Listeners:
Top listeners:
play_arrow
THESE HOES AIN'T LOYAL admin
play_arrow
What hurts more: body betrayal or heart betrayal? admin
play_arrow
Your Relationships Are the Real Career Choices You Make admin
play_arrow
Will She Cheat If She Has Daddy Issues? admin
play_arrow
Reading the Secret Signals: Inside the Cheater’s Mind admin
play_arrow
The Art of Revealing Cheats: Learn How To admin
Psychology Episode 40 November 12, 2022
play_arrow
PLAY EPISODE
The idea of a threesome triggers strong reactions — curiosity, excitement, freedom, sometimes guilt. It is not just about extra bodies in the room. It is about what they represent: novelty, boundary-testing, validation, shared desire. For many couples and individuals, fantasising about what it would be like to bring in a third person holds deep psychological meaning. The reality of three-way sex often reflects more than a sexual act: it becomes a mirror into identity, power, intimacy, and insecurity.
When we ask why someone would want this, we’re really asking what they feel they are missing — novelty, dominance, connection, or escape. Both men and women show interest, but for different underlying reasons. In the data we see that men are somewhat more likely to have had a threesome or express desire for one, but the difference is not just in numbers — it’s in meaning. Awareness of these motivations can help you decide if it is a constructive exploration or a shortcut to complication.
💡 1. What Drives Men?
For many men, the appeal of a threesome is intertwined with novelty, status and maximal sexual stimulation. According to one large US survey, about 18% of men reported having had a threesome. (WebMD) Another study found that 82% of men in a younger age bracket said they were open to or interested in a threesome. (New York Post)
Psychologically, several themes emerge:
These motivations don’t make it superficially wrong, but they do make it risky if communication, consent and emotional preparedness are not present.
💋 2. What Drives Women?
Women also fantasise about or participate in threesomes, though the percentages are lower and the motives often more layered. One US survey found around 10% of women reported having had a threesome. (WebMD) Another piece of research indicated that roughly 37% of women in a N = 16 interview study expressed a desire to experience a 2-male/1-female threesome. (Birmingham City University)
Key psychological drivers for women include:
Women’s interest in threesomes is less about proving masculine status and more about re-defining their own desire, testing boundaries, and putting themselves in a space of heightened possibility.
📊 3. Who Wants It More? (Numbers & Stats)
🔄 4. Constructive or Destructive?
Can a threesome be healthy, or is it fundamentally risky? The answer: both. The outcome depends heavily on motivation, communication, consent, and emotional context.
Constructive factors:
Destructive factors:
Research backs this caution: one study found that among people who had had a threesome, about 20% reported negative outcomes (strain, regret) whereas a similar proportion reported positive outcomes. (Psychology Today) So the gamble is real.
🎭 5. Differences Between Swingers, Threesome-Lovers, and Open Relationships
Threesome-Lovers: This is typically a one-time or occasional sexual encounter involving three people at the same time. It tends to be framed as novelty or fantasy, possibly between a committed couple and a third person, or between three equals.
Swingers: This is more of a couple-based lifestyle. Couples swap partners (sometimes briefly, sometimes longer), often within a community or event setting. The focus is less on one fixed trio and more on partner-exchange, group sex, social structure around it.
Open Relationships: This is a broader category, where the primary relationship allows additional sexual (and sometimes emotional) relationships. It may or may not involve group sex or threesomes. The emphasis is on relational consent, communication, and separate connections.
Key distinctions:
🧠 6. Why the Motives Often Lie Beneath the Surface
There are deeper psychological threads at play:
🔮 Conclusion
The desire for a threesome is not simply about sex. It is a signal. It asks: What do we crave that we are not getting? What boundaries are we willing to test? What fears are we avoiding? Whether you are a man or a woman, the question is not if you want it, but why you want it. The difference between a memory you savour and regret you bury lies in answers like these.
If you choose to explore it, don’t skip the conversation. Don’t assume desire equals readiness. And don’t mistake the fantasy for the fix. A threesome can become an experiment in intimacy — or a symptom of something missing. Who wants it more? Statistics suggest men want it more often, but wanting does not equal doing, and doing does not equal thriving. Constructive or destructive? It depends on honesty, consent, emotional context, and partnership strength.
In the end, use the desire as a doorway to understanding your relationship. A threesome might not solve what’s broken. It might reveal it. And with that revelation, you may decide what kind of connection you truly want.
Tagged as:
podcast
Psychology November 12, 2022
Psychology November 12, 2022
These Hoes Ain’t Loyal is a raw and honest podcast about love, loyalty, passion, and betrayal. It helps you understand the psychology behind your actions and your partner’s. Each episode uncovers real reasons
Join the movement redefining loyalty and relationships. Whether you write, podcast, or have a story worth sharing, we want your voice. Submit your details for a chance to be featured on These Hoes Ain’t Loyal where truth meets talk.
© 2025 These Hoes Ain’t Loyal. All rights reserved. Made in the UK for the people of planet Earth. Everyone’s welcome because life is too short.
✖
✖
Are you sure you want to cancel your subscription? You will lose your Premium access and stored playlists.
✖
Be the first to leave a comment