Two women have different perspectives on being a working girl. Photo / NZME
This is the tale of two prostitutes: One had a great experience of the industry, the other didn’t. The women tell their stories to Corazon Miller.
The woman who chose it
"Ancient history" is what led one Kiwi into a "glamorous" career as a working lady. Not a bad boyfriend, break-up or broken family, but the heroines of ancient Greece and Rome.
At just 22 she had already spent some years mulling over selling sex as a career, fuelled in large part by her love of history.
This was further fuelled by her admiration of strong women with an erotic aura, who tended to be sexually rebellious.
Despite her eagerness, the woman, who has spent the better part of 13 years working in the industry, said there were a few last-minute jitters on the eve of her first job.
She confessed to needing "one drink to calm my nerves", but said it all went as expected - except there was no sex.
"Afterwards I felt euphoria, but also a bit of disappointment as we never ended up having sex."
At 35, she's now trying to make ends meet with an office job and classes herself as being "semi-retired".
But she says sex work enriched her life and that of others.
Some of the clients who moved her the most were those who were recently widowed, divorced or "differently-abled"; "that just wanted to be held, to have skin contact with no judgement".
"One client even booked an extra hour just to sleep in my arms," she said. "It just goes to show how important human contact is for our souls."
She said bad experiences were few and far between at the brothels and mainly involved clients trying to push the boundaries.
"I'd try to tell them off in an affectionate and humorous way and if that didn't work I'd kick them out of the room."
The biggest issue she's found, barring the tax forms and the lack of sleep, was the stigma.
While most of her friends know of her work, she believes her family wouldn't understand and fears her employers would fire her if they knew.
"It's a job that can be very misunderstood and people have very strong emotional opinions towards it, even if they have never talked to a sex worker in their lives."
She said it wasn't a job for everyone, but said of the people she'd worked with, she'd never met one who was forced into it.
For those who might have been, she said criminalisation of the industry would just make it harder to get help.
"As long as humans need comfort, non-judgemental company, skin contact, someone to make them feel better, or just sex, in fact, as long as we are human, there will always be a need for prostitution."
The woman who didn't
At 18, struggling with self-esteem issues, belonging to a broken home with no formal education and fearful of ending up on the dole, she went into prostitution as a short-term fix.
But what was meant to be a temporary job ended in more than three decades of turmoil as she found herself drawn to the financial security but struggled with the dangerous realities of where she was working including drugs, alcohol and abuse.
Today at 58, the former sex worker is happy to have received help that's meant she can move on from her former life. Now she just dreams of a simple life where she can be happy.
"I want to live a life worth living, that's where I'm heading."
But looking back at her years in prostitution she said: "I do regret those choices".
At the time, she said, struggling with her home life and at a loss of what to do career-wise she thought it could be a good stepping stone.
"I didn't want to go back on the dole, back then it was seen as quite terrible and for some reason I thought it [prostitution] might be a better idea."
"I didn't know how to feel, I cared for my family when I saw them, but you are basically living a lie," she said. "You are not really there. You are disconnected."
At 32 after giving birth to her son, she managed to call it quits for 20 years but then said an abusive partner forced her back into it in her early 50s.
She said her return was awful, she felt constantly on edge and felt as if every job was putting her in danger.
"There were great men, normal men, but there's also lots that you have to put up with. You have to be strong, you have to be very, very careful," she said. "I was always at risk, but you can't think about that, you don't."
Her experiences have left her with a dim view of prostitution and anything that she believes seeks to normalise it, including its decriminalisation.