ElizaEmma wrote:
In order to be able to discuss STDs without the stigma, we need to get away from using the word "clean". It is also very vague, as the OP pointed out certain infections are not routinely tested.
Thank you for this. "Clean" harkens back to the days of Jesus when lepers had to ring a bell and announce that they were "unclean." i wrote my prior post on the fly, was at work on a quick break, but i think the topic of STI's needs some serious unpacking.
i'm a critical care nurse in a teaching hospital. Easily 85% of the patients i care for have life threatening, and often multiple co-morbitities, that are related to lifestyle (read: "diet"). Most heart disease, stroke, type two diabetes, is diet related, preventable, and in many cases, reversible. Reversible through diet. i have a great deal of education on this topic, certification through Cornell University on reversing disease through diet. i'm a scientist and practice evidence based medicine. You wanna kick someones sacred cow, try talking to them about the food they eat lol. (btw, i am not talking quantity or weight here, i'm talking types of food)
Here's my point. A lot of sex, at least the kind where one can get STI's, is about putting 'stuff' in the body. Diet kills far more people than STI's do, eating is not stigmatized like sex is. There are segments of culture that do stigmatize sex. Much like sexism, or many phobias, a lot of attitude towards sex is unconscious. Both involve natural needs/drives.
The truth is, the frequent sausage one puts in their mouth poses far more risk of disease and death than the cock one puts in their mouth, or other body orifices.
Many diseases, and the virus or bacteria that causes them, are contagious before symptomatic. Some do not even have symptoms in everyone. Yet, we do not expect, or even think to ask our sex partners to be swabbed for the flu before kissing them, let alone having sex with them.
i'm not suggesting that we should be cavalier about STI's. i think the solution is not 'safe sex' but making it safer to be who we are. If society was progressive about sex and not stuck in the dark ages, we could have social programs where every person who has sex routinely gets tested and treated. It's the lack of testing and treatment that makes STI's such a huge issue. Most STI's are curable, and HIV can be prevented or controlled with a daily pill.
i think if the stigmas against sex were socially addressed, STI's would become a minimal issue.
Okay, stop and consider your (automatic) emotional response to that last sentence. It made me blush a little, like i was being a bit risqué writing i. It's great to have a community like this where we can write and discuss topics like this freely, eh? Being a kinkster doesn't necessarily remove (or expose?) the effects of a lifetime of cultural conditioning, so it is wonderful and healthy to discuss things that we've been conditioned against emotionally, and mentally in some cases.