I completely lost interest in sex at 31 after being left with appendicitis for 3 weeks which left me unable to conceive naturally as my fallopian tubes had been destroyed.
We did try naturally whilst saving up for IVF, just to have peace of mind that I wouldn't be that one miracle in however many million whose tubes heal, however it was upsetting to keep having fruitless intercourse, and we were both grateful to stop when I began IVF.
I was lucky enough to have my daughter after 3 cycles, however obstetric complications left me with almost no vaginal opening so penetrative intercourse would have been anatomically impossible thereafter anyway.
This was treated as if it was a dire emergency by the obstetrician and gynaecologist, who attempted to pressure me into repeated surgeries and dilator use, and even wanted to refer me to someone specialising in gender reassignment whom I suppose they thought could construct me a new vagina.
It felt quite sinister and misogynistic to be honest, as if they were almost sorry they had saved my life if I wasn't going to spend the rest of it gratifying heterosexual men, and as if they thought I had no worth as a person without being sexually active.
I remember wishing such concern and effort could be channeled towards women who were actually suffering - in particular those with infertility having had the experience I'd had - than trying to reconstruct a vagina in someone who couldn't care less.
For years I had a perfectly adequate psychological explanation for my lack of libido as it had coincided with the loss of my fertility, however what I hadn't realised was that over the same time frame, between IVF cycles and after my daughter's birth I had also gone onto the combined pill for health reasons, which is known for suppressing endogenous testosterone and libido.
During the COVID pandemic I temporarily lost access to my combined pill, and my long dead libido actually came back!
So when I was able to get back on my pill I started supplementing with DHEA, which has restored my testosterone and my libido nicely.
I do not have a physical relationship with my husband but I do own a couple of vibrators which I highly recommend - neither is shaped like a penis which was a conscious choice, and I do not need or want any kind of penetration to have an orgasm.
However I have never regarded myself as broken for not wanting or being able to have sex, I told the consultant after declining any further intervention that I don't need a hole to be whole, and in a way regard my colpocleisis as a blessing because after everything I went through to have my daughter, it felt like nature's way of saying "enough" and making sure I never have to have anything shoved up me again, which I had been highly traumatised by.