Pleasure Pixel Turns 2

This Month, Pleasure Pixel Turns Two!

What started as an idea — and a deep frustration with how inaccessible, confusing, and exclusionary sex education can be — has grown into something I’m incredibly proud of. Over the past two years, Pleasure Pixel has become a space for honest conversations, practical education, and compassionate support around bodies, relationships, consent, and pleasure.

Why Pleasure Pixel Exists

Pleasure Pixel was created to make sexual health information easier to understand, safer to access, and genuinely inclusive, for everyone. Too often, people with disabilities are excluded from conversations about relationships, intimacy, and bodily autonomy — or worse, spoken about without being centred.

From the beginning, my goal has been simple: provide clear, respectful, evidence-based information, education, training and counselling that meets people where they are. No shame. No assumptions. No jargon for the sake of it.

What Two Years Has Looked Like

In just two years, Pleasure Pixel has grown beyond what I initially imagined. The work now includes:

  • Sexual health education and online courses

  • Counselling and psychotherapy services, including NDIS-funded support

  • Professional development and training for support workers and service providers

  • Consulting with businesses who want to make sure they are getting things right for their staff and clients

  • Resources designed with accessibility, consent, and capacity-building at the centre

  • Advocacy in the community

Every service has been shaped by the people who use it — clients, participants, support workers, and community members who continue to remind me why this work matters.

What I’ve Learned Along the Way

Running Pleasure Pixel has taught me a lot — about business, boundaries, sustainability, and the emotional weight of holding space for others. But more than anything, it’s reinforced how powerful clear information and compassionate support can be.

I’ve learned that:

  • People want to talk about sex, bodies, and relationships with the people they support — they just want to feel safe doing so.

  • Accessibility isn’t an add-on; it’s essential and should one of the first things that are addressed, not an after-thought.

  • Consent, autonomy, and pleasure are not optional extras — they are foundational to wellbeing and when you have the ability to have a platform, it must be used to support these human rights.

  • My own neurodivergence was discovered and considerably changed the way I see myself in this space and how I run my own business.

Looking Ahead

As Pleasure Pixel moves into its third year, the focus remains on deepening this work. That means continuing to refine services, create thoughtful resources, and advocate for sexual health support that recognises people with disabilities as whole, autonomous humans.

There are new ideas on the horizon — more education, more collaboration, and more ways to support people to feel informed and empowered in their bodies and relationships.

Thank You

To everyone who has booked a session, taken a course, referred a client, shared a post, or had a brave conversation — thank you. Pleasure Pixel exists because people continue to trust this work and see its value.

Happy second birthday, Pleasure Pixel. I’m so glad you’re here 💗

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Why We All Need To Learn Consent And Boundaries

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Bridging the Gap