Midori’s Recommendations: Sex-Positive Shop for Women, Non-binary, and Queer Folks
After significant research, I’ve discovered that there is one, just one, genuinely sex-positive feminist and queer-friendly sex shop in all of Japan; Love Piece Club in Tokyo. They have a strong web presence and an elegant boutique in the super fashionable Laforet building in Harajuku. They also host special events and offer sexuality information and advice services for women.
For those of us in North America and Europe today, it’s common to find a sex-positive and gender-affirming sex toy shop or two in most large cities and many smaller towns. Even people who live far from brick-and-mortar shops can order easily online. It really is a privilege that we ought not to take for granted.
In Japan, you can find plenty of places selling sex toys, but most are sleazy and retro in the worst ways. They range from dingy sad shacks trading on shame reminiscent of Times Square of yore, Vegas-looking florid neon-colored shops selling teeny tiny club wear and cheap vibes, or back corner sections of massive general stores like the Donki chain. Don’t get me wrong. I like a bit of sleaze and dirt now and then, but when that’s all that’s available and they cater to otaku boys and geezers, a nice perv gets pretty grumpy.
Love Piece Club was founded in 1996 by Minori Kitahara. She’s a true maverick, rabble-rouser, and activist for sex positivity and the rights of women and marginalized people.
On a Serious Note: My trip to Bar Black Heart wasn’t just as a customer. I was there to teach a rope and consent class for women.
Black Heart invited me as a guest teacher for their monthly women-only Shibari workshop, “Otome Nawakai.” They asked me to present on negotiation, agency, boundary, consent, and dynamic movement in private rope play. This was a heartbreakingly profound invitation for me. Why? Because women’s consent and agency are not taught, discussed, or supported in Japan, much less clear negotiation before play. The small club filled up with women of varying experiences. At first, they were quiet and unsure. Such workshops aren’t the norm. By the end of the class, we were laughing, moving, and tying. After the class ended, the bar opened to the public. Conversations buzzed for the rest of the evening, and new friendships formed.
The ugly reality is that there is a lot of gender-based violence and sexual assaults in Japan. It may seem a strange paradox that there should be such crimes in such a clean, well-ordered, and seemingly low-crime country. It’s a well-hidden national shame that is getting some light shed on it. (please see references below)
I don’t want this report to be just a blithely-written travel log. I don’t want to blow culturally romantic smoke up your ass. You deserve the real scoop. In Japan, saying a direct “NO” in ordinary small talk or business conversations is difficult enough, much less for women in sexual situations. Please consider this if you want to hook up with Japanese women. Not saying “No” is not an implied “Yes” — and drunk people suck at setting or holding boundaries or saying No.
Be A Fantastic Global Kinkster!
I love history and culture nerding! May this whet your appetite to explore and investigate the fantastic and ingenious ways people worldwide engage in pervery and darker eros. Learning and appreciating how others get it on helps us understand ourselves better, do our kink better, and become fantastic Global Kinksters. Maybe we can spank up some world peace, whip up joy, and unfetter compassion.
I want you to visit Japan. It’s wonderful, complex, baffling, delicious, beautiful, silly, serious, futuristic, ancient, and exciting.