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Joe Newton

We’re a happily married couple from Europe, longtime readers, both in our thirties, and both interested in having sex sometimes with other people. Before the pandemic we were invited to a private sex party in a major European capital. It was an age- and face-controlled swingers night with background checks on every participant. It was our first experience and it was eye-opening, wonderful, and very sexy, even though we were too shy to fool around with anyone else. But we promised ourselves we would return and explore further. Then COVID-19 happened and we couldn’t travel. We decided to hook up with other people locally. We had amazing threesomes and foursomes, and it all went ridiculously well, up until the part when we got herpes from another couple. This other couple didn’t know they had it or didn’t bother to disclose. Herpes isn’t as common here as in the US, as far as my research went, and it was a huge bummer, but after educating and medicating ourselves, we decided to continue having hookups with others. We tell everyone in advance because we believe itโ€™s the right thing to do. Some cut us off, some don’t care, some admit they also have it, which always leaves us wondering if they would have admitted it without us โ€œcoming cleanโ€ first.

We are still part of the online community that organized that wonderful party and, with things opening up here, they are beginning to plan the next event. We would love to go back. My question is: Can we? Should we? Should we tell everybody about the herpes? Or is that a risk you take at an orgy involving fifty or more people? We’ve read a lot about transmission and know that sometimes skin-to-skin contact is enough. We also know that it’s possible to have herpes and not be aware of it, which means other participants may already have it and not know. So what’s the right thing to do? Should we just pass up this orgy for the rest of our lives? Take the viral suppressants that weekend and fuck as many people as we can without worrying about it?

Sincerely Wondering About Post-Pandemic Explicit Disclosures

P.S. I found a piece of advice online about this issue from Betty Dodson, written in 2009, but I’d love to hear your thoughts.

Hm. I would think an invite-only swingers party with โ€œage- and face-controlledโ€ background checks (meaning: no olds*, no uglies**) would also put a few questions to prospective attendees about sexual health. If the organizers of this party donโ€™t require you to disclose that you have herpes or other sexually-transmitted infectionsโ€”because they enforce safer-sex protocols that minimize the risk of transmission and/or they quite rightly assume that anyone down to sex with fifty strangers in a single evening either already has herpes or at least willing to chance itโ€”then I donโ€™t think you have to disclose.

Donโ€™t confuse โ€œdonโ€™t think you have toโ€ with โ€œdonโ€™t think you shouldnโ€™t.โ€ I think you should discloseโ€”I think you should keep disclosingโ€”and if disclosing gets you scratched off the guest list, SWAPPED, you will have other opportunities to fuck other people in other major European capitals. I mean, youโ€™ve been disclosing to couples locally and havenโ€™t exactly wanted for opportunitiesโ€ฆ even during a pandemic. (People who werenโ€™t worried about catching COVID-19 during the pandemicโ€”which isnโ€™t over yetโ€”probably werenโ€™t too worried about catching herpes.) Yes, some couples ghosted after you disclosed but it sounds like just as many or more werenโ€™t scared off. And the couples who ghosted? Some already have herpes and donโ€™t know itโ€”and HPV as well, SWAPPED, as both of these very common STIs are easily transmitted through skin-to-skin contact. Anyone who wants to avoid contracting them shouldnโ€™t have multiple sex partnersโ€”or arguably any sex partners at all, considering how common these infections are and, again, how easily transmitted they are. And anyone who attends orgiesโ€”anyone whoโ€™s sexually active at allโ€”should get regular STI screenings, get treated for treatable STIs, and refrain from having sex (or attending sex parties) when theyโ€™re symptomatic or still infectious. (And everyone can and should get the HPV vaccine and people with herpes can take meds that make outbreaks less frequent and less intense and make them less likely to pass herpes on to others.)

And while itโ€™s my official position that you should discloseโ€”because, like you, I think disclosing is the right thing to doโ€”my unofficial position is that anyone who has sex with fifty strangers in a European capital, be it major or minor, has volunteered for herpes.

P.S. The late, great Betty Dodson was never one for mincing words. Not only did Dodson tell a couple with herpes that they didnโ€™t need to disclose unless asked in the column SWAPPED found, Dodson also shared that she didnโ€™t tell her own partner she had herpes until she had an outbreak ten years into the relationship. (โ€œOrgy Guilt Because We Didnโ€™t Share We Have Herpes,โ€ Dodsonandross.com, July 7, 2009). โ€œI abhor how our society has turned Herpes into an STD,โ€ Dodson wrote. โ€œMy first genital herpes outbreak was in the seventies. If you didnโ€™t have Herpes back then, it meant you werenโ€™t having sex. It was more like a badge of sexual abundance.โ€

* Age is just a number, of course, but people, alone or in groups, are allowed to seek sex partners in their own and/or their preferred age rangeโ€”and I say that as someone who would most likely be excluded from this particular sex party based on my age.

**A person doesnโ€™t have to be conventionally attractive to attract sex partnersโ€”and a person can be conventionally attractive in every sense and repel more people than they attract.

I’m a 24-year-old heterosexual French man. (Sorry for my English.) I really love my girlfriend. Our relationship is deep, we listen and understand to other, and we take care of the other. The sex is great, truly great. We try many different things and we try to fulfil our common desires and the desires of the other. Long story short: everything with her and our relationship is perfect. The only thing is that she wants our relationship to be monogamous and I would like to have sex with 75% of the girls I bump into. Normally this is not a big deal since I’m not particularly attractive, so there are not many girls that want to have sex with me. But during the four years we have been together I had some opportunities to which I had to say no. Once I kissed another girl and the day after I confessed this to my girlfriend. Now every time I find myself attracted to someone else I immediately tell my girlfriend. She doesn’t blame me for finding other women attractive or even when I confess to flirting with another woman but I know she doesn’t feel good about it. If I have to choose I will always choose her but I love to flirt. I would also love to see how is sex with someone else, as I have never had sex with anyone else. But at the same time I don’t want to hurt her and I feel childish for not being able to control my instincts. How do people get out of these sorts of situations?

Diligently Escaping Sexual Intercourses, Relentlessly Excited

Firstโ€ฆ your English is way better than my (non-existent) French. No need to be feel bad about that.

Secondโ€ฆ if you wanna be feel bad about something, DESIRE, feel bad about being a jerk to your girlfriend. In other words: OH MY GOD, DUDE, SHUT THE FUCK UP. Stop running to your girlfriend to โ€œconfessโ€ every time you have an impure thought about another woman. Constantly and needlessly reminding your girlfriend you would like to fuck other women is just cruel. She knows that, DESIRE, so you donโ€™t need to tell her. Youโ€™re not being honest, youโ€™re not being transparent, youโ€™re being an asshole. This is a relationship, DESIRE, not a meeting of Reluctant Monogamists Anonymous. (โ€œHi, my name is ASSHOLE BOYFRIEND and Iโ€™ve been monogamous for four years and each day is a struggle.โ€) If you donโ€™t wanna be in a monogamous relationship with this woman, DESIRE, if monogamy isnโ€™t the price of admission youโ€™re willing to pay, end this relationship. But if it is a price youโ€™re willing to pay, DESIRE, then pay it and SHUT THE FUCK UP ABOUT IT. If you canโ€™t shut the fuck up about itโ€”if you canโ€™t keep these thoughts to yourself and/or find someone else to confide in about them (a friend? a bartender? a pompier?)โ€” your girlfriend is going to realize sheโ€™s paying way too steep a price and dump your ass.

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In addition to being a nationally syndicated sex advice columnist, the author of several books, and the host of the Savage Lovecast, Savage is “a deviant of the highest order” (Daily Caller)....