Submit to our zine!
- ywlpuct

- Aug 28, 2019
- 3 min read

The Department of Health defines SRHR as:
“Sexual health requires a positive and respectful approach to a person’s sexuality and sexual relationships. To be sexually healthy, people need to be able to have pleasurable and safe sexual experiences, free of coercion, discrimination and violence. They need to have access to sexual health information and services. For people to have and keep their sexual health, their sexual rights must be respected, protected and fulfilled. All people have these rights.”
As YWL, we want to interrogate this further by exploring the lived experiences of people who have firsthand experience of accessing these rights.
But we need your help. That is why we have decided to create a zine called My First Time. It is not often that young wom?n, non-binary and transgender people are given the opportunity to speak about SRHR issues openly without stigmatisation. We are treated with disgust when we talk about our periods in public, and are called ‘sluts’ and ‘whores’ when we speak about sex, pleasure, and even just the desire to access different contraceptive methods. Although these issues are not new and are being battled by a number of feminist organisations across the world, we assert that change begins in our immediate communities, and that every single one of us has our own story to tell. bell hooks states that:
When our lived experience of theorizing is fundamentally linked to processes of self-recovery, of collective liberation, no gap exists between theory and practice. Indeed, what such experience makes more evident is the bond between the two - that ultimately reciprocal process wherein one enables the other.
This viewpoint encompasses our direction for this zine - that the telling of our lived experiences can have a significant impact on the change we are able to make in the world.
And that’s where you come in: we want your previously unpublished short stories, personal essays, poetry, photography, illustrations, paintings, videos, sound bites, and more that speak to SRHR in ways that are creative, innovative, and true to your story. SRHR includes, but is not limited to:
Sex and pleasure
Sexual violence and trauma
Mental health
Access to sexual and reproductive health services
Contraception
Abortion
Sex work
Queerness
HIV/AIDS
Teen pregnancy




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