A ‘Kiss and Tell’ book this week, with a lady going by the name of Scarlett
O’Kelly detailing what it is/was like to be a professional escort, read sex
worker.Paying
For It (ISBN 978-0-241-96323-4, Penguin, 2012) begins with the usual
provisos you would expect such as false names (both hers and the clients),
backgrounds, towns, and anything that might pinpoint her or where she
worked.
The reason for her joining the sex industry is not spelled out in any
melodramatic way, or looking for sympathy. Sure, the Irish economy had
collapsed (to be sure, to be sure) and she, as a single mother found that
she was suddenly unemployed and on the dole queue.
Initially mentally fantasizing what it would be like to work in the sex
industry, she then began a toe in the water exercise advertising massages
through the internet and was swamped. There were obviously many men out
there who were willing to pay for it.
Having been a successful businesswoman before the financial crash, she sat
down and planned just how she would run this ‘new’ business venture.
However, the business approach did not stop her having many fears about the
“first time” and she describes her emotions during that encounter in very
human and believable terms.
The second, and very successful encounter led her to justify her new
existence, saying, “I was doing the right thing - the bills were paid, the
men were happy and I was helping people in a way I would never have thought
possible.”
In this line of business she meets her first client with a fetish, in this
case socks. Apparently this is a well documented fetish, but was neither her
“thing” (nor mine I should add).
She also relates being short-changed for the first time after checking the
bundle of notes in her wallet before driving off, and I was surprised that
someone with her business acumen did not collect the money first, and not at
the end of the encounter.
Much self-examination by Ms Scarlett, including analysis of why her once
happy marriage broke up less than one year after the birth of one of her
sons. She then tries to apply that analysis to some of her clients, not all
of which were appreciative of the free psychotherapy, when all they wanted
was a roll in the hay!
By six months in the job she had come to the realization that enjoyment of
sex and physical attraction were not the same. She was learning.
At B. 435 it is a lightweight book which will appeal to the voyeur in us
all. The degree of titillation is fairly minor, so this is not the book for
someone looking for XXX gratification!
Ms. Scarlett finishes with, “It would benefit us all, I reckon, to take a
wider, more mature approach to the issue of the sex industry.” In that, she
is undoubtedly correct, it is after all the oldest ‘profession’ which has
stood the test of time for thousands of years. It should be accepted by now,
and probably is in certain parts of Pattaya!