srijeda, 4. prosinca 2013.

About Sexuality: Sex and Disability, UN Style

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From Cory Silverberg, your Guide to Sexuality

Yesterday was the UN's International Day of Persons with Disabilities.  I've never liked the name of the day as it seems to slide around the important question of who or what we're meant to be paying more attention to, but any excuse to talk about sex and disability is a good one so if you were so busy yesterday that you missed it I thought I'd offer some ideas and some inspiration in case you want to stretch the UN Day out to a whole week, and raise some awareness of your own.  ~  Cory


Ableism Before Sex

Ableism is like that guy who always cuts you off before you can even start a sentence.  Actually it's like an invisible person inside your mouth, inside your mind, that redirects your thoughts before you think them.  It may be the biggest obstacle to sex, and it's definitely one we all need to deal with.

 

 

Search Related Topics:  sex and disability  ableism  discrimination

Sex After Combat
There isn't one way that being deployed and living in an active combat zone screws you up.  There are lots of ways.  And even if sex seems unrelated to combat, once members of the military return home they are never exactly the same, and neither are their sex lives.  Which doesn't mean there can't be healthy and great sex after combat.  But usually it takes some time.

 


Sexuality Through Disability
If being disabled means, on some level, that following sexual norms is more trouble than its worth, what happens when disabled people throw out the norms and start from scratch?  Follow this link to find out.

 

Search Related Topics:  sex and disability  sexual imagery  pornography

Seeing Over Sex

An About.com reader writes:

I'm a 26 year-old blind female and I've been with my boyfriend, now husband, for nearly four years. He's sweet, funny, smart, and the ideal guy. But sex is a problem. We've lost a lot of the intensity we had before and I'm worried about him getting bored. I don't know what my question is exactly but I'm writing to you as I'm afraid to bring this up with anyone around me because I feel like they wouldn't be able to separate the sex from the disability, and in some ways I think that's good, but in others not so much.

 

Search Related Topics:  sex advice  sexuality and disability  what is sexy


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