I’m writing on behalf of a
19-year-old guy with cerebral palsy. As you may know, CP is a brain
affliction resulting from insufficient oxygen at birth, and it causes
the part of the brain responsible for motor function to work
incorrectly. Troubles for people with CP include muscle spasticity,
weakness, and/or painful contraction, and in some cases a life spent in
a wheelchair.
My buddy is, like any 19-year-old,
interested in finding out more about his sexuality. He has watched his
peers develop sexually, but hasn’t had the opportunity to do so
himself. Intimacy aside, are there any services that you know of that
could help him to experience sex for the first time? I don’t mean to
buy the guy a hooker or anything like that, but I wondered if there are
people who would assist him and a girl (disabled or otherwise) into
bed.
Friend In Deed
“Your...
...a hooker or anything like that, but I wondered if there are
people who would assist him and a girl (disabled or otherwise) into
bed.
Friend In Deed
“Your reader shouldn’t make assumptions
about what having sex or being sexual means to his friend,” says Cory
Silverberg, coauthor of The Ultimate Guide to Sex and
Disability. What if your friend doesn’t want to get into bed with
a girl, but head into a dungeon with one? Or two? Or what if your
friend is gay? Or what if all he really wants is to make it with a
plush toy or a picnic table?
“Just like we do with everyone,” says Cory,
“we tend to assume folks with disabilities are straight and just want
to have penile-vaginal intercourse and some oral sex. We’re almost
always wrong. So the first thing he should do is ask his friend what
he’s interested in.”
Cory also suggests that you ask your friend
if he’s having sex with himself, since masturbation is the easiest way
for a person to explore his sexuality. “Mobility disabilities can make
masturbation tricky,” says Cory, “but never impossible. Privacy and
motor control can be challenging, but there are many workarounds.”
If your friend has or finds a partner and
needs physical assistance during sex, you might want to help him find
an attendant, a person who works with physically disabled people, who
is comfortable positioning him and a partner in bed, assisting with
condoms, and cleaning up. “In my experience,” says Cory, “attendants
who are queer tend to be more comfortable talking about sex and making
that kind of assistance part of their job description, but that doesn’t
rule out straight ones.”
So if your friend has plenty of sex with
himself and has a good idea what he’d like to do, but doesn’t have a
partner to do it with, what do you do then? Says Cory: “He should get
out there, use online and virtual spaces, join a social group related
to something he’s passionate about—all of these are good ways to
meet people. Paying for sex is also an option, but avoid the escort ads
and try to get a referral from someone you know and trust.”
I was in a chat room today and a
guy asked if he could see my belly button. Of course, my fetish alarm
went off. Turns out this guy is 19, disabled, and feels like a total
social/sexual outcast. Because of his physical problems and his fetish,
he said he felt like he’d never have a normal relationship. I couldn’t
lie to the kid and say, “Don’t worry, pumpkin, your soul mate will find
you someday,” so instead I offered, “Most people are assholes—and
this comes from an able-bodied vanilla girl, so yeah, your life’s gonna
be tough.”
Then I thought there must be some kind
of internet group out there for disabled fetishists. It might also make
him feel more normal, and he may be able to arrange an amazing
you-can-fetishize-my-disability-if-I-can-jerk-off-in-your-belly-button
relationship. I’m torn up thinking about this kid and want to do
something for him.
Trying To Help A Kid
Out
“Your reader probably feels like she is
doing a good thing,” says Cory, “but she should tone down the
condescension [about fetishes and disability].” Cory feels
strongly that people with disabilities shouldn’t be told they
must look exclusively to disability fetishists for partners.
“But there are people who have a specific sexual preference for people
with disabilities,” says Cory, “and they identify themselves as
devotees and in most cases the disabilities they prefer are people
missing limbs and people in wheelchairs.”
Ascot World (www.ascotworld.com), according to
Cory, “is still one of the biggest and best devotee sites and offers
links to discussion groups, which, if this guy is interested, are one
place to look for people.”
Now before angry able-bodied folks take
offense on behalf of the disabled and fill my inbox with angry letters
about creepy devotees, please wrap your able-bodied heads around this:
If you believe in equal treatment for people with disabilities, then
that extends to sex. We all want to be objectified from time to time,
and a disabled person has just as much right to healthy objectification
as any able-bodied person. There’s really not much difference between a
leg man and a lack-of-leg man—well, except this: The more common
a fetish is, the less likely we are to regard it as one.
Please help me. I’m 38 and have
no boyfriend or friends to go out with. I have been in a wheelchair for
10 years with a hereditary condition. I have low self-esteem, which
does not help. I don’t know how to fix it.
Dying Out Here
“The effects of the social isolation people
with disabilities face can include depression,” says Cory, “and from
this brief note, that’s my first concern.” Cory thinks you might
benefit from seeing someone—le shrink—about your
general mental health before you start looking for a boyfriend. “The
reader wants to ‘fix’ the problem, but the truth is that there isn’t
any quick or easy fix, especially when it comes to self-esteem. But
taking some action to change your situation can make you feel more
positive about yourself and what you have to offer others.”
Once you’ve sought out some help for your
depression, Cory suggests you “find some volunteer work that is
accessible [or] join a social group or club.” You also might want to
check out these disability dating websites: www.dawn-disabled-dating.com,
www.disableddatingclub
.com, www.enablelove.com, www.lovebyrd.com, and www.specialsinglesonline.com.
Cory also wanted me to pass on these
resources: Independent Living USA (www
.ilusa.com); info on seeing
a sexual surrogate (www.pacificnews.org/marko/sex-surrogate
.html);
some practical suggestions from Outsiders, a UK disability-rights group
(www
.outsiders.org.uk/practical-suggestions); and Queers on Wheels
(www.queersonwheels.com).
Cory also writes for, and maintains, a sex and disability resources
page at About.com.
Finally, all three authors of The
Ultimate Guide to Sex and Disability—Miriam Kaufman, Fran
Odette, and Cory Silverberg—are happy to help others with
suggestions and can be reached via e-mail at
sex.disability@gmail
.com. Cory also takes questions this week on
the Savage Lovecast, my weekly podcast, which you can download
at www.thestranger.com/savage.
Confidential to California: Thanks for
that.
[email protected]