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
 
If you were really Australian the village elders would take turns on the 'roo.
Woe to the poor soul whose joey it turns out to be. Hope you enjoy eighteen years of paying child support.
Well I see they're still breeding free-range Greers. This one doesn't have the weird rodent-like facial paralysis though I assume.
Greer comes off as an autist as well, dunno much about him personally but having both can't be helping his sex life.
So did the son sleep with someone like the downie Victoria's Secret model and by his own cognitive decision, or did his mother and a bunch of other creepy adults have to give him by-the-numbers to make sure he got his dick wet? How did the mother know her son was completely interested in girls and wanted a girlfriend?


Oh my God, is the son legit telling his mother about all the porn he's been looking at? :stress:
Let me guess, it's all tentacle hentai with a fifty man bukkake finish on her face.
 
It reminds me of older incels like GovermentGetsGirlfriends. They make the argument that it is the states duty to proved girlfriends to incels because sex is a basic need.
Some disabled woman literally fought with an Australian federal agency that specifically serves disabled people to pay for her access to a prostitute.
Some brave souls have fought for and won the right to have sex work included in their NDIS plans
Australian incels might as well use this logic to get government issued prostitutes and cite that case.
 
Briefly I wondered whether he might prefer to meet the right boy, as more autistic people identify as LGBTQ+ than those without autism.
Perhaps that's because they're more easily manipulated by sociopaths who belong in fucking prison for preying on the mentally disabled...
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.
Deeply fucking perverse. Good plan lady; teach your kid to fuck whores when he gets rejected... after all, what are women but holes to put your dick in, right?
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.
Every day, we fall further from God's light...
 
Honestly, this is just a bad idea all around. As hard as it might be to do, what should have happened is she should have shifted her autist son's focus away from sex entirely because it's not something that will ever realistically be part of his life. Get him into other hobbies that he can hyperfocus on instead of women and relationships. Instill in him from a young age that maybe these kinds of things aren't for him but he can still find happiness and fulfillment in other areas of life. If she's right wing, get him into religion to teach him that sex is a sin. If she's left wing, convince him he's a transgender and get him to chemically or physically castrate himself.

At the absolute worst and if all else fails, she should get him a sex toy and tell him to use it if he ever gets urges, but even then mommy is going to have to be the one to clean it because God knows he never will and would end up getting an infection. The way to actually fix this does not have a clear solution, but what I do know is that hiring a prostitute for him is probably the worst way to go about it.
 
I am hoping that this article is fake and gay, because there’s just something about this which is pretty bone chilling to read.

What kind of parent would expose their disabled child to potentially life threatening STDs? A degenerate hedonist without any regard for consequences.

Yes, getting rejected as a teenager sucks. It happens to everyone at some point, that’s just part of life. But you know what you could have taught him during the height of his heartbreak?

Some emotional maturity for starters, which is what a lot of genuine incels lack from my observations.

Just the writing of this article, I get the impression of the mother being an overbearing control freak who likely sheltered her son and never allowed him to interact with other kids from day one. She sounds like someone who hasn’t figured out that there is a difference between lust and love.

In turn, she’s teaching her son a horrible lesson that if he can’t deal with an issue, just waste your money on hookers. She just taught him that he’s so unattractive and socially retarded that he needs to pay to experience any affection.

She also doesn’t realize that no amount of “sex work is real work” will ever dissolve the stigma surrounding prostitution; especially against men who resort to using said services. Normal, well adjusted high quality men don’t spend their money on prostitutes, let’s just leave it at that.
 
Honestly, this is just a bad idea all around. As hard as it might be to do, what should have happened is she should have shifted her autist son's focus away from sex entirely because it's not something that will ever realistically be part of his life. Get him into other hobbies that he can hyperfocus on instead of women and relationships. Instill in him from a young age that maybe these kinds of things aren't for him but he can still find happiness and fulfillment in other areas of life. If she's right wing, get him into religion to teach him that sex is a sin. If she's left wing, convince him he's a transgender and get him to chemically or physically castrate himself.

At the absolute worst and if all else fails, she should get him a sex toy and tell him to use it if he ever gets urges, but even then mommy is going to have to be the one to clean it because God knows he never will and would end up getting an infection. The way to actually fix this does not have a clear solution, but what I do know is that hiring a prostitute for him is probably the worst way to go about it.
Tbh the way this bitch talks about him I'm surprised this wasn't a "broken arms" scenario.
 
What kind of parent would expose their disabled child to potentially life threatening STDs?
A single mother--

Throughout this my husband preferred to remain in the background

A mother that's married to a spineless husband, which is functionally no different than being a single mother.
 
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I have seen some fucked up things on this site but oddly this article is actually making me nauseous. Mom being this involved in son's sex life makes me want to call whatever the equivalent of Australian CPS is.
Pretty tame compared to that one from around 2015 about a parent giving their retarded son handjobs.
 
Haha no it's not, it's fucking sick and twisted. The nature of the act (or the un-naturality of it to be more accurate) doesn't change simply because you don't tell everyone about it. Consider having fully-formed convictions and the will to stand by them instead of waffling with "well I just don't want 5 year olds getting fucked in the ass" type thinking. This is a slimy ideological flaw that tends to afflict "conservative" types as they really seem to fear being labeled evil or doubleplusungood by literal demons and the pedophiles those demons infest.
My convictions are fully formed, and they won't permit me to reconcile aiming a gun at another human being because they're doing something I find gross behind closed doors with other consenting adults. Men have been looking for any port in a storm since the days of the Greek Empire, yet the problems only really started when these people started taking to the streets and making their perversions public. It's not waffling to acknowledge that the absolute best you can do is keep it out of the public eye and away from the kids, unless you want to introduce a level of surveillance and authoritarianism that would make China blush with shame.
 
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