iStock.com/RealPeopleGroup
Good Sex with Emily Jamea: How to Have a Good Spring Fling
Thinking of hooking up? Read these tips to feel emotionally and physically satisfied.
Mar 07, 2023
Jul 17, 2023
Sexual HealthAASECT-Certified Sex Therapist
Houston, TX
Dr. Emily Jamea is a sex and relationship therapist based in Houston, TX. With over 15 years of experience, she has helped thousands of people create connection and cultivate passion.
Her new book, Anatomy of Desire: Five Secrets to Create Connection and Cultivate Passion, is currently available everywhere books are sold.
Emily offers online workshops as part of her mission to make her knowledge accessible to everyone. She speaks nationally and internationally to a diverse range of audiences including educators, health and mental health professionals, and the general public. Her expertise has been featured in Oprah Magazine, CNN, USA Today, NBC, and more. Dr. Jamea hosts the popular Love & Libido Podcast, writes columns for Psychology Today and Healthy Women, and posts across all the social media channels @dremilyjamea.
In her free time, Emily enjoys spending time with her husband and children, traveling as much as possible, and salsa dancing and painting when she gets the chance.
Full BioLearn about our editorial policies
Thinking of hooking up? Read these tips to feel emotionally and physically satisfied.
Emily Jamea, Ph.D., is a sex therapist, author and podcast host. You can find her here each month to share her latest thoughts about sex.
Spring is here, and with it comes a sense of renewal and freedom, a departure from the norm. This season can be an opportunity to discover parts of yourself that are typically untapped. For singles, this might mean ditching the pressure to seek a relationship and focusing instead on dating, or hooking up, more casually.
This might mean a good laugh over a bottle of wine with someone your mother would deem wildly age inappropriate. Or it might mean surrendering to carnal desires with people you’d never dream of bringing to your office holiday party.
It’s that surrendering part that so many people, especially women, have a hard time with. For centuries, casual sex has been labeled as something bad. The narrative is that, at worst, it will send you straight to hell and, at best, it’s something you’ll regret later. But if casual, no-strings-attached sex is something you’re interested in, you’re not alone. Studies show that casual sex is on the rise.
Recently, a group of researchers took a comprehensive look at all the studies published about casual sex and analyzed the results. All together, they examined 71 studies of more than 120,000 participants. The participants were followed anywhere from 2 months to 7 years after casually hooking up with someone. What did they find? For the majority of people, casual sex left them with more positive feelings than negative ones and the positive increased over time.
The researchers identified a few key variables that seemed to influence whether someone had more positive or negative feelings about casual sex. People who were religious or raised in more conservative families experienced more regrets. This is not surprising. It’s tough to behave in a way that goes against the messages we received about sex growing up.
Also, not surprising: Women experienced more regret than men. Women have historically experienced more pressure to remain sexually pure. Furthermore, from the standpoint of physical pleasure, studies show that women have orgasms at far lower rates in casual sex versus sex within a committed relationship.
The research found that more people regret casual sex when using alcohol and forgetting condoms. So, if you’re going to have casual sex, you’ll enjoy it more if you’re responsible.
One variable that deserves a closer look is familiarity. The researchers found that people who had casual sex with strangers experienced more regret than those who had casual sex with people they knew (e.g., a friend with benefits or an ex). People experienced more regret from a true one-night stand versus sex with someone they could see a future possibility with. This begs the question, is “good” casual sex really all that casual?
When researchers take a closer look at the motivations behind casual sex, they find that it’s rarely about pure no-strings-attached physical pleasure. In fact, one study of “friends with benefits” found that many times, both men and women are hoping for more emotional intimacy from something that starts out as “just sex.”
So how can you ensure your fling feels not only physically good, but emotionally good?
The takeaway? There should be no shame in your casual sex game. What happens during a spring fling can be fun and exciting — just be confident that casual is what you want.