{"id":149,"date":"2020-11-10T09:02:00","date_gmt":"2020-11-10T09:02:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stories.mysecretdrawer.co\/2020\/11\/10\/does-rebound-sex-really-work\/"},"modified":"2020-11-10T09:02:00","modified_gmt":"2020-11-10T09:02:00","slug":"does-rebound-sex-really-work","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mysecretdrawer.co\/stories\/does-rebound-sex-really-work\/","title":{"rendered":"Does Rebound Sex Really Work?"},"content":{"rendered":"
It’s often said that to get over somebody, you need to get under someone else.<\/p>
We\u2019ve all come across the idea of using sex as a remedy for heartache. Maybe we\u2019ve seen it in the movies. Maybe we\u2019ve actually tried it ourselves a few times.<\/p>
Either way, it\u2019s always comforting to know that every misstep you make in the thick, maudlin fog of heartache falls into a well-worn groove in human experience. <\/p>
But is there any scientific data at all to prove that the rom-com movie’s favorite narrative twist actually works in real life?<\/p>
While you\u2019ll find troves of online sources of advice concerning rebound – or revenge – sex, there is surprisingly little scientific research on the subject.<\/p>
Back in 2014, University of Missouri psychologists Lindsay Barber and Lynne Cooper could find only 12 published articles about it in psychological journals. But they found some 18 million casual online articles on the topic through a simple Google search.<\/p>
Barber and Cooper’s subsequent study allows some insight into this often experienced but little understood aspect of sexual behavior.<\/p> Some 170 students participated in the study, which the researchers undertook over the course of a semester. To be eligible, participants had to be sexually active and currently single. <\/p> Of course, they must have experienced a breakup at some point during the previous year.<\/p> The sample chiefly consisted of women who were in their freshman year. Quite fittingly, the two scientists gathered canonical definitions of \u201crebound sex\u201d from Yahoo Answers and of \u201crevenge sex\u201d from the website Lemondrop.<\/p> Below is the gist of what they found.<\/p> In case you\u2019re wondering how your ex is coping, here\u2019s an uncomfortable fact for you. Some 35 percent of the participants began banging other people within a month of breaking up.<\/p> Most participants – 66.5 percent – reported having sex at least once over the course of the three-month study. <\/p> Of those sexual encounters, 54 percent involved sex with a former partner who was not the most recent ex. Another 26 percent involved sex with a new partner or a stranger.<\/p> Those who did engage in rebound sex were also more likely to keep having sex with new partners over time, too, \u201csuggesting that they may be slower to recover from the breakup,\u201d the study says.<\/p> \u201cAs you might imagine, or perhaps have experienced, when you\u2019ve been left behind by a romantic partner, your feelings of self-esteem are likely to dip and you may feel general sadness and perhaps anger,\u201d says Susan Krause Whitbourne, a professor of psychological and brain science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.<\/p>The Science of Rebound and Revenge Sex Revealed<\/h2>
1. Most people have sex within three months of a breakup.<\/h3>
(Photo: Marvin Chandra\/Flickr)<\/figcaption><\/figure>2. Revenge and rebound sex are short-term coping mechanisms.<\/h3>