Teenage Sex And the Faux Promise of Freedom

Oluwadunsin Sanya
6 min readApr 30, 2021
Photo by Olha Ruskykh from Pexels

Many years ago, in a tiny gathering of undergraduates, cups in hand, little chunks of meat in sticks, alcohol in bottles, X blurted out, “there is no big deal about sex, everything we were told as kids are lies. It’s just — sex!”

I chuckled.

X, very sexually-active, was my friend. She was what people call a “runs girl.” She had a pimp, and a group of 5 other girls who were in the same line of business. But X was the luckiest — she got the richest customers. She was generous too; she’d come back with wads of hundreds of thousands Naira notes, and share it with the other 5 girls. Or take them shopping and finish the money; it meant nothing to her.

One very cold night in the city of Jos, we both sat on the carpeted floor of my room. Our windows were shut and a blanket covered us both. We couldn’t see each other as X talked about her sexual escapades: the one-night stands; the random fine guys she walked up to and asked them for sex — at first they look shocked, then they get excited; the wealthy US-returnee widower who proposed to her after months of just having sex, begging her to marry him. When I asked why she didn’t marry him, especially since she liked him too, she said, “His son also returned from the US. If you see this guy, very tall and handsome. If I had married this man, I’d be sleeping with his son too.”

As we laughed through the night, I realised something: X wasn’t doing this for money. It was the sense of freedom, the adrenaline that coursed through her, the carefreeness of her life, the ability to do whatever she wanted and however she wanted it — and perhaps, the discovery that sex wasn’t all that after all, that propelled her. Her sexual escapades gave her a sense of power — like she was in control, like she was conquering something.

As I watched Hot Girl Wanted, a documentary that follows the journey of American teenage pornstars, some of who stopped after several months, I saw my friend in some of the pornstars.

According to the documentary, more people visit porn sites each month than Netflix, Amazon and Twitter combined, and what many of them watch is “pro-am”, that is, porn videos featuring paid amateurs — many of whom are teenagers aged 18 and 19.

Riley, their ‘talent agent’ — who gets the girls, houses them, takes charge of their shoot and gets 10% of their pay — said he never runs out of girls because every day, there’s an 18-year-old girl eager to join the porn industry.

More often than not, people think young girls join the industry because of money. They aren’t far from the truth. Within four months, 19-year-old Tressa — whose porn name was Stella May — said she made over $24,000 from shooting X-rated videos. On average, the girls earn $800 per scene and they shoot 3–5 scenes a week. The money is thrown in their faces and yes, they take it.

But in most cases, it isn’t just money that influences the girls’ decision to do porn. Some of them, like Tressa, didn’t even know what they were getting into. They read adverts that read “models needed,” “Do you want to travel to Miami?,” and hopped on the next available flight. Like my friend, X, it was the thought of freedom for them. The thought of travelling to places they have dreamed of, of being outside the control of their parents and living their lives as they deemed fit.

“We’re free right now, the world is in our hands” — 18-year-old Rachel, known as Ava Taylor.

“In the industry, probably countless girls tried to escape their parents in order to get their freedom like I did through porn. At that time, I had it my way so I would do anything to keep it that way” — Tressa.

Freedom, they say, is golden.

The mystery behind sex was something many teenagers were eager to crack. All her life, 12-year-old Bimbo (not real name) has been taught that if a boy touches her arm, she would get pregnant. It is the same with Uche (not real name) whose father told him if he touches a girl’s hand, even by mistake, she would get pregnant. Bimbo and Uche are seat mates in school and try hard as they may, their hands eventually touch and no, Bimbo did not get pregnant. Discovering this, they kiss and Bimbo did not get pregnant. Then they touch their naked bodies and Bimbo did not get pregnant. Until they eventually have sex and even at that, Bimbo did not still get pregnant. So they do it repeatedly until she is with child.

Understandably, many parents/guardians are scared of introducing the concept of sex to their children/wards and they want to shield them from the ‘immoral world’, but the above scenario would have simply been prevented if both parents had taught their children about sex and how to protect themselves.

Beyond freedom, there’s another reason why some of the girls in Hot Girl Wanted trooped into the porn industry — they, like X, discovered that sex isn’t all that and there are too many lies and unfounded mysteries attached to it.

19-year-old Karly told 25-year-old Jade that all her life, she’s heard that penis and vagina coming together to make a baby is bad — you can get pregnant and have diseases and it’s all so terrible. But then, as someone who has been watching porn, she sees pornstars having sex all the time, nothing is going wrong and they are so happy, and “everything is so confusing.” They then begin to see sex as nothing — it’s not emotional, it’s not that serious.

In reply, Jade says that her teacher taught her about sex by getting two sheets of paper, putting glue on them and sticking them together. Then they peel them apart and say “see, these are two separate papers but there’s pieces of this one stuck on this one and pieces of that one stuck on that one and it will always be that way.”

Fear as a weapon to discourage young ones from having sex will always backfire. It is a counterproductive way of teaching.

Keeping your children close to your bosom all the time and not allowing them leave the house because you don’t want them too exposed is also inutile. What you end up doing is raising children who are so eager to leave home and are just waiting for the next opportunity to ‘explore the world.’

It is important to enlighten kids early about sex. There are no “untold mysteries” about sex, neither does holding the hand of the opposite gender lead to pregnancy. In today’s world, it is imperative to teach your kids and leave them to make their decisions from a place of knowledge and with full understanding of what they are getting into.

Rachel left porn to be a professional photographer, Jade left and now webcams for a living because she wants to “be in control of how she appears on camera” and Tressa is a manager at a restaurant.

Once, after doing a forced blow-job, Rachel says she feels bad about herself and “that’s where it all comes in, like, ‘did I really want money that bad?’”

Tressa says she now asks herself, “why did I do that?”

X, who has long stopped doing ‘runs’ once told me she regrets those days, not because she did not love them, but because the freedom she thought she had turned out to be faux. In her voice was nostalgia, tainted with contrition.

My friend, X, Tressa and the others sought freedom but, like many other faceless people, they all discovered that certain types of freedom are expensive and difficult to sustain.

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Oluwadunsin Sanya

Oluwadunsin is a feature journalist from Lagos, Nigeria.