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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:
Carla786 · 22/03/2026 23:14

ThatPearlkitty · 22/03/2026 22:50

its been good debating with all and apologies if my responses are half baked ideas and points

That's OK- discussing things is a good way to learn more, after all..

DamnBuster · 22/03/2026 23:22

Do you worry about being secretly filmed while working?

Thefsm · 22/03/2026 23:34

For those saying the men paying for services can’t be sweet - you don’t know what you are talking about. I had clients and one I never slept with at all - realised as soon as he showed up what he really needed was an arm around his shoulder and someone to let him just talk and cry about his terrible life. He was a sweet father of 5 with a wife who took him for every penny she could squeeze out of him and gave nothing in return, destroying his self esteem and making him work 60-80 hour weeks so the kids could all do their gymnastics and other activities.

another gentleman is still a good friend to this day even though it’s been 15 years since he was a client. We only ever slept together twice and it didn’t seem right as we were good friends by that time so we broke off the professional side of it. That was escorting really - he’d pay $500 for an evening with me and would take me out on the cruise boat dinner, or to fancy restaurants. He helped me rescue some kittens and he adopted a toothless old corgi because I found it for him when he was hunting for a new dog.

for my 27.5 birthday he sent a package full of of candy and envelopes with different amounts of money inside labeled things like bills, groceries, entertainment up to the value of $1,000 to help teach me better budgeting. He sent us Easter baskets and Xmas boxes for my kids labeled from the Easter bunny or Santa. On his birthday I took him out for a change and paid everything myself so he knew he mattered to me as a person not just a client.

another man came to me with permission and encouragement from his wife. As in I spoke to her and she asked me to work with him. She had had a very bad hysterectomy a few years earlier and was unable to do anything sexually with her husband, but they were still in love and he didn’t want to leave her. So I was merely a body for that outlet once a week. She would send him with lumpia and other treats for me and he was a very nice, gentle man with zero interest in being anything other than professional arrangement.

yes many punters are sleazebags but a lot are in genuinely difficult situations and just want a no strings opportunity for closeness. I would always meet for coffee before agreeing no to take on a client and if I did it was on a sugar daddy basis not a strictly prostitution case so they knew there would be time to hang out and regular appointments but not emotional ties. It was a great source of income when we were really struggling to get by.

80smonster · 22/03/2026 23:36

Props to you OP for such a fascinating and balanced post. Seriously though, I reckon put your prices up, £100 is shit all these days.

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 23:50

Thefsm · 22/03/2026 23:34

For those saying the men paying for services can’t be sweet - you don’t know what you are talking about. I had clients and one I never slept with at all - realised as soon as he showed up what he really needed was an arm around his shoulder and someone to let him just talk and cry about his terrible life. He was a sweet father of 5 with a wife who took him for every penny she could squeeze out of him and gave nothing in return, destroying his self esteem and making him work 60-80 hour weeks so the kids could all do their gymnastics and other activities.

another gentleman is still a good friend to this day even though it’s been 15 years since he was a client. We only ever slept together twice and it didn’t seem right as we were good friends by that time so we broke off the professional side of it. That was escorting really - he’d pay $500 for an evening with me and would take me out on the cruise boat dinner, or to fancy restaurants. He helped me rescue some kittens and he adopted a toothless old corgi because I found it for him when he was hunting for a new dog.

for my 27.5 birthday he sent a package full of of candy and envelopes with different amounts of money inside labeled things like bills, groceries, entertainment up to the value of $1,000 to help teach me better budgeting. He sent us Easter baskets and Xmas boxes for my kids labeled from the Easter bunny or Santa. On his birthday I took him out for a change and paid everything myself so he knew he mattered to me as a person not just a client.

another man came to me with permission and encouragement from his wife. As in I spoke to her and she asked me to work with him. She had had a very bad hysterectomy a few years earlier and was unable to do anything sexually with her husband, but they were still in love and he didn’t want to leave her. So I was merely a body for that outlet once a week. She would send him with lumpia and other treats for me and he was a very nice, gentle man with zero interest in being anything other than professional arrangement.

yes many punters are sleazebags but a lot are in genuinely difficult situations and just want a no strings opportunity for closeness. I would always meet for coffee before agreeing no to take on a client and if I did it was on a sugar daddy basis not a strictly prostitution case so they knew there would be time to hang out and regular appointments but not emotional ties. It was a great source of income when we were really struggling to get by.

If you're being an escort/sugar baby maybe that's a bit different since the men are partly coming for companionship?

'So I was merely a body for that outlet once a week. ' - why did you choose to rent your body out though, if I may ask? Were you hard up? Or was this something you genuinely liked doing- due to enjoyment of sex, or some other reason?

shinycinnamon · 22/03/2026 23:54

I don’t have any particular questions but would you mind messaging me?
not a journalist x

Carla786 · 23/03/2026 00:00

This reply has been withdrawn

This message has been withdrawn at the poster's request

shinycinnamon · 23/03/2026 00:02

This reply has been deleted

This message has been withdrawn at the poster's request

?

Muffinmam · 23/03/2026 02:26

IAMAthroway · 22/03/2026 02:55

My relationship with DH is complicated and possibly outing, so if you recognize my usual username from this, feel free to message me directly, but please don't out me. Ditto if you're Fail Journo, quote this thread, but please don't link it back to my other usernames.

DH was capable of providing for us, but I was young and naive, so when he invested his money in property, I very happily signed all my rights away when the banks asked me to (for buy-to-let mortgages) because I was, at the time, a child (23/24 years old) and knew no better.

I left with nothing because it felt like my option was to stay and model yet more financial/emotional/physical abuse to my children while I fought him in the courts or go back to sex work and they'd be none the wiser. I could have survived on benefits at the time as they were more generous than they are now, but I opted not to because I didn't want my kids to equate marriage breakdown with poverty, as I never wanted them to feel trapped, like I was.

He died very suddenly and left all of his assets to DD.

So he screwed you over financially?

What an absolute POS.

The older I get the more jaded I become to men.

I’m sorry that men have used you your entire life. I’m not judging you for providing for yourself or your child. My only concern is that you’re at risk of being attacked. But any woman who enters a relationship with a man is at risk of being attacked.

Strawberrryfields · 23/03/2026 03:25

Hi OP,
Interesting thread, don’t think these have been asked yet…

  • Do you use your real name?
  • Are you really good in bed? Do you think that matters to clients or not really?
  • Has a client ever paid with fake notes? How did you handle this? (I think these are less common these days but maybe years ago?)
  • Do men ever try to film or take pictures of you? Is this an issue for you or not?
BlueOrangeDreams · 23/03/2026 04:05

Do you declare your earnings to HMRC?

SorryNotSorry00 · 23/03/2026 04:58

IAMAthroway · 22/03/2026 22:22

There are other things I could do, I agree, however I don't think there is anything else I could that would earn the same that I could fit in around a fulltime job. That's why I choose to do this instead of getting an evening or weekend job. It's more money for less hours.

I don't agree that I have no self respect I think I just view sex differently to others. It's not a big deal to me whether that's because of abuse I suffered or just the way I am I don't know. I don't feel like I'm damaged. I'm not depressed, or anxious. I'm quite happy with my life the way it is.

Thanks for sharing your experiences with us here, you sound like quite an interesting and insightful person even leaving your side job out of it. You also sound like someone who has made the best of the life you were given, and who selflessly puts your kids first to make sure their lives are as good as possible.

DannyDeever · 23/03/2026 05:09

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 22:17

@MarianaMonterey , you say : ' If a sex worker only saw single men, would you be ok with that?"- I think that would be better, that' just one of the issues.

From what OP's written, it sounds like sex often happens in strip clubs.

She said it never happened in the club. If there was an arrangement it happened later somewhere else.

Bokeitup · 23/03/2026 05:32

Carla786 · 22/03/2026 21:25

The options bit was true somewhat though. OP has said she has a degree in beauty and could work elsewhere. She says she has a 'day job' which she pays taxes on.

Agreed but I had to include that bit to give context.

AllDreamsLost · 23/03/2026 05:39

@IAMAthroway very interesting thread, thanks!

Do you smoke and do you have a dog?

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 23/03/2026 06:05

MarianaMonterey · 22/03/2026 22:12

That is bonkers. My point is that sex is not different to other physical work for the people doing the work and it doesn’t devalue them as humans. Not that it’s fine for men who have agreed not to have sex outside marriage to ‘not count’ prostitutes because they are a trade. That’s a betrayal of the marriage partnership, which the men are invalidating by having sex outside of it without their partner consenting. If sex workers threaten your marriage, the problem is not the sex workers.

If my husband knocks a wall down in our house without asking me, the issue is that he is an entitled man who doesn’t respect our agreement. Whether or not he uses a professional builder makes no difference. I would either be ok with the wall coming down, or not, and ok with the unilateral decision, or not. It’s not OK if he used a pro and not if a mate got the sledgehammer out. Because that’s not the issue. (Plus, it would be no reflection on the builder as a person).

If a sex worker only saw single men, would you be ok with that? Are you OK with lap dancing and strip clubs?

I don’t know if you meant me being immune from the consequences because I’m not married and so safe from the evils of prostitution tempting my poor hapless husband from me, but that’s also quite ridiculous. Women shaming sex workers divides women, allows men to escape accountability for their infidelity, affords other women ‘respectability’ and scapegoats sec workers who are more likely to be assaulted and less likely to report assault
and be more vulnerable, which reduces prosecutions and lowers the floor for men’s accepted behaviour. It marginalises sex work which supports trafficking and exploitation and reduces the avenues out for those women, which enables men to profit further of women’s work. Shaming sex work is bad for all women and good for the patriarchy, which all women live under. No woman is safe from its harmful consequences. I think this is quite a selfish, naive and very narrow minded view. It comes accross as though you’re happy to shame sex workers (or confine them to one dimensional tropes) so long as they don’t threaten your marriage. Which IS shaming them. Because that isn’t and shouldn’t be the responsibility of anyone but you and your husband.

It’s not bonkers.
If you think “sex work” is “valid” work and there is no human cost to anyone involved then it’s no different to seeing any other professional.

I’ve not made any moral judgements on the women who are exploited by men thinking they’re entitled to use women’s bodies like that.

I am making a moral judgment on women cheering that on so long as it doesn’t impact them.

Sex has an intimate quality that transcends “work”

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 23/03/2026 06:15

Thedevilhasfinallycaughtupwithhim · 23/03/2026 06:05

It’s not bonkers.
If you think “sex work” is “valid” work and there is no human cost to anyone involved then it’s no different to seeing any other professional.

I’ve not made any moral judgements on the women who are exploited by men thinking they’re entitled to use women’s bodies like that.

I am making a moral judgment on women cheering that on so long as it doesn’t impact them.

Sex has an intimate quality that transcends “work”

Furthermore @MarianaMonterey

“Shaming sex work is bad for all women and good for the patriarchy”

What do you think is better for the patriarchy?

Women cheering on other women servicing men exploiting other women’s body sexually or all women taking a united stand and saying “No. You don’t have that entitlement!”?

And as for you building analogy, you’d be upset at him not consulting you before paying a builder to knock a wall down. That’s the wrong analogy.

If you and your husband had long conversations about you not wanting to do a specific sexual act and he asked your permission to see a prostitute in order to get that service, would you feel the same as if you had long conversations about him wanting to knock through the kitchen into the dining room and suggested he speak to a builder?

GiveUsAChip · 23/03/2026 07:01

BlueOrangeDreams · 23/03/2026 04:05

Do you declare your earnings to HMRC?

she's answered that- no.

GiveUsAChip · 23/03/2026 07:17

You've been pretty good at answering questions - in fact that's the whole point of your thread @IAMAthroway but there are a few points, around the psychology of your behaviour that I'd love to know more about.

You could do 3 or 4 manicures for the same income as one man paying for sex.
You could get a better or different job because you have a degree.
So it's not about no other option to earn more money.

You have a sad history of abuse. It's left you damaged where you say you have no emotions around sex. To you it's like walking someone's dog for them. You wrote that.(Although I think walking a dog would be more fun.)

I've asked a couple of times if you've had therapy and you've not answered that.

Working as a prostitute, which many people regard as the 'lowest a woman can go' gives you (in a perverse way) power. Unlike being abused, you are in control. You choose your clients, but to an extent they also choose you. So you have a combination of feeling special, but also holding the power as you can refuse. You said this. now I am older and wiser and more in control, I can pick and choose my clients

It's more subtle than 'victim turns abuser' but it's heading in that direction.

I would implore you to get help because you can't forge any meaningful relationships with men - your own words, you don't want that.

You are at risk every time you have sex, both your health and personal safety. And, somehow your kids may find out - if they don't already- so you have to think hard about how that would impact on all of you.

MyrtlethePurpleTurtle · 23/03/2026 08:07

ToKittyornottoKitty · 22/03/2026 14:30

What I don’t understand on mumsnet, is that everyone who does these threads claiming to be a sex worker claims they’ve never been hurt by their clients and largely only had nice clients, no violence or STIs, found it easy to find this decent work. Almost glamourising sex work and making it sound appealing. None are keen to be open about the real and exploitive side. Seems really odd.

I suspect the ‘I was trafficked from Moldova’ demographic may not overlap with the Mumsnet demographic - but, yes, I agree. We tend not to hear about recurrent bouts of cystitis, clients with poor personal hygiene etc - still less the more serious possibilities

DivorcedAndDelighted · 23/03/2026 08:15

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.

Brilliant post.
I've known a couple of prostitutes, and have read some very thoughtful books and blogs by others. Listening to the women who actually do this is fundamental.
This is a great blog on how to actually help and support prostitutes , rather than 'other' them: https://becauseimawhore.wordpress.com/an-open-letter-to-feminists/

A Letter to Feminists:

An open letter to feminists concerned about exploitation and safety in the sex industry. (Written by me and originally published on Feminaust) Dear Feminists, I am writing to discuss the issue of s…

https://becauseimawhore.wordpress.com/an-open-letter-to-feminists/

Myli1 · 23/03/2026 08:18

Toomuchprivateinfo · 22/03/2026 07:52

How do you feel about not paying tax on this income thereby avoiding paying for public services like the rest of us do?
Presumably you use the NHS, your kids went to school, you drive on the roads, etc.

What makes you think the OP is not paying tax and NI any more so than any other self employed person? Presumably she will just fill out the standard self-assessment form?

GiveUsAChip · 23/03/2026 08:44

Myli1 · 23/03/2026 08:18

What makes you think the OP is not paying tax and NI any more so than any other self employed person? Presumably she will just fill out the standard self-assessment form?

What makes you think the OP is not paying tax and NI any more so than any other self employed person?

Because she said in her posts that she is not declaring it!

GiveUsAChip · 23/03/2026 08:46

DivorcedAndDelighted · 23/03/2026 08:15

Brilliant post.
I've known a couple of prostitutes, and have read some very thoughtful books and blogs by others. Listening to the women who actually do this is fundamental.
This is a great blog on how to actually help and support prostitutes , rather than 'other' them: https://becauseimawhore.wordpress.com/an-open-letter-to-feminists/

I think that post is just one of many where a poster has an opinion.
I don't agree with anything they have said, but there you go!

Cardomomle · 23/03/2026 08:53

GiveUsAChip · 23/03/2026 08:46

I think that post is just one of many where a poster has an opinion.
I don't agree with anything they have said, but there you go!

Yes, and I agree, I think it's a goady title. Feminists are the enemy? Really? Not men who have exploited women, abused and marginalised them?
How about a "Letter to the Patriarchy"?