(26-12-2022 01:15 )D-P-F Wrote: (20-12-2022 09:34 )Sm© Wrote: Missy in the Daily Star.
‘Sex work is the hardest job I’ve ever done – but I love working for Babestation’
In that article Missy says she fell in love with Mr P, got jealous of him oiling other girls and then fell in love with one of her callers, in her own admission she says that she has ADHD.
You get so many of these young social media models who experience the highs and love it - then they experience a low and end up committing suicide - perhaps they had underlying mental health issues.
I wonder if some of these adult sites are exploiting the mental health of some of the women.
In some jobs, a male would be struck off for having a relationship with his colleague, you would think a business like BabeStation would have that chalked down as a definite no no.
I happened across that article, early in the year, whilst searching for something else babeshow-related.
It certainly is the case, especially since '#MeToo', that in many workplaces, such relationships would be strongly discouraged, at least.
Albeit, if you're working, people spend most of their waking time there, and that's where countless numbers have met their life partners.
I think people involved in any kind of digital media work, not just specifically sex work, are exploited and taken advantage of, in many instances.
Nonetheless, and notwithstanding what I said early last year, reflecting on specific, tragic events:
https://www.babeshows.co.uk/showthread.p...pid2656386 I think a lot of aspects of life, related to what Freud called 'ordinary unhappiness', are being redefined as problems in need of treatment, often pharmaceutical.
Where once people would mostly develop a certain level of psychic (pertaining to psyche) immunity, which would help them withstand various kinds of challenges, nowadays they're encouraged to feel helpless, and aren't prepared for some problems, for which people not long ago would have been.
ADHD is one of those conditions which has exploded, with thousands diagnosed and fed pills, for behaviour which is far from new, and which at best, might be related to some other undiagnosed conditions.
With so many 'ordinary' problems being addressed like this, people who really do need specific treatment can get overlooked.
However, with so many of these problems emerging in not just people in their early 20s, but far younger, their neurological immaturity might be a major component:
https://www.npr.org/2010/03/01/124119468...own-up-yet
I've been sceptical when people have referenced such research, to say that adulthood effectively doesn't start till the mid-20s.
As historically people have done lots of things by that age. Whereas nowadays, not least through prolonged formal education, people are actively discouraged from maturing in ways they wouldn't have been previously.