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- From: xtkmg@trentu.ca (Kate Gregory)
- Subject: Re: SAFE SEX or SAFER SEX?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.162718.27615@trentu.ca>
- Organization: Trent University, Ontario
- References: <16B61ADAE.M18611@MBVM.Mitre.Org>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 16:27:18 GMT
- Lines: 78
-
- In article <16B61ADAE.M18611@MBVM.Mitre.Org> M18611@MBVM.Mitre.Org (Kathy Wilk) writes:
- >
- > Here's something I would like to have cleared up - is there such a thing as
- >safe sex (outside of marriage - OK, perhaps even in marriage, it's not so
- >safe...)?
- > I was under the impression that even sex with a condom was only SAFER sex,
-
- Yes, there is such a thing as safe sex. No, penis-in-vagina sex with a
- condom is not safe sex, it is only safer sex. Safer by far than the
- same thing without a condom, but not safe.
-
- What is safe? What is sex? These are the questions you have to be
- comfortable with. Our kids are going to grow up with this, and if
- they grow up thinking only penis-in-vagina is sex and everything
- else is either foreplay or disgusting and perverted, then they wil
- have sex lives that are stunted by AIDS (or lives that are shortened
- by it). but if they grow up thinking lots of things are sex and knowing
- what's safe and what's only safer, and what's damned risky if not
- fatal, they can have happy healthy sex lives.
-
- What's safe? Know where bodily fluids come from: eyes, nose, mouth,
- nipples if you're lactacting, genitals, wounds including cuts and
- sores or bleeding gums. Know what parts of the body are vulnerable
- to infection by someone else's bodily fluids: mucus membranes including
- inside the mouth, vagina, and rectum, wounds including cuts and sores
- or bleeding gums. Anything that doesn't bring these into contact
- at all (not even through latex) is safe.
-
- You can put your hand *on* any part of your partner's body. You
- can put a finger or two into those parts where it will fit. Putting
- a whole hand into your partner's body should be done with latex and
- will only be safer, not safe. You can kiss and lick any part
- of your partner's body that does not emit bodily fluids. You can
- emit your own bodily fluids onto your partner's back or arm or other
- nice safe places. You can rub your bodies together. You can use
- "marital aids" like dildos or vibrators anywhere on your partner (though
- people should be very careful about sharing toys). Rubbing, touching,
- and licking are lots of fun for both people and if you stay away
- from the bodily fluid sources they are completely safe.
-
- What is safer? Anything where bodily fluids could get to a vulnerable
- spot but are restrained by latex. Condoms, dental dams, gloves. Because
- the latex might not keep the virus away from the vulnerable places,
- these kinds of sex are not safe, only safer than doing the same thing
- without the latex. What else is safer? A list of latex-free contacts
- that do bring bodily fluids against mucus membranes but have
- not been shown to have made anyone ill. There's a problem with this
- list though. Kissing hasn't been shown to transmit the virus, for
- example. Everyone in the world who is HIV+ has another risk factor
- besides kissing an HIV+ positive person. They have had needles or
- blood transfusions or have recieved someone else's bodily fluids.
- There is no-one who has only done kissing and who is HIV+. But there
- are not many people who have only done kissing, you see.
-
- Take fellatio. Especially in the early days of AIDS, you could't find
- a gay man who had only done fellatio. Everyone had tried anal sex
- at least once. Who knows exactly how the HIV+ ones got infected,
- if they said they'd had anal sex then that was their risk factor. There
- are, today, at least two men in the world who have only ever had oral sex,
- no other sexual activity of any kind, and who are HIV+. There are
- at least three lesbians who have never had sex with a man, have no other
- risk factors, and who have become HIV+ through sex with a woman.
- So, is latex-free oral sex safe? Clearly, no. Is it safer than latex-free
- anal or vaginal sex? Yes. Is it safe enough that you don't need
- latex? The answer varies. In Europe AIDS hotlines say you don't
- need latex for fellatio, cunniligus, or analingus (rimming), but
- don't let a man come in your mouth. In North America you will be
- told to use a condom for fellatio and a dental dam for cunnilingus
- or analingus. Advise your child as you see fit.
-
- What about monogamy? Think about this first. Around the world,
- 70% of the women with AIDS (or it might have been HIV+ women,
- I forget), have had ONE sexual partner in their whole life. Their
- monogamy didn't save them. Think about that for a while before you
- decide to teach your child only monogamy and abstinence.
-
- Kate
-
-