 Sex education is important for everyone, but because society thinks that it's improper for women to talk about that they miss out the opportunity to actually understand their body and own their body. Outspoken feminists talking about things like sex and culture in a conservative country. I get a lot of backlash. I get a lot of people accusing me of ruining my own culture. Hello, my name is Kef. I'm a teacher. This is the first time we've heard about sex education. It's the first time we've heard about it. We have the Women's Code of Conduct that has been written for a few hundred years and people still believe that it's a representation of what women should do. Our blog could be kind of like a part of the movement, I think, the quiet movement that has been happening for so many years of just people saying their truth and speaking about it confidently. I receive a lot, a lot of negative comments, not just under the videos, not just publicly under the videos, under YouTube or Facebook. I believe that speaking out has changed people's minds or at least created a dialogue. When she talked out about the title and the topic, women seemed like feel fresh, feel encouragement, feel inspired to learn that we not only can do that, but we can do the other steps. I think still the video of virginity that it reached like millions of people in Cambodia, women that have no virginity, is like no value. If you look at it on the positive side, all of the disagreement and the discourse surrounding the things we talk about, it's actually a sign that people are actually having more critical thinking. People are actually more invested in these discussions that can lead to something better. I think that's the first step to every kind of change. They just do what you have to do, say what you have to say.