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Psychological And Physical Effects Of Prostitution On The Prostitute----Share worthy Article

Claudia Love

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Many prostitutes extinguish their emotions while they are with customers. At least that is the case for Roberta Victor, a prostitute who was interviewed in Working by Studs Terkel. At the outset of her interview, Victor claims that “The role one plays when hustling has nothing to do with who you are” (57). However by the end of the interview, she states that “You become your job. I became what I did. I became a hustler. I became cold, I became hard, I became turned off, I became numb. Even when I wasn’t hustling, I was a hustler. I also don’t think it’s terribly different from somebody who works on the assembly line forty hours a week and comes home cut off, numb, dehumanized. People aren’t built to switch on and off like water faucets” (65). Victor seems unaware of the fact that she contradicts herself by stating that she becomes her job [a prostitute] when before she said that she is a different person when she works. Her mindset and analytical process has changed enormously. What factors affected her mindset, from her being able to separate her work from her identity to her thinking that she has become a hustler? What are the psychological and physical effects of prostitution on a prostitute? What factors lead prostitutes to have such a mindset? Is there a way to decrease the effect prostitution has on a prostitute’s mental and physical state?

The psychological effects of prostitution are mainly Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), somatization and stigmatization, and anxiety and depression. The physical effects of prostitution include the high risk of STDs, sexual or physical violence, and introduction to drugs and alcohol . This mindset and alteration of the analytical process is the result of exposure to violence through prostitution. So far it has been said that counselling, cognitive behavioral therapy, and medication can help ease the symptoms of PTSD; however, there is no permanent solution because the condition requires ongoing treatment to control the symptoms and improve the sufferer’s life. Even though are also solutions being found to decrease the physical effects of prostitution in order, there is no perfect solution. There is not any type of medication or therapy that eliminates the psychological or physical effects of prostitution completely.

One of the strongest psychological effects of prostitution on prostitutes is Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). PTSD is described as bouts of anxiety, depression, insomnia, irritability, flashbacks, emotional numbing, and hyper alertness. Symptoms of PTSD are more severe and long lasting when the stressor is a person ( Farley, “Is”). According to Melissa Farley, “PTSD is normative among prostituted women” (“Is”). In San Francisco, Farley conducted an experiment with one hundred and thirty prostitutes were fifty-five percent of them stated that they were sexually assaulted as children and forty-nine percent of them were physically assaulted as children. As adults in prostitution: eighty-two percent had been physically assaulted, eighty-three percent had been threatened with a weapon, sixty-eight percent had been raped while working as prostitutes, and eighty-four percent reported current or former homelessness. In accordance to the one hundred thirty people interviewed, sixty-eight percent of them met the DSM III-R, which is a criteria for a diagnosis of PTSD (Farley et al., “Prostitution, Violence”). My interpretation is that most PTSD symptoms are caused by the different types of lifetime sexual and physical violence that can begin from childhood and continue to adulthood. According to Farley, seventy-three percent of the total four hundred and seventy-three people interviewed in five different countries (South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, USA, and Zambia) reported that they had been assaulted in prostitution, and sixty-two percent had been raped in prostitution (Farley et al., “Prostitution in Five”). Any prostitutes who experience any trauma type of PTSD can result in PTSD. Researchers discovered that out of the five hundred prostitutes interviewed world-wide, sixty-seven percent of them suffer from PTSD.

Another psychological effect of prostitution which is slightly more complex is somatization. Somatization is the making of recurrent and multiple medical symptoms with no main cause. Somatization disorder results in women who were assaulted in childhood and were sexually abused. Somatization is the result of negative affectivity and feelings of incompetence (Christiansen). The relationship between trauma and somatization appears to be a result of PTSD. Somatic symptoms are common among prostitutes who are trauma survivors. According to Dorte M. Christiansen, depression, dissociation, and anxiety are not associated with degree of somatization. Not much research has been conducted on somatization and its disorders among prostitutes.

Another psychological effect of prostitution is stigmatization. Stigma is “a mark of disgrace associated with a particular circumstance, quality, or person”. Stigma emerges in relationships in the sense that people learn to judge, condemn, stereotype, and fault others for having certain characteristics, (skin color, weight, physical disability) or engaging in behaviors (illicit drug use, smoking, sex work) that are considered socially or culturally disrespectful (Agustin). Stigma usually involves blaming, shaming, and status loss of the sufferer and is often related to social anxieties and fears, and a related need to maintain social order or control. It’s also been said that powerful social norms and values effects lead to negative stereotypes such as that sex workers or prostitutes are considered immoral, unclean, or dangerous. Prostitutes who are often negatively stereotyped and tend to mainly be identified by a certain characteristic think that this characteristic is their sole defining characteristic, just as how Roberta Victor begin to think that she was a prostitute not a woman who worked as one. Some prostitutes worry about “perceived stigma,” and so, they do not socially interact out of the fear that people will treat them unequally because they work in prostitution as their line of work(Agustin). Another way individuals are affected by stigma is “enacted stigma” or discrimination when prostitutes are treated negatively because of the societal beliefs held about them (Agustin). However, unlike some prostitutes who internalize stigma, others perceive themselves as playing a role which is very important in society such as emotional or sexual health counselors (Agustin). Even though some prostitutes may stigmatize themselves, they are likely to not do anything about the discrimination that occurs. Even though some prostitutes resist stigma, they are likely to hide their jobs from family and loved ones because even if they think that they are completely resistant to stigma, many of them would secretly loathe themselves (Corrigan). Stigma is one of the stronger psychological effects of prostitution because there is a possibility that stigma can lead to stress disorders and mental illness (Corrigan). There are not many cures for stigma, however there is an ongoing argument that legalizing prostitution would help decrease the psychological effect of prostitution. I believe that researchers who argue that legalizing prostitution would help seem to think that prostitutes would not feel as stigmatized because it might seem to them that they are doing a job that is now legal and this would help increase their level of self-esteem. However, it is not completely likely that everyone would approve of the legalization of prostitution because people and societies may think that it is immoral and undignified.

 
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HAMSTER INSPECTOR

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There are many jobs/events that can cause Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), it all depends on the person and how they handle it. I have met SPs that told me they can never be a nude dancer and Nude dancers that told me they can never be SPs. What about janitors and people that have to pick up bodies at crime scenes, people look down of that type of job, low esteme can be traumatic. I have heard stories of non SP women at the casino or race track parking areas offering BJs for $50 to satisfy their gambling addiction. Single moms will sometimes work as a temporary SP/MP to make ends meet. Party girls that get into their mid 30s and are still addicted to cocaine and need a fix, picking up a guy to party. Sometimes the mind justifies the activity if it satisfies the need or addiction.
 

Kayla

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Aug 27, 2001
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Personally, I think it all depends upon the persons perception, how they deal with it and the choices that they make.
Yes, you do become numb to it, after all, one of my favorite songs is 'Comfortably Numb' by Pink Floyd.
I once had a friend tell me when I was thinking of getting back into the business, 'it hurts you, you don't feel the pain because you are numb to it'.
I still don't know if I agree or disagree with him.
One thing that I do know for sure.. being a prostitute, escort, any kind of service provider.. I know I was always lonely.
 

Claudia Love

Well-known member
Feb 8, 2021
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Personally, I think it all depends upon the persons perception, how they deal with it and the choices that they make.
Yes, you do become numb to it, after all, one of my favorite songs is 'Comfortably Numb' by Pink Floyd.
I once had a friend tell me when I was thinking of getting back into the business, 'it hurts you, you don't feel the pain because you are numb to it'.
I still don't know if I agree or disagree with him.
One thing that I do know for sure.. being a prostitute, escort, any kind of service provider.. I know I was always lonely.
Well said. I ended up having 5 client serious relationships in 10 years. Because I too was looking for someone who'd except me knowing im an escort and 2 everytime I tried dating men not in the industry they went bananas finding out I escorted as if im the witch of Salem good grief
 

Kayla

The Legend
Aug 27, 2001
1,185
78
48
In the Country
LOL.. I know that feeling.. what I ended up doing is just becoming friends with a couple of my regular clients who were single, didn't want attachments and we would hang out, watch movies, laugh, etc. But still.. when they go home.. and you are left on your own, if you aren't so exhausted you fall right to sleep.. your head begins to spin..
 
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