Here’s a topic I haven’t investigated before.  This week I am exploring the idea of prostitution.

 

Poverty and Sin - The Prostitute #1

 

Poverty vs Sin

This quote makes sense to me. I can imagine it isn’t easy to decide to become a prostitute.  Perhaps some might like it, but I doubt very many. I think the majority are likely to do it because, in their mind, it’s the only real option to avoiding poverty.  Of course, with some it might be poverty brought on by drugs or other destructive ways to lose money, but I bet for some it’s just really the only viable option in their minds. I am not saying it is the only viable option, but that it seems that way to them.

I also don’t necessarily think the woman has to think of what she does as ‘sin’. She might think it’s perfectly fine to be in that profession, doesn’t feel morally guilty or wrong.  But no matter what she thinks of the profession she is very unlikely to advertise that it is what she does or used to do.

The Retiree

You know what I wonder about?  Where do retired prostitutes retire to?  What job/career/life do they have afterwards?  The first thing that comes to mind is the street walker and how she will likely get a low paying job in the service industry, maybe will go on welfare, maybe will marry an abusive husband, have kids, be addicted to drugs.  All of those ideas are cliches. I actually have no idea what a street walker does after she no longer walks the street, do you?  After all, do you think she puts it on her resume? Does she openly leave a trail back to that part of her life for others to find?  I doubt it.  So, how would we know?  We wouldn’t.

What about a call girl?  Someone higher in the strata of selling her body for money.  Maybe she is a college girl earning money for school and after she is done with school she will get a job in her major, forget her life as a call girl and go on to be a middle class woman in America.  No one would imagine that is her past based on who she is now, after all how would they know?  She won’t be putting it on her resume either.  so we don’t really know, right?

Condemnation

Why wouldn’t she tell the world what she used to do? Well, that’s obvious.  The reaction would be swiftly condemning from almost all directions.  Even if she did get a sympathetic and understanding ear from someone, that same someone is not likely to want to be close friends, associating him or herself with the retiree for all to see.  The condemnation and negative consequences would be too severe if it came out.  The threat of wider exposure of her ‘sin’ could also lead to possible blackmail, not a fun threat to have hanging over one’s head.  The exposure of her former career could lead to men wanting to take advantage of her as a sexual object. It’s pretty clear to see she has a vested interest in keeping it secret.

Acceptance

But if we aren’t to judge but to love, then that includes people who have had professions we don’t like, approve of or understand, right?   I doubt I will find out from a friend (or stranger) because of this post that they had been a prostitute in the past. But if I did find out, I would hope I would treat her exactly the same as I had before; with love, kindness, interest and concern about who she was, who she is, who she wants to be and how I can help her.

How would you react?

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Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

Quote by Sydney Biddle Barrows, 1952 – not dead yet,  former escort service owner, currently marketing consultant.

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