The CHIP Safe Sex Conversation

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About

NOTE: This page is a daughter page of: Safe Sex


Countries like the US are very bad at talking about sex, let alone knowing how to bring up a responsible conversation. Communication is key, and it can be pretty sexy if you approach it with a "I like you, so let's be adults about this". Your potential new lover should immediately appreciate that you took the initiative (even in the heat of the moment) to suggest you be responsible grown-ups and take just a tiny amount of time aside to make sure you don't end up with a lifelong STD in the morning.


I've seen a few different safe sex talk formats, but the problem is they were all too long to remember. So I created a format that distills some of the verbose formats into one you can hopefully remember:

  • C.H.I.P. - Consent, History, Integrity Protection.

Here's how you start:


  • "Hey, so would you like to have an adult conversation about an adult topic?"
    • (let them answer)
  • "I think you are terrific and I was hoping to have a safe sex talk in case things progress."
    • (let them answer)

C onsent

  • "I'm very excited by the possibility of sex [or-specific-new-type-of-sex] with you."
  • "I would love to hear your thoughts and all of your boundaries regarding consent."


Always remember that cohesion is not consent. One of the unexpected good things to come out of covid is that people realize even a kiss should be prefixed with a "can I please kiss you" (see: consenttokiss.com). Sex-positive people will also realize that this is the right moment to voice their specific boundaries - some concise examples include: "nothing anal" / "no rough biting" / "I don't like my nipples touched" / "I would love it if ...", "I'm uncomfortable with ...", or and so on. This will improve everyone's experience. Every person is unique and may have triggers.



H istory

  • "Before we continue, avoid STD spread is important to me, so I'd like to hear your STD history, and I'll go first."
  • "I am STD negative, I was last tested X months ago - the results are my phone - and I have had X unprotected partners since taht test.

Have you been tested anytime recently?"


If someone has an STD don't freak out - over 50% of sexually active Americans have caught one or more STDs (HPV especially), and many are removable (Chlamydia) or can be protected against. Be incredibly thankful you asked (phew), incredibly appreciative of their vulnerability, then look it up together on a website like this to maturely decide how to proceed. If you haven't been tested in the last few months try STD Testing - The Correct Way for advice on getting tested for as many STDs as possible. Most STD appointments by your doctor will only cover a few (HIV/chlamydia/gonorrhea) unless you specially ask for the works.



I ntegrity

  • "In terms of integrity, I just want you to know I care about your health, so if anything changes with our situation I will let you know."


If you build a connection with someone and sleep with them, there's a good chance you'll have sex again, and this comment acknowledges that you don't just have this conversation once and assume you are good forever. You are holding yourself to a high level of integrity and that means they will most likely raise their integrity and their immediate respect for your maturity.



P rotection

  • "I [do/do not] always use condoms and I'm also curious what forms of protection you might be on."


Aside from STDs, the best partners should talk about what birth control they are on. Some men have had a snip-snip, and many women cannot take birth control because it adversely affects them. Birth control or not, you'll still want a condom against STDs, but at least you can be more confident that you won't be a baby daddy / baby mama in 9 months.


The Importance of This Conversation

The topic of safe sex is one I’m very passionate about and the C.H.I.P. system on the previous page works. Once you get good at it, sex becomes better, more frequent, more connected and far, far safer. Women love it when you can be straightforward and reasonable. Men might be scared at first but will appreciate it too. The impact we can have on the world if this takes off is tremendous. Just in the United States alone we have the potential to reduce the insanely high rates of:

  • STDs ............................ (50% of sexually active people aged >25)
  • Sexual assault ................ (25% of women aged >21)
  • Unwanted pregnancy ......... (I bet you know someone in your family)

All of this is preventable with better communication.


Taking this Further

In 2020 I published the CHIP safe sex talk for the first time as a tiny section in a playful book called "Ice Cream = Sex" (by Andrew Noske, PhD)... but that's just a modest start. I want it to become viral one day.

If I can find a business partner I want to take C.H.I.P. to the people. I want celebrities to demonstrate the talk, and properly launch my phone app which guides people through the process - whether it's: (a) the heat of the moment, (b) a responsible girl texting these questions before a third date or even (c) a couple who’s been together for years, but maybe never deeply investigated the layers of integrity and birth control options I have linked into my app.

I've already written the script - I want Chris Hemsworth and Jennifer Lawrence as my first choice. Once it goes viral.... well we turn it into a set of videos (different scenarios) and we can help change the way the world approaches sex - especially in countries where sex education is poor and people are clueless about how to have "the chat" that could save their lives.

UPDATE: Well I guess I had fun intentions, but when covid hit the idea of reaching out to celebrities never happened... least I finished the book! :)

Click here to see on Amazon Title:

Ice Cream = Sex: What your flavor says about your fantasy, and how to make it happen

Length: ................... 112 pages
Amazon URL: ......... Amazon Paperback + Kindle Version + Audio Version
Book Website: ........ www.icecreamequalssex.com

Publication date: .... April 29, 2020
Description:
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See Also


Links

  • Beforeplay.org. Beforeplay.org is a great resource on STDs and Birth Control methods, but I think they lost their website which is devastating, so hopefully they get it back.