Wednesday, 31 July 2019

Risk vs Reward: Sugar Scams, Part 18

Well, this will be the last post in my findom series.

A quick note: if you or a loved one are experiencing a behavioural addiction, or you think you may be sliding towards it, seeking help from a registered psychologist and/or psychiatrist is strongly advisable. Counselling is great, and affordable options like Betterhelp.com and other outlets are an excellent way to deal with anxiety and other mental health problems. 


Today, I want to cover the ups and downs of findom and how it relates to other coping mechanisms - both healthy and unhealthy ones. I've been out of the scene for a while, but I couldn't leave this article unfinished, so here we are.

I've alluded to the issue of findom as an addiction previously. The men I spoke to would often talk about a compulsive need to send - an urge that had to be fought and dealt with through distractions and mental discipline. Even completely broke men were interested in the fetish - far from being merely the purview of rich men, it seems that the rich tend to be focused on in these stories. That completely ignores the experiences and reality of the fetish and related sex work - but that's nothing new; it's common to see reporting focus on those of means and the most extreme versions of stories, rather than the hard-scrabble and complex reality of things.


Can it be addicting? 


Yes, findom can be addicting - but that doesn't make it inherently morally wrong. However, the exchange of attention and power play for money may add an extra layer of risk. There is something about the combination of factors that appears to be intoxicating.

As far as the mechanics of addiction, however, findom more closely resembles shopping addiction - something I myself have experience with - or gambling than, say, "sex addiction" (which was not included in the DSM-V, despite heated debate on the topic). Although addiction to pornography is also under debate regarding its veracity, both sexuality and the use of pornography can fall under the diagnostic criteria of non-substance based addictions. 

With the caveat that this blog post does not constitute diagnostic criteria, and that it cannot and should not be used to provide a diagnosis, let me explain how behavioral addictions work. A behavioral addiction involves a compulsion to engage with a rewarding non-substance-based (as in, non drug or alcohol-based) behaviour, despite negative consequences to one's mental, physical, or financial wellbeing. These are sometimes considered impulse control disorders, but ultimately, they use the same neurological architecture as substance-based addictions, hijacking the brain's natural reward network.

Non-physical addictive processes include sensitization or desensitization - either an increased or a decreased response resulting from continued or long-term exposure to a behavior or substance (resulting in either an amped-up response to small amounts of the behavior or substance, or needing more of an activity or substance to get the same effect); tolerance of increasing amounts of a behaviour over time; withdrawal symptoms on cessation or decreased use of a behaviour (such as anxiety, insomnia, irritability, etc); psychological and social or interpersonal negative consequences as a result of the behaviour; damage to relationships (such as from hiding the costs of an addiction and deceiving a loved one); and of course, compulsive participation in and obsession over the behaviour.

As you might be able to tell from this (very, very brief) description, pretty much any behaviour can become unhealthy if it becomes a sole coping mechanism for dealing with other problems. As I experienced, one of the most dangerous and deceptive elements of an addiction is denial. Thinking something isn't really a problem, not recognizing how much time and money you're devoting to it, ignoring the effects it's having on your mental state and your life - these things really add up. Worse, an addiction feels like a treatment for an existing life problem, but the escape is only temporary - and does nothing to actually solve real life problems.

Of course, the problem with an addiction is that it doesn't actually make things better - it just distracts you from the pain or anxiety, while actually adding to the burden of problems to deal with.


But are all sex-related activities bad for you? 


The American Psychiatric Association and other bodies associated with the field have declared that, no, they aren't - for nearly all people, and arguably, all people to an extent - masturbation, sexual fantasies, partner activities, and other forms of sexuality are not only healthy and normal, they're basic human needs. There are a few completely asexual people who don't experience sexual desire, attraction, or even the urge to masturbate or fantasize under any circumstances, but even many asexual people, who may or may not experience sexual attraction at all (or to certain degrees), participate in some form of masturbation or fantasizing.

But to veer away from the dickering about sexual identity categorization, let's talk about the healthy thing I keep mentioning. Surprise! It's BDSM!

Fifty shades of therapy 

Unexpectedly, despite the portrayal of BDSM participants as "broken people" or "psychopaths" - thank youuu, Psychopathia Sexualis, you poisonous and outdated old bit of moralistic clap-trap - BDSM actually has therapeutic benefits.

Because consent and discussion are essential and inextricable components of the roleplay and scenes, they create and offer practice in communication skills. Talking about taboo subjects and having to outline one's precise expectations and needs has great value to ordinary life. Clearly communicating how much is good, too much, or on the borderline creates a practice of greater self-awareness for one's needs, preferences, and tolerance. It also creates opportunities for painful experiences in a safe environment. Human brains really like simulations and practice-runs for solving problems and dealing with them, which is one of the theories about why we dream, and is certainly one of the reasons we find fiction and roleplay games so compelling. (Incidentally, Dungeons and Dragons  also has been shown to create positive outcomes and provide opportunities to develop leadership and problem-solving skills. It's been used to excellent effect in both prisons and with school children!)

The thing about BDSM is that it provides a safe environment in which to experience pain and extreme sensations and emotions - unlike abuse, which occurs without consent, discussion, or healthy boundaries. In fact, it looks like BDSM actually makes you a healthier person through participation - and the mechanics of how and why it feels good are absolutely fascinating.

But not everyone is ready to or able to pursue BDSM in person, or has access to a dungeon and equipment - so for them, online pornography and roleplay often fill the gap.


So, is findom or porn addiction something to worry about? 


Ultimately, the answer to this is two-fold - a), seeking help for a behavioural addiction can be painful and embarrassing, but it's necessary for recovery, and should not be stigmatized; and b) there are people who make a lot of money from pushing certain moral perspectives about pornography, sex work, and conflating/associating all human trafficking with sex trafficking (even though sex trafficking makes up a small minority of human trafficking worldwide, being mostly composed of domestic services and agricultural labour). Unfortunately, even far left progressive ideologies have been infiltrated with anti-sex work rhetoric, including some Marxist circles and parts of feminism. (That's a discussion for another time - and believe me, it's coming.)

Ultimately, the salaciousness and fearfulness about financial domination tends to circle back around to very old motifs and storylines. The underprivileged and desperate woman trying to get by; the ignorant young girl trapped in a lifestyle by happenstance; the conniving, aging prostitute determined to shatter as many marriages and control as many men as possible as some form of revenge or sick fulfillment - these figures are, as always, more archetypal than realistic. Sure, they may contain hints of truth from time to time, but real human experiences can seldom be expressed with the thin and gaudy paper puppetry of sensationalised rhetoric.

Above all, if you want to pursue a fetish or interest, try to ask people in the world about how to stay safe. Google as much as you can, and try to pick peer-reviewed sites or those with established reputations when getting your facts - rather than, say, "RealChristianMoms.Com" or other spurious websites.

And remember - sex work is just work.


***
Michelle Browne is a sci fi/fantasy writer and editor. She lives in Lethbridge, AB with her partner-in-crime and Max the cat. Her days revolve around freelance editing, knitting, jewelry, and learning too much. She is currently working on other people's manuscripts, the next books in her series, and drinking as much tea as humanly possible.

Find her all over the internet: * 
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Sunday, 28 July 2019

Stuff I Learned This Week: July 22nd-July 28th, 2019

I'm trying something new this week, something that may or may not stick - just a way for me to share the reading materials, videos, and podcasts I've enjoyed this week.

- Blackwater Security is run by Eric Prince, Betsy DeVos' little brother. They're a highly unethical private security firm that started out working for the CIA in a training capacity. After being pushed away by the Obama administration, Blackwater has been brought into the new administration - even after becoming internationally active as a "shipping company" selling mercenary training and services throughout the Middle East and in China. Eric Prince views himself as a "modern day crusader" and he's basically a freelance war criminal.

- The Border Patrol  in the United States is 95% male, mostly Chicano and Latino, and has an absolutely horrifying culture of sexual assault and dehumanization of migrants. Their actions are being spurred on by both the history of racism and the present-day autoimmune-disease-like flare-up of racism that is the Trump presidency.

- Private prisons in New York are basically run by gangs because of extremely poor oversight, low wages, and improper staff training.

- Astronauts struggled with peeing in space for decades, and basically just had to wet themselves in their suits and put their poop in bags. This was not dealt with until the first woman astronaut went up - and even now, poop baggies are still required to deal with the issue.

- Busing and segregation have had pervasive effects to the present day. It's something Democrats don't like talking about, but it's still really important.

- People on the radical left think Stalin was a good guy and still respect Mao, which is extremely messed up and makes me quite angry. (Twitter and Facebook commentators are the source for this one; I do have an upcoming article about it as well)

- I'm not the only person who thinks Stalin and Mao did the same bad thing as other genocidal fascist dictators. That said, some takes from the radical left on social democracy are also very wild. That said, as "Breadtube" or "Leftube" has risen in prominence, it's quite disturbing that the usual leftist fractiousness has reared its ugly head once again.

- The depth of inequalities in the US is absolutely horrifying and shattering.



- China and the Phillipines are shipping back plastic recycling, which means Canada and the US need much better ways of handling their recycling.

- Boris Johnson is the new Prime Minister of Britain, unfortunately.

- It's hard to make changes for the environment - but there are some cognitive tricks we play on ourselves that can let us fix those problems.

And now, some fun things!

- This discussion of unreliable narrators, and the series in general, is fantastic!



- apparently, blood is repulsed by magnetism, even though blood contains iron in haemeoglobin. So that's weird.

Some reptiles have penes, some have cloacas like birds (except ducks, which famously have weird corkscrew penes), and some female bearded dragons have penes while in the egg!

- Endangered animals thrive in ghost towns! Tiny "rewilding" preserves make an absolutely spectacular difference in the fight against extinction.

- a particular fungus turns cicadas into sex zombies...

- This song was so beautiful that I absolutely had to include it, even though it's not necessarily something I "learned" this week. This one is so intimate and awkward, too, that it's lovely.

***
Michelle Browne is a sci fi/fantasy writer and editor. She lives in Lethbridge, AB with her partner-in-crime and Max the cat. Her days revolve around freelance editing, knitting, jewelry, and learning too much. She is currently working on other people's manuscripts, the next books in her series, and drinking as much tea as humanly possible.

Find her all over the internet: * 
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Wednesday, 24 July 2019

Sweet Escape (Sugars in Fiction vs Fact): Sugar Scams, Part 17

As I alluded to last week, sugar daddies have made their way into fiction. In an era of economic strife and strain, it's not very surprising to notice a growing trend for fantasies about a romantic figure who can offer parental levels of protection and safety with fiscal security and luxuries.

I decided to watch a bunch of news coverage and various stories about sugar babies to see how they were being portrayed - especially compared to "normal girls."

Now, I will refer mostly to "men" and "women" in this article, but remember that many sex workers are non-binary or trans. I haven't run into any submissive or dominant non-men participating in findom - with the exception of a couple of other dommes who were submissive to a particular powerhouse domme by the name of "Miss Leora" on Twitter - so I have referred to the sugar daddies here with masculine pronouns and the term "men". Now, with that caveat out of the way, let's talk about how the world sees sugar babies, both as reporters and in fiction.





Compare and contrast these two videos - the first, featuring a very archetypal sugar baby (with no acknowledgement that just perhaps, she might be portraying herself as a fetish character rather than showing every side of her personality) and the second, featuring a young woman who stumbled into the lifestyle, and isn't a serious, career baby (as far as I can tell).




Media 


The sexual fetish for "bimbos" - which comes from the Italian term "bambino" - is often linked to the sugar lifestyle, but it's not necessarily part of it. Because sugars are submissive in their role, the highly sexualised, frivolous, apparently unintelligent behaviour is as much a part of the fantasy as the oversized breasts, puffy lips, luxuriant hair, and surgically altered features. It doesn't necessarily represent the actual personality of the woman - a mistake often made in media portrayals and interviews.

Sugar babies on screen are often presented as either conniving "gold digger" con-artists, brainless sex toys with no self-respect, or completely depraved, cold-blooded women who don't care about themselves. It's weird to see reporters buy into the personas the girls portray - but it's also weird, because reporters and media ought to be critical, and not just share the stage-face, the sensationalized, abstracted self.

Millionaires, billionaires, and lords


In contrast, most romance novels have a strong bias towards portraying their protagonists as "normal girls." Of course, it's okay to be a sugar baby if you fall into it by accident, as a vast number of romance novels show. Anastasia Steele in the 50 Shades of Gray series could be considered a sugar baby, but she's so earnestly ignorant of her own charms - in the way that 19th century male authors slavered over, of course - that she falls into the "Completely Normal Girl" category. And since most women think of themselves as normal, or at least, as protagonists - which is fine! - the wish-fulfillment storylines often pit a gold-digging, bimbo-esque, or cold-blooded character as an antagonist to the Normal Girl main character.

Naturally, the "marriage of convenience," "marriage to avoid scandal," and similar tropes do overlap with sugaring - especially because the hero is usually financially well-off - but are rarely portrayed as such.

From fiction to reality


Frustratingly, in the real world, "not like other girls" issues are still rife in the industry. Considering that actual sugars and fin dommes, and even other sex workers all tend to throw shade on each other's professions, it's pretty frustrating. Honestly, there's no point in it, and seeing oneself as better than "whores" - whoever that is - or "bimbos" or even "regular" women is terribly counter-productive, and only leads to a lack of solidarity. However, the strong Christian community within the Romance industry works directly against any sense of solidarity or respect for sex workers, and creates a sense of scorn and disgust, as well as pity. Focusing on "trafficking" narratives and lack of self-determination - something present in Dark Romance in abundance - also provides a sensationalized and distorted perspective on both sex workers and peripheral erotic labour.

"It's not prostitution! It's a relationship! But I'm fine with escorting..." comes the frequent cry. We need to examine why we're so scared of prostitution and sex work, and why it's always portrayed negatively or fearfully.




What's the real deal?


I've already touched on the fact that sugaring isn't nearly as easy, straightforward, or easy as it seems, but a frustrating thing about fiction is that main characters fall into the relationships with incredible ease. In contrast, fan fiction writers will address the existence of sugar daddy websites and such. Sometimes romance authors will allude to the futility of prior dating experiences, but the actual relationship tends to fall together with unrealistic ease. Even though many of the books on the market are just written by ghost writers and crafted by multiple individuals, I would encourage fellow ghost-writers and individual romance novelists to actually research the industry and area, rather than assuming that the existing tropes are in any way realistic.

Sure, it's a fantasy, but sometimes fantasies are people's only exposure to an area, profession, or anything else. People don't assume that doctors are lusty hunks trying to flirt with their patients - and those who do are clearly unaware of something called "an ethics violation and lawsuit."

I'm sure many readers are balking at the implied comparison between misunderstanding doctors and misunderstanding sex workers, but even that disgust and disbelief underlines my point. We don't give real people in these industries nearly enough credit and respect - and it hurts them and us.




The thing is, it's super easy to fix. Just don't make jokes about dead hookers, read a few Vice articles about sex work, and check out sites actually run by and for sex workers, like Tits and Sass. Obviously, there's a ton of issues within sex work and representation online, so there's no magic bullet, but fixing our own habits of shaming each other for sexual promiscuity and our assumptions that most sex workers are, for example, strung-out losers on drugs - even if "you know someone that happened to, for real!" - will help a great deal.

After all, we have nothing to lose by respecting each other, listening to each other, and not treating other women as antagonists. In turn, if men are held accountable for their own behaviour (rather than blaming women who "tempt" them), all of us will be safer and experience more respect.




***
Michelle Browne is a sci fi/fantasy writer and editor. She lives in Lethbridge, AB with her partner-in-crime and Max the cat. Her days revolve around freelance editing, knitting, jewelry, and learning too much. She is currently working on other people's manuscripts, the next books in her series, and drinking as much tea as humanly possible.

Find her all over the internet: * 
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Wednesday, 17 July 2019

A quick update

Hey, everyone!

I'll be wrapping up my sugar scam series shortly, but I wanted to provide a quick update about what you can expect in the coming weeks.

Coming up, I have a few opinion pieces and some writing and storycrafting articles, but I've also been considering a "what I learned this week" recap post here and there, so I can share the weird bits of knowledge from the podcasts and articles I inhale. Some of them will be a few weeks out of date, because I tend to save my podcasts up and sometimes forget about them, but hey, maybe sharing my educational experiences would interest and inform others! Let me know what you think in the comments, or hit me up on Twitter.



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Oh, and since there's kind of a humanitarian crisis occurring south of the border, I will probably find some way to talk about the concentration camps run by ICE - but since I've already participated in and plan to be more politically active in the near future, this blog space may remain a sort of haven away from all of that. I don't want to exploit it for clicks, and I certainly re-share a lot of articles on Facebook and Twitter as it is. If I figure out something to say besides, "End ICE" and "Free the Children," I'll let you all know.



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I've also been really focused on and councerned about the climate crisis, so I might find some way to talk about that, but I haven't settled on anything yet. Again, more articles can be found on my Twitter and Facebook pages.

In the meantime, here's a pic of some of the protest signs I made and painted! My skills need work, but for my first protest ever, it went perfectly well.





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***
Michelle Browne is a sci fi/fantasy writer and editor. She lives in Lethbridge, AB with her partner-in-crime and Max the cat. Her days revolve around freelance editing, knitting, jewelry, and learning too much. She is currently working on other people's manuscripts, the next books in her series, and drinking as much tea as humanly possible.

Find her all over the internet: * 
OG Blog * Mailing list * Magpie Editing * 
Amazon * Medium * Twitter * Instagram * Facebook * Tumblr * Paypal.me * Ko-fi



Tuesday, 2 July 2019

FinDamn: Sugar Scams, Part 16

I hope you're ready for some doozies.

Reader's Advisory: Names and locations will be changed for these brief profiles and anecdotes to preserve the anonymity of my sources and respect their privacy. Some profanity and allusions to kink and sexual content are included; discretion is advised.

The worst and strangest subs


The Gross Man - This Indian Subcontinent-based submissive had a fetish for roleplays in which he and his grandchildren were tortured or humiliated (no children were harmed in the process; I interrogated him to ascertain as much). He claimed to be very, very wealthy, and had a text from his bank (probably fraudulent) that said as much. He made large purchases from my Amazon wishlist and bought a Samsung S10+ without being asked for it - but refused to send anything over Paypal. The reason soon became apparent - he hadn't purchased anything, or if he had, it had been refunded immediately. At any rate, it never arrived in my American forwarding mailbox. Some research on Twitter revealed that in addition to loving humiliation and class-based roleplay, he had run this con on other dommes. Cursing my bad luck, I resolved to be more careful.

The Mother-Loving Mormon - Outwardly a MAGA-following Mormon with serious racist tendencies, I told this sub outright that his political beliefs made me want to humiliate him. (Aggression and rudeness are quite acceptable in certain contexts within the community, of course.) In private, he was intrigued, and we had a much more reasonable discussion. He admitted to being romantically in love with his mother, and wanting her to dominate and control him. With fetishes for blasphemy, public-shaming, and scat, as well as a more innocent and humorous adoration of buttons, he was well-aware of his repressed desires and their taboo nature.

Reasoning that he was just trying to break out of his cage and the excessive adoration of his mother, I resolved to help as much as I could. Supportively talking with him about the importance of compassion, taking him through roleplays and soothing aftercare visualizations, I was proud of the self-examination he seemed to be making. Unlike The Gross Man and Young Twat, he did send me a small tribute - $10 on Amazon, which I used to buy a gold-plated necklace on the website. I had high hopes for him - he asked for help to be a better person, less racist, and even expressed kind thoughts towards LGBTQ+ people in private.

Then he apparently confessed his love to his mother, was kicked out, and went to a hotel to get drunk. I suggested the best resources I could and expressed my empathy and sympathy, resolving to keep an eye on him for his own safety. He blocked me unexpectedly, and I'm unsure what happened to him. Perhaps he backslid? Perhaps he found a new domme? It's always hard to know, but all I could do was hope he found the assistance he so desperately needed.

Young Twat - Posing as a Canadian, age 24 and residing in Vernon, BC, this scoundrel drew out our communications for over a month. Baiting me with offers of substantial pay for things like toenail clippings, plucked hairs, scabs, and excreta (the latter of which, I demurred over), he responded with excitement and enthusiasm to my most brutal tones. Sure that I had a steady-paying sub in my grasp, I kept teasing and baiting him - even staying awake to make him go to the bank and deposit his pay.

Unfortunately, he had been running a con, and blocked me immediately. Frustrated, I had some of my fellow dommes contact him - only to have him shuffle back sheepishly. He revealed that he was broke, 18, from London - and had run the same scam on many, many other dommes and even a few "cashmasters" (male doms in the findom scene).

After a tongue-lashing that pulled on my roleplay experience, weird horror writing, knowledge of true crime, and a healthy dose of "listen here you little shit"-style wisdom, I terrified him into swearing that he would respect sex workers, trans women, the disabled, immigrants, and anyone else being hurt or at a social disadvantage, that he would treat his girlfriend and mother well, and that he would delete his accounts and stay off of findom Twitter for one year. He whined and pleaded to stay on, but his apparently compulsive lying and general attitude suggested that he had much bigger problems than being overly entitled. I tried to persuade him to get counselling without apparent success - but suggesting that he try in-person bdsm and join a community did seem to take root.

At any rate, his online days were done. My tweets about him got quite a bit of traction, and his goose was definitely cooked. I didn't trust him, and warned my fellow dommes that he might return with a new name.

How does this happen?


In part, there's a really poor communication system amongst findoms and other sex workers. It can be hard to spread word about bad clients (thanks, SESTA/FOSTA). The problem of men who make multiple accounts to scam dommes is ubiquitous. One fraudster used the same techniques and different profiles to run scams and pretend to pay multiple times on a Kik group, targeting a specific goddess (below; NuclearMistress) of whom he seemed enamored.

Since it's an unregulated industry with no entry requirements, dommes who know nothing other than how to take lingerie selfies and use Facetune can enter the scene. Demeaning other women and failing to learn either terminology or consent and safety rules, some of them develop great followings by selling video clips and pictures as well as doing roleplays. Truculent subs who want to insult a domme will point to such newbies, the "Instadommes," and imply that a domme either isn't worth the money or doesn't know what she's doing. "Findom is dying, the scene is ruined" is a common lament, but the scene itself has grown, and isn't going anywhere. Apparently, the fetish community has more than its share of gatekeepers.

Of course, not all the dommes - even though I was charmed and delighted by many of the ones I chatted with - are immune from problems.

The Literal Infant - Nineteen, British, and pretty, she didn't even know the basics of consent or how bdsm worked. Asking for advice about limits and admitting that she'd found the scene after an older man from Tinder had given her money, she was alarmingly uneducated. Worried that such a girl could be harmed if she went to a realtime meet-up and was robbed, I popped into her DMs with as much helpful info and advice as I could, as well as a few teaspoons of gently-administered bitter medicine. She took it well, and accepted my advice about educating herself on terminology. She doesn't seem particularly well-suited for the industry, and I advised her that freelance work was substantially better for quick money than findom.

Customer service from Hell


Here's the thing - even non-contact text-based roleplaying has higher skill requirements than you'd think. Knowledge of safety protocols and medical limitations, customer service skills, diplomacy, networking with other dommes, the ability to advertise online, writing skills, photography and film-recording, and modelling - which is not nearly as easy as people assume it is, by the way - all come into play. Plus, many subs are from elsewhere in the world, and there's a lot of "hurry up and wait" and cold-call messaging subs involved if you want to get anywhere.

Imagine working in a retail store where customers think you're doing it for fun and that they don't reaaaally have to pay for the goods on display. In addition, there are no security cameras, payment may be illegal or difficult in some countries, and both of you have to keep your identities separate and secret - even though interactions take place on social media.

I take great joy and pleasure in bringing happiness to other people, and that skill, as well as my knowledge of counselling and my conversational abilities, meant that I actually managed to approach and secure more than a few subs. But with a high bleed and loss rate and my own reluctance to market based on my looks - after all, my verbal abilities are far more commanding - even my higher-than-average success rates and modest income made the whole thing very bleak.

Ultimately, sex work online is an endurance contest. Entering from curiosity, desperation, or both, young women who try any form of erotic labour find themselves utterly abandoned by the system and cut off from the bare minimum of work protections and contract security offered by even freelancing sites.

What should we do? 


Ideally, sex work needs to be decriminalized worldwide (something Amnesty International recommends) and there needs to be a recognition that handling niche fetishes requires more training. For that matter, sex work itself is both risky and frustrating. The glamorous and dangerous portrayals in media tend to highlight the drugs and scandalous parts. Yeah, weird things happen, but you get used to that. The biggest problem is the grind and the fact that there are so few rules and protections. Pragmatically speaking, there is money to be made. From a social good standpoint, "ending demand" hasn't worked at any point in the ten thousand years or so of recorded civilization and history - but such rhetoric has resulted in forcing women and vulnerable individuals onto the streets.

We need training programs, certification, diplomas, and courses for people who want to enter the erotic labour market. It's not easy, and it's not unskilled labour. Decriminalization is just the start - to create a safe work environment, we have to treat it, at the very least, like things such as retail or massage businesses. Ideally, society should create an environment where social benefits are so easy to access that people in need don't have to use sex work as a survival industry.


***
Michelle Browne is a sci fi/fantasy writer and editor. She lives in Lethbridge, AB with her partner-in-crime and Max the cat. Her days revolve around freelance editing, knitting, jewelry, and learning too much. She is currently working on other people's manuscripts, the next books in her series, and drinking as much tea as humanly possible.

Find her all over the internet: * 
OG Blog * Mailing list * Magpie Editing * 
Amazon * Medium * Twitter * Instagram * Facebook * Tumblr * Paypal.me * Ko-fi