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AMA

I've been a prostitute on and off since I was a young adult. AMA.

789 replies

IAMAthroway · 22/03/2026 01:49

Just that, really. I am drunk and bored, and I've noticed in the past on MN, many sweeping statements made about sex workers that I don't always agree with (i.e we are all brainwashed into thinking we are happy with our career choice, but really we are miserable)

For background, I started when I was 19, maybe late 18. I got into it because I was lapdancing and noticed those who offered "extras" after hours made 3x what I did. I was young and stupid, and sex just felt like sex to me, so it was quick, easy money. I left when I was 23/24 and met DH.

I got back into it when I was in my early 30s and left DH with nothing to my name, but left again when DH and I agreed to a suitable child maintenance arrangement, and I could afford to live.

I went back into it 2/3 months ago when possible redundancies were announced at my work, and I realised benefits covered only around 2/3 of my basic outgoings. I am in my early 40s with two adult children who still rely on me. DS is in uni, and DD has just started an NMW job; both still live with me.

OP posts:
fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:43

Men use a sex worker and know that……….

A large number of sex workers are trafficked around the world and forced into sexual exploitation. According to the United Nations’ International Labour Organization, 3.8 million adults and more than 1 million children have been trafficked and forced into Prostitution.

I've been a prostitute on and off since I was a young adult. AMA.
MarianaMonterey · 22/03/2026 14:46

Tigercrane · 22/03/2026 12:46

Also women in long term marriages who find their partners repulsive but have sex with them still know their partners.The likelyhood of them being being violently attacked or murdered is less than the person who is selling their body.
I really never understand this arguement.Women do use men, women are not perfect but being with 1 man mostly is safer than having multiple unknown men.

This is not true. A woman is not only more but MOST likely to be assaulted or killed by a partner.

I know this is long, but it’s not a simple
issue. Pretty much the entire thread is women (unintentionally) lifting themselves up by pushing down sex workers as people, to benefit men. Women privileged enough to either be willing or able to manage on the money, and the energy remaining, from another source (often a man, and that’s relevant) want to distance themselves from sex workers at best, and blame them at worst. Because it makes them feel safer and more valued by men in a patriarchy. Why do women want to devalue not just transactional sex, but the women who sell it? Because it allies them with men who do, and those men have power. Why do men want to devalue sex workers? Because they value sex highly and want control of its value to benefit themselves and to exploit other men. Women are just collateral damage.

Why, as women, are you so uncomfortable with sex having valid, objective, monetary value in isolation? Because that’s all this comes down to.

Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.

Sure, it has health risks. So does any physical job. Ask a tree surgeon. A nail tech. A vet.

Sure, it can be degrading. It’s pretty bloody humiliating being reliant on benefits, though.

Sure, men can be dicks. That’s about them They are dicks to anyone they have power over. Retail assistants, serves, wives. Whoever.

Sure there is a risk of violence. Is it higher than domestic abuse?

Sure, bad men pay for sex. But that’s not what makes them bad. Claiming entitlement to sex for free with no obligation is MUCH WORSE, because it is exploitation. Paying a days wage for an hours work to a sex worker gives sex intrinsic value, and a high one at that, and the women who sell it control over whether they sell it or not. That’s BAD FOR MEN (who blame women). It isn’t, if the women has capacity and viable accessible alternatives, inherently exploitative. Although men want it to be. Men can’t have all women walking around knowing they have that value, with no training, skills, experience, costs - and men don’t, and can’t!!! It would be CATASTROPHIC for men if all women had that power! They could just …walk away. From abusive fathers, controlling (or just unfulfilling) marriages, shitty jobs and ageing parents. They could provide for their children without men. Men wouldn’t be able to control children and mould future patriarchy. All men would have to BE MORE and work harder for less reward. Men who pay for sex are in the most fundamental and transactional way openly acknowledging that sex has value and they owe women something for it. That’s awful for men who expect it for nothing or the bare minimum. ESPECIALLY if women have viable alternatives, like equal career opportunities, liveable benefits and aren’t being exploited by other men. Especially if the price, and therefore value, are high. So they frame sex as different from other physical work and shame women who sell it. They isolate them from other women. From you.

The only issue I have with it is the level of exploitation and violence. And that’s is because sex workers are social pariahs with minimal voice and often very limited power. And that is mostly down to you, ladies. This thread and the women on it are doing more harm to more sex workers than men using them are. You are all working for the patriarchy because it has short term benefits for you and is easier. And demanding sex workers pay the price. You are exploiting sex workers for your own gain. he best thing you can do is allow sex workers to be real, complex people and stop forcing them into slut/abused child victim/tax dodger/benefit fraud boxes. That’s the real damage to all women here.

If the OP should come back, she should know that she doesn’t need to be a happy whore to justify being a sex worker. Or to justify her choices through trauma. Or to perform empowerment or victimhood. Or to be ashamed of providing for herself and her family by ascribing a value to sex when the patriarchy needs it to be simultaneously priceless and worthless. She is a real, complex person and not a trope. It can be just be a job. You can leave if you want to. Or keep on if it works better than the alternatives. It can be just the way of making a living that works best for you right now. Good days and bad. It doesn’t have to define you and it certainly doesn’t devalue you. It MIGHT be any of those things. Or none. And it might change as you grow. That’s for you to tell us. All we need to do is society is enable your autonomy by providing genuinely accessible alternatives and validating your choice as a human. That’s all.

Thanks for answering questions and normalising sex work. Good luck with your future. Be proud of surviving your abusive family and marriage and making a life for yourself with fewer than average privileges and for being honest with people who don’t value you and aren’t entitled to your time. And of being a woman in a patriarchy working against it, even if that’s not why you’re doing it. It’s why it’s hard.

Tigercrane · 22/03/2026 14:46

fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:43

Men use a sex worker and know that……….

A large number of sex workers are trafficked around the world and forced into sexual exploitation. According to the United Nations’ International Labour Organization, 3.8 million adults and more than 1 million children have been trafficked and forced into Prostitution.

That is truely a shocking amount of people who are trafficked.Of course the men know, they just don't want to know.Thanks for adding that.

Lifeomars · 22/03/2026 14:46

Hi OP, thank you for this thread. I was a drugs worker for ages and the women who I knew who worked in the sex industry predominantly worked out on the street and a lot of the money they earned went on the substances they used,mainly heroin and crack. We had an outreach service that also had drop in premises that offered health checks, condoms, information about dodgy punters, and if a woman was thinking about drug treatment and a route out of prostitution, there were workers to offer help. Anyway that's my knowledge of sex work, so reading your perspective is very interesting. The women I worked with took huge risks working out on the streets, all of them had encountered deeply unpleasant males and many had stories to relate of violence and abuse from punters. So for me it has been interesting to read your personal account of another aspect of prostitution, thank you

fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:47

Debunking the myth that it’s just an amicable exchange of money for a service

Studies on Prostitution have shown that 68% of 827 prostitutes in 9 countries in the study have met the criteria of a lifetime diagnosis of PTSD. Street-based sex workers are at extremely high risk of developing PTSD if been exposed to traumatic events or work-related violence.

If 68% of workers in offices had PTSD I think the business would be shut down.

Kingalexi · 22/03/2026 14:48

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:49

Just like working in an office…..NOT

A high number of prostitutes have been a victim of violence and around 204 sex workers out of 100,000 are killed each year. One single sex worker is on average beaten 12 times every year. Only 6 out of 10 prostitutes report their assault.

ToKittyornottoKitty · 22/03/2026 14:50

fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:49

Just like working in an office…..NOT

A high number of prostitutes have been a victim of violence and around 204 sex workers out of 100,000 are killed each year. One single sex worker is on average beaten 12 times every year. Only 6 out of 10 prostitutes report their assault.

Are you meaning to quote people in your replies?

fx1Dx7 · 22/03/2026 14:50

Men who use prostitutes are vile…...

Youths under the age of 18 are most likely to be sex trafficked and are involved in commercial sex acts. Young people are vulnerable and often easy to manipulate with fake promises. The average age of a child being involved in sex trafficking is 12 years old.

Most traffickers contact their victims through social media and try to create a relationship with teenagers by complimenting them and offering fake jobs and opportunities. Traffickers are also likely to approach potential victims through schools, malls, metro stations, and more.

Solost92 · 22/03/2026 14:52

I'm surprised at how cheap it is! I thought you'd earn more than that. How long is a typical meet if you're charging £100 ish a time?

Differentforgirls · 22/03/2026 14:55

MyrtlethePurpleTurtle · 22/03/2026 14:22

A lot of people are judging the woman, and judging her hard - right down to being lazy and not paying taxes!

People on here are obsessed with taxes.

Even on a thread about a woman selling her body to strangers, they’re actually asking if she pays tax on her income.

As if she can tell HMRC that she’s shagging strangers for money because it’s better than working a minimum wage job and they’re going to say “ well done for not being a supermarket employee, but still working in the service industry”.

I honestly think that people on here with their addiction to money, spending it, using it to boast (£150k a year doesn’t go that far these days apparently), live a much worse life than the OP.

Because they are judging her, but she is judging no one.

Op, don’t want to ask anything, but I’d much rather have you at my dinner table than the judgemental people people on your thread.

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 14:56

MarianaMonterey · 22/03/2026 14:46

This is not true. A woman is not only more but MOST likely to be assaulted or killed by a partner.

I know this is long, but it’s not a simple
issue. Pretty much the entire thread is women (unintentionally) lifting themselves up by pushing down sex workers as people, to benefit men. Women privileged enough to either be willing or able to manage on the money, and the energy remaining, from another source (often a man, and that’s relevant) want to distance themselves from sex workers at best, and blame them at worst. Because it makes them feel safer and more valued by men in a patriarchy. Why do women want to devalue not just transactional sex, but the women who sell it? Because it allies them with men who do, and those men have power. Why do men want to devalue sex workers? Because they value sex highly and want control of its value to benefit themselves and to exploit other men. Women are just collateral damage.

Why, as women, are you so uncomfortable with sex having valid, objective, monetary value in isolation? Because that’s all this comes down to.

Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.

Sure, it has health risks. So does any physical job. Ask a tree surgeon. A nail tech. A vet.

Sure, it can be degrading. It’s pretty bloody humiliating being reliant on benefits, though.

Sure, men can be dicks. That’s about them They are dicks to anyone they have power over. Retail assistants, serves, wives. Whoever.

Sure there is a risk of violence. Is it higher than domestic abuse?

Sure, bad men pay for sex. But that’s not what makes them bad. Claiming entitlement to sex for free with no obligation is MUCH WORSE, because it is exploitation. Paying a days wage for an hours work to a sex worker gives sex intrinsic value, and a high one at that, and the women who sell it control over whether they sell it or not. That’s BAD FOR MEN (who blame women). It isn’t, if the women has capacity and viable accessible alternatives, inherently exploitative. Although men want it to be. Men can’t have all women walking around knowing they have that value, with no training, skills, experience, costs - and men don’t, and can’t!!! It would be CATASTROPHIC for men if all women had that power! They could just …walk away. From abusive fathers, controlling (or just unfulfilling) marriages, shitty jobs and ageing parents. They could provide for their children without men. Men wouldn’t be able to control children and mould future patriarchy. All men would have to BE MORE and work harder for less reward. Men who pay for sex are in the most fundamental and transactional way openly acknowledging that sex has value and they owe women something for it. That’s awful for men who expect it for nothing or the bare minimum. ESPECIALLY if women have viable alternatives, like equal career opportunities, liveable benefits and aren’t being exploited by other men. Especially if the price, and therefore value, are high. So they frame sex as different from other physical work and shame women who sell it. They isolate them from other women. From you.

The only issue I have with it is the level of exploitation and violence. And that’s is because sex workers are social pariahs with minimal voice and often very limited power. And that is mostly down to you, ladies. This thread and the women on it are doing more harm to more sex workers than men using them are. You are all working for the patriarchy because it has short term benefits for you and is easier. And demanding sex workers pay the price. You are exploiting sex workers for your own gain. he best thing you can do is allow sex workers to be real, complex people and stop forcing them into slut/abused child victim/tax dodger/benefit fraud boxes. That’s the real damage to all women here.

If the OP should come back, she should know that she doesn’t need to be a happy whore to justify being a sex worker. Or to justify her choices through trauma. Or to perform empowerment or victimhood. Or to be ashamed of providing for herself and her family by ascribing a value to sex when the patriarchy needs it to be simultaneously priceless and worthless. She is a real, complex person and not a trope. It can be just be a job. You can leave if you want to. Or keep on if it works better than the alternatives. It can be just the way of making a living that works best for you right now. Good days and bad. It doesn’t have to define you and it certainly doesn’t devalue you. It MIGHT be any of those things. Or none. And it might change as you grow. That’s for you to tell us. All we need to do is society is enable your autonomy by providing genuinely accessible alternatives and validating your choice as a human. That’s all.

Thanks for answering questions and normalising sex work. Good luck with your future. Be proud of surviving your abusive family and marriage and making a life for yourself with fewer than average privileges and for being honest with people who don’t value you and aren’t entitled to your time. And of being a woman in a patriarchy working against it, even if that’s not why you’re doing it. It’s why it’s hard.

I've heard this argument before and you've articulated it very well.
But I'm not convinced

'They could provide for their children without men. '

  • without men?
But they still rely on men....to buy sex from them! And statistically younger women DO dominate sex work, and you need to be in fairly high demand to be able to pick and choose clients , acts etc

There are plenty of ways to earn money without relying on men, or primarily men to buy services. Selling sex & relying on male sexual preferences to earn your daily bread doesn't seem like a far more positive option.

Tigercrane · 22/03/2026 14:59

MarianaMonterey · 22/03/2026 14:46

This is not true. A woman is not only more but MOST likely to be assaulted or killed by a partner.

I know this is long, but it’s not a simple
issue. Pretty much the entire thread is women (unintentionally) lifting themselves up by pushing down sex workers as people, to benefit men. Women privileged enough to either be willing or able to manage on the money, and the energy remaining, from another source (often a man, and that’s relevant) want to distance themselves from sex workers at best, and blame them at worst. Because it makes them feel safer and more valued by men in a patriarchy. Why do women want to devalue not just transactional sex, but the women who sell it? Because it allies them with men who do, and those men have power. Why do men want to devalue sex workers? Because they value sex highly and want control of its value to benefit themselves and to exploit other men. Women are just collateral damage.

Why, as women, are you so uncomfortable with sex having valid, objective, monetary value in isolation? Because that’s all this comes down to.

Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.

Sure, it has health risks. So does any physical job. Ask a tree surgeon. A nail tech. A vet.

Sure, it can be degrading. It’s pretty bloody humiliating being reliant on benefits, though.

Sure, men can be dicks. That’s about them They are dicks to anyone they have power over. Retail assistants, serves, wives. Whoever.

Sure there is a risk of violence. Is it higher than domestic abuse?

Sure, bad men pay for sex. But that’s not what makes them bad. Claiming entitlement to sex for free with no obligation is MUCH WORSE, because it is exploitation. Paying a days wage for an hours work to a sex worker gives sex intrinsic value, and a high one at that, and the women who sell it control over whether they sell it or not. That’s BAD FOR MEN (who blame women). It isn’t, if the women has capacity and viable accessible alternatives, inherently exploitative. Although men want it to be. Men can’t have all women walking around knowing they have that value, with no training, skills, experience, costs - and men don’t, and can’t!!! It would be CATASTROPHIC for men if all women had that power! They could just …walk away. From abusive fathers, controlling (or just unfulfilling) marriages, shitty jobs and ageing parents. They could provide for their children without men. Men wouldn’t be able to control children and mould future patriarchy. All men would have to BE MORE and work harder for less reward. Men who pay for sex are in the most fundamental and transactional way openly acknowledging that sex has value and they owe women something for it. That’s awful for men who expect it for nothing or the bare minimum. ESPECIALLY if women have viable alternatives, like equal career opportunities, liveable benefits and aren’t being exploited by other men. Especially if the price, and therefore value, are high. So they frame sex as different from other physical work and shame women who sell it. They isolate them from other women. From you.

The only issue I have with it is the level of exploitation and violence. And that’s is because sex workers are social pariahs with minimal voice and often very limited power. And that is mostly down to you, ladies. This thread and the women on it are doing more harm to more sex workers than men using them are. You are all working for the patriarchy because it has short term benefits for you and is easier. And demanding sex workers pay the price. You are exploiting sex workers for your own gain. he best thing you can do is allow sex workers to be real, complex people and stop forcing them into slut/abused child victim/tax dodger/benefit fraud boxes. That’s the real damage to all women here.

If the OP should come back, she should know that she doesn’t need to be a happy whore to justify being a sex worker. Or to justify her choices through trauma. Or to perform empowerment or victimhood. Or to be ashamed of providing for herself and her family by ascribing a value to sex when the patriarchy needs it to be simultaneously priceless and worthless. She is a real, complex person and not a trope. It can be just be a job. You can leave if you want to. Or keep on if it works better than the alternatives. It can be just the way of making a living that works best for you right now. Good days and bad. It doesn’t have to define you and it certainly doesn’t devalue you. It MIGHT be any of those things. Or none. And it might change as you grow. That’s for you to tell us. All we need to do is society is enable your autonomy by providing genuinely accessible alternatives and validating your choice as a human. That’s all.

Thanks for answering questions and normalising sex work. Good luck with your future. Be proud of surviving your abusive family and marriage and making a life for yourself with fewer than average privileges and for being honest with people who don’t value you and aren’t entitled to your time. And of being a woman in a patriarchy working against it, even if that’s not why you’re doing it. It’s why it’s hard.

Wierd long take on what others have said on here.I can't talk for others but I in no way wish to belittle the woman who posted on here.
It does not make me feel safer or better than her in anyway, I really do feel sex work is exploitative.
I find it strange how you can compare have sex for money with all the dangers to a tree surgeon or anyone doing something pysical with their body.
Having sex is an intimate act how can you compare it to being a tree surgeon.
Some people find sex very emotional and intimate and some people can operate on a different level.
Show me the evidence that women are more likely to have violence commited at home rather than by a client as a sex worker?Do you have any data on that?
Anyway any violence to women is abhorrent.
You are entittle to your view.
I do not agree with them.
I do not put other women down or wish to feel better about myself by doing so.Please show where I have done that.
Good afternoon 😄

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 14:59

MarianaMonterey · 22/03/2026 14:46

This is not true. A woman is not only more but MOST likely to be assaulted or killed by a partner.

I know this is long, but it’s not a simple
issue. Pretty much the entire thread is women (unintentionally) lifting themselves up by pushing down sex workers as people, to benefit men. Women privileged enough to either be willing or able to manage on the money, and the energy remaining, from another source (often a man, and that’s relevant) want to distance themselves from sex workers at best, and blame them at worst. Because it makes them feel safer and more valued by men in a patriarchy. Why do women want to devalue not just transactional sex, but the women who sell it? Because it allies them with men who do, and those men have power. Why do men want to devalue sex workers? Because they value sex highly and want control of its value to benefit themselves and to exploit other men. Women are just collateral damage.

Why, as women, are you so uncomfortable with sex having valid, objective, monetary value in isolation? Because that’s all this comes down to.

Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.

Sure, it has health risks. So does any physical job. Ask a tree surgeon. A nail tech. A vet.

Sure, it can be degrading. It’s pretty bloody humiliating being reliant on benefits, though.

Sure, men can be dicks. That’s about them They are dicks to anyone they have power over. Retail assistants, serves, wives. Whoever.

Sure there is a risk of violence. Is it higher than domestic abuse?

Sure, bad men pay for sex. But that’s not what makes them bad. Claiming entitlement to sex for free with no obligation is MUCH WORSE, because it is exploitation. Paying a days wage for an hours work to a sex worker gives sex intrinsic value, and a high one at that, and the women who sell it control over whether they sell it or not. That’s BAD FOR MEN (who blame women). It isn’t, if the women has capacity and viable accessible alternatives, inherently exploitative. Although men want it to be. Men can’t have all women walking around knowing they have that value, with no training, skills, experience, costs - and men don’t, and can’t!!! It would be CATASTROPHIC for men if all women had that power! They could just …walk away. From abusive fathers, controlling (or just unfulfilling) marriages, shitty jobs and ageing parents. They could provide for their children without men. Men wouldn’t be able to control children and mould future patriarchy. All men would have to BE MORE and work harder for less reward. Men who pay for sex are in the most fundamental and transactional way openly acknowledging that sex has value and they owe women something for it. That’s awful for men who expect it for nothing or the bare minimum. ESPECIALLY if women have viable alternatives, like equal career opportunities, liveable benefits and aren’t being exploited by other men. Especially if the price, and therefore value, are high. So they frame sex as different from other physical work and shame women who sell it. They isolate them from other women. From you.

The only issue I have with it is the level of exploitation and violence. And that’s is because sex workers are social pariahs with minimal voice and often very limited power. And that is mostly down to you, ladies. This thread and the women on it are doing more harm to more sex workers than men using them are. You are all working for the patriarchy because it has short term benefits for you and is easier. And demanding sex workers pay the price. You are exploiting sex workers for your own gain. he best thing you can do is allow sex workers to be real, complex people and stop forcing them into slut/abused child victim/tax dodger/benefit fraud boxes. That’s the real damage to all women here.

If the OP should come back, she should know that she doesn’t need to be a happy whore to justify being a sex worker. Or to justify her choices through trauma. Or to perform empowerment or victimhood. Or to be ashamed of providing for herself and her family by ascribing a value to sex when the patriarchy needs it to be simultaneously priceless and worthless. She is a real, complex person and not a trope. It can be just be a job. You can leave if you want to. Or keep on if it works better than the alternatives. It can be just the way of making a living that works best for you right now. Good days and bad. It doesn’t have to define you and it certainly doesn’t devalue you. It MIGHT be any of those things. Or none. And it might change as you grow. That’s for you to tell us. All we need to do is society is enable your autonomy by providing genuinely accessible alternatives and validating your choice as a human. That’s all.

Thanks for answering questions and normalising sex work. Good luck with your future. Be proud of surviving your abusive family and marriage and making a life for yourself with fewer than average privileges and for being honest with people who don’t value you and aren’t entitled to your time. And of being a woman in a patriarchy working against it, even if that’s not why you’re doing it. It’s why it’s hard.

'Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.'

  • if it's just the same as these, how come forcing someone to sell sex is a more serious crime than forcing someone to be a cleaner, a dancer or a sportsperson?
Carla786 · 22/03/2026 15:04

@MarianaMonterey , this bit : 'sex having valid, objective, monetary value in isolation'

  • why do you keep framing sex as something women should monetise, rather than something that can be wonderfully pleasurable and that many women cherish for the intimacy, sexual pleasure etc in can provide? Seems very regressive to view sex as something women should use to manipulate men, rather than enjoy for themselves.

You also ignore the fact that women on average have lower sociosexuality than men and often prefer to have sex in a relationship. And selling sex is something that would make a lot of women very unhappy.

thestudio · 22/03/2026 15:16

ginasevern · 22/03/2026 13:47

@thestudio "Do you really believe that these men are just 'lonely'?
Or can you accept that, as well as being lonely, they are fundamentally abusive"

But what about men who are deformed in some way or just very, very ugly and who otherwise would have absolutely no hope of sex. They do exist, and they do use sex workers. Are they evil and using women as commodities? Don't you think they would truly love to have a genuine relationship with a woman?

We all know that this is not the majority of men who buy women's bodies.

But even if it was, no-one has a right to sex.

And if those men want did actually want a relationship, rather than sex - I bet they could find one.

thestudio · 22/03/2026 15:19

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 14:59

'Sure, it’s using your body for money. So is ballet. So is cleaning. So is removals. So is professional sport.'

  • if it's just the same as these, how come forcing someone to sell sex is a more serious crime than forcing someone to be a cleaner, a dancer or a sportsperson?

Precisely. And how come most SWIW people wouldn't want their daughter to do it?

Sex is intimate, and intimacy is called intimacy precisely because it's different from our general interactions with others.

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 15:21

thestudio · 22/03/2026 15:19

Precisely. And how come most SWIW people wouldn't want their daughter to do it?

Sex is intimate, and intimacy is called intimacy precisely because it's different from our general interactions with others.

Good point.

@MarianaMonterey , if you had a daughter, would you want her to sell sex? Why or why not? Or a son, for that matter...

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 22/03/2026 15:31

For the “SWIW” women

Would you be fine with your husband using these professional services?

Do you think men, who have not felt fully satisfied with the service, should be able to get refunds?

Do you think unemployed women should be encouraged to seek “sex work” and attend interviews if they’re claiming unemployment benefits?

Do you think it should be spoken about at school careers fairs?

Do you think young people should get apprenticeships or work experience in that sector before signing up for it?

Would you be comfortable with online reviews of prostitutes?

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 15:35

@MarianaMonterey , you assume
all women could gain economic independence through selling sex, but sexual markets are shaped by beauty standards like any other market. Not everyone would have the same demand or earning power, so it’s hard to see how this would function as a universal path to independence for women.

canisquaeso · 22/03/2026 15:37

Haystackhunting · 22/03/2026 07:40

Unless you’re employer is sticking their dick in your arse it’s not really a comparison

No need to get nasty.

OP has explained there’s no coercion and she’s doing essentially for the quick money that allows her to keep up the lifestyle she feels she should have. So I guess yeah, maybe I’m getting fucked by clocking in every day like a loser.

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 15:41

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 22/03/2026 15:31

For the “SWIW” women

Would you be fine with your husband using these professional services?

Do you think men, who have not felt fully satisfied with the service, should be able to get refunds?

Do you think unemployed women should be encouraged to seek “sex work” and attend interviews if they’re claiming unemployment benefits?

Do you think it should be spoken about at school careers fairs?

Do you think young people should get apprenticeships or work experience in that sector before signing up for it?

Would you be comfortable with online reviews of prostitutes?

This!

MyrtlethePurpleTurtle · 22/03/2026 15:46

JipJup · 22/03/2026 12:12

Oh no, I completely disagree with this.

Obviously the OP is getting work, but it's still a fact that younger prostitutes have always been more popular.

Her desirability in the market WILL be going down but that's just the way it is.

Nothing to do with a desirability to 'degrade'.

I'd say the desirability to do that lies with the punters.

Genuine question here: does a 60 year old (male) paying for sex with a woman really want a 20 year old? Or someone who is a bit older than someone barely no longer a teenager?

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 15:47

MyrtlethePurpleTurtle · 22/03/2026 15:46

Genuine question here: does a 60 year old (male) paying for sex with a woman really want a 20 year old? Or someone who is a bit older than someone barely no longer a teenager?

Probably, imo.

throwawayimplantchat · 22/03/2026 15:47

Do your children know what you’d do? I would never get over it emotionally if I found out that my mum had been selling her body to fund me as an adult. I’d be devastated and to be honest angry that she made that choice and allowed me to accept her financial help without me knowing that’s how she was funding it.