| > Until it becomes socially acceptable to talk openly about Well you see, I would hate to live in a world where it became socially acceptable to talk about human sexuality I think it is good to be able to talk about it to your close friends / family But I'm already disgusted when I hear coworkers talk about porn or their (most of the time imaginary) sexual life. I think it is a very personal subject, and maybe I'm wrong, but I feel like you'd get less freedom in your sexual life if everybody was talking openly about it. Part of why I think that way is: people have weird fetishes for example, you could think in a society where you can talk openly about sex and you sexual life you could talk about your weird fetish, but I don't think that's the case, only "popular" fetishes / sexual preferences would be discussed, and "weird" fetishes / sexual preferences would be seen as degenerate. Again this is my opinion, maybe I'm wrong, but I would definitely not want to talk openly about sex with random people. |
I support sex-positivity. It does not require one to like it (I know asexual sex-positive feminists), but to believe that all consensual, in-good-faith practices are fine. We may not be interested in them at all, or personally find them repealing, but it shouldn't be different from not liking a particular food.
Vide "10 things sex-positivity is not" (https://everydayfeminism.com/2016/08/10-things-sex-positivit...). Among other points:
"7. Making Other People Listen to Your Sex Stories."
(Which goes both ways, so you don't need to like hearing others' sexual life details.)