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  • Understandably enough, our societies pay vast attention to the idea ofsexiness’; far

  • more questionably, they tempt us to believe that it might be easy to understand what this

  • quality consists of. The leading suggestion takes its starting point from the biological

  • sciences: we learn that sex aims at successful reproduction and genetic fitness in the coming

  • generation. Thereforesexinessmust logically comprise a host of semi-conscious

  • signals of fertility and of resistance to disease: bilateral facial symmetry, large

  • bright pupils, full lips, youthful skin and melanin-rich hair.

  • But this analysis too quickly assumes that it might be simple to know what sex really

  • aims at. Unlike most other living beings, our biological drives sit alongside, and at

  • points take second place to, a range of emotional priorities. Chief among these is the desire

  • to overcome loneliness and share our vulnerability within the arms of a safe and intimate other.

  • We seek, through a physical act, to overcome our customary psychological alienation and

  • a host of painful barriers to being known and accepted. Viewed through such a lens,

  • the erotic is not so much a promise of reproductive health as a suggestion of a redemptive capacity

  • for closeness, connection, understanding and an end to shame and isolation.

  • It is this emotional mission that explains the conundrum sometimes generated by people

  • whom one would expect, by all standard biological criteria, to possess an exemplary sexual aura

  • but who manage to leave us cold - just as it may shed light on the associated puzzle

  • of those physically more challenged candidates who nevertheless lay claim to a rare power

  • far outstripping the quality of their hair or the lustre of their eyes.

  • The people whom we call sexy despite, or aside from, the raw facts of their appearance are

  • those whose features and manner suggest an unusual ability to fulfill the underlying

  • emotional purpose of love-making. The way they respond to a joke, the curve of an eyebrow,

  • the characteristic motion of their forehead, the way of holding their hands convey in an

  • unconsciously understood but hugely eloquent language, that one is in the presence of a

  • kindly being who is liable to understand our broken and confused aspects, to help us over

  • our loneliness and submerged sadness and reassure us of our basic legitimacy and worth; someone

  • with whom we can at last reduce our normal suspicions, cast aside our armour and feel

  • safe, playful and accepted. Whatever the quality of their skin or balance of their proportions,

  • it is these aspects that have a true power to excite us; in a melancholy and avoidant

  • world, this is the real turn on.

  • We hear so much about what we might need to do to increase our physical appeal. But by

  • getting more detailed about the psychological traits that drive desire, we could learn to

  • pay as much, if not more, attention to the foundations of an exciting mindset. Armed

  • with a broader understanding of the aims of sexuality, some of the following might also

  • - henceforth - deserve to be counted as valuable sources of sexiness:

  • - A sense of being slightly at odds with mainstream society:

  • Whether at work, with friends or around family, we are too often hemmed in by exhausting requirements

  • to fit in and subscribe to dominant notions of what it means to be good and acceptable,

  • requirements which nevertheless leave behind, or censor, a lot of our internal reality;

  • there ends up being a lot we mustn’t say and even more we shouldn’t even really feel.

  • What a relief then to note (perhaps via a wry twitch in another’s upper lip) that

  • we are in the presence of someone who knows how to adopt a gently sceptical perspective

  • on prevailing assumptions - someone with whom we would be able to break away and express

  • doubts about revered ideas or people and cast a cathartically sceptical gaze on the normal

  • rules of life. Good sex promises to feel like something of a conspiracy against everyone

  • else.

  • - An unshockable nature: The more we are honest with, and exploratory

  • about ourselves, the more we realise that there is much inside our characters that might

  • surprise or horrify outsiders: that we possess alarming degrees of vulnerability, meanness,

  • strangeness, waywardness and folly. Our standard response may be shame and embarrassment - and

  • yet we quietly hunger to be properly witnessed and accepted as we really are. What may prove

  • supremely sexy therefore are suggestions that another person has explored their own deeper

  • selves with courage, has a handle on their darkness - and may on this basis be capable

  • of extending an uncensorious perspective on our own.

  • - A tension between good andbad’: Someone who paid no attention whatsoever to

  • decency and scoffed at all propriety might be merely alarming. Yet what can prove uniquely

  • appealing is a person alive both to duty and temptation, to the pull of maturity and the

  • draw - at least for a little while in the early hours - of wickedness; a divided person

  • simultaneously responsible and marked by a touch of desperation.

  • - Vigour & Impatience In addition might come a potential for aggression

  • and anger that they managed to keep very sanely under control in daily life, but that they

  • knew how to release at points in private; someone whose capacity for a little cruelty

  • was all the more moving because it stood out against a customary habit of extreme consideration

  • and gentleness.

  • - Kindness: A lot of our reality deserves compassion and

  • sympathy. How compelling, therefore, to come across someone whose features would belie

  • a willingness to extend charity towards a lot that is less than perfect in human nature,

  • someone who could know how much we stand in need of forgiveness and who could laugh generously

  • with and at us - because they knew how to do the same in relation to themselves.

  • We have allowed our concern for sexiness to be coarsened by physical obsession because

  • we are under the sway of an overly simplistic biological sense of what sex might be aiming

  • at. Yet by recovering contact with some of what we emotionally crave from another person,

  • we can - happily but not merely conveniently - rediscover that the real turn on is never

  • just a well-polished body but, always and primordially, a well-fashioned soul.

  • Great dates are made up of great conversations, our dating cards are designed to spark

  • insightful and playful encounters. Click the link on screen now to find out more.

Understandably enough, our societies pay vast attention to the idea ofsexiness’; far

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