From the Desk of a PSO

Do I look Different? A photo from my first session as a professional Dominant!

Recently I was on call with a client and he wanted to know what I thought about his partner. He’s turned on that she’s dated extensively prior to meeting him, and has more experience than he does. He enjoys when she “plays the whore” in the bedroom. I asked him what he meant by that, and he said he likes how wild and verbal she can be. Obviously I think she sounds wonderful, but our conversation led me to muse on a few related topics.

Hand in hand with diverse experiences comes an ability to articulate thoughts and feelings on the subject more easily. Practice makes perfect. In our society, which socializes people to strive for longterm monogamy, acquiring sexual experience and feeling free to own your experiences is less commonly a topic of conversation. To speak of one’s sexual feelings and desires openly, to call a spade a spade while it’s happening in the bedroom [kitchen, or on the office floor], is a sexy practice indeed. For one to name what is happening in the moment — what is actually turning oneself and one’s partner(s) on, rather than gratuitously enacting the missionary style of sex we’re taught we’re supposed to enjoy — is a gift of affirmation.

To discover the sexual activities that please us as individuals, and for those desires to be be accepted is a powerful acknowledgement of self, of pleasure, and of a carnal reality which can be cared for without shame. It is a form of seeing and accepting another person deeply when one is able to name your turn-ons without judgement or imply wrongfulness.

So I ask this question today in reference to my client’s comment: What is a Whore (appropriately referred to as a Sex Worker)? My answer is: a Sex Worker* is a person (historically, and most commonly a woman) who is committed to deeper understanding of carnal knowledge. It is the world’s oldest profession, and one which will never (and should never) go away. Like any profession it deserves compensation. Unlike many professions it should come with hazard pay and protection by the state (rather than against it).

To “know” someone infers a level of established intimacy. It also means having shared a sexual experience with them. I do not think this is a strange double entendre. Sharing one’s sexuality is sharing oneself at the most primal and basic level there is. Consensual sexual intimacy allows our animal self space to emerge, and the lizard brain to take over. We have opportunity to shed the skin of intellectual humanity, and the pleasure of our desires may emerge and dance freely. We find ourselves looking through the eyes of love, lust, desire, caring, and vulnerability during these moments. Our vulnerable selves exposed, allows another to truly “know” who we are.

When people who I do not know approach me for sexual or sensual connection because they are attracted to how free and well versed I am in expressing my experiences with various sexual and sensual pursuits, or how articulate I can be within the subjects of desire, it is not because they are interested in pleasing me. It’s because they are interested in setting their own selves free, and they see in me the potential to experience something they themselves desire to unlock. I am a professional sex worker because I am open to, non-judging of, and excited to support other people’s journeys and needs in the sensual and sexual realms within the boundaries of my comfort and safety. It is a job. That sex work is my profession does not mean I’m not passionate about what I am doing, but make no mistake — I am doing the session for my client. A therapist does not turn around and unload their personal crisis’ on their clients, nor does a sex worker make a session about what they themselves wholly wish for within an intimate relationship. I may experience pleasure, just as any person who loves their job or practicing a skill effectively should. Just like your friend who happens to be a chef is not be expected to cook dinner every time you hang out, nor should I be expected to plan ahead and prepare myself to fulfill someone else’s desires simply because they request my audience and appreciate (or are turned on by) my photos, art, articulations, free spirit, and writing. Outside of my personal intimate relationships I require payment for my time and attention in these matters. As I should. Does a session feel like love? Yes, I would say some of the most successful connections can hold that feeling for the allotted time we spend together. A session has clear boundaries though: a price, a time limit, and a pre-negotiation about what activities are on and off limits.

I think it’s wonderful that the man I was speaking with and helping — both erotically and emotionally (as he paid me by the minute) — has a partner who helps him feel alive, turned on, excited, openly desirous, and sexually satisfied. He mentioned they were having trouble and that she told him to start seeing other people. I hope he finds methods to further support her needs, as she may not be around forever to cater to his desires. It is not a woman’s (nor a sex worker’s) job to fix or perfectly entertain anyone sexually. Sex workers do not owe you their trade skills, their passion, years of research, experiences, or fought-for freedoms garnered from a lifetime journey into and through sexual, sensual, and often violent taboos. Cherish your local sex workers. Fight for decriminalization of their long-standing vocations. Patronize them (and tip). Treat them like the wonderful and wise resources they are. Sex workers allow themselves, and so their clients, to be deeply and vulnerably cared for and known.

*The terms “whore” and “prostitute” are regarded as derogatory slurs. They are only appropriately used by full-service sex workers in reclamation of their history of misuse, violence, and abuse. The general terms, “sex worker” or “full-service sex worker”, and other words which more specifically describe the type of sex work being referred to (escort, porn star, pro Dom(me), stripper, etc.) are the appropriate ways to refer to the people in these industries.

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. Thanks.

“Escort” is Not a Bad Word, Definitions within Sex Work

I will not do my part to reinforce a sexually repressive nor sensually harmful society. It is not an egalitarian (nor feminist, womanist, anti-racist, anti-ableist, anti-classist) view of the world that our bodies — any of them — should be treated, taught to be thought of, nor enslaved within a paradigm of shame. ~Creature Karin Webb

I am a professional Dominant. I am also someone who has searched for a sugar relationship (Sugar Daddy/Sugar Mommy) from time to time, I’m a longtime sex educator, and I’ve flirted with various other forms of work defined under the beautiful Red Umbrella. You probably know that each of the terms I just used references different vocations, yet how different and how similar are they? Every now and then while chatting with a potential client they’ll dislike something I say and act out about it. It usually happens when I hold my boundaries and they don’t line up with that person’s fantasies, and so in Aesop’s sense of the phrase they go all sour grapes on me — frequently punctuating their distain with a piggy-squeal attempt at derogatory insult hurled in my general direction such as, “Whatever, I don’t date escorts”, or, “if I wanted an escort I’d date a stripper”, or, “I don’t pay to get my cock wet, whore.”

I don’t really get heated by these outbursts anymore (regardless of how obnoxious and annoying they are), I generally laugh at the complete ignorance contained within their utterance, and then smile at the fact that we’ve successfully vetted out yet another anger-issue burdened, entitled bro from the herd — absolutely not my client demographic. Sometimes I’ll make an effort to educate the lad before I block him (yes, it’s always, every single time, a him). Recently a guy was chatting me up about being a sugar daddy and he got pissy when I said I wouldn’t get involved with him completely on his terms for free (aka send him a bunch of nudes and video just because he rudely and inappropriately demanded them from me about 10 messages into our first ever conversation). His first retort was “sugar babies are just girls who want to be paid for doing nothing”, and when I explained what a sugar baby was he bounced back with “I’m not looking for an escort.” Following was my response, and the inspiration for this article:

Being a sugar baby is very different than escort work — no slight to escorts, they’re awesome. Escorts are event based. Sugar is ongoing-relationship based, and often puts someone on allowance. Full Service Sex Workers (FSSW) are hourly or activity based. Strippers are club based. Doms are BDSM session based (which I actually do professionally). Porn is film based. Wives are marriage based (historically and still quite presently today)… Sex work is as old as time and it’s the only honest way that our patriarchal society levels the playing field in response to the financial and social disadvantages it puts on women and minorities.

If you’re cheap or don’t want to look at the wage gap between you and your partner, that’s your damage. I make less than 15,000 a year. I’m clear about what I put my time and energy into — the things I care about, and the people who value my time and attention. You are obviously not one of those, so bye. Good luck finding what you’re looking for. I hope your perspective grows and changes over time. Xx

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This article endeavors to help define what different types of sex workers actually do. That said, being a sex worker of any type is an extremely personal profession, and no two sex workers are going to have exactly the same skills, offerings, boundaries, or ways of working. This article is meant to give a general sense of what these words usually refer to, especially within the context of a society which so brutally represses sexuality, consensual sex work, women, and minorities while at the same time financially rewarding those with more social privilege while also instilling a sense of entitlement over women’s and minority people’s bodies. It’s my belief that capitalism and sex work go hand in hand like the yin and yang. Without capitalism (and so systemic sexual repression to keep a particular hierarchy of power in place) there would be no need for sex workers (I’ll write an article expanding on this purview sometime). In the meantime, let’s chat sex jobs!

What is and what is not sex work? In light of Fosta/Sesta and the breakdown of the USA’s functional ability to properly or safely converse about and connect on the subject of sex work online, it’s an important moment to continue public discourse on the subject and contribute to visibility rather than erasure of this human reality. Knowing the difference between “sex work” and “sex trafficking” is an important and essential understanding for anyone who might become involved in any aspect of either. So, let’s start by defining those terms first:

  • Sex Trafficking: Sex trafficking is not sex work. Sex Trafficking is abuse and absolutely a serious human rights issue. It defines 100% of exchanges which provide trade, profit, fraud, or money for underage sexual activity. It also defines any exchange where someone is coerced, forced, threatened, held hostage, defrauded, or is non-consenting to provide any type of sexual activity for trade, profit, or money. It is illegal. It should be. It’s a serious global problem with victims and perpetrators anywhere and everywhere around the world. It is not always easy to recognize. There’s a good website, www.StopTheTraffick.org, which can educate you further on sex trafficking, how to recognize it, and what to do when you come across it.
  • Consensual Sex Work (aka “Sex Work”): Consensual sex work is the negotiation of sexual or sensual activities between consenting adults for money, trade, or profit. Consensual sex work is the true meaning of the term “sex work”. If certain acts are not agreed upon during negotiation of sex work, yet come to pass non-consensually against a sex worker, it is still rape, and it is still illegal. Sex work takes many forms, and any given form of sex work does not categorically guarantee a specific sexual or sensual act will be provided. Sex workers decide individually what skills they are interested in sharing with clients, what boundaries they have, for what price range they will be compensated at, and who they are willing to work with, unless they work for a third party who sets these expectations. Sex workers maintain the right to work or not work for a third party (person or business entity), and if they cannot exercise the right to leave work or refuse service to a client, they are not involved in sex work, but being trafficked.
  • Survival Sex Work: There is a kind of grey area in the world of sex work which reflects the reality that some people are willing to do sex work for their survival, but it’s not necessarily something they would do otherwise. It can be an every now and then thing to put food on the table or to make rent, or it can be work that someone finds their way into and eventually feels trapped by or unable to switch out of. Even though a survival sex worker may not find their work to be abusive, coercive, or they wouldn’t define what they’re doing as a form of trafficking, they’re often not engaging in sex work as an “enthusiastic yes”. Survival sex workers are usually people who come from poverty, and are frequently marginalized people who feel (or have experienced) that they can’t get hired into a different well paying job or career.

The following list includes sex worker and sex worker-adjacent jobs. The definition of what “sex” is varies from person to person, and there is no federal definition of such. You may or may not agree with my definitions, and that’s fine. You might think I’ve defined professions which shouldn’t be included under the umbrella of sex work, or that I’ve left off things that should. That’s entirely okay. This list is not meant to be a definitive list of what does and does not belong in discussions of sex work. My hope is that it represents a solid jumping off point for many varied complex conversations on the subject. Thank you for reading.

  • Cammers: webcam models and actors are people who perform sexuality on camera, usually to be live-streamed through a website for paying (and often also nonpaying) consumers. The hosting website takes a percentage or fee from whatever “tips” are earned by the the cammer during their session. Tips can come from random people who are watching that cammer’s “room”, from playing “games” with the cammer (ex: tip to roll the dice, tip to spin the wheel, etc), from tip-per-minute private room sessions with the cammer, or any other number of creative online flirtations.
  • Dom(me)s, (Professional): professional Dominants (Doms/Dommes) are people who offer BDSM play sessions in exchange for “tribute” usually. Sessions can be hosted at a professional dungeon, home dungeon, hotel, etc. Sometimes pro Doms are self employed, and sometimes they work for hire at a public or private dungeon. Professional Dom/mes generally do not offer “sexual services” in accordance with their state’s solicitation law definitions.
  • Erotic Massage Providers: utilize any number of massage modalities in service to their clients, which may or may not include the famous “happy ending”. Erotic massage providers usually do not shy away from contact with the client’s “private parts” during massage, including breast massage, buttocks, and genital massage. Legally, state or federally licensed massage therapists may not receive money for erotic massage work without losing their licenses and/or being fired by their company if found out. Some erotic massage providers may provide prostate massage, yoni massage, tantric practice during massage, happy endings, etc, while some providers limit their erotic touch to external stimulation.
  • Escorts: are people who are hired for a certain amount of time to be a companion to their clients. The work might include being a dinner date, attending a public function, spending time doing a particular activity together, etc. Whether or not the escort engages in sexual acts with their client during that time is up for negotiation between the two of them.
  • Full Service Sex Workers (FSSW): is the non-slur way of saying what people mean when they use the term “prostitute”. FSSWs are usually for hire by the hour or by the sex act. For a rather lengthy period of time leading up to 2009 in the state of Rhode Island, full service sex work which was negotiated “indoors” (off the street) was decriminalized due to a loophole in the writing of Rhode Island’s solicitation laws. When that loophole was closed, research data showed that for the period of time sex work was decriminalized: cases of gonorrhea in females went down by about 40% statewide, and rape cases reported across the state were down about 30%. Great arguments for decriminalization of sex work, wouldn’t you say?!
  • Marriage and Domestic Partnerships: marriage and domestic partnerships are painted to be the ultimate form of romantic love in our society. Historically though, and contemporarily, people still find themselves exchanging sexual favors for security within the bonds of matrimony. It’s built into the patriarchal organization of our civilization. When one sex of people categorically makes more money than the others, I can’t see how the exchange of spousal duties (sex acts) for a place to live, food to eat, healthcare, etc… is any different than any other form of sex work. Unfortunately some people in this role may be more prone to emotional, psychological, and physical violence over time due to the legal sanctioning of their agreements. It’s much harder to divorce an abusive partner and banish them from your life than it is to get a restraining order for a problematic client — especially once you have children together.
  • Models, (Fetish & Adult): this category includes people who model for photos, film, or perform on stage providing content which is nude, fetish oriented, or otherwise adult in nature. Models often make income by being hired for a photoshoot, a short video clip, a club event, or stage performance. Many models also create their own content and sell it online to paying customers, or receive commissions to create specific content for an individual client.
  • Phone Sex Operators: talk sexy on the phone and usually charge by the minute. They can work for themselves or a larger phone sex operator company. They usually only receive a percentage of the money charged to their client, while their employment agency takes the rest. Phone sex operators sometimes also text these days. Depending on the company they work for, they may have the option to provide photos and short videos through text, or book private video chats for clients in search of personalized connection and entertainment.
  • Porn Stars: are actors who perform various sex, BDSM, and sensual acts on film. Like the  non-porn film industry there’s a wide range of film styles and professionalism represented in the final product — from local amateur video to big budget and widely distributed work. Porn actors are usually paid a daily or hourly fee or stipend to perform in a film, or might be paid a percentage of the film’s profit over time. The porn industry has its own adult entertainment awards hosted by AVN (Adult Video News) much like the Oscars. Smaller independent sex shops around the country sometimes host local amateur adult film festivals — there could even be one in your area!
  • Sex Coaches: help people with a wide variety of issues concerning sex, relationships, identity, and intimacy. There are programs that certify sex coaches, though there is no regulation of sex coaching, so anyone with experience and interest can find clients and work as one. Most sex coaches will have a specific area of expertise that they focus on. Sex coaches usually utilize a “talk therapy” model while working with clients, and may assign homework for their clients to explore outside of session.
  • Sex Educators: cover a wide range of activities such as giving age appropriate school presentations, providing curriculum writing on sexuality education, sexuality themed column writing (or blogging), sex toy party teaching, working outreach for companies such as Planned Parenthood, teaching classes and workshops at the local independent sex store… Sexuality educators generally build a career around teaching, answering questions about, and sometimes demonstrating information surrounding sexuality, sexual identity, BDSM, sex and gender issues, sexual orientation — the field of human sexuality. You can be certified as a sexuality educator through ASSECT, though not every sexuality education position requires that you obtain this.
  • Sex Surrogates: are people who provide a variety of intimacy and sexual services to a client while working in tandem with a licensed sex therapist. You can get certified to do this work though not all sex surrogates do. The idea behind utilization of a sex surrogate’s skills is that some people, prescribed within their therapy, may want to have real life sexual or intimacy experiences in order to help their emotional, sexual, psychological, or physical growth and well being. In these cases a therapist will bring a sex surrogate on board to consult with their client. All three people work together to execute a program which the client and therapist decide will be helpful within the client’s therapy. The client and therapist have regular therapy sessions ongoing throughout the length of this process, the therapist and surrogate define a plan of action together to address the client’s intimacy and sexual needs, the surrogate and client have a number of sessions or “dates” where they practically work through whatever intimacy or sexual issues have been targeted within the plan, and the surrogate and therapist check back in about the client’s progress after each surrogacy session.
  • Sex Therapists: are professional therapists licensed by the state who have taken additional (and ongoing) credits within the field of human sexuality in order to specialize in areas pertaining to sexuality. Sex therapists are just like every other therapist in the types of therapy they may offer, but their specialization will be in topics concerning sex, relationships, and sexual identity. Sex Therapists may decide they would like to work with sex surrogates or not when appropriate, and may offer referrals to sex workers when they deem it appropriate to a client’s health or needs.
  • Strippers: are dancers in strip clubs who may also work privately or for hire at private parties and events. Strippers generally dance and remove clothing in a sensual and sexy manner for tips. Strippers usually work for a strip club and they often pay a house fee or percentage of their earnings to the house to dance on any particular shift. They may also be expected to tip out the DJ, bar staff, security detail, house mother, or other club workers after their shift. Strippers generally perform on a club stage, in VIP rooms, and in private booths. Lap dances can be bought by individuals and couples by the song or by the minute. Cities (and then clubs) set the rules and regulations concerning the age of dancers, what parts of the body must always be covered (or don’t have to be), work fees, and any other number of specifications about what a stripper is allowed and not allowed to do during work. The movement to unionize strippers is important — even earlier this year there were organized stripper strikes in response to NYC clubs which were enacting racist hiring and scheduling practices, promoting “instagram girls” as bartenders and floor models, and robbing hard working strippers of their tips in plethora ways.
  • Sugar Babies: are the people who find “arrangements” with Sugar Daddies and Sugar Mommies. The general expectation is that there will be an ongoing relationship between “babies” and their “Sugar” which honors the sugar baby’s time and attention financially. Like any relationship the frequency of dates, the expectation of emotional and practical connection, the amount of spoiling or allowance provided, and the degree of sexual contact between participants is a personal arrangement which develops over time.

I hope you can see the pattern clearly outlined above — sex work is less an issue of sex in this society, and more an issue of money. Those who have ample financial resources are in a position to search for sex for free or to commission it. Those without financial security consider all of their assets — physical body, sexual skills, emotional maturity, sensual intelligence, communication skills, capacity for empathy, etc., as commodity. Though it is possible for any person of any sex, gender, race, or background to become a sex worker, the fact that we so predominantly fetishize women, people of color, LGBTQ people, and youth in our society teaches — I’ll even say “grooms” — these demographics of people to consider their inherent worth in terms of sexual prowess and appeal.

I am not against sex work, just the opposite. I am for complete ownership over one’s body, including the choice to use one’s body for labor in whichever way one decides. As someone who’s been a sexuality educator for a couple decades now, and who has dabbled in various forms of sex work over time, I’ve found it can be a fulfilling and even healing endeavor when approached carefully and intentionally by those involved. Sex work needs to be decriminalized and better understood by society. Sex work as an institution, and sex workers and clients as individuals, need to have support networks built around them including resources for safety, continued education, support to enter and exit specific vocations, safe spaces to work and negotiate, open conversations about problematic and unsafe individuals and behaviors within community, and more. Sex work needs to be valued and legitimized for the skilled efforts and work that it is, and people seeking sex workers need to have instilled within them a healthy and professional respect for those whom they might work with… Either that or we need to get rid of money completely and provide for and treat all people equally. I have a feeling decriminalization will have to come first.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

Support my writing on Patreon. For one time Donations: Support the Artist or email.
This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art. Thank you.

Connection and Shame

Photo by RADskillZ Photography 2013

Why do I love the sex work that I do? Simple. It feels amazing to connect with individuals and couples and to help them find that place of openness which leads to a delicious exchange of sensual energy. That’s really most of it, sometimes done with whips and blindfolds, sometimes with massage oil, sometimes with my voice or command… It feels incredible when a person lets me in and I get to guide them through a new experience or show them how easy and sexy and rewarding communication can be. I enjoy seduction, I love everything about it. In a very grown-up way this work defies “growing up”. The adult playground is a reality I love to share with others (call me Pan)… Negotiation, consent, seduction, and positive experiences abound. I’m into it!

Individuals I’ve worked with have told me they were able to enjoy activities they’d never thought of before or were nervous about, that after our sessions they were able to communicate with their other partner(s) better, and some clients have brought techniques I taught them home for more satisfying sensual connections there. I’ve been informed that my energy and guidance felt natural, built organically over the course of a scene, and that I was easy to work with and learn from. I’ve been told that people consistently found themselves enjoying experiences they were nervous to try or worried they wouldn’t like, and so were able to learn something new about themselves. I’ve been told by couples I’ve worked with that they felt very confident trying new things with me, and that they were able to communicate more openly and creatively with their partners after a session or two of us working together. I’ve been told that working with me felt like a safe place to open up and grow.

I love this work. How could I not?!

My solo show is entitled “NO SHAME”, and that’s an idea I’m serious about when it comes to sensual and sexual things. I think it’s important that we’re able to differentiate which parts of that feeling, shame, have been thrust upon us or taught to us in reaction to certain stimulus, and which parts of that feeling come from an authentic place inside meant to teach us about our own personal boundaries or current needs. Shame is not a useful feeling when used to limit oneself out of fear. It often leads to self-repression. Self-repression is a scary tool when employed over a long period of time, and can be traced to a lot of inappropriate and harmful behaviors including outright abuse.

Just think what the world might be like if instead of feeling bad about our sexual and sensual needs, we were celebrated by our communities for discovering more about what makes us happy and turned on. Imagine if we were taught about consent and sensual/sexual negotiation and good communication skills, rather than repeatedly mis-informed about sex and steeped in a lifetime of superficial and harmful stigma related to the subject. I believe we’d be better at communicating with one another in general, and we’d probably be happier in our day to day realities too.

Despite my desire to examine shame and banish it from one’s primary experience of sexuality, I think it’s also a really good guidepost for learning more about what we need and desire from ourselves and others. When I feel an authentic pang of shame (rather than a reactionary dose of the feeling) it’s often because I realize I didn’t do the best job communicating with someone, or I realize I may have caused unwelcome unease or pressure in a situation. This information let’s me know I should be paying more attention, that I can do better, and that a follow-up conversation or a check-in might be in order.

Shame is a good reminder to slow down and check in with myself: do I think I pressured someone into a thing? Could I have negotiated what happened more clearly? How did the persons(s) I was negotiating or playing with actually respond to or communicate with me? Do I need to have a follow-up or check-in about anything? Does my feeling of shame come from my own boundaries being pushed or ignored? Could I have been clearer about what I wanted? How would I articulate what I need now if I was to articulate what I failed to before? Am I simply worried I did something wrong and that there may be consequences forthcoming, and can I work to let that feeling go (this one is specific to my own baggage/anxiety, but I’m sure it’s not uncommon)? What can I give myself now, or ask for from another person, to actively address, heal, or release the discomfort I’m feeling?

I remember the first time I had a threesome in college. It was a great night, but I woke up the next morning worried I’d done something wrong or that I was bad. I called my mom to process, and she just asked me a few really clear questions: “Did you have fun? Did everyone else have fun? Did anyone get hurt?”… When I answered, “Yes, yes, and no”, she replied, “Then I don’t think you need to feel bad about it, I think you can let yourself enjoy that experience.”

Thanks Mom!

These are some of the ways I’ve learned to address my own feelings of shame — a common foil to deeper connection with those around me. When I’ve spoken up rather than hid behind the feeling, often really wonderful conversations (and sometimes hard ones) have been had. Healing and growth can result, and even better experiences are waiting in the wings when I acknowledge what feels good, or with an open mind and heart, what doesn’t.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

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~Thank you.

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