So, while this book was more liberal leaning than I prefer, there was valuable information throughout. It opened up my eyes to a lot that I was ignorant about; I really enjoyed it! A few of the stories were hard to follow and had a lot of back stories and facts that I would have to stop and look up or read the footnotes for.
There were TONS of quotes that I loved!!! Sharing them below for you to read now and for future reference.
“My mind had started to empty. The hours spent staring at a screen were changing my thought patterns, depleting my passions, numbing my emotions. Sex work was often draining, and the violence of criminalization was occasionally traumatizing, but it never left me feeling like a different person.” Page 57.
“We’ve moralized sexuality in such a way that monetizing it is considered uniquely hurtful when the truth is that most jobs under capitalism are violent in some way.” Page 59
“Have you ever thought-deeply thought-about what the word freedom means? It's such a funny word, one that doesn't need to be defined. Simply by being human, we somehow innately understand the idea, the need, the want of possessing it. It's a deep, visceral understanding of both the word and the actuality of it: to live a life unencumbered by some- thing. Bosses, responsibilities, bills, and even to some, consequences. It's beyond just wishing we didn't have to be constantly connected to clock-in machines, time cards, and printed weekly schedules; it's the imagination of floating through life, unfettered by anything other than those things we instinctively believe would finally fulfill us. Freedom isn't "not having a job," it's working at something designed to fulfill you.” Page 103
“I have never felt fully satisfied doing anything that requires me to adhere to a schedule, clock in "on time," or watch whether I've tried to clock in three minutes early or clock out more than seven minutes late. While some baristas might not mind that at all and, because they are busy truly enjoying the making of two hundred “mocha-latte-mericanos" a day, never give a single thought to reading the next week's schedule again and again and again... and again, I'm personally filled with such a deep dread at even the thought of it that words cannot begin to describe it.” Page 103
“The service industry, customer service, and sex work-all of these jobs share in common a strong, unifying element of emotional and physical labor, and to some extent, that labor is even sexualized across industries, though of course it is most explicitly sexualized within the sex industry. We flirt, we suck up, we tease, we cajole, we smooth over, we grin through our gritted teeth; we sell, we sell, we sell, we sell.” Page 133
“Is it any wonder, then, that the same white, middle-class, predominantly cis and heterosexual women who gave us enthusiastic consent as the exclusive model of consent are also the same ones who use government crackdowns, police brutality, loss of civil liberties, and social stigma to save sex workers from themselves?” Page 151
“If you're from a middle-class background, if you've only ever worked in a nine-to-five, making a salary that comes in and out of your life through a series of virtual transactions, if you've never had to stand for hours on your feet, breaking your back for minimum wage or suffering through the pawing of some creep to keep your job, then, yeah, I can see how the physical-labor side of sex would remain invisible. Sex is packaged to women along with Romance! as our raison d'être: we are supposed to see sex as inherently magic and meaningful, the ultimate intimacy. Even if you're not from a Christian-patriarchy family, we all know people like Jane Villaneuva's abuela, telling us virginity (a social construct to begin with) is precious and unless we save it for the right man and moment, we're trash. We're taught to find pleasure in being desired but not taught about desiring. All of this presented as natural.” Page 192
“I grew up under adults entirely hypnotized by the plastic promises of the American Dream, knowing already that they as adults had lost sight of something I knew as a child. That life was full of magic. That the Earth could speak. That without love, spirit, and imagination, the world became dark and poisonous. I did not know, at the time, that I was growing up into a world that people would call a "dystopia" without a hint of irony.” Page 207
“A society that has been made to forget just what fiction and fantasy are on a fundamental level. Imagination has atrophied into commodified distraction from the lives and world it was made to benefit. People rewatch, binge, and reminisce over the same escapes on repeat while their own lives lack creative attention.” Page 208
“The idea that fantasy and reality do not intersect is not only racist and sexist in its applications and historical appearances, it is also a skillful tool of disempowerment.
Imagination is "just" play, and fantasy is "just" entertainment… so is worry "just" worry, with no effects on our reality? Our health? Is plan-ning, also, nothing but a daydream to be discarded? Surely you can tell where I'm going with this. At some point, it becomes apparent that we've often been tricked into ignoring what our minds have to say, dissuaded from being brave enough to engage with our hopes and fantasies as if they were things that mattered. When you apply intent to fantasy, it becomes a seed of radical creativity.” Page 210
“So a tip: Dare to imagine peace and safety. Know that this will take faith.
As our world begins to heal from the collective traumas of oppres-sion, society must learn to trust letting go of the addictive familiarity of what hurts most and get comfortable with growth and peace. Apart from religious dogma about the term, I define faith as the fidelity of one's attention to an outcome-literally, how long you can sustain giving something your time and energy before doubt makes you quit. Faith is mandatory for applied imagination the way it is for growth, because so often, the act of imagining and actively creating our desired realities requires that we endure and persist without immediate evidence that a difference is being made.
I shall leave you with one last question. You have heard that this is your story, and you have a right to decide how it goes. Do you believe in yourself, as the writer? If not, start. Our world depends on it.” Page 212