There is No Such Thing as Safe Sex

So, there’s recently been a kerfluffle on the blogosphere about the issue of consent due to an inflammatory article by a college student, which lead to an equally unfortunate flamewar on the All About Romance blog about whether or not monogamous marital coitus is the only truly safe sex.

Well, I’m here to tell you: there’s no such thing as safe sex. Not in marriage, not out of marriage, not with a condom, not ever.

Sex is, at its core, an act of vulnerability. Whether it’s just skin-to-skin or heart-to-heart, it requires trust. It requires an inherently irrational leap of faith. And anyone who has looked at the statistics for divorce and adultery these days can just put out of their head any notion that a wedding ring or the word monogamy is going to magically protect them from all sexual risk.

It doesn’t. And in fact, even if your guy or girl never cheats on you, there are still myriad ways in which sex will always be a risky behavior. You will always be risking your health–even your life if you’re a woman of childbearing age. Much of the time, you will also be risking your heart, your emotional well-being, your sense of autonomy, and more.

If you want to be safe, don’t have sex. Don’t drive. Don’t leave your house. Don’t eat anything delicious. Don’t drink too fast or laugh too hard. Don’t live.

Life is risk. Love is risk. Sex is risk. And that’s what makes it worthwhile.

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5 Responses to “There is No Such Thing as Safe Sex”

  1. karen wester newton Says:

    What is with WordPress? I tried to post just “Amen, sister!” and it said my comment was too short! What is this, the anti-Twitter?

  2. Amarinda Jones Says:

    “If you want to be safe, don’t have sex. Don’t drive. Don’t leave your house. Don’t eat anything delicious. Don’t drink too fast or laugh too hard. Don’t live.”

    Yep, life’s short. Live it with gusto and not in fear of what may happen

  3. Angie Says:

    Total agreement. [nod] One of the worst problems our society has is the poisonous idea that everything can be, or even should be, perfectly safe if we just figure out how to do it right. Nothing is completely safe, and life shouldn’t be completely safe. That includes, love, sex, childhood, everything. Living life is about dealing with risks, and the sooner we learn that and learn how to deal with it, the better off we are. Clearly there are many (theoretical) adults who never did learn it.

    Angie

  4. Stephanie Draven Says:

    You’re right, Angie. And I’m not saying that there aren’t things we can do to make these things marginally safer, but people need not to kid themselves about how risky just about everything worthwhile really is.

  5. Stephanie Draven Says:

    Karen, Sorry about Wordpress. It probably is the anti-twitter!

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