PHOTOS: Meet the sex worker who slept with 10,000 clients

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A former escort has claimed that the pool of ‘decent men’ in Australia is ‘reducing significantly’ – and that women are to blame.
Gwyneth Montenegro, a former escort who made headlines when she revealed she had slept with 10,000 men, told Daily Mail Australia that five years ago, the most prevalent type of man was ‘admiring of women’.
Ms Montenegro hopes to reverse this trend and improve communication between men and women
But fast forward to this year, Ms Montenegro, from Melbourne, says the most prevalent type of man has ‘a degree of dissatisfaction with their female counterpart’.
Ms Montenegro, who now teaches women how to understand the opposite sex, was first paid for sex at the age of 21
Ms Montenegro, 39, used an intimate profiling methodology to survey more than 60,000 women to come up with the results each time.

A former escort has claimed that the pool of 'decent men' in Australia is 'reducing significantly' - and that women are to blame

A former escort has claimed that the pool of ‘decent men’ in Australia is ‘reducing significantly’ – and that women are to blame

Gwyneth Montenegro, a former escort who made headlines when she revealed she had slept with 10,000 men, told Daily Mail Australia that five years ago, the most prevalent type of man was ‘admiring of women’

Ms Montenegro, 39, used an intimate profiling methodology to survey more than 60,000 women to come up with the results each time

Ms Montenegro, 39, used an intimate profiling methodology to survey more than 60,000 women to come up with the results each time

‘In 2012, by far the most common profile types were “The Stroker” and “The Non-Conformist”. Both of these profile types have a bias toward continually proving themselves to their partner,’ she explained.

‘In 2017, the most common profile types revealed were “The Wimpy Kid” and “The Conqueror”. Both of these have primary motivations that reveal a degree of displeasure or resentment toward women.’

'On the upside, the fascination with me having bedded 10,000 men has provided me with a platform with which to promote my methodologies.

Ms Montenegro believes that if changes aren’t made, these averages will become ‘societal norms’.

‘If you look into the data from just a handful of years ago it seems that the majority of men saw women as someone to impress. Someone to woo if you like,’ she explained.

Ms Montenegro stayed in the industry for 12 years, unable to give up the thousands of dollars that kept pouring in and the perks of beautiful clothes and trips.

It was a lifestyle that gave Ms Montenegro a deep insight into what men really want from women as they confided in her about their desires and relationships.

It wasn’t until the age of 33 that she finally retired once and for all and instead became trained in neuro-linguistic programming, a type of psychotherapy.

Ms Montenegro then found fame when she wrote the story of her life in the book 10,000 Men and Counting, which was released in 2014.

Ms Montenegro has spent two years putting together her profiling system, creating an 80-question test to help women discover who they’re really with.