Skip to content
Neuropsych

Infographic: Who and what do people fantasize about?

A new survey asks Europeans and Americans to share their imaginary lives.

Favorite fantasies, by gender. Visual: Superdrug Online Doctor.

Key Takeaways
  • People who are overwhelmingly satisfied in their relationships fantasize other people
  • More of us daydream about strangers than exes or friends
  • Survey asks if we need to keep our fantasies to ourselves
Sign up for Smart Faster newsletter
The most counterintuitive, surprising, and impactful new stories delivered to your inbox every Thursday.

It’s everybody’s dirty little secret. Which is to say it’s not much of a secret at all. Even when we’re in relationships, we fantasize about other people. We may feel guilty about it—are we betraying our significant others?—or not, chalking it up to being just one of those things we can’t help but do. But what, if anything, does it say about our full-time relationships?

Superdrug Online Doctor asked 1,613 people from Europe and the U.S.—via online survey platforms Amazon Turk and Clickworker—how fantasizing works when you’re already hooked-up. Their data is published in infographic form as Fantasizing About Other People.

All visualizations in this article are bySuperdrug Online Doctor.

We suspect our partners are thinking of someone else

Over 70% of us assume our loved ones are imagining a little lovin’ with someone else. Most convinced of all are American women, who are probably right. Americans in general, are more concerned than Europeans, who may be a bit more “sophisticated” about secret dalliances than Americans.

If you’re so happy, why fantasize?

The survey suggests that fantasizing is not an indicator of serious dissatisfaction with a partner. People who fantasize are overwhelmingly “satisfied” in their relationships, though it is true that those who don’t fantasize report being “very satisfied.” Are those non-fantasizers super-fulfilled? Maybe, but “satisfied” is hardly, well, “dissatisfied.”

Should you admit your sexy daydreaming?

Probably you should, since those who tell their partners what’s going on in those lusty noggins are 10% more satisfied than those who don’t. (The negative impact of guilty secrets, maybe?)

So who do we fantasize about?

We mostly picture ourselves being intimate with strangers, by a wide margin—certainly, it’s easier to think of them as perfectly attractive since we don’t really know them and thus about any flaws they might have. Women are most strongly drawn to strangers. Men, the dirty dogs, think more about hooking up with exes and friends.

What do we fantasize about?

For men and women both, it’s mostly about sex, though it’s clearly more of a priority for men. Also true to stereotype, women do think more about cuddling and kissing, but not that much more. We’re all so romantic. Or at least as many as 38.5% of us are.

Esther Perel on the Nature of Erotic Desire

content.jwplatform.com

The mysteries of lus…sorry…love

We’re confusing creatures, and “the heart [or loins] wants what the heart [or loins] wants.” Pretty much all experts agree, though, that honest communication in a relationship is important. The other side of the coin is that we have to be brave enough to find out if ours is strong enough to withstand the revelation of what’s really been on our sneaky minds.

Sign up for Smart Faster newsletter
The most counterintuitive, surprising, and impactful new stories delivered to your inbox every Thursday.

Related

Up Next