by Furry Girl
08.20.10
[The title for this post is a quote from Lee Harrington, from the amazing relationship roundtable titled "Your Girlfriend SUCKS!... for Money!" The context of his quote was among commentary on those of us with the overlapping traits of being sex workers, kinksters, and polyamorous/non-monogamous.]
It's no secret that my spring was really shitty. I had two bad splits from people I was involved with, and wasn't feeling motivated to do much of anything besides sleep. My summer, however has been amazing: filled with travel, good friends, excellent food, partying, sex, and seeing inspiring people fighting for various issues. If I was a low-IQ midwesterner, I'd label the season "chicken soup for the soul", but since I'm a city-dwelling vegan rationalist, I prefer "come shots for the sapient."
At the end of July, I spent 10 days in Las Vegas - which is the most loathesome place in the entire world - and ended up loving pretty much every moment of it. I was there primarily for the Desiree Alliance conference, but as coincidence would have it, the 2010 whorecon overlapped precisely with a couple of nerd conventions that I've attended in the past. I don't think I'll ever have more people I love occupying the same city at the same time.
Thank you so much to the Desiree Alliance conference organizers, volunteers, speakers, and attendees for carving out a wonderful place to be in Las Vegas for a week. I liked that an over-arching theme in so many presentations (I was mainly interested in the business tract, mind you) was the importance of working independently, and how empowering it is to be calling your own shots. I couldn't agree more.
One of the things I want to praise is the conference's expectations form, which all presenters and attendees were required to read and sign at registration. This policy was apparently based on an agreement from Dark Odyssey, at the suggestion of Sarah Sloane. It's a kick-ass statement on the rights and responsibilities of participants at a sex-positive event, so I'm quoting it in full. (Same list of expectations for attendees as for presenters/volunteers, just different titles for each form.) Readers know that I've long had a huge bee in my bonnet about people/conferences not being real allies to sex workers. Consider this a starting point for making your events safe spaces for sex workers.
Our Expectations of Presenters and Volunteers:
Our presenters and volunteers are the public face of Desiree Alliance, and we ask that all presenters and volunteers agree to support the following ideals during their time at the conference:
A) As a presenter or volunteer, you are in a position of trust regarding attendees' identities & levels of privacy. In order to protect all attendees, we ask that you:
-Respect that some attendees have separate identities for separate parts of their lives; do not disclose personal information about them without their express permission.
-Do not share with people outside of the Desiree Alliance conference any information about who is and is not in attendance.
-Identify them at the conference with the name that is on their badge, even if you know them by another name.
B) You understand and agree to practice the principles of Desiree Alliance including diversity, respect, tolerance, acceptance, openness, and non-judgmental support. You understand and agree to not make any assumptions as to the sexual orientation, partner choice, physical ability, race, spiritual affiliation or belief, class, kink or sex work interests of any attendee.
C) You understand and agree to practice a gender neutral policy. Desiree Alliance is committed to being a safe, inclusive, welcoming, and positive space for people of all genders. We ask that you do not make any assumptions about someone's gender identity, genital configuration, or the pronouns they prefer. Please respect everyone's self-identification. If you are unsure about how someone would like to be referred to, please just ask them.
D) You will take your role as presenter or volunteer seriously and professionally. Know that you are a representative of Desiree Alliance. You will not use your position to practice or promote classist, sexist, racist, homophobic, or other kinds of bigoted behavior. You will abide by the rules of the conference which include local laws and hotel policies.
I was involved in a couple of presentations, both of which seemed to be quite well-received.
The first was one I did was titled "Solo girl: An introduction to operating your own porn site". I was nervous about being able to condense all the material I wanted to cover into a 40-minute time slot, but amazingly, I did so, with 4 minutes to spare. I skipped out on all the personal storytelling, and went at things point-by-point, hitting the most useful and practical advice I could think of for aspiring indie pornographers. I will not be posting my slides or notes for this presentation online. It remains my opinion that if you're serious about starting a business, you can be serious enough to travel to an industry conference for your new chosen profession.
The second was a panel I did with Amanda Brooks, Dr Brooke Magnanti (Belle de Jour), and Alex Sotirov, titled "Safety for Sex Workers Through Personal Privacy: Digital and Real-World Techniques For Safeguarding Your Identity and Your Life". I believe that a recording of this panel will be made available soon, and I'll post that once it appears. Brooke and Alex are also planning to expand a bit on the material they covered at the conference, and I'll post their notes here. (Not sure if Amanda plans on posting her materials on her own blog, but she highly recommended the book "How To Be Invisible" by JJ Luna.) I'll also post a separate entry covering my portion of the panel. This topic could have easily been a half-day workshop, but I think the four of us did a kick-ass job of narrowing things down to the most important basics that every sex worker needs to know.
To get a feel for what else went on at the conference, see the schedule here. Personally, my favorites were Dr Joycelyn Elders' keynote, Kimberlee Cline and Mariko Passion's talk on coming out to friends and family, Kirk Read's keynote (watch video), Serpent Libertine and Bebe's ethical sex worker discussion, Nina Hartley's keynote (watch video), and the roundtable on sex workers and relationships.
I especially liked the relationship discussion because it's a subject that's been extra-present in my life this year, and it's good to be amongst other people who've experienced similar issues at some point or another. I had been with a primary partner/dominant I was in love with, but no matter how happy I was at any given moment, there was always an unspoken expiration date on our relationship. What he was really looking for for a girl who restrains her kink to the bedroom, her weirdness to an annual trip to Burning Man, and was, overall, a person with a non-embarrassing occupation with whom he could have a litter of children in the suburbs and share a mostly heteronormative life. That is not now, or ever will be me.
The transgressions I've made against traditional society (as a sterilized, clamorous, out-and-proud sex working pervert) aren't things that most people can deal with. They're not piercings you can remove, tattoos you can cover, funny-colored hair you can dye back to normal, or the occasional tab of acid you can plausibly deny ever having taken. They're not surface-level personality quirks purchased from Hot Topic - they're the things that define the core of who I am as a human being. Through the experiences with my main ex, along with having another guy ditch me solely on the grounds of my being a sex worker, I've been coming to realize how deeply and permanently totally fucking aberrant I am in the eyes of society, and that I need to work even more diligently at repelling mates who aren't okay with who I am. (I already knew I was weird, and tried my best to warn people of that, but I'm apparently not working fervently enough at this task.)
My contribution to the relationship discussion was pointing out that those of us who are sexually different in some way or another are basically in two camps when it comes to finding mates. You can try to gently ease people in - such as another person's suggestion that one start out by telling a partner that they used to be a dancer and see how the they react, and then consider telling them the whole truth from there. This has never been my strategy, because it means hiding who I am by default, and the whole dynamic seems designed to put sex workers on the defensive about the lies and omitted truths upon which they founded their relationships. It's too sneaky and dishonest for me. My strategy is one I flatly referred to as the scare 'em away plan. I am upfront with anyone I consider dating or hooking up with- I want them to run away, as soon as humanly possible, if they know they aren't going to be okay with me making a living taking my clothes off for strangers. I don't want to build a sexual and romantic relationship with someone - pulling a bait and switch, essentially - and tell them the truth only after they've gotten attached to me. Such a dynamic seems doomed to fail and hurt all parties, although it does work out for some sex workers.
And anyway, why would I want to fuck someone who might be anti-sex worker? A few years ago I had a brief tryst with a guy whom I later learned to be a homophobe, and I felt so icky that someone like that got to have his dick in my mouth. I can't imagine wanting to set myself up for such potentially disgusting and hurtful discoveries every single time I got involved with anyone. I don't want to fuck or love people who might despise me if they actually knew the truth about me. So yes, please- let them run screaming, because I'd be running away screaming, too.
Dating/mating as a sex worker isn't easy. I wish we could have a weekend retreat or unconference on this subject, open to sex workers and their partners. I wonder if there would be many takers for such a thing if I tried to cat-herd people into doing that at some time in the future?
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Furry Girl: a good time not yet had by all.
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Actually my partner and I were just talking about that the other day (getting together sex workers and their partners to share strategies about this stuff).
I was tossing around the idea of doing a roundtable for sex workers and current/former sex worker partners at MOMENTUM con, since it seems like the people who date sex workers or are likely to are the hardest ones to gather together and reach about this, and that seems like one place they're likely to be - and a place where sex workers would feel comfortable (they're proactively addressing sex worker friendly space issues, and plan to have a sex worker liaison who is actually an active sex worker. Would you be interested in lending your voice and experiences to the discussion? Because that would be awesome.
A weekend retreat or unconference around this issue would be amazing, and I think you're a skilled enough planner to pull it off.
Comment by Sabrina Morgan — August 20, 2010 @ 7:07 pm
I like the idea of having any sorts of sex worker discussions at Momentum, but I think the subject of sex workers and their partners really deserves its own thing, not just an hour or two out of another conference. Plus, not all sex workers are kink-identified or go to web 2.0-types of events.
I was thinking San Francisco, since I love that city, but who knows.
I wonder when Scarlot Harlot is having her next Sex Worker Fest? (http://sexworkerfest.com) It would be a great add-on to an event like that which is already sex worker specific, and it gives people all the more incentive to travel across the country if it's a part of something else awesome.
Comment by Furry Girl — August 20, 2010 @ 7:24 pm
As a follow-up: the next Sex Worker Fest will be in May or June of 2011. Scarlot doesn't have her dates set yet, but I've already raised my hand and pitched my add-on.
Comment by Furry Girl — August 21, 2010 @ 2:52 pm
I feel a bit weird asking this but you don't strike me as a shy person
when you say sterilised, is that just a turn of phrase for your personal decision not to have children or you have been surgically sterilised?
Just out of interest in the context of the post because i wasn't sure what you meant. you don't have to answer me if it's personal, like i said, it's just to clarify the ambiguity
love your work btw, massive fan, keep it up :)
Comment by Chantelle — August 22, 2010 @ 6:59 pm
Hi Chantelle: By your spelling, I'm guessing you're British/Irish? Perhaps it's a regional language thing, but in North America, the term sterilized is used solely to describe a person who has been surgically rendered incapable of biological offspring. Someone who just doesn't want to have kids, and takes the birth control pill or uses condoms or whatnot, is simply someone on the pill, they would never refer to themselves as sterilized. If you're interested in the procedure I had, I have a page that explains it: http://furrygirl.com/unbaby/unbaby.html
Comment by Furry Girl — August 22, 2010 @ 8:14 pm
I look forward to you posting the privacy panel here but no, I don't plan on posting my notes online. Anyone is always welcome to email me and ask though -- I simply don't want to make it Googleable.
Vegas is not the most loathsome place in the entire world. Not by a long shot. It's candyland (moreso when the economy is better).
XX
Comment by Amanda — August 23, 2010 @ 6:27 am
Great post! I'm always wondering why people who say "but you won't get a partner if you're a slut/whore" assume any of us would want a partner who can't accept us the way we are.
Comment by Sina — August 23, 2010 @ 6:28 am
Amanda: I guess it matters what a person's into (and if you're there to work or not) as to whether Vegas is fun. As someone who hates smoking, heat, unhealthy food, loud noises and flashing lights, and drunk frat boys telling me to show them my tits from the back of a stretch Hummer, Vegas indeed represents everything I dislike about the world. I'm able to make myself have fun because I go there with friends for conventions, but I'd rather be pretty much anywhere else in the world- I can have fun in spite of, not because of, the location.
Comment by Furry Girl — August 23, 2010 @ 3:05 pm
Australian, actually :) so British descended i guess. Ah, again, i feel weird but you're the only sterlised young woman i have any knowledge of, the only other sterlised woman i know is my nan and she's 66 so that's not really unusual as your case is - you're really young, so do you worry you might regret it later on? I've heard a lot of women who decided not to have children start to question that around 45/50 when they are in menopause and it's too late. Too, it's such a permanent decision and again you're so young - i don't want children either anytime soon but because of your age why did you decide for such drastic action rather than the pill, etc in case your situation/opinion might change? I apologise if i'm coming off nosey, but you just fascinate me because you're so young and have decided to such permanent surgery that commonly women only opt for once they've had their families.
Comment by Chantelle — August 23, 2010 @ 7:42 pm
I think the scare 'em away plan is the most logical course of action. In any personal relationship being yourself is most important. Otherwise it's a waste of time.
I naturally advertise my weirdness to anyone who inquires without thinking about it. But I'm a social retard too, so it's not like I've ever been able to conceal that I'm an outsider.
I don't understand why people would have any problems with dating a sex worker. But I generally don't understand popular thought at all.
Comment by Royce Icon — August 23, 2010 @ 9:17 pm
I'd definitely be into a sex workers and their partners unconference/retreat. While what I do is decidedly softcore, even I experience the "your boobs are mine, not everyone else's" kind of responses when starting to date seriously.
I have found someone that understands that my body is my own, and that my love is true and belongs only to him (yeah, we're monogamous-types, which added more difficulty to finding long-term mates for me). It's convincing those around me that I'm not trying to steal their mate that's become my challenge these days.
So many issues, so many stories to hear.
Comment by Kate — August 26, 2010 @ 12:12 pm
I've traveled to Vegas for years, worked there, lived there. I've never had any runins with frat boys -- ever. Sexual harassment on the street is 1000x worse in Dallas than in Vegas in my experiences.
Unhealthy food is universal. Every culture offers it.
XX
Comment by Amanda — August 30, 2010 @ 4:29 am
Kate: I'm considering planning such an event in May or June of 2011. I'll post here once anything starts to firm up a bit.
Amanda: To each their own. I also think that Burning Man sounds like hell, but many people I know consider it the highlight of their adult lives.
Comment by Furry Girl — September 1, 2010 @ 1:48 pm
Completely agree with you on the scare 'em away plan. I'm poly and bi (which I imagine doesn't put off quite so many people as sex work, but puts off a good few) and do my best to make this to anyone I even flirt with. If you do it early enough then it nips things in the bud before either party can properly consider it a 'thing'
Comment by Sven — October 14, 2010 @ 9:17 am
That was such a great article ! thanks a lot ..xx
Comment by Luca — January 1, 2011 @ 6:26 pm