At a time when comprehensive sex education remains patchy or nonexistent, and mainstream pornography is shaping many young people’s first impressions of sex, we’re seeing a generation grow up with warped ideas of power, consent, and connection. Without real conversations, curiosity gets hijacked by performance, and intimacy loses its grounding in truth, mutuality, and choice.
This is why voices like Amsterdomme’s are not only necessary but urgent. As a sex worker, dominatrix, and kink educator, she brings lived experience and body-based knowledge that often gets erased from public discourse. If feminism is to be inclusive, liberatory, and intersectional, it must also reflect sex workers’ voices—not as a fringe perspective, but as vital contributors to conversations around autonomy, labour, consent, and bodily integrity.
This is not just about sex. It’s about breaking the silence, reclaiming our stories, and expanding what’s possible in how we relate to our identities, to each other, and the world—across genders and generations.
Tune in to the second half of the episode, and get ready to think differently about power, intimacy, and healing—not in theory, but in the messy, embodied reality where change begins.
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