Shades of Pleasure Podcast
Welcome to Episode 29 of Shades of Pleasure, where Mou, Melissa, Wayne, and Kelly, four sex and relationship professionals, explore the harm caused by silence and complicity in the face of oppression. What keeps people from speaking up for human rights? Why are so many afraid of losing credibility, followers, opportunities, or influence by challenging systems of oppression? These are the questions we wrestle with in this conversation. Oppression is cyclical. Oppressed people can go on to oppress others. Harm that is never examined often becomes harm that is repeated. We are all taught stories about how people are “supposed” to live, love, express themselves, and build relationships. While each of us has the right to make our own choices, dominant cultural narratives, particularly those rooted in conservative religious ideology and colonial systems, have caused profound harm for many communities. These narratives continue to reinforce objectification, exploitation, victim blaming, and the stigmatization of people who exist outside of what society has labeled as “normal.” Black, Brown, Indigenous, queer, immigrant, disabled, and other marginalized communities continue to bear the weight of these systems every day. The impacts of colonization are deeply personal. They are ancestral, relational, embodied, and often passed from one generation to the next. They shape the way we move through the world, relate to one another, experience intimacy, and understand ourselves. Without intentional reflection and repair, these wounds can create ongoing cycles of trauma and retraumatization. Healing professions are not immune from these dynamics. Therapy, academia, and medicine have long histories intertwined with racism, colonialism, and systems of exclusion. At the same time, therapy remains inaccessible for many people because of financial barriers, cultural stigma, geography, and the emotional demands placed on both clients and practitioners. So, what does it actually mean to decolonize our healing spaces, our relationships, our bodies, and our minds? What does it mean to truly “do the work?” Does healing have to happen in therapy, or are there other pathways to liberation, community, accountability, and repair? As Pride Month reminds us, decolonization is not only about unlearning. It is also about reclaiming. It is about visibility in the face of erasure, celebration in the face of shame, and joy in the face of oppression. Tune in to the full episode below: https://pleasureforthemasses.substack.com/s/shades-of-pleasure-podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit pleasureforthemasses.substack.com [https://pleasureforthemasses.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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