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Virginia Woolf's love life was sexually abused as a child, and she loved women more than men

She married Leonard Wolf and then discovered she was frigid. Sexual intercourse in the marriage ended immediately after the honeymoon, although the couple was happy for 26 years.

Virginia Woolf had both charm and wit. Her mother, Julia Duckworth, was famous for her beauty, and her father, Leslie Stephen, dominated as one of the leading literary figures in England. Virginia was tall and slender, with accentuated, beautiful eyes.

Growing up in a circle of top intellectuals, she became one of the most important English-language writers of the 20th century.

She suffered from occasional attacks of insanity, manic depression, and then she had sound and visual hallucinations, but also deep depression. Those attacks were almost the rule when she finished writing one of her books.

The outbreak of World War II was far more than her fragile figure could bear. So she filled her pockets with stones and jumped into a river. She was 59 years old.

Virginia had two half-brothers, Gerald and George, who introduced her to the world of sexuality at the age of six. Gerald, who was just over 6 at the time, regularly "checked" her genitals. During her youth, George would crawl into Virginia's room overnight while she slept, crawling into her bed, cuddling, hugging and kissing her. For all this Virginia was silent and endured the abuse until she was 20 years old.

Although she had many suitors, some of whom begged her to marry her, she did not want to marry until she was 30 years old. She married Leonard Wolf and then discovered she was frigid.

Sexual intercourse in the marriage ended immediately after the honeymoon, although the couple was happy for 26 years. In her farewell letter to Leonardo, Virginia wrote, "I do not think two people could be happier than we were."

Although as a girl she flirted with men, for the first time when she fell in love - she fell in love with a girl. Her name was Madge Vaughn, a beautiful black-haired woman who shared a love of literature with Virginia. They had an intimate friendship without sexual intercourse, but Madge soon married.

At the age of 20, she began passionate correspondence with Violetta Dickinson, a family friend 17 years her senior. The letters were full of passion, but there was never any physical contact. Ten years of dating was a platonic, deeply emotional relationship.

After 10 years of marriage, Virginia, at the age of 40, met 30-year-old Vita Saxville West. They fell in love with each other. Vita was very beautiful, and on top of that she was a writer. Its literary origins date back 400 years. Virginia and Vita have been in a relationship for five years and have slept together at least ten times. It was the only homosexual physical contact Virginia had. The relationship with Vita was the longest sexual relationship in the life of Virginia Woolf.

Her husband Leonard did not care about his wife's relationship with another woman because he did not see any danger to his marriage in that relationship.

In a letter, Virginia wrote to Vita, "It's a good thing to be a eunuch like I am."

Summarizing Virginia's sex life, it can be said that later in life she lost her virginity, was significantly more inclined towards women than men, and was sexually abused as a child.

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