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    • October 20, 2013 10:54:03 AM EDT
    • Bruce Wilson On prostitution

      There is just so much interest in this subject that every day the internet gets swamped with stories, opinions and comments about this subject. I found this in my daily cruse of the internet flesh sites.

       

      Bruce Wilson On prostitution

      Sunday 20 October 2013


      Mariya tweeted a link to an article on why young women in rural China become mistresses of older men, which reminded me of living next door to a paid mistress in Thailand, and she prompted me to blog about it.


      So here goes.



      When I moved to Thailand in 1996 to help set up a school, I took a 3 month rent on a small room in a new hotel near my work. On my floor there was only one other resident, a very well-dressed, attractive woman in her mid-20s. We soon became friends, leaving our doors open and popping in and out of each other’s rooms to chat, gossip, eat, drink beer and smoke.


      Lek didn’t seem to work, but attended college every day to learn how to cook, went out most nights and, frankly, seemed to have more disposable income than I had. This was surprising for two reasons; firstly, most Westerners employed in Bangkok with work permits earned three or four times what the locals earned. Secondly, while there were many Thai kids with rich parents, they tended to be fair-skinned, whereas Lek was dark-skinned and from the impoverished Southern provinces of Thailand where a long-running terrorism campaign to secede from Thailand and join muslim Malaysia had damaged the area.


      I asked her about it, and she told me straight: she had an older, Western boyfriend called Mike who was posted to work in Thailand in some big engineering project. Mike was married, but his wife was back in England with their kids. Mike paid for the apartment, her college course and took care of her living expenses. In return, she was his mistress. She was to be available for sex, going out to parties or weekends away. The sole stipulation was that she was not to have sex with anyone else (a wise move; in the late 90s, HIV was rife in Thailand). She didn’t love Mike, although she liked him – she viewed it purely as a business relationship. Mike, however, did get jealous of me (until we lied and told him I’m gay); I found lots of Westerners who had mistresses or picked up prostitutes deluded themselves that they were emotionally involved rather than simply buying a service.


      Before I’d met Lek, I had always assumed that prostitution was a sordid business of trafficked or abused women being forced into it by a pimp. It had never occurred to me that it would be voluntary. I asked Lek if she felt exploited.


      “Absolutely not”, she answered. She explained that she had a sister, a year younger, still living in the home village “in the jungle” (as she put it). Her sister had four children by a man who beat her when he was drunk, and who forced her to wear a veil. “I have a nice apartment, I’m getting an education. Mike is a good guy who treats me well, we go to parties where I meet lots of people, I’ve learned English and have friends from all over the world. This is freedom”.


      Who was I to argue?


      It made me wonder, though, why we still get so squeamish about sex. If someone works with their bodies to entertain by dancing, or gymnastics, or sports, we don’t pity them.


      Neither do we condescend to other people who look after others’ physical needs for money – we don’t pity a person who cooks food or others, or cuts their hair, or massages their aches, or looks after their teeth. So why do we look down on people who voluntarily offer sexual services?

       


      Reply from a reader

      “So why do we look down on people who voluntarily offer sexual services?”

      I don’t think that many people do, at least not many of my peers. I certainly see no problem with an adult doing anything they like, for any reason they like, as long as it’s voluntary and they’re happy about it – and that it doesn’t harm other people. And to clarify my definition – offence is not harm, offence is a choice made by the offended.

      I’d assume that people who do react in that way either:

      * Do so on religious grounding
      * Are under the impression that prostitution is a ‘desperate measure’ and the prostitute got to it through poor life choices.

      Personally, I think if you’re looking down on someone for any reason, it’s because you’re lacking in empathy and you’re being a judgemental dick.

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