This is an edited extract from SLUTDOM: Reclaiming Shame Free Sexuality by Dr Hilary Caldwell (Out July 2, UQP, $34.99)
'What did you do today?' my daughters would ask when I picked them up from school in our battered old Toyota Tarago. I would mutter something about not doing much. And I'd hope I didn't look as tired as I felt.
I was a single mum, working as a nurse part-time and paying for childcare, when I first started sex work. I could feed the kids, but I couldn’t pay the bills. Newly separated, I couldn't make up the loss of a married, middle-class position on a single part-time income. I fiercely refused rescue relationship offers. I didn't need to be rescued. I didn’t want a second round of wifedom, and my children didn’t need a new man living in our home.
I was 36 years old when I started working in the sex industry. That means I had decades of whorephobic stereotypes onboard. At first, I was reluctant to see myself as a sex worker; I imagined all hookers worked on street corners — disrespected and desperate. After reading sex worker blogs and books to get ideas, I started working independently as a private escort, offering what I later understood to be girlfriend experiences (known in the industry as GFE). I attracted mostly good-quality clients. But I learnt things the hard way. Sex workers are still shunned and judged harshly, and the discrimination and stigma surrounding my new career path made coming out unsafe for me. I hid my sex work from friends and family because I wanted to protect my safety and that of my four daughters. Keeping my sex work a secret was isolating. In the early days I quickly learnt to 'screen' clients using my gut feelings. It wasn't until a year or two later that I learnt about the amazing sex worker community out there and received their advice and support.