Culture A sex worker gave my autistic son the gift of confidence – and I organised the encounter


Until he finds the right girl and a loving relationship, how better to channel his sexuality in a healthy way?

Parenting takes you on some interesting twists and turns, but as I lay in the maternity ward gazing into my newborn’s eyes, never in my wildest dreams could I ever have imagined that 21 years later I’d be trawling the websites of sex workers looking for a suitable young lady to take his virginity. Yet that’s exactly where I found myself earlier this year.

We’d not long left the hospital when I noticed my baby’s gaze had a distant quality. A few days after his third birthday, he was diagnosed with autism.

He’s now learning to drive and to catch public transport, having finished high school. But navigating social relationships is harder than reading a train timetable or Google Maps. Physically and sexually, he is a young man, but his social skills lag by several years.

I hope one day he will find the right girl, his own version of Love on the Spectrum. But how can we healthily channel his sexuality until then?

Briefly I wondered whether he might prefer to meet the right boy, as more autistic people identify as LGBTQ+ than those without autism. However, while my son thinks he’s bisexual, it’s clear from his comments that he’s primarily attracted to women. “No filter,” his teacher once observed.

This frankness is largely a blessing. Teenage boys now have unfettered access to internet pornography, but – unlike my son – don’t confide their viewing habits to their mother, giving her the opportunity to correct misperceptions. There’s a danger in socially isolated autistic males, with their obsessive tendencies, being exposed to misogynistic porn. Already they are overrepresented among “incels” (involuntary celibates), who are known for their anti-women views.

So, when my son alluded to certain “activities” he’d obviously come across online, I was able to explain that, in real life, not all girls like that sort of thing. That good sex was about mutual caring and respect.

I’d suggested the idea of a sex worker to him a couple of years ago when he had trouble getting past his first rejection, his first broken heart. Unfortunately, the pandemic intervened. Then, late last year, I attended a webinar on disability and sexuality.

A male sex worker from Touching Base, a Sydney-based charitable organisation that links up sex workers and people with a disability, answered questions, as well as a female worker called “Anna” who identified as neurodiverse. Touching Base’s vision aligns with that of People with Disability Australia, which argues that “people with disability have a right to a sexual life, just like everyone else”.

Feeling validated, I asked Touching Base to email me a list of suitable sex workers and summoned my son to look through the candidates. After lobbying hard for this to happen, he suddenly became diffident. “You choose,” he said.

Ha-ha: a mother’s prerogative.

I’m not opposed to tattoos, but the heavily inked women in black leather looked rather fierce. In contrast, there were a couple of workers who favoured a girl-next-door look. One of them I recognised as Anna, from the webinar. I had my girl.

Worried others might judge, I confessed our plans only to one good friend, who also has an autistic son. He had visited a brothel off his own bat. She was quietly proud of his initiative (parents of children with disabilities have a completely different frame of reference for achievement) but wryly added she’d have preferred to hear about it in less detail.

I emailed Anna, describing my boy and what he sought from the encounter, but also what I wanted. My son understood consent in theory, but I wondered if he could apply it. Who better, I thought, to educate him than an experienced sex worker? Anna was agreeable and we negotiated terms – a four-hour “immersion experience” for $1,000.

She asked if we’d be using NDIS funding, but I demurred. Some brave souls have fought for and won the right to have sex work included in their NDIS plans, but this was one battle with bureaucracy I preferred to avoid.

Finally, the day arrived. I’d once imagined that disability sex workers would be a distinct and rather dowdy bunch, not everyday workers who’d diversified. In my mind’s eye, my son’s first sexual encounter would be with a short-haired woman wearing sensible shoes, not the bare-footed sylph with pre-Raphaelite curls who opened the door to us.

It’s probably all downhill from here, young man, I couldn’t help thinking.

I left them alone and did what any other mother would do after dropping her child off at a sex worker’s: I cooled my heels in a coffee shop, read magazines, window-shopped and avoided using my imagination.

Four hours later, after collecting him, I inexplicably choked up.

“Are you OK, Mum? You seem distressed,” he said, in an impressive display of empathy for someone who (by nature of his condition) is supposed to lack it.

I reassured him I was fine but did not want to know what happened, and mercifully he took this onboard. When he later admitted, “This has been the best day of my life,” I knew I’d done the right thing.

Still, I wondered how it was from Anna’s perspective. What was the protocol here – could I ask? Perhaps she read my mind because a few days later I received emailed feedback. My son was totally respectful and would make someone a lovely boyfriend when the time came, she wrote.

Throughout this my husband preferred to remain in the background, not out of misplaced prudishness but because he worries that sex work is exploitative. Which it can be, obviously. But none of this applies to Anna, who’s her own boss and obviously comfortable in her choices.

My son is keen on a second visit, but I told him that he’ll have to save up for it himself. Hopefully he will find a girlfriend one day and learn to enjoy sex in a loving relationship. Whatever happens, I will remain forever grateful to Anna for the gift of confidence she has given my son.
  • The author’s name has been kept anonymous to protect the privacy of her son
 
Already they are overrepresented among “incels” (involuntary celibates), who are known for their anti-women views.
“people with disability have a right to a sexual life, just like everyone else”.
Wait, isn’t this just incel ideology wrapped up in progressive language? It suddenly becomes acceptable to say this when the person saying it is disabled?
 
Who says he even understands what a prostitute is and that he can't just go up to random women thinking he can do what he wants with them, especially if arrangements and payment were made for him

My son is keen on a second visit, but I told him that he’ll have to save up for it himself.

She thinks she's dodged that bullet but you know he's already in love with that prostitute and if he ever gets enough money to see her again he'll ask her to be his girlfriend. She'll let him down gently and I can only assume he will try to "buy" another girlfriend.
 
Wait, isn’t this just incel ideology wrapped up in progressive language? It suddenly becomes acceptable to say this when the person saying it is disabled?
Yes, it is. The fast and hard Rules of Nature™ is that you only know if you "deserve" a sex life by having one. Nobody's obligated to sleep with you, but you also shouldn't make your entire raison d'être be getting the approval of strangers by saying you've had sex.
 
Throughout this my husband preferred to remain in the background, not out of misplaced prudishness but because he worries that sex work is exploitative.

How to tell me you are a high-maintenance bitch who ran off your first husband without telling me you are a high-maintenance bitch who ran off your first husband. The current husband is obviously not the father, and wants no part in this (because it is creepy and awkward).
 
"My son is keen on a second visit" so he's learned nothing, except that if he pays a girl enough money she'll have sex with him. Well done, Mum.

Your son is never going to have a girlfriend. You essentially gave him a vagina to rent and expect him to know how to form relationships afterwards?
 
How to tell me you are a high-maintenance bitch who ran off your first husband without telling me you are a high-maintenance bitch who ran off your first husband. The current husband is obviously not the father, and wants no part in this (because it is creepy and awkward).

The easiest way to throw people off the scent that you have/might pay for sex is to say things exactly like that guy. "Uh they've all got aids, on drugs, being forced by some pimp" and then the topic will change. I bet that woman hasn't put out for him in years.
 
"My son is keen on a second visit" so he's learned nothing, except that if he pays a girl enough money she'll have sex with him. Well done, Mum.

Your son is never going to have a girlfriend. You essentially gave him a vagina to rent and expect him to know how to form relationships afterwards?
I think women have a hard time understanding how trying to find a partner works for men (and everyone would have a harder time understanding that from an autistic person's perspective). Women can be passive and get pursued, so having the confidence to "put yourself out there" for a woman moreso means just be physically present and you'll have options. That may be true to a lesser extent for certain guys, but guys have the role of initiator. Yes there's weirdos like Ralph that have sex, but consider how much effort and planning it takes to scope out high schoolers and groom them. It's not really just a "go to the bar more" activity.

Mom probably doesn't understand that offering up prostitution as a solution doesn't instill confidence in her son (and is why most incel circles don't count prostitutes). Old Mr. Smith taking his wallflower son to a brothel so he can man up isn't actually about giving Smith Jr. an understanding of the nuance of relationships: It's to make him not mythologize having sex (which can become its own issue for incels). It's the Shady Boomer Dad™ method of trying to keep your kid from stewing in it and going weird. Is it a perfect parenting decision? Probably not, but it has a clear point. Dad's not trying to make his kid have a wistful first summer romance: The kid missed that boat, he's just trying to show him getting some is nothing to be afraid of.

This mom seems to be treating her kid's lack of a sex life as a fear of having sex and not just a plain old porn habits/inability to attract a partner. Sleeping with prostitute isn't going to instill confidence in the autistic kid(well, 21-year-old man) the same way it didn't with Chris; it's just going to lead to him catching feelings and setting a poor precedent going forward, because he has obsessive tendencies and his first sexual experience, apparently after not even having a "gal pal" before hand, was completely unnatural compared to the sort of relationships the mom apparently wants her son to actually have in the future. Obviously not everyone that gets the Vegas treatment to lose their virginity as an adult is a broken person, but I can't imagine this is actually helping the kid get into healthy relationships any sooner. Now he doesn't even have to stress himself out with dating; he'll just fall back on the comfortable option and save up money to see his "sweetheart"
 
Fathers have been buying their "late bloomer" sons whores since the onset of the family unit.

It's not something worth bragging over.
Sure, but they at least had the decency to keep quiet about it. Leave it to a libtard roastie to humiliate her son for internet asspats. I've said it before, most liberals do not give a fuck about their children as people, only as ideas and trophies that they can use to pull rank on other people.

Much like men fucking other men in the ass, it's fine if you do it, just keep it on the downlow. It seems like we've collectively forgotten that we don't need every single detail to he publicized. Yes, I am shaming you. Piss off and keep it to yourself.
 
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