Sex News: Kinky and Disabled Fetish Gear, How UK Sex Ed Includes Disabled Students, and Sex As Meditation

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“‘The market needs a high-end voice,’ says Maria O’Sullivan-Abeyratne, CEO and founder of Adaptista, a fashion-forward adaptive platform launching in November. ‘In the history of the internet, disabled people have never been able to go to a luxury brand’s website and buy anything, really, unless it’s a candle.’ Adaptista will offer a range of adaptive items at different price points, but the overall feel will be significantly more elevated than most adaptive platforms out there…

“Adaptista is sponsoring a disabled student to complete a degree in fashion design next year, and O’Sullivan-Abeyratne has two adaptive collections of her own in the works: a wedding collection, inspired by her own struggle to find a wedding dress that worked for her, as well as a fetish and bondage line, ‘because people just don’t think that anyone with a disability has a sex life!’ she says.” (via Emily Farra/Vogue)

https://twitter.com/adaptista/status/1431377669833232388

“Sex was my first form of meditation — my first place of play and emotional exploration. Its power is so potent to my person that while I respect and admire those that can turn it into performance art — my body refuses. My system demands authentic carnal connection because as an assumed autistic — I can smell a facade (and to me it smells like processed food farts.)” (via TeenyTinyTaylor/MakeLoveNotPorn)

“We’re TouchBot, a disability-led startup currently developing a line of accessible pleasure products, and we want you to be part of the process! Your feedback will enable us to design products that reflect a wider range of access needs and desires.

You do not have to identify as disabled to respond. We’re thinking expansively on how the toys and tools we build can create pleasurable experiences for all body/minds, so we want to hear how everyone’s sex toy experience can be improved in terms of access and ease of use/ergonomics. Responses are anonymous and should only take about 5-10 minutes to complete.”

The survey is available at Google Forms if you would like to participate.

“Currently, only three states in the [United States] explicitly include special ed students in their sex-ed requirements. Six other states provide optional resources adapted for more accessible sex-ed curriculums. Thirty-six states fail to mention students with special needs at all…A glance at a radically different approach taken in Britain shows us that it is possible to do better for all our children.

“In Britain, this mandate includes special-ed students and offers a whole gamut of specific recommendations for them: encouraging a “spiral curriculum,” in which topics are revisited regularly in greater depth; avoiding euphemistic language (like “sleeping together”) that can confuse children with disabilities, especially those on the autistic spectrum; using experiential learning, including field trips to health clinics; and role-playing during which students are given a chance to practice saying “no.”(via Cammie McGovern/The New York Times Opinion)

Image source: Adaptista

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