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Clayton admits it sounds “hypocritical” because he’s had “his share of women” but says sex is sacred — the “most intimate thing in the world” — and should be treated with reverence. A reverence, it seems, that flows one way.
It’s a view that experts warn is often harmful to women – and also men.
Street interviews won’t stop asking about ‘body count’
In them, a certain script often plays out: men “level up” through experience. Women, not so much. Too many and she’s “easy” or “less desirable”. Too few, she’s a prude. Too much sex from anyone, and they’re labelled not “relationship material.” None, and there’s something wrong with them.
Jeff, a social advocate who has dated both men and women, sees the body count narrative as just another way to police women’s behaviour.

Men’s coach Clayton Harrop (left), anti-violence advocate Tarang Chawla and social advocate and commentator Jeff Kissubi on The Feed’s Masculinity debate.
“I wouldn’t care at all,” he says. “If someone shares that with me, fine. If they don’t, I still wouldn’t care because I wouldn’t base a relationship on how many people they’ve slept with. That mindset is odd to me. I think it stems from power and control.”
Pressure looks different for men and women
Since the 1970s, studies have consistently found that women with strong Christian beliefs that emphasise abstinence are more likely to experience sexual pain disorders, according to research published in Sociology of Religion.
It positions women as responsible for tempting men, and burdens them with being the sexual gatekeepers. That’s a lot to carry.
Lauren Rosewarne, associate professor at the University of Melbourne’s School of Social and Political Sciences
“It positions women as responsible for tempting men, and burdens them with being the sexual gatekeepers. That’s a lot to carry.”

Clayton isn’t alone in his worldview, with the conversation gaining attention online. Source: Supplied
She also notes that men face their own set of expectations, measured by different metrics, but restrictive in their own way.
“I have concerns about men’s value being connected to their perceived worth. That worth might be tied to resources, which it historically has been, but also to how much in demand they’re seen to be.”
Assumptions made based on numbers
About 47 per cent of young Australian men said they felt pressure to live up to the idea that a “real man” should have as many sexual partners as possible, according to The Man Box 2024 report from Jesuit Social Services.
“You might assume someone with a high body count has a high sex drive or is really experienced. That may not be true.”