Consent is an agreement between participants to engage in sexual activity. Consent should be clearly and freely communicated. A verbal and affirmative expression of consent can help both you and your partner to understand and respect each other’s boundaries.
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Consent cannot be given by individuals who are underage, intoxicated or incapacitated by drugs or alcohol, or asleep or unconscious. If someone agrees to an activity under pressure of intimidation or threat, that isn’t considered consent because it was not given freely. Unequal power dynamics, such as engaging in sexual activity with an employee or student, also mean that consent cannot be freely given.
When you’re engaging in sexual activity, consent is about communication. And it should happen every time for every type of activity. Consenting to one activity, one time, does not mean someone gives consent for other activities or for the same activity on other occasions. For example, agreeing to kiss someone doesn’t give that person permission to remove your clothes. Consent is a process of agreeing what sex is with your partner. Having sex with someone in the past doesn’t give that person permission to have sex with you again in the future. It’s important to discuss boundaries and expectations with your partner prior to engaging in any sexual behavior.
You can withdraw consent at any point if you feel uncomfortable. One way to do this is to clearly communicate to your partner that you are no longer comfortable with this activity and wish to stop. Withdrawing consent can sometimes be challenging or difficult to do verbally, so non-verbal cues can also be used to convey this. The best way to ensure that all parties are comfortable with any sexual activity is to talk about it, check in periodically, and make sure everyone involved consents before escalating or changing activities. This may include asking “I don’t want to keep doing this,” “I changed my mind,” “I need a break,” or “Can we pause?” or “Can we take a break?”
How to respond if your partner does not consent or stops consenting:
Remember that if your partner stops consenting, or tells you they want to stop, they are listening to themselves, and taking care of themselves. Your job is to immediately listen and honor that choice. You might say, “I’m listening,” or “Let me know what you need” or “Thank you for taking care of yourself.”
Some sex educators have argued that more than affirmative consent (yes means yes), sex should be organized through enthusiastic consent -- an affirmative, enthusiastic “yes!” to a sexual activity or proposal. Enthusiastic consent insists that we should only want to have sex that both we and our partners are enthusiastic about, and in doing so, reminds us that having sex we don’t really want to have can be harmful to us, just as having sex our partner doesn’t really want to have is harmful to both of us. It asks us to ask ourselves: is it okay to want to have sex with someone who has only grudgingly, or unenthusiastically, agreed? At the same time, enthusiastic consent can suggest that we owe enthusiasm to our partner, in the same ways that women often feel that they owe their partner an orgasm (or, the performance of their own orgasm). Remember: you owe it to yourself to express enthusiasm when you genuinely feel it, and not because you think it’s what your partner wants.
Note: Physiological responses like an erection, lubrication, arousal, or orgasm are involuntary, meaning your body might react one way even when you are not consenting to the activity. Sometimes perpetrators will use the fact that these physiological responses occur to maintain secrecy or minimize a survivor's experience by using phrases such as, "You know you liked it." In no way does a physiological response mean that you consented to what happened. If you have been sexually abused or assaulted, it is not your fault.
Refusing to acknowledge “no”
A partner who is disengaged, non-responsive, or visibly upset
Assuming that wearing certain clothes, flirting, or kissing is an invitation for anything more
Someone being under the legal age of consent, as defined by the state
Someone being incapacitated because of drugs or alcohol, or pressuring someone into sexual activity by using fear or intimidation
Assuming you have permission to engage in a sexual act because you’ve done it in the past
Assuming your partners definition of sex is the same as yours. You have to ask
Cajoling and or convincing your partner to engage in a sexual act
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