While you can never go back and change your past, it is never too late to make a commitment to abstinence for your future. Whether you have experienced previous pain and heartache in your sexual experiences or just want to make a positive choice for your future, you will experience many great benefits of secondary virginity.
Basically a secondary virgin is someone who has already been sexually active but wants to make a commitment to wait until marriage from that point forward. If this is something you would like to choose, it means refraining from sex, making changes in your relationships and working toward a better, more promising future.
Thousands of people nationwide are making the decision to choose abstinence after being sexually active. Hear some of their stories by clicking here.
Just because you’re having sex doesn’t mean you must continue. Remember, a decision for abstinence protects your future as well as your partner’s. Choosing abstinence together will prevent the possibility of pregnancy, giving you both the best for your future. It will also help your relationship grow in other areas. You’ll be able to focus on what you have in common mentally, emotionally, spiritually, and socially. Help your boyfriend or girlfriend to see the positive aspects of waiting and that it will be a great decision for the both of you. Encouraging them to choose abstinence could be one of the best things you ever do for them.
If they end up not agreeing with you, they might say, “If you really loved me, you would have sex with me.” Remember that the best relationships and most long lasting are ones that are founded on trust and respect. Someone who tries to push you into sex is someone you cannot trust and does not respect you. If they continue to push you, tell them, “If you really loved me you would respect my decision to wait.” It won’t be easy, but you’re worth it.
To read some stories of people who have chosen secondary virginity, click here.
You can make a decision to choose secondary virginity today! Make a pledge for your future!
If you’re going to save all sexual activity until marriage, marriage better be an amazing thing right? 91% of teens say that eventually they would like to be in a good marriage.2 But all too often we hear that marriage isn’t worth it. Some say it doesn’t even last. Instead of people’s opinions lets see some facts.
If you’re not going to get married, chances are you’ll move in with somebody instead. Here are some facts about cohabitation (living together).
Couples that move in together tend to believe that they are professing their commitment to each other. Yet statistics don’t confirm that this is true.
After seeing the facts, what do you think? The facts show that you’re more likely to be happy and successful if you choose to get married. And what better way to commit yourself to a lasting marriage than by waiting until your wedding night for sex?
1 Teen Pregnancy-So What? The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy (February 2004).
2 Lloyd D. Johnston, Jerald G. Bachman, Patrick M. O’Malley, John E. Schulenber, Monitoring the Future: A Continuing Study of American Youth (12th –Grade survey) 2004, Survey Research Center at the University of Michigan.
3 Steven Stack and J. Ross Eshleman, “Marital Status and Happiness: A 17-Nation Study,” Journal of Marriage and the Family, 60 (1998): 527-536.
4 Jan Stets, “The Link Between Past and Present Intimate Relationships,” Journal of Family Issues 14 (1993), p. 251.
5 Waite, 1995, p. 483-507; Waite and Gallagher, 2000, see chapter 8; Wilmoth and Koso, 2002, p. 743-754.
6 Robert T. Michael, et al., Sex in America: A Definitive Survey, (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1994), p. 124-129; Edward O. Laumann, et al., The Social Organization of Sexuality: Sexual Practices in the United States (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994), p. 364, table 10.5; Andrew Greeley, Faithful Attraction: Discovering Intimacy, Love and Fidelity in American Marriage, (New York: Tom Doherty Association, 1991), see chapter 6.
7 Randy Page and Galen Cole, “Demographic Predictors of Self-Reported Loneliness in Adults,” Psychological Reports 68 (1991): 939-945.
8 Ronald Angel and Jacqueline Angel, Painful Inheritance: Health and the New Generation of Fatherless Families (Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 1993), pp. 139, 148.
9 Judith Treas and Deirdre Geisen, “Sexual Infidelity Among Married and Cohabiting Americans,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 62 (February 2000): 48-60.
10 Renata Forste and Koray Tanfer, “Sexual Exclusivity Among Dating, Cohabiting and Married Women,” Journal of Marriage and Family 58 (1996): 33-47.
11 Smock, P.J., & Gupta, S. (2002). “Cohabitation in Contemporary North America.” In A. Booth & A.C. Crouter (Eds.), Just Living Together: Implications of Cohabitation on Families, Children, and Social Policy (pp. 53-84). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
12 “Cohabitation, Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage in the United States.” Data from the National Survey of Family Growth, Department of Health and Human Services, Center for Disease Control, 2002.