Trash Fires

Deep breath. Slow, in and out. Let go of the tension. Calm the nerves. Allow my cortisol levels to drop… Steady. Grounding. Coming back to the moment I’m in. It’s going to be alright…

If I took the time to do this for five minutes everytime I read about or experienced an injustice which directly impacts me (much less the ones I read about and witness others who are less privileged than myself endure) I would be in a constant state of meditation. I would live the life of a monk. I would never be able to stop paying attention to my breath and body. Understandably, there are many days I don’t have the bandwidth to post about or speak on the subjects I find demeaning and unfair.

I am exhausted that so rarely people who aren’t directly targeted by a particular social issue speak up about it on my or other’s behalves.

When someone is hit by a car they are generally not the one calling 911 and managing the scene of the accident. If you were lying there, trying not to paralyze yourself, focusing on managing your broken physicality, amped up emotions, and fearful mind until help gets to you, other people—people who were not directly effected by the accident, and perhaps the person responsible for the harm—are the people who manage response. They are the people who call for help, who ask you if you’re ok, who make sure that whatever information needs to be gathered is being taken care of, and that you are out of further harm’s way.

For some reason racism, sexism, and other human rights issues are only treated when the victims of these crimes take responsibility for everything related to response and cleanup of the crime—even to the point of educating perpetrators and managing their resistance to compliance within our social order. There are so many problems with the world that we live in, this cannot continue to be the way we make meaning or allocate our resources.

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Racism: Anyone and everyone harbors bigotry somewhere inside. It is every individual’s job to examine their personal issues and learn to grow and share this planet we live on. Because our country (and the world) is a place which has hundreds of years of institutionalized bigotry directed specifically at nonwhite people (therefore unfairly, disproportionately, and over generations exponentially profiting white people), racism cannot be thought of as anything other than a problem for white people to examine and solve. Consider it a disease if that helps, and seek treatment. We white people must educate ourselves about what to do in situations where racism is evident (and to see evidence of racism), regardless of whether or not people of color are present. We must challenge ourselves when we are called out, and begin to see the racism we ourselves perpetuate. Until white folk are as clear about what oppression looks like as the oppressed are, racism and the enculturation of violence by it shall persist. As long as there is institutionalized bigotry, every single white person will profit off of racist behaviors in one way or another. We should not want those things.

Sexism: See “racism” above. Apply to sex and gender based bigotry.

Abortion Access: AMAB folk, and people not able to get pregnant must speak up in favor of bodily autonomy for women and AFAB people who risk both wanted and unwanted pregnancies. Not only does the law in the United States state that abortion is a private medical matter, but access to abortion is protected until and, in cases that threaten the life of the mother, through the third trimester. Access to safe abortion is an issue which directly effects ONLY marginalized populations. Not a single person who can get pregnant is of the highest and most privileged ruling class. Something to think about: what does it mean if you support taking a marginalized person’s bodily autonomy away from them?

Anti-Choice: If you are anti-choice because you believe yourself to be pro-life, that is entirely your own right, and please do not have any abortions. I beg of you to follow your heart entirely in such matters. In the meantime, it’s obviously a primary directive of yours to ensure that all children who are born have access to affordable healthcare and medication, healthy food and nourishment, safe housing, and safe family situations or adequate alternative parental support. It’s clear that you care deeply about access to top tier education for all regardless of class, and honest discussions about sex alongside comprehensive (definitely not abstinence only) sexuality education offered to young people. It’s wonderful that you voted for increased state funding for easy access to free birth control, as this method has proven to drastically lower the rate of teen pregnancy, as well as the rate of individuals under 30 seeking abortions—yay! I assume you rally as hard against the school-to-prison system as you do Planned Parenthood, as prisons rob families of two-parent households and the income they need to rear children sufficiently in alignment with the wild abandon you celebrate every embryo’s right to life. Thank you for being so active and vocal in the fight against immigrant children being taken away from their parents, and being as intolerant of detention centers as you are. I really appreciate all of the hours and money you pour into anti-gun violence legislation, your sincere efforts to keep weapons out of schools, and your pledge to keep all children who have been born safe, healthy, out of abject poverty potentially leading to a life of crime, and alive.

Immigration: No people came to this piece of land we call the United States seeking home because they weren’t looking for a better life. The white people who first colonized this land did so violently, and it is not acceptable that we continue perpetuating their inherited violence onto those who would peacefully do only what our forefathers, foremothers, and forezaddies have already accomplished. Waging a war primarily on brown people in the name of protecting our country is unconstitutional and definitely unpatriotic. US citizens: we must do better. Our national birthrate is dropping, and the economy requires an influx of working citizens to sustain itself and keep up growth.

Orientation, Sex, and Gender Diversity: Who the fuck cares about defining the private bodies or affections of others? If you find that you do, I implore you to get a job so that you might have less time to squander on such trivialities. To what end does disrespecting someone else’s stated pronouns or other identifiers benefit you in any possible way? If you’re not LGBT or genderqueer, what possible stake might you have in denying someone their pronouns or preferred name within conversation? Why do you care who “Jess” brings to the company picnic, as long as their +1 offers up a delicious peach pie? These are not brain surgeon level complications regarding the work of adulting. Get the fuck over your personal shit and act like a community member and fellow individual. At least fake-it-till-you-make-it as a well adjusted human being for the sake of the rest of us.

Sexual Appetites and Relationship Styles: Since when is someone else’s relationship style or interest in various sexual or sensual activities (between consenting adults) any of your nevermind?! If you aren’t being pulled into a scene you don’t want to be a part of, it’s not your goddamn right to act out about it. If someone is pulling you into something that feels uncomfortable: you’re an adult. State your boundaries, negotiate shared space if you must, and move along for Lilith’s sake. I believe in you. If you are an employer you certainly don’t need to know about any of these things, however if you are privy to privileged information you certainly shouldn’t be running a business based off of someone else’s afterwork bedroom/kitchen/dungeon plans. I absolutely believe in your ability to effectively compartmentalize—how else did you ever become a boss to begin with?!

Human and Sex Trafficking: Shame and classism are primary ways we institutionally regulate people’s access to healthy sexual expression and response, as well as to social status including upward mobility. If this wasn’t the case I’m pretty sure trafficking would be MUCH less prevalent worldwide. Children, women, and other people unwilling to share their bodies with you should never be put into situations leading to abuse and enslavement. Do your due diligence when contracting illicit work from a marginalized person, make sure they are not under someone else’s control. Learn to report trafficking where you actually find it.

Sex Work: Speaking of demand for service… those people who participate in the workforce surrounding consensual sex and sexuality, are people who have some stake in the healing of sexual wounds and shame—not only their client’s, but in some cases their own as well. What happens between two consenting adults within a respectfully negotiated sexual/sensual scene, even when money is involved, is not the business of anyone who isn’t participating. People engaged in sex work should be protected just as enthusiastically as people of any other workforce are. Don’t contribute to violence against sex workers through your own words and behaviors.

Rape: Stop trying to control others. Your sexual release is your job to advocate responsibly for. Masturbation is your friend and well within your means. Self love is an important step toward treating others equally. Rapists should definitely not have their sentences forgiven because being convicted of rape is embarrassing. Rape could be understood as a crime which fucks up the lives of perpetrators exponentially more than that of their victims… Let’s get with the program.

Abuse: Be the end of abuse by breaking the abuse cycle. Get help if you’ve been affected. Get help and learn not to abuse if you’ve perpetrated. Evolve. The only way to heal the world of the poisons we’ve ingested is by turning our knowledge of adversity into motivation to become the sort of person who’s able to hold space for the complicated reality of humaning as it effects others who are in need. We can do epically more positive work in our lives when we examine and heal from our own maltreatments and misfortunes.

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This is the end of my rant today… I’m sure it’s evident that my bandwidth is pretty low right now. I’m angry. I’m hurt and I’m furious. I’m mortified and deeply sorrowful. I’m impassioned and I will not step aside. We must look at the wrongs ourselves and our communities perpetuate, and we must each commit to furthering the (r)evolutionary: positive growth, peaceful coexistence, and radically humane change.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please visit my Patreon, offer one time Support or email me for options. Thank you.

#1 Socially Accepted Fetish: Objectification

“Don’t let my tits stop you from calling me “Sir”

For the purpose of this writing I am using the word “fetish” somewhat interchangeably with the word “kink”, and as a general concept rather than a medical diagnosis. “Fetish” and “kink” have separate meanings, though they are often conflated, and the degree to which something is considered a kink or fetish is personal and arguable outside of psychological evaluation. A fetish is understood to be something (often an object, objectified body part, or action) which needs to be present for someone to obtain sexual arousal and/or release. Example: a foot fetishist may not be able to orgasm or become sexually turned on without seeing, touching, or fantasizing about a person’s foot. People develop sexual fetishes for a wide variety of reasons at different points in their life, and someone with a “true” clinically diagnosed fetish is not what is generally meant when people use the word. The term fetish is frequently used to indicate a strongly enjoyed kink. The word fetish is also used to indicate kinks which reside specifically within the world of objectification: latex, shoes, nylons, feet, sissification, trans people’s bodies, women’s bodies, dick size, etc. When focus is placed on what a person is wearing, how they present, are physically formed, or something other than the integrated person themselves as reason for sexual interest, the word fetish is appropriate. Example: a person who doesn’t care what you look like as long as you’re wearing latex—that person will find you attractive because they have a latex “fetish”. A kink is a sexual taste which is considered out of the ordinary. How common or uncommon a kink actually is varies wildly. People frequently disagree about where a certain activity resides on a spectrum of vanilla to kinky. Example: spanking. Some people consider spanking to be a normal part of sexual activity and so vanilla by nature, others consider it to be kinky and not a behavior to be defined within the boundaries of an “ordinary vanilla” sexual connection.

Control of other people’s bodies is a kink which has reached fetishistic proportions in our society. Our culture’s widespread practice of objectification is a primary reason for this, which is made even more complex within a social structure where gendered privilege and unchecked entitlement runs rampant. Most people don’t consider themselves to be objectifiers, however, related behaviors and ways of thinking are so part and parcel of how we’re raised and what coping mechanisms we learn at an early age, I posit that almost everyone wrestles with these values (or is confronted with them) at some point in their life. In a capitalistic society we are held to the standards of ad campaigns and salability everywhere we look, it’s pervasive and insidious. It’s almost unavoidable not to hold our friends and family, celebrities, public figures, and even the strangers we interact with to these same standards and expectations. The alternative to reactionary objectification is practicing acceptance, curiosity, and enjoyment of a diversity of personal presentations, rather than jumping to judgement based on appearance.

It isn’t bad or evil to objectify, but it is important to gain consent when it will effect the person targeted. A “trendy” form of objectification these days is the obsession with knowing what’s contained in other people’s shorts. In conversations about sex, gender, orientation, identity, even lawmaking, and filing paperwork, an entitlement around knowing someone’s phenotypic sex characteristics outshines discussion of their character, skills, intellect, behaviors, or energetic capabilities.

That’s some pretty bullish stuff… why is it this way? I think a large part of what makes our society so concerned—even fanatic about other people’s private bodies—is in order to control their own personal branding, which is frequently expressed as an unyielding claim to a limited or stringent idea of sexual orientation. In short, we are obsessed with other people’s appearances in order to maintain the image (or belief) that we ourselves are of one sexual orientation or another. It’s commonly accepted that people lean on others to “keep up appearances” in order to telegraph a comfortable public image of themselves, based upon whom they associate with.

I was teaching a workshop about gender and sexuality recently, and in class a question was raised about how to appropriately ask after a person’s genitalia while cruising. How does one find a partner with the genitalia they are attracted to, prefer, or are interested in playing with if it’s rude to ask someone about their phenotypic sex traits? In the recent past, with the binary more firmly in place, one simply made assumptions about who they were bringing home and what the sex might be like. They were either pleased, proven wrong, or exposed to a whole new experience by the end of the evening. Nothing has really changed. If someone makes you laugh when you chat on the dance floor and you like their moves, you will still be surprised when they remove their garments and reveal the size, color, shape, stiffness, or coiffure of what they’ve got going on under all those layers. One will, of course, be even further surprised at discovery of the depth, sensitivity, solidity, strength, technique, longevity, sensual interests, texture, chemistry, scent, and experience of that individual as seduction and actual play come to pass… Nothing is certain until you’ve tasted the damn fruit.

If you’re hooking up with a relative stranger, chances are you aren’t solidly wed to complete control of what happens, with whom, or how it goes down. That’s a much surer bet within a longterm relationship. In hook-up situations people are looking to satisfy an urge in combination with the projection of a fantasy. If one is driven to connect with someone they don’t know, and with little time for interview, chances are they’re actually looking to get off however they can get it, not satisfy a deep connection with someone they respect as separate and equal. Whatever that hook up is like, chances are it’s also not going to be wholly articulated by one person’s fantasy. If that was the goal, they would have taken the time to find someone to service them properly within the boundaries of their specific desires.

When one engages in longer term or friend-first sexual connections, they certainly don’t fall in love/lust/sexual intrigue based on what their partner’s junk looks like either. Many people fall in love with their partner’s perfect groin because of how it makes them feel, because it’s connected to the person they love, and sometimes also because of how it looks. When one takes the time to get to know a person before negotiating sexual intimacy, there’s usually an emotional and/or mental connection cultivated which cannot be ignored when discussing the reasons for sex. This too is far from fetishistic.

In our current age of emergent nonbinary acceptance, visibility, and public acknowledgement, in order for people to defend an unwavering sexual identity, focus on phenotypic sex traits inappropriately comes to the forefront of conversation and highlights this social anxiety. For example: if someone notices me, decides they’re attracted to me, and jumps to correspondent fantasies about what it might be like to have sex with me, that’s all very well and normal. It’s also on them and not my responsibility. That person’s fantasy has nothing to do with the actual living, breathing, autonomous me. Their assumption, i.e. wish, that I might enjoy a particular activity, or that the body under my clothes appears a certain way, or that I might respond favorably to a particular type of stimulus, is their fantasy and it has nothing to do with my actual physical, emotional, and psychological interests or lived reality. We do not generally fall for people because of the size, color, type, hairiness, or functionality of their genitalia. If one does fall for someone’s specific size, color, type, hairiness, or genital functionality, it’s very simply defined as: their fetish. It’s the responsibility of anyone harboring a fetish to negotiate their desires honestly in order to fulfill them appropriately and respectfully. It’s definitely not the object of their desire’s responsibility to fulfill those fantasies or fetishistic expectations.

While we live in a highly fetishistic society, that’s in no way an excuse to pursue controlling someone else’s body outside of their willingness to be so. If a person needs their partner to present their body in a specific way in order to enjoy intimacy, it’s their responsibility to negotiate the scenario they wish to engage in, or let it go, or move on to someone willing to play those particular games. For example: if your kink is shaved genitals, good for you. I do not shave my genitals. It’s also none of your business if I shave my genitals unless I want to share that information with you. I am probably not going to shave for you, as it’s my right to tend to my body exactly as I please, and shaving does not please me—quite the opposite. Your kink/preference/fetish doesn’t overshadow my right to keep my autonomous unshaved body as I prefer it to be. Your desire to fulfill your fantasy with me also doesn’t give you the right to demand me to reveal private information about my body. If you cannot get over this particular desire then we’ll probably not interact sexually. No big deal. If you happen to fetishize something I’m also into, we’ll probably have a lot of fun with that thing as long as you don’t objectify me about it. If you want to objectify me, that’s a separate fetish and negotiation, and I’ll probably require aftercare if I decide to engage you in that way because one of my deepest kinks and emotional needs is connection.

Back to my student’s initial question: I answered, “Taking personal responsibility for one’s desires is key to success”. Saying something to the effect of, “I’m really horny and came out tonight looking for X—is that something you’re interested in or might want to help me out with?”, is a far cry from, “do you have a pussy or a dick?”. The first sentence takes responsibility for and names a specific personal desire, and then asks if there’s mutual interest in further conversation about it. It allows the person being asked to respond in a number of ways based on what they’re comfortable revealing. That person might simply say, “No thanks”, or they might mention they can’t physically fulfill the desire expressed, or maybe they’ll check in about toy use or alternative hole penetration in lieu of specific biological requests, or maybe they’ll even reveal their own desires so the discussion can build into something more mutually agreeable… the options are limitless. The second question indicates an entitlement to knowledge about someone else’s private body. It also implies an assumption that if the person answers “correctly”, that there’s an interest in engagement, and so puts a responsibility of rejection and/or clarification on the person being asked. Further, it assumes that having a particular physical trait equals a desire to engage that physicality in a specific way during sexual congress. None of these assumptions or implications respect another person’s values, skills, availabilities, psychology, history, potential traumas, or interests.

Fetishes can be wonderful, and my argument is not to draw the conclusion that one should do away with such things—even objectification. What I think we need to get better at is practicing communication about and gaining consent for our fetishistic desires, rather than bullying people by way of shame, negging, abuse, neglect, unasked for behavior modifications, games, and guilt trips in order to repress them, convince them to conform, or otherwise control their actions and bodies outside of their personal values and interests. If you’re completely disinterested in becoming involved with a person who has a particular style of genitalia, it’s your responsibility to be honest and upfront about that before unduly wasting the time and energy of the person you’ve approached. It’s never the job of those you flirt with to preemptively let you know anything about their bodies, as if their bodies might be potentially “wrong”, or as if their bodies exist primarily to be pleasing to you. When we can better navigate our own fetishistic interests, we may even find ourselves more excited about and equipped to satisfy other people’s interests as well.

If you’re interested in more conversation about gender, kink, sexual behavior, BDSM skills, or similar subjects, please contact me about presenting at your party, convention, school, or event. I love teaching theory and practical skills, and I enjoy developing new curriculum to suit my client’s needs. Alternatively, if you’d like to support my work, research, travel, writing, and other artistic creations please join my Patreon campaign. Thanks.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please visit my Patreon, offer one time Support or email me for other options. Thank you.

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