“Does your family know?”
It’s a question I get asked a lot and it’s a fairly simple answer: Yes, many close family members know that I do porn, and they support me. And some of them I haven’t told yet because I want to come out to them when the time is right.
Simple enough on the surface, but there’s much more.
I am seeking submissions of personal narratives from porn performers, videographers, photographers, producers, directors, web producers, industry writers and reviewers, and anyone else who works in the field of adult videos, websites, and other explicit content. The current focus is on submissions approximately 1000 words, but longer or shorter works will be considered. (I will also accept submissions that are creative, including poetry, visual art, music and video as supplemental elements involved in the promotion of the final ebook.)
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
- Please provide your experience coming out (or not) and whatever details about the situation that feel comfortable to you and the parties involved.
- Please include name changes, pen names, or anonymous submissions.
- Submissions should be approximately 1,000 words in length.
- Writers retain rights and may publish their work at any time, as they see fit. Exclusivity is not required.
- Please send as a Word, Text, or Google Doc, or in the body of the email.
- If your work is selected, I will contact you in regards to publishing information, payment, and contracts.
- If your work is selected, I will contact you in regards to any desired biographies and website URLs.
Email: Jiz@JizLee.com
I will respond to all submissions no later than October 11th, 2012. (National Coming Out Day.)
So, what was your experience like? Or what information do you withhold? Do you work behind the camera in video, photography, editing or web production, and are you out about it? Do you generalize what you do when asked? Are you more open to disclosing your job to friends or strangers? Do your children know about your work? Do their teachers know? Do you have any advice to others? Did you find acceptance and excitement about coming out? Are there other coming out stories you think are relevant?
- – -
Without getting into too much specifics, because I don’t think it’s appropriate for me to speak on behalf of someone else with such a personal topic, I’ll share some of thoughts I’ve had since coming out a few years ago.
1. Coming out about porn can mean coming out about other things.
In my case, my porn involves a lot of aspects of my personal life. This means incorporating queer and kinky sex with many of my lovers, my gender expression, and this very website with my blog describing how I enjoy sex work and think it’s fun and healthy. That sentence alone incorporates at least five things to come out about, besides porn itself: My 1) queer sexuality; 2) Kink; 3) polyamorous lifestyle; 4) genderqueer/trans* identity; and, 5) sex work as sex-positive pleasure.
It can be difficult to come out as just one of these things, so the fact that they’re wrapped up in one another adds complications. Since my teenage years, I’ve come out as gay, then poly, and the last three all together.
2. You don’t just come out once.
As I’ve come out over the years about different things, I’ve come to understand that the act of coming out is not a one-time event. It’s not like once you’ve come out, it’s over and things are either fine or they’re not. There are the on-going discussions that come up and there’s further outings that happen (either by you or other people, sometimes accidentally). It takes an open heart to commit to being honest about the fears and anger that can arise, and to communicate these feelings in a healthy way.
I’m blessed to have a lot of love in my family. And that love is there even when there is fear or confusion.
3. There’s very few resources.
Books have been written for parents of transgender youth, for teens on coming out as queer, and BDSM lifestyles such as “When Someone You Love is Kinky“. When one of my partners and I were first exploring non-monogamy, we found “The Ethical Slut” and “Opening Up” full of helpful information. And while there are books about sex work and sex & culture, there’s not much specific to pornography. Of the sex educators and sexologists I’ve asked, it seems that this book has yet to be written.
For a brief history on the beginnings of the porn industry as we know it, check out Michael Stabile’s documentary “SMUT CAPITAL OF AMERICA“. A strange fact is that the very people I’m coming out to have been alive longer than the industry itself. Porn — at least the kind that’s sold online and in stores for personal viewing — hasn’t been around for very long. Perhaps the fact that it’s still so new is one reason why there’s not a lot published on the subject.
Another reason of course, is the subject itself.
4. Porn is a four-letter word.
One of the reasons it took me so long to come out was my fear that I would be judged and I would lose my family’s love. No matter how brilliant and loving someone is, I still am afraid that coming out to them will cause them to think poorly of me, pulling from society’s stereotypes of sex workers being naive or damaged victims, powerless or coerced. There’s so much shame around sex in our culture, that even though it’s legal and very common, there’s stigma around P-O-R-N. Many of the people I’ve worked with refuse to call their work “porn” because of these terrible associations. For myself though, I think that breaking down the stereotypes is part of the process. While much of the work I do can be described as erotic, sexual documentary and adult cinema, and my intentions can gravitate towards sex-positive representation and alternative views of healthy sexuality through working primarily with people whom I’ve loved… at the end of the day: I did porn.
5. The Internet is Forever.
Part of my organic, “self-agent process” entails my decisions to meet directors and co-stars before agreeing to do a project. And if that can’t happen for whatever reason, they must come with strong references or recommendation from people I know. When you perform in porn, you sign the rights of your image over to a producer. When a sexual image of you is published online, it’s there forever. It’s downloaded to user’s computers, it’s shared on Tumblr, and as much as you might try to control it… once it’s done, it’s done. This is the reason I try to work with directors and producers who I feel understand and respect me and my identity. The process of putting myself out there in ways I have some control over, establishing my identity and creating representations of people like me, outweigh the dangers of people behaving with malicious or exploitative intentions. It’s a known risk, and one I’m willing to take even though it can be frightening, especially for loved ones. It can also mean that you can be outed through an image online at any given time… regardless if it’s flattering or not.
So where am I now?
Honestly, I think I’m still the same place I was before I first came out, only now I can share my excitement and pride in my accomplishments. How GOOD it feels to not have to tell white lies about my trips abroad, traveling half-way around the world to “visit friends”. I hate lying. I feel more shame in the fact that I lied to my family, than I ever will about the sex I had on film.
And coming out hasn’t changed my decisions about doing porn. (Although knowing that my family can read my blog means I’ll try to remember to proofread.) As always, I’ll continue to do projects which I think are satisfying to me while exploring the genre — in a way that is safe and sustainable, and teaches me and others about sex and pleasure. From the beginning, each project I do is a choice. Even though I can’t claim that they’ve all been brilliant, shining examples of my sex-positive philosophy, and that sometimes I work with a production that probably wasn’t the best fit, each project has been lesson in helping me define and articulate the power I have of my own sexuality and autonomy.
So, I feel proud about all this. And, I want to ask for your help.
I wrote this blog post in hopes that it will help me form my thoughts about coming out, and maybe it can offer something to you. But I need more resources. Do you know a good book or blog post I can use to create a “syllabus” of supporting materials to help other performers, families and friends find the information and validation they need to come out? (This information will help me and my own family too, that’s for certain!)
Thank you everyone, for the support you’ve given to me through your emails and messages, for purchasing my work, for respecting my gender pronouns and sexuality, for inspiring me to write and share my experiences, and more. I’m looking forward to hearing from you!

































9 comments
Creatrix Tiara says:
Feb 3, 2012
Wow. My family did NOT take my burlesqueing very well – and this was way back in the beginning *before* I had done anything particularly salacious! No way am I going to come out to them about having done porn. Sex and my family don’t mix: honestly, sometimes I wonder how they even had kids to begin with.
I would really appreciate stories from other South Asians – I do get a lot of South Asians telling me “I wish I could do what you do but my family would kill me”, and I feel there’s an interesting cultural dynamic that is present even in the diaspora that’s worth looking at. (Your identity being subsumed by that of your family, your actions affecting your family’s livelihoods, filial piety and being “selfish”, sex as a private discreet matter between a married couple, shame and disgrace and honor). There aren’t that many role models for me to look to, none especially that take cultural issues into account. Probably there are a lot more South Asian sex-related performers out there that aren’t out about their ethnicity or nationality because of this! So if you ever do hear from other South Asians, do share – and let them know there is a fellow bideshi hungry for support.
Ms Naughty says:
Feb 3, 2012
This is a brilliant idea, Jiz, thanks for doing it. I would like to contribute, even though I’m coming from the position of “behind the scenes” rather than as a performer. But it’s still tricky. When acquaintances ask why we went to Berlin last year I still don’t have a good explanation. I have found, however, that it’s a handy way of sorting out who your friends really are.
Miss Lagsalot says:
Feb 5, 2012
Jiz, this is a wonderful idea! I am so excited about this project–sharing stories of trials and tribulations always brings people together, but this is one “coming out” that has been largely ignored, and in a community in which coming together (haha!) goes undone far too often… this will legitimize many people’s experiences in their own eyes, and perhaps legitimize the experience of choosing a career/lifestyle that others don’t always agree with in a whole new way. So… yes! Just, yes.
Violet+Rye says:
Feb 6, 2012
As sex bloggers/photographers/filmmakers that are still Anon and struggling with the idea of coming out or not, we truly appreciate the thought behind this post and the call for other stories. We look forward to reading other responses and thank you for putting this together, not to mention the inspiration!
Love,
V+R
WDKYMY says:
Feb 6, 2012
Such a good post. As much time as I spend thinking about queer crap, I don’t know that this specific nuance of coming out has ever broached my mind.
Kudos to your courage, sir. Keep on doin’ you.
ted says:
Feb 8, 2012
This is a great idea Jiz. I am sure it will help a lot of people who work in front and behind the scenes in the adult film business not to mention people who work in the retail end of things which is where most of my expereince has been. In most cases people(my family and friends) seemed to be cool with the retail end but, I know of at least one instance where a woman did not want to date me simply because I was working at an adult business store. At the time I was suprised as she seemed to be a cool person and we seemed to be getting along okay. I wasn’t in love with her or anything but, it still threw me for a loop that I would be rejected for where I worked and not for something more signifigant. I would imagine it is much more difficult for people who work on the set especially in front of the camera when they are dating or when they decide to tell their loved ones about their chosen profession. In any case I think it is a great idea and I wish you much success with it. Take care.
Ted.
DearMissLucy says:
Feb 20, 2012
I think that this is an important project that will yield an informative and educational work, and I commend you for taking it on. However, I must ask, in your quest to compile a bibliography, have you consulted a research librarian? Asking random people on the internet for their favorite books and websites is fine, but if you want factual information from sources that you haven’t even heard of yet, librarians are the way to go. As a bonus, there are MANY of them in the queer community and they would undoubtedly be thrilled to help. Just a thought. Good luck!
Queeries says:
Apr 19, 2012
[...] and they take obvious and political pleasure in what they do. This shines through in Jiz Lee’s personal explanation about why they are a pornstar: “From the beginning, each project I do is a choice . . . a lesson [...]
Coming Out says:
May 7, 2012
[...] a side note, this project relates to me in that I’m working on a book called “How to Come Out Like a Porn Star“, which involves family dynamics, queer and gender issues, and a collection of essays by [...]