offensive alert again!
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first, you are comparing the decision to be an SP to the decision to buy overpriced swamp land . .... what's irrational about my decision to be an SP? why not compare my decision to a SOUND financial decision instead of an IRRATIONAL one?
second, you are suggesting that if you were to date an sp and she didn't quit, that you would leave the relationship... that's emotional blackmail. Why enter the relationship in the first place if that's how you feel?
and lastly ... someone who feels the way that you do should never consider a relationship with a sex worker. Ever. Period. Full stop.
You have misunderstood me entirely Jessica. My comments are strictly directed at this poster and his notions about relationships
IN GENERAL. I was making a general comment about his view that one is there to support a partner's decisions - IN A GENERAL SENSE. That proposition is simply not true.
I WAS IN NO WAY SAYING THAT BEING AN SP IS AN IRRATIONAL DECISION!!! But I do think that a partner in a relationship should not support an irrational decision. For example, I noticed you gave up smoking in a previous thread. If we were dating, should I just support your picking up the habit again, even if I don't smoke?
As to your second point - you are bang-on. Why enter a relationship, any relationship, when something -
anything - is off? Again, this is a general comment about relationships - not specifically being an SP. If you don't find anything wrong with dating an SP, then date an SP. If there is something wrong with it, don't date an SP. However as a
GENEARL COMMENTI have been around the block enough to know that some things do not change in relationships. Look at dating sites - they list weight, height, age, location, smoking, drinking, occupation, number of children, wants children, religion etc... all of which are common variables on which one chooses a mate. So yes, if you don't like something about someone don't enter into the relationship.
However, if I did enter a relationship
with someone who I want to change, and they don't, then it is entirely an option to leave. In fact it is emotional blackmail to me if you say something like "How could you leave me because I still do xxxxxxxxxxx?" I would say "I have outlined my reasons before. At some point I have to look after myself." That xxxxxxx could be anything from being an SP, through to picking their nose, through to excessive drinking, through to wearing polka-dots, through to drug use, through to playing Disco music too loud, etc...
I have nothing but respect for SP's, the profession and the work. The profession, like many others, does impact the dynamics of a relationship and it would be foolish to think that it doesn't.