Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2017-04-06T07:26:26Z | Updated: 2017-08-03T00:39:18Z Understanding Affirmative Consent | HuffPost

Understanding Affirmative Consent

Understanding Affirmative Consent
|
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Open Image Modal
Photo credit: Tim Gouw

First, before we get started, I just want to check are you sure you want to read this article? Its about a five-minute read, minimally invasive, and I think its funny and informative. I want you to know what to expect before you decide. Youre good? Awesome, thanks for affirmatively consenting to read this article!

Affirmative consent is the latest attempt to address an epidemic of sexual assault on American university campuses. Governor Jerry Brown of California signed the first Affirmative Consent bill into law in September 2014. This bill set a legal precedent requiring state-funded universities in California to adopt affirmative consent standards. Several universities in other states proactively followed suit.

The rollout of these new measures has been rocky. Students are clearly confused about affirmative consent, and I understand why. By the time I got through some of the training materials schools are using, I wasnt even sure if I could have sex with myself.

Schools dont fully understand how affirmative consent works , and are doing a terrible job of explaining their own standards to students . One student asks point-blank , Are there guidelines? Are we supposed to check every five minutes?

Open Image Modal

No, dont ask over and over like the Verizon guy.

No, affirmative consent is not a matter of asking Can I keep (blanking) your (blank) every five minutes. The spirit of affirmative consent is that before anything new happens, your partner understood and was excited to do it. So youd better have asked before you started (blanking).

Practically, you should check in with your partner(s) before beginning any new activity that escalates the level of physical risk or emotional intimacy. In a he says, she says scenario, how can a judge, or a lawyer, or any third party know if one partner asked before moving from first base to second? You cant. That data is unattainable. Like tilting at windmills, schools keep grasping for surefire ways to prove the presence of consent. But consent is just not as simple as universities, parents, or lawyers want it to be.

Check in with your partner(s) before beginning any new activity that escalates the level of physical risk or emotional intimacy.

Many institutions are keenly interested in preventing their prestigious names from peppering any more rape-related headlines . So naturally, there are many ridiculous apps and kits marketed to universities as solutions to the consent problem. One such app is designed to record, on video, evidence of consent in advance of sexual relations. Each partner is prompted to state his or her name on camera, the name of their partner, and to state explicitly yes to sexual relations with that person.

Open Image Modal

This is an actual screenshot from the We Consent app.

Besides being utterly creepy and taking all the fun out of everything, the premise of this app is dangerously flawed. Consent is not a checkbox; it cannot be irrevocably granted on a form at the beginning of having sex. One yes does not mean you can ignore someone if they revoke their consent . And one verbal yes does not cede permission for any and all sexual acts.

Sex is not one thing. Sex is a myriad of different experiences and activities in a row. We simply paraphrase these as having sex, because it gets really awkward when youre asked what you did last night and you describe it stage by stage.

Every sexual activity has unique levels of risk, appeal, and comfort for you and your partner. Each activity requires explicit consent. Sex is a broad category, like sports. If you told your mom that you consented to sports, how pissed would you be if she signed you up for curling ? You know, unless youre into that sort of thing.

If you told your mom that you consented to sports, how pissed would you be if she signed you up for curling? You know, unless youre into that sort of thing.

If youre having good sex, youll find yourself asking your partner to consent a lot. The question May I touch your breasts? only gets you consent to touch you guessed it! Breasts! If you want to try something new, you must ask May I do this? or Would you like it if I did this? and wait for explicit consent to do so. (This goes for women too, guys. Whomever is escalating things needs to ask, regardless of their gender.)

Affirmative consent is often summarized as yes means yes. Thats catchy, but flawed. This has already been abused to create a new legal loophole. Proof that someone said the word yes can be all that is required to dismiss a legal investigation into a sexual assault . (Please note the air quotes around the words rape victim in the link headline. Her rapist was found guilty on all charges .)

The question May I touch your breasts? only gets you consent to touch you guessed it! Breasts!

Yes means yes is undoubtedly a better mantra for consent than no means no, but its a misleading tagline for affirmative consent. One yes is not an all-access pass.

Isnt asking for consent for every. single. activity. a little over-the-top? After all, you want your partner to think youre sexy, not OCD. Sure, maybe you already have an intimate relationship with this person. Lets say youve already navigated a lot of physical boundaries together, and you know their non-verbal cues well. Then you might not need to ask for consent out loud. It can be as subtle as moving your hand, making eye contact, and seeing a familiar nod or smile that shows that your partner understands and consents.

But lets say youre a teenager, and youre trying something for the first time. You dont have any data about how your own body is going to react to that stimuli, much less how your partner will react. You do not have enough data to rely on non-verbal communication. So ask out loud. Be absolutely sure; do not assume. Remember that time your friend ordered a pizza and you assumed it would not be covered in anchovies and pineapple? That was regrettable. Dont assume.

Open Image Modal

Affirmative consent feels perfectly natural when you actually care about your partners health and well being. Just keep checking in with your partner, to ensure that they are genuinely enjoying each experience with you. Yes, you can care about a persons health and well being even if youre just having a one night stand with them. Good people care about not hurting other people.

Bullying or coercing someone into saying yes is a form of sexual assault . Unfortunate but true: lots of people say yes when they dont want to. Maybe they are afraid of being ostracized from a social group or being dumped. They said yes! is a pretty sorry excuse if deep down, you know they were uncomfortable. Maybe according to the law youre not a rapist, but youre still a jerk.

Consent is not a checkbox; it cannot be irrevocably granted on a form at the beginning of having sex.

If your average college student can handle Hey, hold my beer before handing their buddy a beer and then doing something painful, they can handle affirmative consent. You hold out your beer. You ask. Buddy either takes the beer, or, doesnt (and hopefully, talks you down from doing something stupid.)

Consent doesnt need a catchy phrase or a cartoon mascot to be understood by young people. Consent needs advocates, who are willing to start honest two-way conversations. If you dont know how to start that conversation with a young person in your life, why not just send them this article? Affirmative consent IS complex, but it isnt difficult to understand when someone takes the time to explain it.

This article was previously published on https://medium.com/consent-explained . Follow @ExplainConsent on Twitter for more updates.

Need help? In the U.S., call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800656-HOPE (4673) or visit the National Sexual Assault Online Hotline operated by RAINN . For more resources, visit the National Sexual Violence Resource Centers website .

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Support HuffPost