It's High Time To Embrace The "Slut"

It's time to put this nasty stigma to bed.

It's High Time To Embrace The "Slut" Subbotina Anna / Shutterstock
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By Jewely Hoxie

How many times have you heard people say, "If she wasn't such a slut…" or, "She's kind of a slut, but…" or, "I can't believe she's slept with [X number] of people”?

I always interject by pointing out that being a slut is not a bad thing — at least, not in the way I define it, i.e. enthusiastically enjoying your sexuality in ways that are always physically and emotionally safe. 

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There is a big difference between sleeping with 10 different guys in one month and taking 10 Plan B pills in one month.

The former is perfectly fine sluttiness (that I encourage!), while the other has nothing to do with sluttiness and everything to do with being careless and irresponsible.

I'll take the side of sluts any day.

RELATED: My Therapist Slut-Shamed Me

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How We Learn the Slut Stigma

At a young age, we are often taught that women are somehow damaged if they do not "save themselves" sexually for their one true love. As we grow older, many of us find ourselves — naturally — wanting to have sex before marriage or even true love, but the negative connotations attached to more casual sex can still linger, sometimes subconsciously. This can make women feel detached from their own sexual pleasure, turning sex into something that a woman does for someone else rather than for herself.

How many times a day do we hear the message that a man needs to work hard in order to convince, trick, or pressure a woman to sleep with him in order to satisfy his natural animalistic libido, while less lustful-women resist and hold out until perhaps they eventually "give it up"?

The conventional, cultural wisdom tells us sex is something men do to women, not something people do together on an even playing field, and certainly not something women ever do to men. When you hear that enough times, you start to believe it.

Why People Don't Want the Slut Stigma to Go Away

We all know the tired, old double standard of how awesome and studly men are when they sleep around, compared to how dirty, loose, and unladylike women are when they have a few notches on the bedpost.

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Stigmatizing the word "slut" has become a way of controlling women's sexual behavior. If a woman thinks that having a lot of sexual partners makes her undesirable, she might avoid that kind of behavior. She may end up staying in a relationship that is unhealthy, just to make sure she does not sleep with too many people. She may miss out on experiences that she might otherwise enjoy.

And if she dares to follow her desires, the guilt and shame that may follow can be debilitating. Thanks to slut-shaming, a woman's sexual agency is seriously limited.

Why the Slut Stigma Is Dangerous

Using the term "slut" as a pejorative is, in part, responsible for the way in which rape victims often get blamed. A woman was raped because she was "scantily clad," she was "asking for it," she was "leading him on" — you know, acting like a "slut."

Retaliating against this way of thinking is what spurred the proliferation of the SlutWalks over the past few years. Organizers wanted to reclaim the word "slut" as something positive.

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RELATED: Why All The BEST People Are Sluts

Why We Need to Embrace "Slut"

Expressing one's sexuality is a good and healthy thing — duh, right?

A thousand studies tell us that sex is good for us, but not everyone seems to have gotten the memo. We are told, over and over, that we need to have more sex and better sex and hotter sex — and yet we should also be careful not to explore too much or say too much.

You'd think we'd be over the whole Madonna-whore thing by now (yawn), but just last year on Bravo's reality show, Miss Advised, columnist Julia Allison described the perfect dress to wear on a first date as one that says to the man, "You can take me home to your mom, and I might give you a blow job on the way there." Ludacris jumped on the bandwagon with his less-than-original lyric, "a lady in the street but a freak in the bed."

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Aside from the fact that women are more interesting and more complex than these media portrayals, in both of these examples, the sexual part of the woman must be hidden in order for her to be seen as respectable.

Women deserve respect. Women are sexual creatures. Ergo, women's sexuality deserves respect.

What We Can Do to Help

If we could be more open about sex at a young age and actually call a vulva a vulva and not a "private part" or — I even cringe typing this — a "vay-jay-jay," we might all be better off. We have vaginas just like we have elbows and legs.

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As much as society does not want to admit it, Freud had it right when he said infants are sexual creatures, too. We masturbated as children because we were curious about our bodies. As sex-negativity grew, we explored less.

Whether you want to find your inner Anastasia Steele/Christian Grey relationship exclusively with your spouse or you want to enjoy some simple vanilla missionary with your whole block, I don't think you should be judged any differently. Just keep it honest and safe.

A Slut Mission Statement

I love sluts, perverts, deviants, freaks, and geeks alike. As long as you are fucking in the name of pleasure (and consent), you are OK in my book. A pervert is someone who is not only conscious but proud of their sexual nature. That is already more than what a lot of people can say. If you find someone attractive and it just so happens you also like getting off, I say go for it.

RELATED: I Was Called A Slut By Mean Girl Moms — But I Refuse To Be Shamed Into Submission

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Em & Lo currently blog daily about all things love- and sex-related at EMandLO.com. They've co-authored seven books on the topics of sex and love, including 150 Shades of Play: A Beginner’s Guide to Kink and SEX: How to Do Everything. They've contributed to numerous anthologies, as well as publications including Glamour, Details, New York, Marie Claire, Slate and, in the UK, The Times, The Guardian, The Telegraph, Esquire, GQ, and many more. They are also are the hosts of a ten-episode television series called “SEX: How to Do Everything,” which aired on Fiver in the UK.<