She briefly consults her image of her twenty-year-old self. Twenty-year-old Karen, do you feel like you're probably going to be any less traumatized by having to have illicit sex with someone you don't know or like or want to marry and who probably thinks you're a total dumbass?
(Well, sixteen-year-old Karen, I'm glad you asked. No, I think sex is probably going to just keep being terrifying until you figure out how to make it not be terrifying. But I do think it'd be less terrifying with someone you - OK, loved might be too much to hope for here, but generally trusted, even if you had less than no interest in having sex with them under normal circumstances. Like, if Dennis were here - forgive me, younger self, I need to use someone as an example - you'd be nervous and worried about what he'd think of you and worried about whether you'd hurt him, but you wouldn't be like this, because you'd both be scared and upset, but you'd be on a team, you'd be slaying a god together, you'd know that together you had this in you, and - that would be enough. Because you trust each other and you know each other and you would definitely, definitely be on a team.)
Her projected twenty-year-old self makes some compelling points.
"I - don't know that waiting will help by itself. Knowing you better seems like it might, but that implies - needing to figure out how to make that happen, not assuming that if we wait longer it just magically will."