JohnBoy2000
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 11, 2016
- Messages
- 2,596
To be clear, this is not an attempt to hold sex-work in conventional light of them all being poor exploited women.
Or to villainize the industry as being entirely degenerative.
There's an emergent contemporary mentality, not least of all amongst law and policy makers that "sex work is work".
Upon browsing some reddit forums dedicated to this style of work, I've began to try and figure out the actually thinking within the work, mentality associated with doing it, its sustainability; naturally it's been historically controversial and there are emergent case reports of potential psychological issues emergent with some long term workers, especially resulting from their discontinuation from or conclusion with sex-work.
However, the reasons for it's controversy are not particularly well defined and I believe may be quite counter intuitive in nature:
- By example, women coming out of the work into regular jobs I have come to believe can begin to miss the excitement, easy money and sense of purpose associated with having been in that line of employment; resultantly it's not trauma sustained over the time of being a sex worker that negatively impacts them when it's time to conclude their affairs, but rather the trauma of the psychological shift to more conventional living - where an inadequate transition can bring about that potentially self-compromising end result.
Or to villainize the industry as being entirely degenerative.
There's an emergent contemporary mentality, not least of all amongst law and policy makers that "sex work is work".
Upon browsing some reddit forums dedicated to this style of work, I've began to try and figure out the actually thinking within the work, mentality associated with doing it, its sustainability; naturally it's been historically controversial and there are emergent case reports of potential psychological issues emergent with some long term workers, especially resulting from their discontinuation from or conclusion with sex-work.
However, the reasons for it's controversy are not particularly well defined and I believe may be quite counter intuitive in nature:
- By example, women coming out of the work into regular jobs I have come to believe can begin to miss the excitement, easy money and sense of purpose associated with having been in that line of employment; resultantly it's not trauma sustained over the time of being a sex worker that negatively impacts them when it's time to conclude their affairs, but rather the trauma of the psychological shift to more conventional living - where an inadequate transition can bring about that potentially self-compromising end result.
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