For many, sexuality feels like a fixed part of who they are. But for those who identify as abrosexual, attraction is more fluid — shifting over time in ways that even they sometimes struggle to explain.
Abrosexuality describes people whose sexual orientation changes or fluctuates. One month, they might feel primarily attracted to men, the next to women, and later to no one at all. These changes aren’t a choice or confusion; they’re simply how some people naturally experience attraction.
“I used to think I was bisexual,” one person shared. “But then I’d lose all attraction to anyone for months at a time. It made me feel broken — until I learned there was a word for what I was feeling: abrosexual.”
The term gives people a sense of relief and belonging. For many, it’s not about labeling every shift but understanding that change doesn’t make them any less valid. Their orientation is fluid, not fixed, and that fluidity is part of their identity.
Experts say abrosexuality falls under the broader LGBTQ+ spectrum, highlighting the diversity of how people experience love and attraction. It’s a reminder that sexuality isn’t always static — it can move, evolve, and grow just like any other part of who we are.
As one person summed it up perfectly: “Being abrosexual means I don’t have to fit into one box forever — I just have to be honest about how I feel right now.”