In 1979, at 42, Barbara Gonyo was reunited with her son, Mitch, 26 years after giving him up for adoption.
She immediately felt a maternal love for her son, she wrote in her memoir, but those feelings soon developed into a deep affection that manifested in sexual fantasies about him. Yes – Barbara felt a sexual attraction towards her son.
She expressed her sexual desires to him, but he did not reciprocate the feelings.
Barbara was convinced that her attraction was not abnormal. So, she coined the term Genetic Sexual Attraction (GSA), to explain the powerful sexual feelings that can happen when biologically related adults are reunited late in life.
As she argues in her book I’m His Mother But He’s Not My Son, sexual attraction between relatives may be a byproduct of “missed bonding” that would have normally taken place between family members had they not been separated.
According to The Guardian, GSA is more common than you might expect. In fact, “50 per cent reunions between siblings, or parents and offspring, separated at birth result in obsessive emotions,” the publication reported in 2003.
17 years on from that data, it is evidently still a feeling experienced by long-lost family members today.
In 2015, The Cut published an interview with an 18-year-old woman, who at the time was preparing to marry her biological father.
The anonymous teenager explained her father emailed her mum asking to see his daughter when she was 15. She agreed, and at 17 she was reunited with her father, after 12-years of estrangement.
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