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2025-04-25 Β |Β β±οΈ 16:18 Β |Β ποΈ 58.3K views Β |Β π 6.1K likes Β |Β π¬ 2.1K comments
Pea digs into data showing Americans are having significantly less sex than previous generations and connects it to a broader global trend that includes the Philippines. She explains the Filipino-specific concept of "lashang" β when married women let themselves go β and examines how different cultures handle sexless marriages, including Japan's strikingly pragmatic approach.
The data on declining sexual frequency β
- In the 1990s, American couples averaged 73 times per year (about 1.5 times/week)
- Twenty-five years later, that dropped to 55 times per year (about once/week) β a 25% decline
- The decline is accelerating, not leveling off
- Even teenagers are having less sex: the percentage who'd had sex dropped from 58% in the '90s to 44% a few decades later
- Pea finds the teenage decline especially odd given easier access to birth control, more dating options via social media, and fewer moral constraints on casual sex β yet people still aren't connecting
Sexless relationships defined β
- No official definition, but most studies use fewer than 10 times per year as the threshold
- Western marriage counselors are seeing a huge spike in sexless couples
Why this is happening β Pea's diagnosis β
- Studies blame diet, fatigue, and video games, but Pea says the professionals are "missing the elephant in the room"
- Men don't feel welcome to approach women anymore, so fewer relationships form in the first place
- Both men and women are increasingly taking care of their own needs and no longer see relationships as necessary or even desirable
- "Women are giving up on men and men are returning the favor"
The single-by-choice lifestyle β
- Pea plays a clip of a woman in her 30s describing her ideal weekend: waking up hungover, FaceTiming friends, walking the dog, going to Beer Olympics, then country night line dancing
- The woman credited her freedom to having no children
- Pea's concern: she has the right to live this way, but when a majority of women feel like this, you get a birth rate that can't sustain itself
The Philippines is feeling it too β
- In 2017, the average Filipina had 2.7 children
- By 2022, that dropped to 1.9 β below the replacement level
- In a country that frowns on birth control, fewer babies strongly correlates with less sex
- Pea pushes back on the stereotype that Filipinas are "sex-starved energizer bunnies" β that early passion is partly about sealing the deal and impressing the partner
"Lashang" β when Filipinas let themselves go after marriage β
- Pea introduces the Filipino term "lashang" (also spelled "blang" in the transcript): when a married woman stops maintaining her appearance because she feels she no longer needs to look hot or be sexy
- This is culturally accepted in the Philippines β everyone understands that once you're married with children, the sex is pretty much going to stop
- Privacy disappears anyway because Filipino kids don't get their own bedrooms
- Filipino men don't like this any more than Western men would β their solution is to have affairs, and Filipinas "pretend to look the other way"
- Pea's advice: warn your Filipina girlfriend early that you're "not playing by Filipino rules when it comes to lashang"
The bait-and-switch argument β
- Pea plays a clip from another creator making the case that women lure men in with high sexual frequency at the beginning of the relationship, then drastically reduce it after marriage
- The argument: women set the sexual standard early on, and when the man expects that to continue, they get angry at him for it β which is "manipulative, deceiving, and hurtful"
- Pea frames this as a widespread pattern, not unique to any culture
Japan's solution: 68% of Japanese marriages are sexless β
- More than half of Japanese people don't consider paying for professional adult services as cheating
- Three reasons Japanese give for this view: (1) it's just a service, nothing more; (2) it's not cheating if there are no emotions involved; (3) it should be allowed if you don't feel guilt
- 53% of Japanese women and 60% of Japanese men hold this view
- One woman said she'd feel bad stopping her husband from being fulfilled since she can't offer what he wants
- Another said she'd rather her husband spend money on professionals than get involved with regular women who might cause drama or make false accusations
- Pea's take: "If it works for them, who am I to judge?"
What Western men face β limited options β
- Western women are "perfectly happy to divorce you for cheating, then take as much as they can as they push you out the door of your own house" β so the Japanese approach doesn't translate
- Option 1: Stay for the kids, sacrifice your own desires out of duty and responsibility β "as many men often do"
- Option 2: Pursue desires outside the marriage or negotiate a "don't ask, don't tell" policy β works in some cultures, harder in others
- Option 3: Decide you're not willing to give up an active sex life and go searching for a new reality
- Option 4: Ignore women and relationships altogether β an increasing number of men are choosing this
70% of divorces are initiated by wives β
- The vast majority of those are by women over 40
- These women say they don't need a husband anymore and are often done with sex entirely
- Only 15% will ever remarry β they're permanently removing themselves from the dating pool
Pea's conclusion β
- She refuses to criticize any man's choice in how to handle a sexless marriage β "No one knows better than you what you want out of life"
- She's just sorry it's an issue men have to deal with at all
- The sexless relationship "might be here to stay"