates and children being raised outside of the promiscuity group circle and brought into the group for consensual participation as adolescence or for health assessment and transfer to other areas.
Low sex drive, low energy, low metabolism numbers
- Once per month
- Once per year
- Once every three weeks
- Once per week
- Special occasions only like favorite holiday or birthday
- Usually, single lifetime partner or follows practices of traditionally monogamous partners regardless of religious preference. Often times completely celibate after single lifetime partner passes away.
Age makes a big difference in things like contamination risk, emotional or psychological connections, experience, preferences, or aptitude and preferred intimate activities.
A 16 to 24 year old from a traditionally polygamous partners group may not actually do so well with a 40 to 50 year old from a promiscuity group circle. However, a 16 to 24 year old from a traditionally monogamous group wishing to transfer into a promiscuity group circle, might do ok with a 30 to 40 year old from a modern age group. Similarly, a 30 year year old experiencing boredom or non interest in partners from a modern age group might do good with a 16 to 24 year old that is still in a traditionally polygamous group and has more experience before settling back into their group or attempting to interview for a promiscuity circle.
Overall, age can play an important role in intimacy decisions for adults and is irrelevant for others as long as everything is consensual, through non aggressive agreement, and legislatively valid or legal.
Mostly, orientation, preference, and age groups are the most important factors when defining sexuality and consent. As with cognitive groups, there will be some slight differences in various population groups based on delayed or advanced development which is combined with other factors to form or propose agreements. However, these groups outline current levels of human development and their perceptions of life and sexuality.