Business I’m An Autistic Sex Worker, And Here’s Why It Works For Me

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I’m An Autistic Sex Worker, And Here’s Why It Works For Me​

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Hayley Jade
Fri, April 30, 2021, 6:00 AM
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(Photo: Olena Ruban via Getty Images)
I came out as autistic during the pandemic. Being isolated for so long finally revealed that I had been “masking,” or performing social behaviors that are considered neurotypical, my entire life. And the less I masked, the happier I became.

I have this theory that autistic people know they’re autistic just like gay people know they’re gay. As a bisexual woman, I didn’t have to go to the psychologist to take a test and have an old white man tell me whether or not I’m into women. But for some reason, this is what society requires of autistic people. Without a diagnosis on paper, we’re not recognized ― even though a diagnosis still rarely helps us in society. But for much of my life, I knew I was different, even though I didn’t know why.

After hours of telling my psychologist my life story, doing multiple-choice personality tests and emailing him traits I identified with, I was devastated when he told me he didn’t think I was autistic. I tried to keep eye contact and look calm while I dissociated.
I asked him why he didn’t think I was autistic when I had been so certain. I had stayed up until 3 a.m. watching TikTok videos of other people around the world who made me feel less alone ― and suddenly my whole life made sense. Suddenly I knew why being diagnosed late with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) didn’t feel like the complete answer. I had suspected I was autistic for years ― but now I knew I was.

“Oh, I just don’t think someone who’s autistic would be able to do your job,” he said, like it made perfect sense.

I had told my psychologist that I had been working as an escort for the last few years. Unable to keep a job in my 20s, I went on disability and started escorting to make some extra money. I found it incredible that men would pay hundreds of dollars an hour to spend time with me and that the more I was myself, the more they wanted to see me.

Disabled, chronically ill and mentally ill people could relate to me ― and I loved being able to work my own hours while giving others the affection they desired. I knew how it felt to feel lonely in your own skin.

Instead, the doctor diagnosed me with avoidant personality disorder ― because I’m a 31-year-old woman who doesn’t want “a family.”

I went home and stopped myself from throwing furniture. Sobbing, I paced around my house and yelled, “I don’t have a personality disorder!” I didn’t know how to deal with the psychological pain of a professional telling me that my experience didn’t fit his expertise. Who was I to argue with someone who literally went to school for this?

If it wasn’t for other sex workers, I honestly don’t know what I would have done.

“My psychologist doesn’t believe I’m autistic because I’m a sex worker,” I desperately wrote on Twitter. “If you’re an autistic sex worker can you please get in contact with me?”

I wasn’t sure if anyone would respond. Maybe my psychologist was right. Maybe being an escort was too social of a job for someone who was autistic.

“My psychologist said the same,” commented one woman. “At our next appointment, I showed her Reese Piper’s writing.”

“It’s absolutely absurd to think that autistic people can’t be in jobs where they have to socialize,” another autistic sex worker DMed me. “I have a Masters in Clinical Psychology and nowhere in the DSM does it have exclusionary criteria about a person’s profession.”

Numerous sex workers came out one by one ― either in the comments or in my DMs. Suddenly I had more confidence. I made a TikTok video talking about my experience, and thousands of people replied that they had a similar experience. They had been told they were too smart, too good at socializing, too good at eye contact ― even too pretty.

I realized that psychologists may study autism, but they’ll never truly know what it’s like to be autistic. They clearly weren’t aware of the lengths we went to mask our traits to appear “normal.”

For me, it’s the perfect job for someone with ADHD and autism because there’s a routine but there’s also variety in my clients and how we spend our time.
As women or those who are AFAB (assigned female at birth), we learn to mask more than men because we’re socialized to. We learn to smile, to look someone in the eye (even though it’s painful), to nod that we’re listening, to internalize our meltdowns because they’re not socially appropriate. That’s why the world doesn’t see us as autistic ― because we don’t always fit the “Rain Man” stereotype of the emotionless genius.

And while this helps us appear normal, it also works as a disadvantage because we seem normal enough to not be autistic but not enough to be given accommodations when we can’t keep up in school, hold a job or just feed ourselves anything other than a bag of chips. And if you’re like me, that means burning out from trying to fit in with the 9-to-5 and switching to a job that’s less conventional ― like sex work.

All my years of masking made me perfect for providing the Girlfriend Experience. While dating in my civilian life gives me extreme anxiety, when I’m working as Hayley I know exactly what to do and when. I greet clients at the door in lingerie and a robe, take their coat and their cash, excuse myself while I count and put it away ― and then join them on the couch for refreshments I’ve laid out.

We chat, I move closer, put my hand on their thigh and kiss them. From there, we become more intimate, and when our time is up, I ask them what they’re going to do with the rest of their day to signal that it’s time for them to put on their clothes.

For me, it’s the perfect job for someone with ADHD and autism because there’s a routine but there’s also variety in my clients and how we spend our time.

Sometimes it’s just an hour in a hotel room. Other times we go out for sushi or head to a sex club. Because our dates are about me making my client feel good, I don’t have to worry about knowing the right thing to say like I would on a civilian date. My clients already want to be there. They’ve seen my advertisements and know who I am. They read my outgoing Twitter feed.

So I ask them questions about themselves and enjoy listening to them talk about their lives. And if they aren’t talkative, I break the tension by becoming more physical, because, as a semi-verbal autistic, I’m much more comfortable not talking anyway.
I still have social anxiety on every date, but it helps a lot to know that this date is about them ― not me having to navigate social cues, such as whether they want to kiss me. I know they want to kiss me: They’re paying for it.

Since my misdiagnosis, I’ve emailed my psychologist evidence that autistic people can be sex workers. He’s said he’s going to consult with other psychologists who specialize in autism and get back to me. It’s been over a month and I haven’t heard from him.

Though I would love a diagnosis, I’ve accepted that I don’t need one to be fulfilled. I’m currently waiting to receive the COVID-19 vaccine so I can see clients again, and, in the meantime, I’m writing a book about being autistic and hoping to have it published.


After a year of unmasking alone in my house, I’m not sure how I feel about going back to masking as an escort. Part of me wants to completely unmask and brand myself as an autistic sex worker ― in all my awkward glory. And part of me doesn’t know how to do this job without masking.

I suppose as I grow more comfortable coming out as autistic, this confidence will also show in my work. After all, the best part of this job is getting paid to be authentic.

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I didn’t get too far into her Twitter account but she doesn’t have a lot of followers and I wonder who she had to blow for this kinda publicity. Is “life couch” a common way for people to advertise thenselves
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I think it’s funny she’s offering marriage advice. From what I understand she’s a single slut. If she’s to be believed she’s also autistic.

she also did a Reddit ama (archive).
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The top comment made me lol a bit and so did the bottom one.
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On a bit of a tangent but… what?
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Unless she do the deed with painted up in peanut butter, I don’t trust a word of what she say.
 
Bring back the word Whore. It’s more fun to say than “sex worker”

edit: ew she’s actually gross looking
 
By the love of God, she wrote another article

I’m A Disabled Sex Worker, And This Is What I Want You To Know​

My clients are everyday people who just want to feel desired as we all do.
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Sex worker Hayley Jade would like to remove the stigma about seeing an escort. (Photo courtesy of Hayley Jade)
When I was 27, I started escorting. My disability payments didn’t provide me with much left for extras and savings, and I was lonely at home without a job to go to. I desperately wanted to feel part of a contributing member of society. The high market value and short hours allowed me a flexibility I never had from mainstream jobs — where I would have panic attacks and chronic fatigue from being overstimulated and would get fired for bad performance.
I am living with neurological issues such as anxiety and ADHD, and sex work has given me a profession that makes me feel, for once, that I’m great at my job. Slowly, I’ve begun to build up my clientele and become more comfortable financially as well as in my own skin. I’m happy to bring joy into my clients’ lives as they’ve brought joy into mine.

There are lots of reasons someone might see an escort. I’ve had a man come to me because his girlfriend had pain during sex and she gave him the go-ahead to seek out a professional. Another sex worker told me someone’s wife messaged her because she wanted her husband to learn stamina in bed. Many clients are too busy with work to settle down but are lonely, crave intimacy and are even depressed. A lot are unhappy with their sex lives and don’t want to leave their marriages.
But after a little over a year, I’ve begun to see a trend. Often the clients who contact me are older cisgender white men. This is probably the group of people you think of as johns: married professionals who travel a lot. While I’m a fan of salt-and-pepper gentlemen, seeking out a sex worker isn’t just for older white men who are lacking intimacy in their marriage and are rich enough to do something about it discreetly. In fact, about 50 percent of my clients are people of color, and many are around my age. But I want to see more variety — people with mental illness, people with disabilities, women, people who are LGBTQIA+ (yes, asexuals, because intimacy is about more than just sex).
Many people can’t afford to hire an escort unless they make at least a certain amount of money. Because of the way society is set up, this generally leaves older cis white men at an advantage. But just like me, many sex workers are in this profession to make people happy, not just to make money — and this is why a lot of ones I’ve talked to offer sliding scale discounts or more time to marginalized people.
While I’m not saying that everyone in my profession should do this, it’s worth looking into options for how we can carve a space for diversity in clients, from the language escorts use in their ads to making appointments more accessible.
As a disabled woman who has found empowerment in this industry, I know that there are many other sex workers who are marginalized — people who are neuro-atypical, of color, queer — and can relate to clients like themselves who want a better quality of life. If we made seeing a sex worker more inclusive, that would also help destigmatize sex work in society, because the more people who see that they can benefit from our services, the more society will see us as people rather than a stock photo.
When clients come to me nervous and leave glowing, I know that I’ve picked the right profession.

Of course, sex workers are free to see whoever they wish; it’s their body, and many make this clear in their ads or social media presence by stating that they won’t see certain ethnicities or people who are heavier than they are. However, I don’t see this as any less discriminatory than telling a gay couple you won’t make their wedding cake.
As an escort, my job is to provide intimacy for my client — sharing a conversation while out to dinner, getting to know each other in the bedroom, etc. It doesn’t matter to me who you are because it’s my job not to judge you.
I’ve seen the way discriminatory behavior leads potential clients to feel wary and even unwelcome. Some feel the need to inform me of their ethnicity or weight before we meet because they fear I’ll turn them away at the door. As one client told me, a large number of escorts refuse to see him simply because he’s East Indian.

Escorting has given me the gift of meeting all kinds of people I wouldn’t have otherwise met. There was the war veteran with PTSD who didn’t want any strings attached, the sweet Indian guy who was getting over a breakup, the shy Asian man who missed intimacy and the disabled fellow who wanted a girlfriend. However, I’ve yet to have a woman or anyone who’s not cisgender come to see me. As a pansexual escort, I would love to offer my services to more clients who are LGBTQIA+, but I’m unsure where to advertise, since cis white men take over review boards and advertising platforms are limited in the wake of FOSTA-SESTA, a law intended to fight sex trafficking.

There’s a stigma that there must be something wrong with you if you’re paying to see an escort, but I know how difficult it can be when you’re lacking the intimacy you need, whether you’re in a relationship or single. When clients come to me nervous and leave glowing, I know that I’ve picked the right profession. It makes me wonder why anyone would think someone seeing a sex worker is a loser. My clients are everyday people who just want to feel desired as we all do.


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Taylor Goode is a client-turned-escort who started in this business because he saw that straight women needed to hire sex workers too. He doesn’t use the traditional advertising platforms and finds female clients through word of mouth and Twitter. He doesn’t charge as much as female escorts, and he says this is one of the few industries in which women can charge more than men. While you might wonder why his clients would pay for it when they can get sex more often than men, he told me that his clients generally have a lot of sexual or emotional frustration and shed shame they might have from society looking down on them because the experience is worth it.
Intimacy is a need, no matter who you are. And while no one is entitled to sex, more people should know that seeing a sex worker is available to them.
I asked other sex workers on Twitter how they thought we could make our services more inclusive. A lot of people said that they agree that sexual empowerment should be for everyone, not just cis white men. Along with the options of reduced rates and more time for marginalized groups, many sex workers told me that they don’t necessarily advertise other types of accessibility but are open to it on a case-by-case basis. During this conversation, a sex worker named Juniper Jane decided to advertise 25 percent off for those who aren’t able-bodied cis men, saying that trans women are her favorite clients.

As the discussion went on, someone said that seeing a sex worker should be covered by health care insurance because intimacy is part of sexual health. Another person said that services like sexual surrogates are already available to those who are disabled but that insurance typically doesn’t cover it. Perhaps the bigger answer to “How can we carve a space for diversity in clients?” is to encourage marginalized people to give themselves permission to act on their sexuality.
It can be hard to give ourselves permission to seek out what we desire. But perhaps if more people had the confidence of cis white men, they would feel more comfortable hiring a sex worker like any other service. In the meantime, please know that a lot of us are waiting for you with open, nonjudgmental arms.
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"I have this theory that autistic people know they are autistic and that gay people know they are gay. I don't need some old white man to tell me I like women."

This is the most retarded thing I have ever read in my entire life.
 
"Austistic Sex Worker"

Sorry lady, Stephanie Bustcakes already beat you to it.
 
I came out as autistic
That's not how it works.

I have this theory that autistic people know they’re autistic just like gay people know they’re gay. As a bisexual woman, I didn’t have to go to the psychologist to take a test and have an old white man tell me whether or not I’m into women. But for some reason, this is what society requires of autistic people.
THAT'S NOT HOW IT WORKS. It's not something you just "know" like who you prefer to fuck, it's a fucking disorder. Besides, doctors need to be sure it's not something else like avoidant personality disorder, the thing you were actually diagnosed with.

I went home and stopped myself from throwing furniture. Sobbing, I paced around my house and yelled, “I don’t have a personality disorder!”
Sounds like something someone with a personality disorder would say.

“My psychologist doesn’t believe I’m autistic because I’m a sex worker,” I desperately wrote on Twitter. “If you’re an autistic sex worker can you please get in contact with me?”
"My psychologist won't tell me what I want to hear, better go cry to my hugbox!"

What's the bet he actually had a bunch of other reasons why she wasn't autistic that she didn't listen to, so he said autists can't be prostitutes as a last ditch effort but it backfired?

Since my misdiagnosis, I’ve emailed my psychologist evidence that autistic people can be sex workers. He’s said he’s going to consult with other psychologists who specialize in autism and get back to me. It’s been over a month and I haven’t heard from him.
He probably forwarded that email to his colleagues with a note saying "Check this crazy bitch who won't accept that her selfdx was wrong!"

I love that she says "I haven't heard from him in over a month" because you can tell she's thinks he's ghosting her because she was right and not because she's insane and he knows it's better not to engage.

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Jesus, maybe she is autistic because that's the only way she could think this looked good.

Is that a hotel room? I feel bad for the underpaid Mexican woman who has to wipe that chair down.

However, I’ve yet to have a woman or anyone who’s not cisgender come to see me.
It's okay honey, you can admit only men hire you.
 
whatever label helps her get through the next round of fucking truckers at the Waffle house and doing the lot lizard cleaning of her beef curtains of baby batter from an oil slicked rain puddle is fine by me.
 
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That gunt. Them eye bags. The weird pussy lips.

Yeah, this woman is just a failed human being. Another dead egger on her way to wine aunt status thanks to the "CURRENT YEAR".

Her whole existence is a self-own.
 
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