
To be more specific: queer, feminist pornography has changed the way I love and live.Pages upon pages have been written on what defines the terms queer, feminist, and pornography, so it’s hard to pinpoint exactly what queer, feminist porn is.I’ll tell you what it’s not, though. It’s not massive breast implants. It’s not fake orgasms. It’s not playing to the camera and angling into ridiculously unreal positions that can’t feel good. Sometimes it includes degradation and control, but it’s always about consent and creating safe spaces for people to explore sexuality. It’s about respect for minorities of all kind—women, queers, people of color, differently abled people, people of larger sizes—and representing sex from their perspective.In that, queer, feminist pornography represents sex from my perspective.Every piece of media that bombarded my awkward, fat dyke brain as a kid told me I was not OK. My body was not OK. My appreciation of the pleasure my body can give me was not OK. The bodies I desired to touch were not OK. Nothing about myself and my desire was OKThen I saw The Crash Pad.Photo credit Cody T WilliamsIt was 2007 and my first girlfriend and I had just broken up. I was exploring sex in a whole new way, which meant I was spending serious time at the sex shop Good Vibrations on Valencia Street, right in the heart of queer San Francisco. I’d always been interested in sex, but I hadn’t had access to what lesbian sex looked like outside of Hustler magazine and some crappy free porn I’d found on the internet. I spent hours in Good Vibes, buying every porn, toy, and book I could afford, learning what it meant to be queer.
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