Teen Boy Sex Story

Teen Boy Sex Story




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Teen Boy Sex Story

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Colton Haynes Opens Up About First Time Having Sex
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The young person’s guide to conquering (and saving) the world. Teen Vogue covers the latest in celebrity news, politics, fashion, beauty, wellness, lifestyle, and entertainment.
In a new interview, Colton Haynes opened up about the first time he had sex — something he said he's never talked about publicly before.
Colton told Andy Cohen in a recent interview that he first had sex when he was 13 years old. He said his first time was with two people, both a girl and a guy. And while he doesn't label the experience as a threesome, Colton said everyone involved participated in the act.
"I lost my virginity at 13 to a girl and a guy," he told Andy. "I've never said that before. The girl was two years older than me, and the guy was, I would say, around 16."
The first time you have sex can be a very special experience, or it can just be another day in which you did something new. The truth is that having sex doesn't transform you into a new person or give you something you were missing — it's just a new part of your life that you get to explore, if you're interested. Everyone's first time is different, and it should be something you feel prepared for and comfortable doing. Who you do it with and when is totally your choice. It's also your choice not to have sex — if you don't feel ready or just don't want to have sex with someone that is totally OK, and something you should feel empowered about.
If you do choose to have sex, it's best to know how to protect yourself and to know what your options are if the protection fails. Your local Planned Parenthood clinic can help guide you through that either before or after you have sex.
We're glad Colton felt comfortable opening up about his sexuality — that's something that's also totally your choice. Colton didn't name who he had sex with that first time, which is important. While he might feel comfortable sharing that information, others might not want that detail of their life made public. Of course, there's no shame in having sex, but just like anything else in our sex lives, consent is imperative.
© 2022 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy and Cookie Statement and Your California Privacy Rights. Teen Vogue may earn a portion of sales from products that are purchased through our site as part of our Affiliate Partnerships with retailers. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Condé Nast. Ad Choices







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Unseen: The Boy Victims Of The Sex Trade, Part I

Thousands of Boys Face ‘The Same Victimization’ As Girls, But Go Largely Overlooked

Unseen: The Boy Victims Of The Sex Trade, Part I
“I really thought I was the bad person selling myself. I didn't realize that I was a victim.”
“The major reason why kids aren't getting services is because they're not identified. That is compounded with challenges within our system to even recognize boys as victims of sexual crimes.”



Eliza Reock, a child sex trafficking program specialist at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children


There is growing evidence that in New England and across the U.S. there are likely thousands of male victims of commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking, far more than previously understood.
Jose Alfaro says he was perfect prey for a sex trafficker because of the color of his skin.
Researchers say more than half of gay and bisexual teens use the site to find sexual partners.
The latest chapter turns to the abuse and trafficking trans females face In Massachusetts and across the country.
A recent case in Connecticut shows how difficult it is for prosecutors to hold alleged abusers accountable.
One small shelter that opened in Texas signals a growing awareness of this often unseen population, and serves as a beacon for those who need help.



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By Jenifer B. McKim and Phillip Martin ,
GBH News Center For Investigative Reporting
April 5, 2021
Chris Bates was 16 years old when he started selling nude photos of himself on the internet to adult men who pressured him for more and more images.
The demands snowballed into riskier requests, and within months the gay Connecticut teen was trading sex for dinners out, designer sneakers and other luxuries.
Bates says he was lured by the attention and what appeared to be easy money. He secretly hoped his financially struggling single mother, or anybody, would notice what was happening and protect him.
No one did — and within two years, the tall, lanky youth was living alone in a dilapidated apartment, prostituting himself to get by. His home — and an array of hotel rooms in Connecticut and Massachusetts — became a “revolving door” of sex buyers.
“I really thought I was the bad person selling myself,’’ said Bates, now 26 and living in Worcester. “I didn't realize that I was a victim.”
Bates’ story is unusual only in that it is so rarely told: Boys and young men lured into the sex trade and victimized in ways the public generally assumes applies mostly to women and girls. But there is growing evidence that in New England and across the United States there are likely thousands of male victims of commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking, far more than previously understood.
In Massachusetts alone, more than 411 boys have been referred to the state Department of Children and Families since 2018 for concerns they were victims of commercial sexual exploitation — about 15 percent of the total number of referrals, according to state data. An additional 109 youth were identified as trans or non-binary, state data shows.
The state just started collecting this data in 2016, and it is widely considered to be an undercount. Definitive data is still lacking but recent studies show boys and young men are being exploited at much higher rates. A 2016 national study found more than a third of young people involved in the U.S. sex trade were boys and young men. That same year, a federal study found a third of male youths experiencing homelessnes said they traded sex for something of value — putting their numbers in the thousands on any given night nationwide.
Yet too often male victims of sexual exploitation go unseen and unhelped, specialists say, their stories stifled by personal shame, stigma and a world that has trouble seeing boys and young men as victims at all, especially gay and trans youth and boys of color.
In Massachusetts, there is one program focused solely on helping sexually exploited male youth and trans females, and its revenue last year was less than half of its sister program for female youth run out of the same nonprofit, Roxbury Youthworks, Inc.
Prosecuting exploiters and traffickers of boys and young men is even more challenging. The Office of the Massachusetts Attorney General has filed 62 sex trafficking cases since 2012, but only one includes a male victim, state officials say.
Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey says her office strives to hold exploiters accountable, whatever the gender of their victims, in what she calls one of the “fastest growing criminal industries in the world.” She says many victims are unwilling to speak out, silenced by fear, trauma and often substance abuse issues. She says she is working to better identify male and trans female victims. “We have to absolutely talk about the fact that it is not just girls, it is boys as well,’’ she said. “They suffer from the same trauma, the same victimization, the same exploitation.”
Yet conversations about sex trafficking still often focus on victims as girls or young women, controlled by a pimp in what is increasingly understood as modern day slavery. It’s a dark world, where many females go unidentified and lack enough services to help. But male victims get far less attention from the public, law enforcement and social services, say advocates who are striving to highlight their stories.
“We are led to believe that men are perpetrators and women are victims and not the flip side,’’ said Steven Procopio, a Boston-based social worker, who has been striving for more than a decade to raise awareness about the problem.
Many local advocates say they know there are more boys out there, even if they don’t show up in the data. Their stories run the gamut from teens controlled by traffickers including pimps and gang members, to an insidious form of commercial sexual exploitation known as “survival sex,” involving youth exchanging sex for food, shelter or other goods. Under federal law any youth under the age of 18 involved in the sex trade is considered a trafficking victim.
Males who are gay, trans, Black and brown are particularly affected, youth advocates say, because they are more vulnerable to exploitation and because people tasked with protecting them often don’t see they need help.
A small but vocal brotherhood of survivors is beginning to speak out.
“From the age of 15 to basically 24 years old, I felt crazy, like something was wrong with me and I didn't know why,’’ said Jose Alfaro, a sex trafficking survivor, who now is 29 and works as a hair stylist on Boston’s trendy Newbury Street.
Alfaro testified in 2018 against his trafficker in a federal courtroom in Texas describing how he was forced to perform sexual massages that became violent. In 2019, he won a rare $1.43 million civil verdict against his abuser — and wants people to know how male victims are overlooked in the sex trade.
“They are afraid that people are going to think that they’re gay. They’re going to think that if they are gay, that maybe they wanted it,’’ he said. “A lot of male victims decide not to come forward because of the stigma behind it.”
Compounding the problem, specialists say, is a slew of misinformation about sex trafficking that is surging on social media. Much of this is in the form of politically-motivated conspiracy theories advanced by proponents of QAnon under the seemingly virtuous heading “Save The Children.” Adherents of the right-wing extremist philosophy purport to be engaged in breaking up a global pedophile ring associated with liberal politicians.
Alfaro says these fabrications add to the suffering of real male victims like him. He says he was drawn into the sex trade as a teen after being kicked out of his home because he was gay. People already have a distorted picture of the boys and men who are exploited or trafficked, he said. Conspiracy theories only make it harder to tell the true story. “[QAnon] has ruined a lot of the hard work that people have done to put that education out there for people to read and to understand and to help end this problem,” he said.
Chris Bates is just now finding his voice. He says telling his story is empowering, as if by explaining the painful parts he too understands more about what happened and why.
He grew up in subsidized housing in rural Connecticut where he was the only openly gay youth he knew. His mother was stressed by mental health and financial challenges, working long hours. He found solace on Facebook where he quickly gained thousands of followers.
Bates says he first posted pictures of himself on the beach or a pool, which led to requests from adult men for nude photos, and, later, for meetups.
“At first it seemed kind of exciting,’’ he said. “I really wasn’t getting enough attention at home.”
Bates’ mother, Mariel Njuguna, acknowledges now that she wasn’t around enough. She worked long hours as a medical assistant and struggled with symptoms of a bipolar disorder. When Bates later told her what he’d been through, she says, she blamed herself. “At first I didn’t understand,’’ she said. Now she just wants to support him. “All you can give him is love.”
Bates’ entryway through his computer is increasingly common.
Online sexual exploitation is surging because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has kept young people stuck at home and attached to their computers, phones and tablets.
Last year, there were nearly 38,000 reports of suspected “online enticement for sexual acts” — nearly double the number of reports from the year before, according to the nonprofit National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which runs a cybertip line.
And boys are far more likely than girls to share sexually explicit content of themselves when directly communicating with predators, according to a 2015 study by the national center.
Eliza Reock, a child sex trafficking program specialist at the center, says the number of reported cases of trafficked boys has grown from almost nothing 15 years ago to seven percent of the total in 2020 — a sign she sees as hopeful that people are finally beginning to pay attention.
“The major reason why kids aren't getting services is because they're not identified,’’ she said.
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