I am often amazed at what people think it’s okay to say to others, especially people who are perfect strangers. I was a sponsor at a business event last week and a woman came up to me at my booth and said, “Are you the sex lady? You’re a real slut aren’t you?”
She wasn’t kidding—she meant it. Now, words like that roll off of me—I don’t take them that seriously and I don’t internalize it. I’m strong enough in who I am as a sexual being. But there are some really important things about this little event that bare speaking.
To think that you could walk up to any business owner in a professional context and call them a “slut” is beyond inappropriate and is in absolute poor taste. To assume that because I talk about sexuality, that I’m okay with a stranger calling me a “slut” is another problem. And underneath it all is what this actually says about how this woman views sexuality, including her own.
The biggest thing is the idea that if you are someone, like myself, who is willing to talk openly about sex and to address it, that that must make me a slut. How much do young girls and women who are still finding themselves as sexual beings get shamed and called sluts because they are in a process of exploring and expressing their sexuality? There is a major problem with slut-shaming right now and we have already lost hundreds to thousands of young people to suicide because they have been shamed about their sexuality: as “sluts”, as gay, as too fill-in-the-blank sexual.
And just the week before, as we were working to solidify our insurance for the same event, we were turned down when the insurer found out my business had anything to do with sex. Yep. They wouldn’t insure me for the same potential accidents that they were insuring other business owners for in the room all because I talk about sex in my business. Yep, people were going to be way more at risk at my booth than the one next door. They might choke on the open discussion about sex and lose their balance and fall more easily.
These two events are definitely related.
Photo by Rosea Posey
In our culture, we sunbathe in sex-negativity constantly. When I say sex-negativity, I mean that we attach all kinds of negative ideas to sex and sexuality and, as a culture, we use sexuality as a weapon of control. We shame one another for sexual expression we don’t personally like, and we hurl outrageous insults at people who don’t fall in line sexually the way we want them to. The sex police are everywhere, from Bill O’Reilly, to your sexist legislator, to Phillis Schlafly, to your mama or your school peer: They tell us what to do with our bodies, what sexual choices to make, what sexual expression is okay/not okay and the sexual etiquette they deem appropriate for us. So much of it boils down to others wanting to limit our sexual choices and expression.
You are not a slut because you’re a sexually powerful woman.
You are not a slut because you’re in your body.
You are not a slut because your sexuality might be different from someone else’s.
You are not a slut because you enjoy sex.
I’m not a slut because I talk about sex and help people with their sex lives, which are a precious and important part of their well-being and happiness.
We are all taught to judge one another’s sexuality harshly. It can seep out in insidious ways. This week, I encourage you to notice if you start to judge another’s sexuality/sex life/body and where you go when you do. Just notice it, and see how cultural norms about sex might be impacting your judgments.
In my Women’s Sexually Empowered Life Program, I lead a Sexual Archetype Ritual with the women so they can explore how these many cultural archetypes impact their sexuality. The slut is one of 12 archetypes we explore. It’s powerful stuff. And until you really look at the ideas you’ve been fed culturally about sexuality, and unpack it all, it’s really hard to get to who you really are as a sexual person and what you really want.
And a person who knows what they really want and asks for it is powerful. I want to see a world of people who get that and are in their own desire and able to be critical of all the expectations that are hurled at them daily. THAT, my friends, will be a changed world.
I can’t wait for us to tip the scales. I’m gonna start with the 25 women who will step into this program over the next 6 months with me. These archetypes need a facelift. We’re gonna’ give them one.
When I was called a “total stud’ in public several years ago I told the folks at my seminar that actually meant that I was a male slut, and that I am proud of it. When one of the women in the seminar introduced me to her husband than evening she introduced me as the slut who was leading the class. We had a lot of fun with it, but I have known women who were totally devastated by the use of the term. We need to move away from the stereotyping around that word as well as number of others.
This is coming at an absolutely wonderful time – thank you.
Have you managed to catch any articles about Elizabeth Smart’s recent comments about abstinence only education contributing to her staying with her abductors? Talk about harm! If you haven’t seen it yet, here’s a link to a (short) good one. http://bit.ly/16Lljua
I think it’s less about semantics and more about respecting boundaries. I respect Amy Jo because she’s able to teach boundary-pushing issues in a way that doesn’t trigger those who might be confronted by them (myself included, to be honest). It’s nice to see you’ve turned something that confronted you into inspiration for positive action!
Unbelievable! In so many ways. I cannot imagine your being turned down for liability insurance for the event. Thanks for writing this amazing and useful article. I’m a licensed counselor & the mother of an 11 year old daughter and a 15 year old son, and so very aware of the truth of what you’ve said – “In our culture, we sunbathe in sex-negativity constantly.” We must all continue to raise consciousness & contribute what we can to stop the insanity, the shaming, and lack of respect for healthy sexuality.
Amy Jo, thank you for writing this. Still being relatively new to this community I am often shocked by the responses I get. I was recently apartment hunting in a new city and a friend (and sex educator) told me “Be selective in what you say about your profession- there are folks who won’t want to rent to you because you talk about sex” and I was floored. Just the act of talking about sex scares people so much they go into attack mode. This is why it’s so important for us to keep talking, keep growing our community and keep educating others. You are awesome. Thank you.
Thank you all for these thoughtful comments. I am used to these types of things happening and I have learned to be selective and thoughtful about how and when I describe what I do/what my business is to people. It’s amazing how much meeting someone who actually addresses sex in a real, honest way confronts people. We can take it as candy, as play–porn or other more crass expressions of it can be just another day, but a real serious conversation about it? A business committed to that? Now that’s scary!
It’s important to me to share these things when they happen as they are opportunities for all of us to tune our sex-radar into the sex-negativity that is about and turn it positive. Thanks for your great posts!
Great post! I would have verbally punched her in the face. 😀
My ex-husband insisted on complete honesty when we were first married so he after he shared he had only been with two women before he met me I shared that I had been with four men and he said, “I married a slut.” He was dead serious. I never forgot that. He may as well have slapped me then but I realized he was too conservative and controlling to appreciate that we’re all sexual beings. Poo on him.