Sexy storytelling, performances, and anonymous audience confessions. Sex, (almost) everybody does it and (almost) nobody talks about it — except at Tipi Confessions.
Sexy storytelling, performances, and anonymous audience confessions. Sex, (almost) everybody does it and (almost) nobody talks about it — except at Tipi Confessions.
Tipi Confessions is not only sexy. Our audiences are reminded that sex is always also political.
Tipi Confessions is a live storytelling show on sex, sexuality, and gender, featuring performances and anonymous audience confessions. We highlight Indigenous, decolonial, political, humourous, creative, feminist, queer, and practitioner perspectives. We curate shows that have featured burlesque performances, educational comedy skits, staged readings, musical performances, personal narratives, spoken word readings, and more.
Coming Fall 2025: The Tipi Confessions Newsletter/Blog
Stories, shows, and educational content straight to your inbox. Stay connected with monthly updates on our workshops, speaker series, upcoming shows, and relevant commentary and resources grounded in Indigenous, decolonial, queer, and feminist perspectives.
Most of our work and engagement takes place in amiskwaciwâskahikan, within Treaty 6 territory and Métis homeland, a traditional gathering place for many Indigenous peoples, including the Nêhiyaw (Cree), Niitsitapi (Blackfoot), Métis, Nakoda (Stoney), Dene, Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) and Anishinaabe (Ojibway/Saulteaux), and Inuit.
At Tipi Confessions, decolonizing sexuality and gender through storytelling means disrupting colonial binaries and imposed categories: on our bodies, our relationships, and the land. It means reclaiming body sovereignty, reconnecting to land, restoring Indigenous governance systems, addressing the harms of colonial policies, and uplifting kinship-based models of care, consent, and justice.
Before colonization, many Indigenous nations honored and respected diverse sexualities and gender roles, grounded in place-based languages, laws, and creation stories. Sex, pleasure, and desire were not shamed, they were integral parts of the human experience, intimately woven into everyday life and spiritual practice.
Our work is grounded in Indigenous knowledges and practices that are relational, dynamic, and deeply place-based.
When we host shows locally, we continue to nurture kinship relationships within amiskwaciwâskahikan and support anti-colonial and Indigenous-led movements for sexual and gender sovereignty.
When we travel to other territories, we commit to learning from the lands and the peoples who host us, to understand their histories, laws, languages, and knowledge systems. We strive to be good visitors, respectful relatives, and accountable storytellers.
Our stories are not only grounded in place; they are interwoven through time - the immediate, the historical, and the cyclical. Each performance, each gathering, is an act of connection, grounded in land, accountable to our ancestors, and in service of our shared and sovereign collective futures.