Love

Why Women Get Turned On By 'Psycho' Boyfriend ASMR Videos

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girl in bed looking at phone at night

It's no longer a big secret that many women harbor the occasional dark fantasy. But unless you frequent certain corners of Reddit and other such underground-ish message boards, you may be surprised to learn about a particular growing trend.

To wit: women getting turned on while watching a niche trend of ASMR role-play videos featuring a possessive, jealous, "psycho" boyfriend as he whispers threats.

Wait, what? Really? Yes. It's a thing. OK, this does lead to a multitude of perfectly valid questions.

In particular, what is ASMR, why would a woman enjoy hearing a jealous man whispering about the ways he intends to harm her?

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Explaining the unique sensation linked with ASMR 

To begin, Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR) is defined as "an experience characterized by a static-like or tingling sensation on the skin that typically begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine."

The concept can be better understood when the acronym is explained this way: 

  • Autonomous — spontaneous, self-governing, with or without control
  • Sensory — pertaining to senses or sensation
  • Meridian — a peak, climax, or highest point
  • Response — experience triggered by something external or internal

Most commonly, this phenomenon produces a state of relaxation, and so most ASMR videos are intended to soothe. Many people find their favorite videos so compelling that they often find themselves lulled into a sort of trance.

People describe the ASMR response as feeling like the "tingles" you receive when you get shocked by a mild electrical current, and it appears to result from having your senses and/or sight or sound triggered by various types of outside stimulation.

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Common triggers associated with ASMR

Some common triggers leading to an ASMR reaction include:

  • Listening to a whispering voice, particularly near your ear or where you must strain to hear
  • Listening to repetitive, usually quiet sounds, such as keys clicking as someone types or pages turning in a book
  • Watching someone do a mundane task is a central focus point
  • Listening to someone explain a concept or describe an object

Little "formal" research has been done on ASMR to date, but a study conducted in 2015 identified four prominent categories of triggers.

According to the 2015 findings of a study conducted by Emma L. Barratt and Nick J. Davis of the Department of Psychology at Swansea University in the UK, more than 50 percent of the 475 participants reported feeling an ASMR reaction triggered by whispering (75 percent), personal attention (69 percent), crisp sounds such as metallic foil or tapping fingernails (64 percent), and slow movements (53 percent).

And while 98 percent of the study's participants reported seeking out ASMR as an opportunity for relaxation, 5 percent also reported using ASMR for sexual stimulation.

Thus, a new genre of erotica has emerged, known as ASMR or "whisper porn."

But, lest you believe it's only men wanting to hear "a pretty girl speaking softly" turning to ASMR for sexual excitement, one of the most quickly growing categories within the genre is that of possessive, jealous, and abusive boyfriend ASMR videos.

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The allure of dark fantasy

These boyfriend role-play videos, which have been steadily gaining in popularity since 2017, are part of a larger category of ASMR videos known as "altruistic role-play care," featuring YouTubers — or as they prefer to be called, ASMRtists — "posing as doctors, hairdressers, masseuses and increasingly as boyfriends and girlfriends."

In these videos, the virtual boyfriend whose voice you hear calls the woman listening to all sorts of degrading names, while sometimes telling her of his plans to kidnap her, while other times threatening to separate her from her family or to cause her physical harm.

Fascinatingly, the idea for these "psycho" boyfriend videos originated not with angry, misogynistic men, as one might understandably expect, but grew out of requests from female viewers.

ASMRtist CJ Lennox, the host of the YouTube channel CJ & Chill, told now-defunct Ozy Media he noticed a growing pattern of requests from women for more violent scenarios in the comments sections of his more typically sweet boyfriend role plays.

To date, his most popular "psycho boyfriend" video has been viewed more than 330,000 times, making it three times more popular than his second most-viewed video, which featured a much tamer topic: intimate massage and a surprise.

Ravishment or submission fantasies have long been one of the most popular fantasy categories for women. For those who find a narrative of dominance and submission incredibly exciting in their own imagination, as well as in books and movies, the multi-sensory experience of watching and listening to an ASMR video makes the arousal that fantasy elicits all the more intense.

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What ASMR roleplay is not

It's important to recognize being sexually aroused by fantasies and thoughts of being abducted or dominated in some other way does not mean that you or any other person of any gender wants to experience actual sexual violence.

When you act out a dark fantasy with a partner you trust and know to have your best interests at heart, as well as with whom you've negotiated the parameters and boundaries ahead of time, you retain a meaningful level of control.

Women who watch violent or abusive boyfriend role-play ASMR videos are simply experiencing a new medium through which they can safely indulge in exploring these fantasies.

Plus, ASMR videos come with the added bonus of triggers that have been purposely selected and built in to elicit a specific physiological response in your body.

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ASMR, goosebumps & you

Think of how it feels when someone whispers in your ear or touches you softly in just the right spot, leaving you with goosebumps.

As troubling as this trend in YouTube videos may appear at first glance, possessive boyfriend role play in ASMR videos creates a safe space for women to enjoy their kinky BDSM fantasies about being overpowered while, ironically, remaining in complete control. Since the "bad boyfriend" in question is safely contained in the video, you can simply turn him off if things become too hairy.

Some women who are particularly susceptible to intense physiological responses to stimuli and triggers may experience a negative reaction as a result of watching these types of violent boyfriend ASMR videos, but they represent a small minority of potential viewers.

You're more likely to either find these videos stimulating than you are to find them frightening or triggering, but truthfully, most people find them quite boring.

You'll never know how you feel about ASMR videos until you try one, of course, so if the idea appeals to you and you dare to give it a go, you just might find a new source of erotica to fuel your fantasies.

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Dr. Lori Beth Bisbey is a psychologist and intimacy/sex coach who helps individuals, couples, and polyamorous groups create their ideal relationships.