Wondering whether people agree with the following.
In my real life, I'm a consultant. Last year, a fellow consultant turned to me and said, "John, you know, we're nothing but industry whores. When our clients need us, they'll pay us large sums to get the job done. The moment we're finished, they want us out of their faces."
I found that thought-provoking, since it made me realize what negative connotations words like "whore" and "prostitution" have in our culture, yet so much of our transactions are no different than prostitution. What's ironic, is that when it comes to sex that is not directly paid for, much of our behavior is for all practical purposes, prostitution.
Merriam-Webster defines prostitution as, "The act or practice of engaging in promiscuous sexual relations especially for money." If a boy takes a girl out on a date, buys her a nice dinner, and then she has sex with him, is that prostitution? If a woman provides a lovely home for her husband and expects an intimate relationship in return, is that a form of prostitution? Society would say no, but the fact is that many people offer sex in exchange for things besides intimacy or pleasure. Based on the much larger number of females escorts I've seen on the review boards compared to male escorts, I believe men “need” sex more than women to feel content in life, so they may be more willing to do things to obtain it, but I've personally witnessed these trades going both ways.
Where things seem especially confusing to me is the exchange of sex for emotional connection. I believe that many people will become sexually involved with someone as a means to create an emotional connection. Their partner may be ready to reciprocate and a healthy relationship ensues. But more often than not, especially in shorter-term liaisons, the emotional bond does not develop. It is just sex, and the person who has sex to establish an emotional connection feels cheated.
What you see is people conducting complex interpersonal transactions in sexual relationships, yet they never discuss what is being transacted, and are often dishonest in their transactions. For instance, a man may sense the woman wants connection or commitment, but will have sex with her anyway and never commit. Yes, it's a cliché, but only because it keeps happening all around us.
That is not what happens in paid sex. As Juliette, my dear escort friend tells me, "That's ultimately why I like getting paid for sex. Not because I'm selling my body. It's because I'm giving myself to a man for the duration of the session. I give much more than sex. I listen to him; I emotionally reach out to him; I connect with him on as many levels as he is able to or willing to. I give myself to him as much as I can as a human can give. If he gives back on a deeper level, I consider that a bonus. It does happen surprisingly often. But if he gives me nothing when I feel like I gave him everything, it doesn't matter. Because I have the money. I don't ever walk away feeling like I was cheated."
And that is why prostitution is ultimately the most honest sexual transaction. A prostitute offers a service, whether it is sex or something a little deeper, and she or he gets paid for it. Sometimes I think that we should just all start charging for sex in an open and relaxed fashion. "Hey honey, I'll give you a sensual massage each day this week if you let me go golfing with my buddies next weekend. Or, "Sure, I'm okay with you taking my wife home for the night as long as she's up for it, but she charges $1,000." Why the hell not? We do it anyway - we just never admit to it and do it for terms we never articulate.
Maybe all our relationships would be healthier if we were completely honest about our sexual needs and what we were willing to do for each other to address those needs. Things might work even better if we remained fully open-minded about those needs. Beyond this though, I believe we should stop stigmatizing sex workers and their clients, assuming the transactions are consensual. They are, after all, just engaging in completely honest transactions.