thank you for sharing your experience and feelings about them. One thing I learned during my 2-year period of involvement with escorts, including one that you could say evolved into more of a SD/SB thing, is that women (and of course some men too) enter the industry for a wide variety of reasons. But one of the most common, no, I'd say emphatically the most common reason, is economic need. Young people facing a tight labor market with no job experience, few marketable skills, and often with strained or no relationship with family are confronted with choices that people not in their shoes simply can't comprehend. I'm so sorry that you have to carry the weight of shame from your experience, but if it's any consolation, the SD/SB phenomenon is exploding so you are soooo not alone in having made the choices you made And I'd also add - and this is not in any way meant as a way for me to lessen my own burden of guilt, shame and remorse for my experience -- there is a growing number of people (sex workers, activists, lawyers who specialize in cases related to the sex industry, and even politicians in some countries (Canada comes to mind because my SB was a Canadian escort and they have been in the process of decriminalizing escorting) who are working not only to make conditions of sex work safer but to reduce the stigma attached to sex work. I came to believe, in fact, that mere decriminalization of sex work will fail to improve the conditions in which sex workers operate, nor do anything to lessen the emotional impact on sex workers in terms of shame.
Case in point: my escort/sb in Canada texted me one day to tell me she had just been beaten up by a client. A client she had been seeing for sometime. Being in the US at the time, I wasn't there to offer her much in the way of comfort or support. But I did ask if she called the police - after all, Canada had just decriminalized escorting (well sort of, actually, escorts are legally allowed to offer their services for pay, but the "John" can still be arrested for soliciting those services.). Anyway, she told me that no, she wasn't going to call the police. I asked why not, since according to Canadian law she hadn't done anything illegal, and she was clearly a victim of a violent assault. Her reply taught me an important lesson. She wasn't going to contact the police, she explained, because even though the law had changed, she knew that as soon as she told the police that the assault was perpetrated by a client (i.e., that she is an escort) they were going to do nothing about it, and implicitly or even explicitly, blame her for the assault because she is an escort. A version of the "she asked for it" or "she knew what she was getting into" shaming game played against sex workers all over the world. This is all to say that in my view, the shame you carry around with you is in great measure not actually the result of choices you made about what to do with your body and how and with whom your will express your sexuality, and under what terms, but rather the way our societies have so terribly stigmatized sex work of any kind, including legal SB/SD relationships. I do really hope that you find a way to come to better terms with yourself and your experience and thus relieve yourself of the shame you continue to experience. If you want or think it might might, I can recommend some readings and websites that might help you process your emotions. Either way, I wish for you all the peace you so deserve. And I thank you again for sharing your experience and feelings. blessings to you...