Enas:And on that note i want to ask for advice. I do want to see a better community and i do want to participate in community building. What can i do? (meaning, what can a person do to at least faciliate this process of community building?)
As for solutions, I really don't think there is one. The community's attitude towards itself swings with culture shifts. In the anything goes days of the old internet it was just people who were genuinely curious. Paysites became more common as pornhub and OF emerged. Social media and dating sites connected more people to more kinks than ever, and drew in more unpleasant types. I think now that we've been through the pandemic economic crash that made the community the go to free money stop, we survived the #MeToo era that sought to demonize anything and everything not womancentric (though I acknowledge #MeToo also did a lot of good), we have lost Roe vs. Wade and a great deal of female bodiy autonomy, and we have dealt with the sexual harassment suit that determined a former president was civilly liable for rape, and we're now in the midst of a massive multifaceted controversy centering on the largest youtube channel ever, we are in a different, far more cynical, place. Which is to say nothing about the influx of once disgraced sexual predators returning to youtube without consequence. The majority of the country sees that the status quo is unfair and against the kink population. We can't really do much within the kink space itself, but we can fight against apathy and closed mindedness.
All the social issues I mentioned revolve around entitlement to see or touch another person in one way or another. And it's my observation that our community is getting burnt out. We can't all exclusively do missionary forever, and a whole lot of younger people are starting to see that. #dontkinkshame was trending for a while some time ago before X. All we can do is ride it out. Sex and sexuality will always be victims of current social biases.
My best advice is to actively support movements that focus on bodily autonomy. Because that's the biggest factor. As a society we have a way of allowing strangers to make medical decisions on our behalf. There are many many examples, like insurance refusing to cover something life saving, or social pressure for plastic surgery, or the one and only acceptable model body type. I really believe rejecting these narrow attitudes and simply living outside the confines of the opinions of others is the way to go. At one point early on Mochii was harassed by one guy in the fitness community who believed he had the right to humiliate and judge her for decisions she made about her own body. I found it appalling. Fighting against those types by pointing out that it's not their right to demand another person change, and that different people are allowed to life different lifestyles regardless of a stranger's approval, are good ways to stand up to them. On an individual level it would go far to defend the rights of an adult to engage with their kink.
On a societal level though...I still say all we can do is ride it out. This community will never be free of its toxic elements, and those more sensationalized stories will always be the media's focus. Maybe one day a filmmaker will feature a nonvillian fat fetishist (Deadpool doesn't count). Until then...well, I'm not holding my breath.
6 months