Tag: sexual health

  • Acadia Students’ Union’s New and Exciting Service—The Sexual Health Resource Centre!

    Acadia Students’ Union’s New and Exciting Service—The Sexual Health Resource Centre!

    The Sexual Health Resource Centre is a brand new and exciting service of the Acadia Students’ Union, opening this Monday, February 8th!

    What is the Sexual Health Resource Centre?

    The Sexual Health Resource Centre, or SHRC for short, is a student-funded organization which serves to be the central point for the Acadia Community when it comes to sex, sexuality, and sexual and reproductive health.

    The SHRC works to facilitate students’ advancement, growth, and development of sexual health knowledge and practices. We do that by providing education, resources, support and access to products for the Acadia community.

    We strive to create a welcoming environment and safe space at the SHRC and our guiding values reflect that. The SHRC is an inclusive, confidential, non-judgmental, sex-positive, and pro-choice organization. We believe that every individual has the right to access accurate, up-to-date, unbiased, evidence-informed information and services when it comes to sexual and reproductive health.

    What services does the SHRC provide to Acadia students?

    The SHRC offers a variety of free products, programming and workshops, borrowing resource library, and products for purchase. Keep reading to learn more about each of these service areas!

    Free Products

    We offer a variety of free products to anyone who needs them—this includes free internal and external condoms, free pregnancy tests, free personal lubricant testers, and free menstrual products.

    Programming and Workshops

    The SHRC offers a range of in-house and virtual educational programs and hands-on workshops. While the topics covered in our programs are vast, some examples include healthy relationships, sexual pleasure (solo and with a partner), sex toy FAQ, and communicating consent and boundaries. Our workshops are offered on a pre-determined programming schedule and are available by request for group bookings.

    For our opening month of February we have some great events planned, such as our Valentine’s Day Open House (Feb. 11th) , Sex toy 101 workshop (Feb. 17th), Come as you are workshop, and a Sexy Scattergories night at the Axe lounge (Feb. 25th).

    Resource Library

    We also have a well-stocked resource library, where all of our books, zines, and magazines are free to borrow for up to two weeks. Simply provide us with your student email and name, and we will send you out a reminder three days before your items are due. We currently have over 200 books spanning a wide range of topics, including how-to guides, sexual and reproductive health, gender and sexuality, dating and relationships, erotica, sex and religion, disability and sexuality, queer issues, and memoir and fiction. If there is a book you would like to see us carry, please reach out and let us know and we will be happy to order it for the resource library.

    In addition to our resource library, we also have a wide selection of free pamphlets, information cards, and articles covering on-campus & community resources, STIs and STI testing and treatment, contraceptive options, pregnancy options counselling and abortion access in Nova Scotia, HIV/AIDS, hormone therapy, sex toy use and care, hormone therapy, and health insurance coverage and fees.

    Products for Purchase

    We also offer a variety of products for sale, including affordable sex toys, massage oil and lube, menstrual cups and dilator kits, and at-cost gender-affirming gear. At the SHRC we are dedicated to providing our products at low prices, as affordability is central to our mission of sex-positive, shame-free, and accessible when it comes to sexuality and sex education. Plus, as a student-funded not-for-profit organization, any revenue generated from our sales goes directly back into funding the SHRC’s services!! Our manager is educated on all of the products we sell and is happy to help you find the toy or product right for you.

    Who works at the SHRC?

    The SHRC is staffed by one full-time employee, the SHRC Manager, Hannah Hutchinson. Hannah is an Acadia Alumna (Class of 2017) and is excited to be back on campus in a new role. She has a BA(h) in Sociology and WGST and an MA in Sociology. She is passionate about sex-positive education, sexual violence prevention, and providing support to students. In addition to the manager, the SHRC is looking for interested students to volunteer with us as peer educators. Stay tuned for more details on volunteer opportunities, coming spring 2021.

    Where and when can I visit the SHRC?

    We look forward to seeing you! Visit us in the Student Union Building, room 509 (the upper mezzanine directly beside the Acadia Food Cupboard). You can also reach out via email ([email protected]) and find us on social media (Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter) @SHRCAcadia. For the Winter 2021 semester, the SHRC’s regular operating hours are from 9am – 4 pm Monday to Friday. We will be expanding our hours to include weekend and evening hours in the future.

  • Opinion: If you’re not into abstinence…

    Opinion: If you’re not into abstinence…

    Let’s talk about getting tested.

    I know what you might be thinking. You would definitely know if that guy you brought home had chlamydia… like for sure you would have noticed if something was off. And that girl was way too pretty to have gonorrhea, you’re totally certain! None of your friends would ever contract something like that and there’s no way you wouldn’t know if you had one yourself.

    If this sounds like you, let me tell you what I’m thinking: you’re wrong. Do you want to know why you’re wrong? Because good-looking people can absolutely get STIs and most STIs don’t have ANY symptoms in over 50% of infected people.

    If you have sex (vaginal, anal, oral or whatever else you might be doing) and you aren’t using a physical barrier between you and your partner, YOU COULD CONTRACT AN STI. If you are in a relationship, YOU COULD CONTRACT AN STI. Even if you only have sexual contact with people who “look clean”, YOU COULD CONTRACT AN STI. And if you think you have some weird 6th sense that tells you when people have a venereal infection, you’re wrong and you could totally contract an STI even if your third eye isn’t seeing it.

    Here’s the deal. If you have sexual contact with someone without a physical barrier, call up the Mud Creek clinic or go online to book an appointment with a nurse at the Acadia Clinic. It’s a little awkward- sure- but is it more awkward than looking up that person you brought home from the Vil last weekend to tell them over Facebook message or Instagram DM that you gave them something? Is it worse than wondering if your genitals are infected with something that might affect your chances of having children at some point? These infections do not go away over time and can wreak havoc on your system if left untreated!

    To avoid an incredibly weird conversation with someone you found attractive enough to sleep with, you’ll go to go to the doctor’s office and tell the receptionist that you’re here ‘to get tested’ in a very hushed voice. You’ll sit in the waiting area and scroll on your phone, hoping that no one asks you why you’re there. While you’re pretending to cough (you’ll say you think you have strep if anyone asks) and avoiding eye contact with anyone who comes into the room, consider that you’re doing a good deed.

    Instead of pretending this is some taboo subject that no one has any experience with, let’s be real. Nearly everyone knows someone who has had an STI. So why are we all pretending that it doesn’t happen? Why are we stigmatizing getting tested- something that would help us all?

    So, here’s my suggestion to every sexually active Acadia student: talk about it! Go get tested with your friends- make a day out of it and grab an ice cream at The Real Scoop or a beer at The Axe afterward. Don’t make it some big secret. You should be proud of yourself! You held yourself accountable for your actions and made an adult decision to get tested. Good for you!

    We’re pretty much all adults here (sorry to the 17 year olds in first year- I’ve been there and I feel for you) so why can’t we act like it? If you’re sitting in the waiting room in the basement of Dennis and your buddy from class comes in, ask what they’re in for. If they fake a cough and say it might be strep, you don’t have to call them out- but if they ask you what you’re in for, why lie? You’re there to get tested to make sure you don’t have to Twitter message anyone about having given them the clap. Own it! Shout it from the rooftops! I peed in a cup! I got swabbed! I don’t have an STI! –You could even use it as a pickup line!

    Of course, if you’re absolutely mortified about getting tested and you couldn’t even manage to lie about maybe having strep, there is one other option. And hear me out- it’s not that bad. YOU CAN ALSO JUST USE A CONDOM.

    So that’s it. Book an appointment or use a condom. Take the free condoms in the SUB and in the clinic and take advantage of the free health care that we all pay for.

    Shout it from the rooftops: safe sex is good sex and safe sex means getting tested!

  • Girls and Sex: An Overview of how Peggy Orenstein Navigates a Complicated Landscape

    Girls and Sex: An Overview of how Peggy Orenstein Navigates a Complicated Landscape

    Some of us grew up in semi-liberal or liberal households. Some of us grew up in conservative households. At one point or another, our parents would openly discuss the harms of drug and substance abuse, the negative consequences of consuming alcohol before 19 (or 18, in some cases), and why it is important to always follow the rules. As I continued to get older, I became more aware of the generation gap between my parents and I. This gap between mothers and daughters, and mothers and fathers has become even more evident as I see my parents’ friends struggling to make their way through the adolescent years of their teenage daughters. Even in the age of the “helicopter parent” there is a continued stigma and discomfort around the notion that their daughters have the potential to have a sex life. The same notion is not met with the same level of discomfort when their son’s sex lives are the topic of discussion.

    At this point, it is safe to say that blaming girls’ clothing for boys’ sexual drive is counterproductive. However, we must first look inward at the ways in which girls’ clothing is marketed in comparison to boys. Orenstein writes about the methods that are used to market girls’ clothing. It is evident that boys’ clothing isn’t centered on the idea that they should bare their bellies and wear short-shorts when they dress, so why is this marketing tactic targeting girls from a young age? If we dig deeper by using Orenstein’s study as a framework, we may be able to see a correlation of self-objectification. Orenstein offers a strong definition of self-objectification: the pressure on young women to reduce their worth to their bodies and to see those bodies as a collection of parts that exist for others’ pleasure; to continuously monitor their appearance; to perform rather than to feel sensually. Could the marketing tactics of young girls’ clothing be subconsciously objectifying them? Could it be leading them towards a road of lower self-esteem and doubt? Perhaps it is the lack of conversation surrounding female sexuality on behalf of the parents, who often perpetuate the stigma from a young age that it is okay to follow media and gender norms by going along with fashion trends that sexualize the female body, but having conversations about how to engage in sexual activity safely is out of the question.

    However, the stigma around young women’s dress is more likely to have damaging effects. It begins with the media normalizing how young girls are supposed to dress, what toys they are supposed to play with, and what shows they are supposed to be watching. By submitting to these cultural norms, their experience is shaped to fit a particular model. Parent’s discomfort with the teenage sex drive is actually more harmful for young girls’ self esteem, further creating a more difficult landscape for these girls to navigate.

    Orenstein conducted an interview with 71 young women. In this series of interviews, she asked questions about the girls views on sexual conduct, what they hoped to get out of their sexual encounters, and how the level of discomfort they felt when talking about these experiences with family or their peers. The results were alarming. The general consensus was that their friends became an audience to be sought after and maintained, that their engagement in the sexual experience was not for their own pleasure, but more so for the purpose of fulfilling their partner’s “needs” before their own, and so that they would have stories to share with their friends to not come off as “prudish.” Not only is this behavior harmful to girls’ self-worth, but it can also be related to mental health issues. Orenstein describes this phenomenon as “using your experience to create an image of yourself.” Essentially, the more experience you gain sexually (even if it is not for your own enjoyment), your social status will be higher.

    Let’s shift into a discussion about the negative consequences of social media. It is a game, and one that you need to play correctly in order to be “accepted” by your peers. Orenstein uses Sarah* as an example. She talks about a girl in her high school who continuously posted selfies. It was the general consensus that she either had no friends or was completely self-absorbed. It was never thought that, perhaps, this girl just enjoyed posting pictures of herself. The impacts of social media use have severe impacts on girls (and boys) well-being. Are selfies empowering or oppressive? Are they used to control girls and constrict them within a particular social norm, or are they a useful tool for expression and exclusion? When we are faced with these discussions there is rarely a strait and narrow path to follow, it perpetuates the ideology that there is a difficult landscape to navigate when it comes to teenage girls and sex.

    Why is it called a blow “job”? The expectations for women’s bodies just continue to perpetuate a pre-existing notion of the misogynistic roles they are expected to fill in society: subordinate. Just before the Bill Clinton scandal in the White House, a 1994 survey in America revealed that just over 50% of women had never performed fellatio on a partner. In 2014, these numbers have alarmingly increased. A story in the New York Times declared that sixth-graders were now more inclined to treat fellatio “like a handshake with the mouth.” Has this practice been normalized because of the ever-growing presence of social media? Or is this stemming from the need to form an image of oneself, one that favors the female’s role in sex because it is increasingly being viewed as “normal.”

    Sexually active teenage girls are often referred to as “sluts.” Sexually active teenage males are often referred to as “players.” It is extremely evident that this is a problem. Normalizing and gendering sexual behavior in teenagers is not only dangerous for their physical well-being, but also their mental well-being. Stigmatizing a normal practice (don’t turn your noses up, we are all human and puberty is a confusing, hormone-ridden, emotional roller coaster) to favor one gender over the other is not only wrong, but goes deeper to perpetuate gender roles in society as a whole. It targets women to be submissive, to be ashamed of their bodies and their desires, and calls them to question their characters for having a sex drive as a teenager. The media has sensationalized the idea of casual sex, yet targets and shames women who engage in this practice. The sexualized nature of the media not only encourages young women to call their self-worth to question, but it also perpetuates particular ideals about virginity, their role in the sexual landscape, and how they should go about the complex terrain of the “hookup culture.”

    I am not a mother. I have no experience with parenting and I do not know how to care for someone who is entirely dependent on me. I write this article as an opinion piece, based off of my own experiences and the study conducted by Peggy Orenstein. If I may suggest one thing, it is that we call to question preexisting norms about teenage girls. I suggest that we become more open to discussion with these young women, who will someday be the future. I call all parents to step outside of their comfort zones and talk openly about sex with their children, which is a conversation I never had with my own parents (comfortably). This is a difficult landscape to navigate, with a variety of different factors influencing behaviors, interactions, and personal decisions. Opening up the floor to a more inclusive, non-gendered conversation about sex is what we may need in order to help maintain teenage girls self-esteem, let them know their worth, and ensure that any decision they make regarding their bodies is just that, their own.

    For reference, please pick up a copy of Peggy Orenstein’s work.

    Peggy Orenstein, “Girls and Sex: Navigating a Complicated Landscape”, (New York: Harper-Collins, 2016): 1-236.

  • The Silent STI and I: Together for Nearly Three Years

    The Silent STI and I: Together for Nearly Three Years

    A close friend of mine was worried that she had picked up an STI recently, but was too scared to get tested because she didn’t know what to expect. So I volunteered to be the guinea pig for her and get tested first, because why not? Solidarity for my sister! So, I walked into the clinic feeling confident that I was clean and could report back to my friend what to expect from the test and that chances are she was clean, too. It turns out that she was worried for no reason, because she came back STI free. I, however, did not. They told me I had chlamydia.

    Given that chlamydia is one of the most commonly spread STIs, especially among people my age, this shouldn’t have been a shock statistically speaking. Especially since, most of the time, there are no shown symptoms. But, it was. Full disclosure: I haven’t had sex in almost three years. It’s been quite the dry spell, I know. So, you can imagine my surprise when sexually inactive, sexually frustrated, sexually deprived me got the news that I had an STI. Like a television show cliché, I told the nurse that she must be mistaken. She went on to explain to me that, as far as STIs go, chlamydia is easily treatable and will be gone in no time. One dosage of medication and I would be cleared up. I then explained to her my situation, and there was a terrible moment of silence and then “how soon can you come in for a follow up?”. You bet your ass I was sitting in the waiting room the very next morning.

    You see, chlamydia really is easily treatable. It’s when it isn’t treated where things can get complicated. Chlamydia has the potential to spread and infect other parts of the female reproductive system, sometimes causing pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Which, by the way, is also potentially asymptomatic as well. As luck would have it, living with chlamydia for nearly three years is a sure way to get PID. The only symptoms I can recall experiencing were abdominal pains, and lets face it, it needs to take more than that to get any of us to believe that something more than normal lady cramps is happening in there. So here I am, writing to you facing the very real possibility that severe damage to my reproductive organs has already happened enough to prevent me from becoming pregnant or living without random spasms of pain. Here I am, telling you the very real possibility that many reading this article have Chlamydia and don’t even know it. Do yourself and your partner(s) a favour and get tested.

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