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Despite the widespread cultural assumption that men desire sex more than women, this study examines the experiences of women whose sexual desire consistently exceeds that of their partners. Drawing on 137 in-depth interviews with women aged 20–69 who self-identify as highly sexual, this paper explores how persistent unmet sexual desire shapes intimate relationships. Nearly every respondent reported never having been in a relationship that met her sexual needs, even in long-term marriages or committed partnerships. Women described frequent initiation of sex, repeated rejection or postponement by partners, and ongoing frustration with sexual incompatibility and boredom. Using grounded theory analysis, the findings highlight how women’s sexual desire challenges dominant heterosexual scripts that frame men as sexual pursuers and women as sexual gatekeepers. Rather than treating high female desire as pathological or exceptional, this study documents how cultural assumptions about male libido and female restraint contribute to chronic sexual deprivation for women whose desire does not conform to those expectations. By centering highly sexual women’s lived experiences, this paper complicates prevailing narratives about sexual desire, initiation, and compatibility within intimate relationships.