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Case File
d-24642House OversightOther

Personal narrative on sexual double standards and self‑reflection

The passage is a subjective, introspective account with no mention of public officials, institutions, financial transactions, or actionable allegations. It offers no investigative leads, novel claims, Expresses personal feelings about societal slut‑shaming. Describes a rainy day in San Francisco and a dinner with a friend. No references to politicians, agencies, or misconduct.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #018529
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a subjective, introspective account with no mention of public officials, institutions, financial transactions, or actionable allegations. It offers no investigative leads, novel claims, Expresses personal feelings about societal slut‑shaming. Describes a rainy day in San Francisco and a dinner with a friend. No references to politicians, agencies, or misconduct.

Tags

sexualitysocial-commentarypersonal-narrativehouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
women never have our own damn sexual needs; that it's wrong or wicked or dirty for women to negotiate any sexual exchange for pleasure; that women are meant to trade sex for "commitment" or "support" (though, bizarrely, never outright for money). If we assume that I can get something great from sexual relationships without Being On The Path To Marriage. That I understand and honor my sexual desires, that those desires are worth fulfilling in themselves. And if we assume that men have something wonderful they could bring to the sexual exchange; that they aren't always "using" or "exploiting" or "winning" some kind of sick war-of-the-sexes, every single time they fuck. But even if the fears don't make sense, sometimes they still come out and whisper at the back of my neck... /'m selling myself short. As if I should have bargained better, should have traded my sexuality for far more than "mere" pleasure with someone I "merely" liked, was "merely" attracted to, who "merely" respected my boundaries and "merely" was fun to hang out with. Would some people see it as ironic that I prefer relationships with real emotional heft, even when short-term or casual? Even with that said, though, there is no description of how reasonable, safe, or awesome my relationships are that will matter to our slut-shaming society -- or to the fears it's hammered into me. Society, whose judgment of whether a girl is a "slut" can be sudden and devastating, stupid and stereotypical; a lightning strike that lands based on absurd factors like how non- normative or straightforward or aware of her sexuality she is. And once I'm a "slut" -- if] dare dance over that ever-shifting line -- then I'm beyond the pale. The world always seems to be outdoing itself in finding new ways to tell me that once I'm a slut, no man will ever respect me again. TK OK ok I went home. It was raining, all across my cypress city; raining so hard, I had to take the bus instead of walking. The rain struck me as an insultingly obvious metaphor, as did the fact that I was scheduled to attend a wedding that afternoon. It seemed strange that hallucinatory San Francisco would throw such tired tropes at me. (I should have trusted the city more. It was with me, still.) I was sad. Not devastated. Just sad, and a little bit scared. /'m such a screwed-up perverted slut, no man will ever care about me. However, I'm an adult, so I tried to recognize my emotional baggage, give myself some time to process, then eat a proper lunch and get some work done. I took a very dear, very blunt friend out to dinner recently. (Yes, I paid, and yes, he felt objectified.) Over Indian curries, I tried to explain my fears that All Men (who are of course a monolith) will pigeonhole me as "too much", "too extreme." A "slut." Whatever. My friend listened, savoring his delicious lassi as he thought about what I was trying to say. Then he said, "Look, you shouldn't worry about it. You're extreme. You're also tall. You couldn't be un-tall for a man, and you can't be un-extreme. There are men who will like you just fine for it, so just keep an eye out for those men.” I could detect the edge under his words: Come on, Clarisse, you're the one who always says that People Are Different, why do I even have to tell you this? A fair point, but I can't help it -- stories like this still shake me. As it happens, though, this story has a happy ending.

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