Ultimately, no matter what you do, your inner definition of you do is the only one that counts, and you helped me see that!Īll the best of luck with moving to L.A. What it meant for me was that you get to choose your story: someone may find one job as demeaning, but for someone else, it is empowering and dignified. Lastly, I really liked what you said about stripping being empowering. I’m sorry for this avalanche of very silly questions! (I’ll totally understand if you don’t want to answer any of them.) I’m just unaccountably curious. Ooh! Thanks for this interesting subject, Sarah, and thank you for sharing, Regina! I have a tonne of questions, but I’ll narrow it down to four(ish):ġ) Do any women come to the club, to watch you dance, I mean? Or are there special clubs for female clients?Ģ) How is your security ensured in case there’s a sleazy/unpleasant/violent customer? Are you in a position to refuse a certain customer or a specific service?ģ) How do you prepare your dances? Do you have practiced routines or do you improvise?Ĥ) Are the women that you work with all a similar body type, or is there a lot of diversity?