Why Choice and Sexual Freedom are Men’s Issues

Screenshot of an old Craigslist announcement declaring, "US Congress just passed HR 1865, "FOSTA", seeking to subject websites to criminal and civil liability when third parties (users) misuse online personals unlawfully.
"Any tool or service can be misused. We can't take such risk without jeopardizing all our other services, so we are regretfully taking craigslist personals offline. Hopefully we can bring them back someday.
"To the millions of spouses, partners, and couples who met through craigslist, we wish you every happiness!"
A year ago this notification was posted on Craigslist after shutting down their “personals” section for fear of prosecution by the feds for unknowingly aiding sex traffickers. This action has proved to hurt consensual sex workers, their clients, civilians looking for unpaid sexual connection, AND sex trafficking victims in the year since.

Fosta/Sesta just had its one year anniversary, and in the past 6 months all over the country with exceeding traction, 6-week bans on abortion (anti-choice abortion bills limiting accessibility to medical intervention before most people even know they’re pregnant) have been proposed and signed by politicians. It seems “the land of the free” is more interested in controlling the bodies of women, people who are able to reproduce, and marginalized workers within the sex industry than they are at:

  • actually protecting victims of sexual trafficking
  • helping marginalized people gain control of their lives, or
  • discontinuing the targeting of women, racialized people, and LGBTQ people as objects for sexualization, objectification, and imprisonment (especially when found controlling their own bodies based on personal choice).

If you aren’t pissed off you’re either part of the problem or you’re not paying attention. Choice over what each person does with their own body—whether sensual, sexual, procreative, or abstinent—are issues which effect every one of us. I’d love more cis and cishet men to speak up in support of autonomous choice for marginalized people with committed regularity. Cis men are, by and large, the ones passing these egregious bills, signing them into law, the clients of sex workers, sex traffickers, brothel owners, and egg fertilizer/embryo creators. Of course cis men are NOT the ones who suffer most of the legal or natural consequences for fallout from an active sexuality or laws which target such. I’ll posit here this is why we view sexual choice as a “women’s” or “minority” issue. The disparity between who traditionally benefits vs. who traditionally suffers from such exchanges clearly makes these issues, to my mind: CIS MALE ISSUES.

Men are not off the hook for educating themselves about the consequences passed onto others when acting out in favor of their own libidos. Action is warranted on behalf of their fellow humans who carry less political power and appeal, yet who garner the lion’s share of punishment and/or hardship garnered from sexual union.

Be The Man. Which “The Man” are you going be? It’s everyone’s job to speak up, participate, sympathize or empathize, and read articles or otherwise educate themselves on what parts of our society unduly harm our neighbors in favor of ourselves. Similarly, we should be paying marginalized people for their time explaining the nuances of issues that disproportionately impact them, especially when we don’t individually do the work to educate ourselves first.

Ejaculation matters—but never through the imprisonment of my or any other person’s body. Recently Georgia’s gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams agreed with this sentiment, saying, “Women should not put their lives at risk because of sex, and whether it is seen as a commercial enterprise or it’s human trafficking, our obligation is to create a safe space so that no woman risks her life because of sex.”

In other news of political matters swinging toward the side of sanity, New York is currently considering how to fully decriminalize sex work. The most frequent way I hear people dismiss sex work, and therefore sex workers (who by the numbers come from marginalized populations), is by complaining that sex work is “transactional”, and they aren’t looking for “transactional sex”. I retort that if you don’t see how all sex is transactional (especially in our financially unequal society), it may benefit you to meditate on exactly what “transactional” means to you, and consider whether that opinion is indeed a correct perspective, or a privileged one.

Paying for someone’s time—such as one does with their massage therapist, medical doctor, ballet teacher, or landscaper—does not define an “impersonal connection” (unless that’s what you’ve negotiated you’re paying for, such as in the case of negotiating objectification). Paying for someone’s time helps define the terms for what type of connection is meant to be had within the confines of your time together based on what you want.

Because you may not be comfortable (or able) to turn your sexuality on and off as required, doesn’t mean other people cannot. Money is a great motivator for this—no one denies how grateful they are for the services of a professional massage therapist when none of their friends “have the energy”, for instance. One of the most poignant reasons for hiring a professional (in sex work or any other realm of expertise) is their ability to show up on time, prepared to enact and/or cultivate the experience and environment you’ve asked for. Though “transactional”, what exactly is there to criticize about this? It seems that only in sexual scenarios do we entertain the ridiculous belief that others owe us release and/or catering to which is not transactional. Of those who seem to take on this belief, cis men are the most determined not to sway from this unequal and privileged/gainful perspective.

The reality is that sexual exchange or “transactional sexuality” is as old as two autonomous people deciding to negotiate sexual acts. “Sex work” is only as old as capitalism.

Sex is sacred. Sex is triggering. Sex is healing. Sex is an opportunity to know yourself and to know others better. Sex is no big deal. Sex is fun. Sex is a way to bond. Sex is a way to reproduce. Sex is a way to relieve stress. Sex is a way to calm your mind and emotions. Sex is a workout. Sex is something which changes your body’s chemistry. Sex is risky. Sex can be threatening. Sex is manipulative. Sex is gender affirming. Sex is gender traumatizing. Sex is a way to have orgasms. Sex is a means for falling asleep more easily. Sex is something a lot of people have a hard time talking about. Sex doesn’t have to involve genitalia. Sex is different for (and with) different people. What counts and doesn’t count as sex is a broad subject for personal exploration.

Sex is euphemized as “knowledge”. Our sexual explorations can teach us a lot about our bodies, hearts, minds, spirits, and communities. Some people spend considerable time gathering these types of knowledge, and they should be entitled to compensation for time spent, skills developed, and their willingness to work, just as any other educated professional does.

May we respect and care for one another as we get our needs met. May we all advocate for our needs responsibly. May the powers that be in conjunction with those who have disproportionate privilege in society help to bring about meaningful change toward an egalitarian reality, doing what they can in our collective fight for freedom, personal fulfillment, and peace. Men, as you value your sexual needs being met, this means especially you too.

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.

International Sex Worker’s Day!

Happy International Sex Worker’s day!!!

So, how are you celebrating and supporting the sex worker community and the people in your life (as well as yourself probably) who value things like erotica, porn, strippers, fetish models, full service sex workers, professional Dominants, tantrikas, sex coaches, cam performers, sensual massage practitioners, sex educators, and other sexy and sensually wise and educated career people who have a thing or two to teach the world about what we somewhat ironically refer to as “biblical knowledge”?

Today is a day to thoughtfully and vocally resist the power structures which have a hold on our social media/performance/lives and communal reality, and to call out righteously for sexual empowerment to be valued, and protection given to the people who spend their lives learning trades related to those issues.

Considering the ridiculous, offensive, and dangerous crackdowns over language, words, and ideas running rampant within social media these days, I’ll leave you with the following, and some good weekend resources:

Sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex sex!… Happy now? Ask me anything.

Read the following articles and consider how you can support working people who aren’t the butt of a sophomoric teenage joke, but part of an ancient heritage concerned with bodily knowledge which helps adults connect creatively and primally to themselves and to one another in ways our culture is largely repressed about, often ignorant of, and dubiously against — especially when considering the functionality of the government, church, the advertisement industry, and capitalism.

Here’s an article where you can find events TODAY and this weekend to support the sex worker community.

Here’s an article which might give you a better idea about how SESTA/FOSTA is actually affecting people these days, especially if you haven’t thought about it for a hot minute. It basically reports that everything journalists and those in the know (including my own articles) wrote about months ago, is actually happening. People in the sex work industry from all walks are in need these days, are in greater danger than they were before, and those who are actually being sex trafficked are still not being helped. This is not a moment to retreat quietly. This is a moment to fight in all the ways you know how for your own and everyone else’s civil liberties. This is a battle over who owns your body and what you are allowed do with it consensually.

Decriminalization is the word. Happy PRIDE month. Happy International Sex Worker’s Day!

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

Please support my work on Patreon, or for one time: Support the Artist or email me.
~Thank you.

Sexology

Photo by Jhayne

I’m considering getting a certification in Sexology. Why? Good question. Currently the United States doesn’t legally recognize such certifications. Legally anyone can say they’re a sex coach whether they’ve had training in the field or not. In my career I’ve completed trainings, have many years of research, and have worked in various aspects of sex counseling and education. I’ve been teaching about and creating art about sex, gender, orientation, and identity for 20+ years now (what?)! Yet still, I feel like I’m “not enough”.

AASECT, the American Association of Sexuality Educators Counselors and Therapists, does offer certification in sex therapy, sex counseling, and sex education. Each of AASECT’s certifications requires a degree in the psychology field — something which I don’t have, and am unsure if I want to find the funding for or make the time to obtain. There are also certification options which require less money and less time. Going after a certification in sex coaching seems more relevant to what I do currently, but I question if it is “enough” even if it isn’t strictly speaking, necessary?

How do I see myself functioning in a year or two from now? Right now I engage in so many different types of sexuality outreach and education I find it hard to see exactly what I’m building up for in the long run. It wouldn’t be enough to get hired to work as a legitimate therapist or to offer insurance options. It would be a start to stepping more confidently into the work I do, and perhaps learn to run the business end of my life more effectively. I love connecting with and helping the talk clients I have, and I’m glad that I work with clients in others ways as well. Lecturing at schools and with community groups, weaving aspects of sensuality and sexual dialogue into my performance art is another long standing and important way that I do this work, working with individuals as a Professional Dominant is extremely rewarding, so is writing this blog. None of it pays enough or steadily though. That is a struggle I am tired of.

At the end of the day I need to be able to sum up and understand all of the various ways that I engage in this work and decide what it is that I am doing. I don’t have a grasp on how to articulate it yet, and I think articulation is a good step toward running a business which is successful. I live the gig economy life, coupled with a degree in theater I don’t really understand anything else… I may be good at seeing other people and serving them in ways they need, however I have a spectacularly hard time seeing myself and selling.

I unendingly struggle with thinking and feeling I am not enough. I find how we organize worth on this planet confusing and hard. I get angry at how difficult it is to be taken seriously if you aren’t “playing the game” right, and often “playing the game” means being from a demographic I haven’t been born into or experience (though I’ve got it leagues easier than others too). I believe everyone has a purpose and inherent worth and that there is enough in the world to keep everyone above water. I wish it was easier to share wealth along lines of value. I know I am valuable, even if I am lost when it comes to selling my worth.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

Please support my work on Patreon, or for one time: Support the Artist or email me.
~Thank you.

 

Age Verification: www.ABCsOfKink.com addresses adult sensual and sexual information, including imagery associated with a wide variety of BDSM topics and themes. This website is available to readers who are 18+ (and/or of legal adult age within their districts). If you are 18+, please select the "Entry" button below. If you are not yet of adult age as defined by your country and state or province, please click the "Exit" link below. If you're under the age of consent, we recommend heading over to www.scarleteen.com — an awesome website, which is more appropriate to minors looking for information on these subjects. Thank you!