joeylittle
Sponsor
@rosieek - you don't have to have sex if you don't want to, ever. I really want you to remember that. It doesn't matter if he shares his pot or not. Your body belongs to you, and it's up to you what you do with it. That includes everything. If you don't want hands on you, you can say no and stop and then, you can leave. If you are making out and you change your mind, you can say no, and stop, and leave. Even if you are totally naked - there's absolutely no time when you cannot say no, and stop, and leave.
The honest truth is, some guys (people) will argue with that, and they can argue hard. That's why two things are important.
One, you have to remember no, stop, leave. Those all go in a row. You don't need to say no and give them a chance to do it. You say no, stop - and start moving. If the person is going to respect your 'no', they will be stopping when you say stop. You can decide then if you want to leave. But trust your gut - it's better to have a conversation about it the next day than to end up trapped where you don't want to be.
Two, you want to think a little more about how soon you go with strangers to their place - especially if you are going to do drugs. I'm not trying to shame you at all - there's just a reality there that's important. If you know you're going to smoke (I've got no judgement on that) - you know that you're not going to be 100% tuned in to the situation. If it's a person you just met, honestly - it's not worth it. You are walking into too many unknowns. You don't know them, you don't know who else might be where they live, you don't know what they are actually going to give you.
You deserve to be treated right, in this life. You don't deserve to be pressured into having sex. You have the right to say what happens to your body. And sometimes, that means not putting your body at risk. You don't owe anybody sex, ever. Not a long-time partner, not an ex, not a stranger, not even your spouse.
I don't think it matters, whether or not you were raped. I think it's very important that you try and get yourself some therapy to work through not only what happened, but the things that might be going on in your head telling you that you don't have to right to no, stop, leave. You weren't ok with it, and you lived through someone doing something that you did not want them to be doing. That has an impact, it really does. So please, reach out and get some support for that.
The honest truth is, some guys (people) will argue with that, and they can argue hard. That's why two things are important.
One, you have to remember no, stop, leave. Those all go in a row. You don't need to say no and give them a chance to do it. You say no, stop - and start moving. If the person is going to respect your 'no', they will be stopping when you say stop. You can decide then if you want to leave. But trust your gut - it's better to have a conversation about it the next day than to end up trapped where you don't want to be.
Two, you want to think a little more about how soon you go with strangers to their place - especially if you are going to do drugs. I'm not trying to shame you at all - there's just a reality there that's important. If you know you're going to smoke (I've got no judgement on that) - you know that you're not going to be 100% tuned in to the situation. If it's a person you just met, honestly - it's not worth it. You are walking into too many unknowns. You don't know them, you don't know who else might be where they live, you don't know what they are actually going to give you.
You deserve to be treated right, in this life. You don't deserve to be pressured into having sex. You have the right to say what happens to your body. And sometimes, that means not putting your body at risk. You don't owe anybody sex, ever. Not a long-time partner, not an ex, not a stranger, not even your spouse.
I don't think it matters, whether or not you were raped. I think it's very important that you try and get yourself some therapy to work through not only what happened, but the things that might be going on in your head telling you that you don't have to right to no, stop, leave. You weren't ok with it, and you lived through someone doing something that you did not want them to be doing. That has an impact, it really does. So please, reach out and get some support for that.