- Get Help
- Help for students
- Help for faculty and staff
- Make a report
- Relationship Violence
- Resources for respondents
- Self care
- Translated SVSPO Brochures
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Phone and Video Guidelines
- Supporting Survivors
- Education & Prevention
- Request a Workshop
- Safer Campuses for Everyone
- Active Bystander Network
- InterroBang
- Definitions
- Consent Matters
- Sexual Assault Awareness Month
- Safe(r) Party Initiative
- Active Bystander Intervention
- December 6
- Blog
- ACTIVE BYSTANDER
- CONSENT
- Yes, No, Maybe So: The Inner Workings of Consent
- Sextortion
- Yes/No/Maybe Checklist
- Cyberconsent and How to Practice Consent Online
- Curious About Consent?
- The importance of pronouns
- Sexting: tips on staying safe(r)
- A Conversation on Cyberconsent
- Are Tea and Consent Simple?
- Consent Is Not Cancelled
- How We Can Contribute to Consent Culture Every Day
- Yes Means Yassss: Improving Consent Education Among Queer Men
- Isnt that kind of守nsexy?
- My Ode to You
- Back to School 101: 5 Things I Wish Someone Had Told Me About Consent
- Sexual Violence in Intimate Relationships
- Why Consent Matters
- CULTURE, SUPPORT, AND CARE
- InterroBang: A new game to get to know yourself and others
- Content Notes: From Either/Or to Both/And
- The STEM Gender Gap in Focus
- Moving Past COVID
- Top 6 podcasts you should listen to
- Guide to BIPOC Support Services
- Why are Women in STEM Still Unsafe? Commemorating L'cole Polytechnique Massacre With Action
- Boundary-Setting In The Age Of COVID
- Tips for survivors who might find wearing a mask challenging: Tips and tricks during COVID-19
- Plain Language Resource Sheets for Survivors & Respondents
- Your First 間眅埶AV Policy Summary: GP 44 Policy in Plain Language
- Do You Even Cry, Bro? - Canadian healthy masculinity programs
- From boys will be boys to boys can be色: Some thoughts on masculinity
- Supporting Someone By Listening
- Women Deliver Mobilization: A World and Relationships with Gender-Based Violence
- Self-care Tips for Survivors
- Transformative Justice and Community Accountability: Changing behavior and justice
- Working Towards a Culture of Care and Support Within Your Community
- Dear 間眅埶AV faculty: It's on all of us to respond to sexual violence
- Understanding Sexual Violence: A Graduate Student's Perspective
- 間眅埶AV Athletics Listen Believe Empower Campaign
- A Conversation with Lorelei Williams about Modern Day Colonialism
- HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS
- SAFE(R) PARTYING
- ANONYMOUS DISCLOSURES
- Comic
- Faculty
- About Us
- Contact Us
- Leave Site Now
Yes/No/Maybe Checklist
Have you heard of a Yes/No/Maybe Checklist?
While this may seem like a pretty self-explanatory checklist, it is used to help communicate effectively around sex, physical intimacy, consent, and fun between sexual partners. There are many different Yes/No/Maybe lists you can use to help you explore different sexual activities and physical boundaries.
There are typically two types of Yes/No/Maybe Checklist - they can come in checkbox format and fill-in format. For the checkbox ones, if you feel comfortable doing any intimate actions, you mark yes. Not into it at all? Please tick "no." When you're not sure how you feel or are still considering the act, you put maybe. As for the fill-in ones, please write Y next to the action you feel comfortable doing, enter N when you arent interested in the activity and M'' if you are unsure.
- If both you and your partner, hookup or date say Yes'' to the same thing, that gives you some common ground to talk more about what that/those activities can look like.
- If one of you says No, you can let that go or you can start a conversation to understand more about the persons feelings and desires.
- If there is a Maybe, there could be an opportunity to talk it through further to understand more, if you are each willing to share more.
Respect, consent and ongoing communication with each other are key points here.
Here are some Yes/No/Maybe checklists you can take a look at. They are great places to start conversations and, when you get more experience with them, you can create your own!
Scarleteens sexual inventory checklist is very thorough and covers a lot of ground as it discusses body boundaries such as boundaries about direct eye contact. Often, these little details are overlooked when people engage in intimacy, so its great that Scarleteens checklist dives into some of these finer details.
Sexuality educator and pleasure advocate Sunny Megatron shares two Y/N/M lists in the link above. There is one for those who are vanilla and want to explore their sexuality.
Bex Caputos Y/N/M list is a bit different from the other ones on this list. Its quite exhaustive because it covers sex, kink, language, and feelings. It asks what kind of activities one wants to explore; what one want to be called in bed; what kind of emotions one want to feel while engaging in sex and kink. Caputo explores a few options: Yes Into, Yes Willing, Maybe, No. The lists consider positions in giving and receiving and ask how frequently one wants to feel a particular emotion: often, sometimes, or never.
The cool feature of Autostraddles Y/N/M list is that it is actually a set of worksheets that are quite visually appealing. I found this list to be very engaging because of its design. It is not as extensive as Bex Caputos or Scarleteens list, but it does offer a look at what a colourful and engaging Y/N/M list could look like.