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The Embodied Side of BDSM versus Sex (part 2)
The Second part of
this beautiful article in taken from Clarisse Thorn's Blog -
http://clarissethorn.com
The Embodied Side of BDSM versus Sex
Although Part 1 was all about how the divide between “BDSM”
and “sex” is often nonsensical, or purely political, or socially constructed …
that doesn’t mean that the divide does not exist. I once had a conversation
about ignoring social constructs with a wise friend, who noted dryly that:
“One-way streets are a social construct. That doesn’t mean we should ignore
them.” Just because the outside world influences our sexuality, does not mean
that our sexual preferences are invalid.
Some polyamorous BDSMers have very different rules about
having sex with outsiders, as opposed to doing BDSM with outsiders. For
example, during the time when I was considering a transition to polyamory, I
myself had a couple relationships where we were sexually monogamous — yet my
partners agreed that I could do BDSM with people who weren’t my partner. Those
particular partners felt jealous and threatened by the idea of me having sex
with another man, but they didn’t mind if I did BDSM with another man. Maybe
the feelings of those partners only arose because they categorized “BDSM” and
“sex” into weirdly different socially-constructed ways … but those partners’
feelings were nonetheless real, and their feelings deserved respect.
And there are also unmistakable ways that BDSM feels different
from sex. There is something, bodily, that is just plain different about BDSM,
as opposed to sex. I often find myself thinking of “BDSM feelings” and “sexual
feelings” as flowing down two parallel channels in my head … sometimes these
channels intersect, but sometimes they’re far apart. The BDSM urge strikes me
as deeply different, separate, from the sex urge. It can be fun to combine BDSM
and sex, but there are definitely times when I want BDSM that feel very unlike
most times when I want sex.
The biggest political reason why it’s difficult to discuss
this is the way in which we currently conceptualize sexuality through
“orientations”: we have built a cultural “orientation model” focused on the
idea that ”acceptable” sexuality is “built-in”, or “innate”. Some BDSMers
consider BDSM an “orientation” — and I, myself, once found that thinking of
BDSM as an orientation was extremely helpful in coming to terms with my BDSM
desires. But one thing I don’t like about the orientation model now is that it makes
us sound like we’re apologizing. “Poor little me! It’s not my fault I’m
straight! Or a domme! Whatever!” Why would any of these things be faults in the
first place? Our bodies are our own, our experiences are our own, and our
consent is our own to give.
The orientation model is one of the cultural factors that
makes it hard to discuss sensory, sensual experiences without defaulting to
sexuality. As commenter saurus pointed out on the Feminist version of part 1 of
this post:
Sometimes I think that we have compulsions, needs or
“fetishes” that aren’t sexual, but lumping them in with sexuality is sometimes
the most convenient or socially manageable way to deal with them or get those
needs met. They might even physically arouse us for a variety of reasons, but
that might be a side effect instead of the act’s inherent nature. Which is not
to say that every act can be cleanly cleaved into “sexual” and “non-sexual” —
of course not. But I think we lack a language around these needs that doesn’t
use sexuality. I see a lot of groundbreaking work coming out of the asexual and
disability justice communities in this regard (which is just to say that I find
the folks in these groups are churning out some incredible ways to “queer”
conventional dominant ideas about sexuality; not that they never have sex or
whatever).
I think one answer to that is to just open up the definition
of sexuality to include these things, but as someone who identifies vehemently
not as “sex positive” but as “sex non-judgmental”, I know I don’t personally
want all my shit to be lumped in with sexuality. It just makes me picture some
sex judgmental person insisting that “oh, that’s totally sexual.”
I, Clarisse, can certainly attest that it’s common for
people to have BDSM encounters that are “just” BDSM — “no sex involved”. For
example — an encounter where one partner whips the other, or gets whipped, and
there’s no genital contact or even discussion of genitals. (I’ve written about
such encounters several times, like in my post on communication case studies.)
And I’d like to stress that when I have encounters like that, they can be very
satisfying without involving sex. The release — the high — I get from a heavy
BDSM encounter can be its own reward.
I’ve also had BDSM encounters where I got turned on …
… but I didn’t feel turned on until later, or afterwards, or
until my partner did something specific to draw out my desire. For example — I
remember that in one intense BDSM encounter as a domme, I wound up the
encounter and pulled away from my partner. We had both been sitting down; I
stood up and took off the metal claws I’d been using to rip him up. (Secretly,
the claws were banjo picks. Do-It-Yourself BDSM is awesome.)
Then I leaned over my partner to pick something up. I had
thought we were pretty much done, but he seized me as I leaned over, and he
pulled me close and kissed my neck, and I literally gasped in shock. My sexual
desire spiked so hard … I practically melted into his arms. And yet if you’d
asked me, moments before, whether I was turned on … I would have said “no”.
One way to think about it might be that sometimes, BDSM
“primes” me so that I’m more receptive to sexual energy. It’s not that BDSM is
exactly a sexual turn-on in itself; sometimes it is, but that’s actually
surprisingly rare. Yet BDSM often … gets my blood flowing? … and seems to “open
the floodgates”, so sexual hormones can storm through my body.
And just in case this wasn’t complex enough for you … on the
other hand, I’ve had BDSM encounters where my partner tried to take it sexual,
and I wasn’t interested. It’s almost like there’s a BDSM cycle that I often get
into, and once the cycle is sufficiently advanced, I can’t easily shift out of
it.
Sometimes, when I’m near the “peak” of the BDSM cycle, then
being interrupted for any reason — sex, or anything else — is absolutely
horrible. I’d rather be left on the edge of orgasm, burning with sexual desire,
than be hurt until I almost cry. The emotion becomes a stubborn lump in my
throat; becomes balled up in my chest. At times like that, it almost feels hard
to breathe.
A while back, a reporter named Mac McClelland who worked in
Haiti made a splash by writing an article about how she used “violent sex” to
ease her Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. I briefly reported on the article for Feminist,
but at the time, I didn’t share many of my thoughts about what she wrote. One
thing I did say was that the reporter didn’t use any BDSM terminology — at
least not that I spotted. She didn’t seem to conceptualize her desire for
“violent sex” as a BDSM thing at all. Interestingly, a Feminist commenter named
Jadey, who has experience with kink, also didn’t conceptualize the reporter’s
article that way. Jadey wrote:
I don’t think she’s bad or wrong, and I don’t think her
method of coping with her PTSD is bad or wrong. … [Yet] I’ve got a kink/BDSM
background, but that’s not what she’s describing here. She’s talking about
something far different, and I can’t understand the experience she describes
with Isaac. It is … incomprehensible.
I want to stress here that I, Clarisse Thorn, have never
been diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. (And I’ve undergone plenty
of analysis, so I’m sure that if I had PTSD, someone would have noticed by
now.) And just in case it needs to be said again, I’ll also stress that I have
no intention of telling anyone else how to define their own experiences. And
just in case it needs to be said again, there is a big difference between consenting
BDSM and abuse; here is an article I’ve written about the distinction between
consenting BDSM and abuse.
But unlike Jadey, when I read the original “violent sex”
article, the reporter’s description of her encounter sounded a lot like some of
my preferences … indeed, it sounded like some of the BDSM encounters I’ve had.
For example, the reporter writes:
“Okay,” my partner said. “I love you, okay?” I said, I know,
okay. And with that he was on me, forcing my arms to my sides, then pinning
them over my head, sliding a hand up under my shirt when I couldn't stop him.
The control I’d lost made my torso scream with anxiety; I cried out desperately
as I kicked myself free. … When I got out from under him and started to
scramble away, he simply caught me by a leg or an upper arm or my hair and
dragged me back. By the time he pinned me by my neck with one forearm so I was
forced to use both hands to free up space between his elbow and my windpipe,
I’d largely exhausted myself.
And just like that, I’d lost. It’s what I was looking for,
of course. But my body — my hard-fighting, adrenaline-drenched body — reacted
by exploding into terrible panic. … I did not enjoy it in the way a person
getting screwed normally would. But as it became clear that I could endure it,
I started to take deeper breaths. And my mind stayed there, stayed present even
when it became painful …. My body felt devastated but relieved; I’d lost, but
survived. After he climbed off me, he gathered me up in his arms. I broke into
a thousand pieces on his chest, sobbing so hard that my ribs felt like they
were coming loose.
… Isaac pulled my hair away from my wet face, repeating over
and over and over something that he probably believed but that I had to
relearn. “You are so strong,” he said. “You are so strong. You are so strong.”
Sounds extremely familiar to me.
Now, it’s not like I have BDSM encounters like that all the
time; indeed, experiences of that type are relatively rare for me. But the
reporter’s description doesn't sound “far different” from what I've experienced. Certainly not “incomprehensible”. There’s only one big difference,
actually: I've never had such an intense BDSM experience in which my partner
also had penis-in-vagina sex with me. (I’m assuming the reporter means “penis-in-vagina”
sex when she talks about “getting screwed”, but I could be wrong.)
Honestly, I’m not sure why I would want to combine vaginal
sex with an experience like that. Vaginal sex strikes me, personally, as kinda
incidental to what I’d get out of it. But maybe I’ll try it sometime and it’ll
be the greatest thing in the world; we'll see, I guess.
Sometimes I find that I’ve still got a “BDSM versus sex”
distinction to work out, although I seem to have comfortably settled into the
frameworks I've created. One of my very first blog entries, back in 2008, was
called “Casual Sex? Casual Kink?“, and I spent the whole thing musing about
whether I was more or less okay with casual BDSM than I was with casual sex.
These days, I find that I’m kinda okay with both casual sex
and casual BDSM, but I much prefer those experiences within intimate
relationships. Make no mistake, my friends: BDSM can include a great deal of
love and connection … at least as much as sex.
To hammer the point home, let me tell you about what
happened after I broke up with a much-beloved ex-boyfriend: Mr. Inferno. It was
back when I was very focused on being monogamous with my partners. Mr. Inferno
broke up with me, and a month or two later I had the chance to have an
overnight BDSM encounter with another man, so I took it. There was no genital
contact; the whole encounter was limited to this guy giving me orders, and
hurting me until I cried.
But I remember, even as I slipped into the familiar
emotional cycle, that I couldn't let go: I couldn't let go because I felt like
I was betraying Mr. Inferno. He’d broken my heart, but on some level I felt
like I still belonged to him. It was wrong, wrong, wrong for me to cry in
someone else’s arms. The wrongness rang through me like a bell. It was so
impossible, unbearable — all I could think was how it should have been Mr.
Inferno. I choked on the tears. I couldn't lose myself in them.
Later, I mentioned to my partner that one of my
ex-boyfriends (not Mr. Inferno) had trouble dealing with my BDSM desires. “Ah,”
my partner said. “That explains why you had trouble letting yourself cry.” I
decided to nod; to let him think he knew what was blocking me off. It seemed
simpler.
In the morning, I had breakfast with my partner. We hugged
and split up, and I went for a walk until I found a local creek. I sat next to
the creek and I closed my eyes and I let the helpless tears slip down my
cheeks.
I’d felt (and I’d known others who felt) this way after the
dissolution of a sexual relationship. But I had never imagined that such a
reaction of intense bodily loyalty could apply to BDSM as well as sex. I hadn't anticipated that I’d feel such heartbreaking, visceral loss just because I let
another man hurt me.
So different, and yet so the same.
~ Clarisse Thorn - 14th OCT 2011 ~
BDSM versus Sex, Part 1: Divide and Conquer
This beautiful article in taken from Clarisse Thorn's Blog - http://clarissethorn.com
BDSM versus Sex, Part 1: Divide and Conquer
Every once in a while, someone will ask me a question about
something BDSM-related that I feel “done with”; I feel like I did all my
thinking about those topics, years ago. But it’s still useful to get those
questions today, because it forces me to try and understand where my head was
at, three to seven years ago. It forces me to calibrate my inner processes. I
often think of these questions as the “simple” ones, or the “101″ questions,
because they are so often addressed in typical conversation among BDSMers. Then
again, lots of people don’t have access to a BDSM community, or aren’t
interested in their local BDSM community for whatever reason. Therefore, it’s
useful for me to cover those “simple” questions on my blog anyway.
Plus, just because a question is simple doesn’t mean the
question is not interesting.
One such question is the “BDSM versus sex” question. Is BDSM
always sex? Is it always sexual? A lot of people see BDSM as something that
“always” includes sex, or is “always sexual in some way”. In the documentary
“BDSM: It’s Not What You Think!“, one famous BDSM writer is quoted saying
something like: “I would say that Eros is always involved in BDSM, even if the
participants aren’t doing anything that would look sexual to non-BDSMers.”
But a lot of other people see BDSM, and the BDSM urge, as
something that doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with sex — that is
separate from sex.
I see two sides to this question: the political side, and
the “how does it feel?” side. Both sides are intertwined; when it comes to sex,
politics can’t help shaping our experiences (and vice versa). I acknowledge
this. And yet even when I try to account for that, there is still something
deeply different about the way my body feels my BDSM urges, as opposed to how
my body feels sexual urges. I don’t think that those bodily differences could
ever quite go away, no matter how my mental angle on those processes changed.
This post is about the political side. Several days after I
wrote this post, I followed up with a post about the bodily side. But first ….
The Political Side of BDSM versus Sex
“BDSM versus sex” could be viewed as a facet of that
constant and irritating question — “What is sex, anyway?” I’ve always found
that the more you look at the line between “what is sex” and “what is not sex”,
the more blurred the line becomes.
For example, no one can agree about what words like “slut”
or “whore” actually mean. As another example, recall that ridiculous national
debate that happened across America when Bill Clinton told us that he hadn’t
had sex with Monica — and then admitted to getting a blowjob from her. Is oral
sex sex? Maybe oral sex isn’t sex! Flutter, flutter, argue, argue.
It is my experience that (cisgendered, heterosexual) women
are often more likely to claim that oral sex is not sex, while (cis, het) men
are more likely to claim that oral sex is sex. I suspect this is because women
face steeper social penalties for having sex (no one wants to be labelled a
“slut”), so we are typically more motivated to claim that sex acts “don’t
count” as sex … whereas men are usually congratulated for having sex (more
notches on the bedpost!), so men are typically more motivated to claim that sex
acts “count” as sex. (Unless they’re Bill Clinton.)
So we already have this weird ongoing debate, about what
“qualifies” as sex. And you throw in fetishes such as BDSM, and everyone gets
confused all over again. A cultural example of this confusion came up in 2009,
when a bunch of professional dominatrixes got arrested in New York City … for
being dominatrixes … which everyone previously believed was legal. Flutter,
flutter, argue, argue, and it turns out that “prostitution” (which is illegal
in New York) is defined as “sexual conduct for money”.
But what does “sexual conduct” mean? At least one previous
court had set the precedent that BDSM-for-pay is not the same as “sexual
conduct for money” … and yet, in 2009, the Manhattan District Attorney’s office
decided that “sexual conduct” means “anything that is arousing to the participants”
… and then decided that this suddenly meant they ought to go arrest
dominatrixes. It’s not clear why the Manhattan DA did not, then, also begin
arresting strippers. And what about random vanilla couples on a standard
date-type thing, where the woman makes eyes at the man over dinner, and the man
pays for the meal? Sounds like “sexual conduct for money” to me. Which could
totally be prostitution, folks, so watch your backs.
In his piece “Is There Such A Thing As Kinky Sex?“, Dr.
Marty Klein says that:
If practicing kinky sex makes you “other”, not one of “us”,
if it has non-sexual implications, if it means you’re defective or dangerous —
who wants that? And so as “kinky sex” and its practitioners are demonized,
everyone is concerned — am I one of “those people”? It makes people fear their
fantasies or curiosity, which then acquire too much power. It leads to secrecy
between partners, as people withhold information about their preferences or
experiences.
… I’d like to destroy the idea of binary contrast — that
kinky and non-kinky sex are clearly different. Instead, I suggest that kinky
and vanilla sex are parts of a continuum, the wide range of human eroticism. We
all slide side to side along that continuum during our lives, sometimes in a
single week. We don’t need to fear our fantasies, curiosity, or (consensual)
sexual preferences. They don’t make us bad or different, just human. Some
people like being emotional outlaws. They’ll always find a way to get the
frisson of otherness. But most people don’t want to live that way. So ending
kink’s status as dangerous and wrong, and its practitioners as “other,” is the
most liberating thing we can do — for everyone.
That’s certainly reasonable from a political standpoint.
I’ve made similar arguments. (Some folks, such as the brilliant male submissive
writer may, also argue against the common idea that “kink” is limited to
“BDSM”; they prefer an expansive definition of “kink” that denotes a vaster
cornucopia of sexuality.)
Plus, I even suspect that a lot of the distinctions made by
BDSMers ourselves are based far more on stigma than sense. For example, when I
was younger, I went through a period where I couldn’t stand to have the word
“submissive” applied to myself. I insisted that I was into BDSM solely for the
physical sensation, and swore I would never ever do something solely
submission-oriented (such as wearing a collar). It was like I could only handle
BDSM as long as I distanced myself from the power elements; the power elements
carried too much stigma in my head for me to acknowledge them … yet.
I also used to carefully separate “BDSM” from “sex” in my
head. Part of me felt like, “If my desire for pain and power is sexual, then
it’s weird. If it’s not sexual, then it’s less weird.” (It looks strange when I
type it, now, but I guess that’s how sexual stigma works: it rarely holds up
against the clear light of day.) It took me a while to integrate sexuality into
my BDSM practice. In contrast, I once met a couple who told me that it took
them a long time to do BDSM that wasn’t part of sex. In their heads, the
thought was more like: “If the desire for pain and power is sexual, then it’s
not weird. But if it’s not sexual, then it’s really weird.”
I’ve heard of plenty of dungeons where sex is not allowed —
sometimes for legal reasons, but sometimes because there is actually a social
standard against it: people are like, “Dude, let’s not get our nice pure BDSM
all dirty by including sex.” (Note: My experience is primarily with dungeons
owned by “lifestyle” BDSMers — “lifestyle” being a clumsy word that attempts to
denote those of us who are motivated to do BDSM for reasons other than money.
While there is some overlap between “lifestyle” BDSM and professional BDSM, the
overlap can be surprisingly rare, and professional BDSM is often banned at
lifestyle BDSM parties. Lifestyle dungeons are often non-profit organizations,
and often function more like community centres than moneymaking venues. I
understand that some professional dungeons have a “no sex” rule out of a desire
to protect the boundaries of dominatrixes who work there, who may not wish to
be asked to engage in sex.)
There are also plenty of cultural groups who do things that
look suspiciously like BDSM … who insist that they have nothing to do with
BDSM. For example, I’ve heard of spanking clubs whose members get really mad if
you dare bring BDSM up in their presence.
And then there’s groups like Taken In Hand, a
quasi-conservative organization. Actual testimonial from the Taken In Hand
site:
There are lots of websites for people in the BDSM, D/s, DD
(domestic discipline) and spanking communities. There are websites for people
who belong to religions that advocate male-head-of-household marriage. There
are even websites for Christians who are interested in BDSM. But there are very
few websites for people who are interested in male-led intimate relationships
but who are not interested in all that the above communities associate with
this kind of relationship (jargon, clothes, etc.) Some of us don’t even like
thinking of this as a lifestyle.
Well, my friend, you know what … you can refuse to call
yourself BDSM all you want, and you can reject our “jargon” all you want, and
you can “dislike” thinking of this “lifestyle” until the end of time … and you
have every right to insist that we have nothing to do with you. But when your
site has posts that include comments like “When my husband behaves in a
dominant manner I basically swoon,” or have titles like “Don’t forget your
whip,” well … I’m just saying.
Also, since you mention rejecting BDSM “clothes”? I’ll just
say that I can be an astoundingly badass domme in a t-shirt. And I have done
so. Multiple times.
Personally, I am particularly frustrated by the stigmatizing
idea that BDSM has nothing to do with love. Sometimes I encounter this idea
that BDSM has to be separated from sex because BDSM has nothing to do with sex,
whereas sex supposedly “should” be about love. The truth is that both BDSM and
sex are very different for different people, emotions-wise. Although many
people experiment with “casual BDSM”, the same way many people experiment with
“casual sex”, a stereotype that BDSMers cannot find love in the act is wrong
and absurd. (There’s even an actual study that found that positive, consensual
BDSM increases intimacy.)
So yeah. Nowadays, many of these “BDSM versus sex” reactions
strike me as being born out of pure, irrational stigma. As Dr. Klein noted,
these reactions are usually born of the terrible human urge to exclude: to find
ways to differentiate ourselves from “those people”. Humans apparently love to
think things like: “I’m not like those people. It doesn’t matter if I, for
example, write extensive rape fantasy fiction! That couldn’t possibly be BDSM!
Because I’m not a BDSMer! Because BDSM is dirty.”
But we shouldn’t necessarily blame people for this instinct
to reject and categorize: the instinct is one that comes from being scared and
oppressed … because the social penalties for “getting it wrong” are high.
Remember, those New York City dominatrixes thought they were “safe” from the
law as long as BDSM didn’t count as sex. But as soon as someone decided BDSM
“counted as” sex, those dominatrixes were arrested.
It’s just one more example of how sexual stigma for
“different kinds of sex” is constantly intertwined. No type of consensual
sexuality can express itself freely until people agree that “among consenting
adults, there is no ‘should’.” The Romans, those ancient imperialists, used to
say: “Divide and conquer.” When consensual sexualities are scared of each
other, we will continue to be conquered. As long as “vanilla” people are afraid
of “BDSM” … as long as “BDSMers” are afraid of being seen as “sexual” … as long
as the social penalties for being a “slut” or a “whore” are incredibly steep …
as long as sex workers are stigmatized and criminalized … everyone will be
bound by these oppressive standards.
~ Clarisse Thorn - 9th OCT 2011 ~
22 Oct 2012
Reading and Berkshire Top Dominatrix
Sinful & Wicked Mistress Lady Leyla
Who I see:
- MEN & WOMEN
- TS / CD
- NOVICE & EXPERIENCED
- COUPLES
- THOSE WISHING TO LEARN AND EXPERIMENT
- SESSIONS AVAILABLE AT MY DUNGEON OR AT PRIVATE RESIDENCE / HOTEL
I am an alpha Female. Strong and confident with a desire to
dominate and control. Powerful yet playful. Sinful, wicked and sadistic yet
sensual, sophisticated and intelligent. You will kneel and grovel. You will
plead for me to stop - I will be in your mind ALWAYS. You will not be able to
dismiss thoughts of me easily. My work is an art - you my canvas.
I adore glamour and beauty. I absolutely relish whole
sessions around being dressed and pampered by my slave. I love my feet being
worshiped and my toenails pedicured. I might order my slaves to lie down and
then crush them with my gorgeous stilettos.
I love cross-dressers, slaves who dress like tarts please me
because I love treating them like little sluts with a dildo and nipple torture.
Animal training is entertaining, Doggies are my favourite
and I will make you sit, stay, fetch, carry and roll over. And good, well
behaved doggies deserve treats and walkies. Exploring imagination, finesse and
responsibility along with the principles of safety, sanity and consent are the key elements to a world of
possibilities within bondage, domination, sadism and masochism.
I take pleasure in being in control. I will manipulate
people or demand. Human psychology, kinkiness, fetishes and sissy maids intrigue me. I take pride in what
I do. I enjoy what I do. I am not a cold or cruel Mistress, I enjoy getting to know my slaves. I
particularly enjoy role play sessions and hearing about my slaves fantasies.
I am drawn to feminisation and training. I admire my
subjects embracing their feminine sides. I relish training them and help them
develop into glamorous and obedient serving divas. I want them to embrace this
aspect of their personality. There is nothing I like more than obedient sissy
maids keeping everything immaculately clean for their Mistress - In her Dungeon
overlooking Reading.
I have a seductive and sinful dungeon and from the moment
you enter my domain I expect total obedience, submission & dedication! You
are at my mercy. I EXPECT faultless obedience, submission and dedication.
I Am in control. You
WILL serve, obey and submit to me. I will NOT tolerate disobedience, time
wasting or disrespectful subs in any way.
I can suspend or withdraw your slave status at any time if
you displease me.
My services are not free – do not waste my time if you
cannot provide the monetary offerings I require.
For more info, go to MY WEBSITE
Knots 101 - Clove Hitch and Half Hitch.
Clove Hitch and Half Hitch.
These knots are two of the easiest to tie and work well when securing a rope to a bedpost. They can cut off circulation when enough pressure is applied, so they should not be used for suspension, to tie around the body, or with wrist and ankle cuffs.
Clove Hitch Using Loops
Clove Hitch Tied with Rope End
Clove Hitch Using Half Hitches
Knots 101 - Reef Knot
Square Knot (Reef Knot).
This basic knot is best suited for tying the ends of two ropes together. It is a fairly flat knot, and does not inflict as much pressure on the skin as other knots. It is a good knot to use when first tying rope for bondage or trying out BDSM
21 Oct 2012
Autogynephilia (Crossdreamers) and loneliness
How do you explain to the woman you love that you dream
about taking her role?
Living with autogynephilia can be hell, there is no doubt
about it. Here we are, living in a society that seems to judge us by our
ability to live up to masculine ideals, while we dream about being women full
time or at least about allowing our "inner woman" to be an important
part of our otherwise "manly" lives.
We love women, and we fall in love with women, and we want
to be with them, just like other men. But how do you approach women, when they
have no reason to expect anything else than a "normal" man. How do
you tell a woman that you dream about being the catcher, when she is looking
for a pitcher?
I am going to republish parts of an email I have gotten from
another autogynephiliac. Let's call him Anonymous 20+ The text expresses the
pain and the anguish that can follow from this condition. He is in his
twenties.
If you have any advice or experiences that can be of help,
please add a comment!
Teenage love and acceptance
"I am a ... male with autogynephilia along with
crossdressing. Almost all my fantasies involve identifying with the 'female'
role, though this has not precluded me from a couple of fulfilling
relationships in the past. I have had girlfriends, two of which were
serious(...). I've had sex with two partners -- both were these two serious
girlfriends. The last time was about four years ago....
My first girlfriend (let's call her FirstLove) knew about my
crossdressing and fantasies (we dated [as teenagers]). I told her , though it
was immensely painful to do so. Luckily, she accepted me for it. I kind of knew
she would because she had a big heart. We were both each other's firsts etc. I
suppose I am a fool for leaving her, but I was young and didn't know any
better. Now she is married. She used to go shopping with me for clothes, and we
had good sex and similar sex drives, and were very close to each other, she was
aware of my fantasies and even sometimes played along, so I know it's possible
to have a fulfilling relationship as an autogynephile.
Something's wrong with you
I did not tell my next girlfriend , in college. Let's call
her SmartGirl. Our relationship slowly progressed to staying at each other's
apartments, and we eventually had sex a few months in....Sometimes the sex with
SmartGirl was good though, I think partly because we were together long enough
to establish trust and build some physical chemistry, even though I didn't tell
her my fantasies...
But SmartGirl had a feeling something was up with me. I
think because later I avoided sex , partly I felt like I was hiding something
(which I was) , partly because I didn't care , and partly because I felt
"why be intimate if she could never accept the full picture?" So I
remained kind of distant. I also had to fantasize about taking the female role
to enjoy sex. And I still crossdressed by myself at my apartment....some months
later, she eventually left me because I did not make her feel 'desirable'. So she
cheated on me and left. Partly I think this was because I was not paying her
enough attention and initiating sex enough.
So I pick up and move on...- then this whole thing happens
again the next year with a third girl, let's call her ArtistGirl. That is,
ArtistGirl leaves me after telling me I didn't make her feel desirable. SAME
THING. You can imagine how I felt after that. ...
After that, I completely avoided relationships with women,
just because I became so scared about this whole thing. I was literally in
despair on and off for the past four years.
Two things kept running through my mind:
(1) I was a fool to have left FirstLove who I lost my
virginity to and the only girl who KNEW and accepted my fantasies
(2) Having the same failure happen TWICE in a row with the
next two girlfriends (SmartGirl and ArtistGirl) -- neither of whom I had the
guts to tell about my fantasies or crossdressing -- and then have them both
leave me , because I did not make them 'desirable' or 'wanted'. This made me
realize this was something on my end.
What a horrible feeling.
I literally remember the second time when ArtistGirl told me
the same thing as SmartGirl (basically, "what's wrong with you?",
"don't you enjoy sex?", "don't you want me?") I just felt
my stomach sink and my heart sink and I felt like I was going to cry. I felt
ill and the room was spinning. I thought to myself, "am I going to be
alone the rest of my life now?" I felt incredibly stupid, like I was
misleading them as to who I was , since I wasn't a 'normal' guy, I was some
damaged fuckup. Anyone who says it's easier to be gay or trans has no idea how
painful this is.
In hiding
For the past several years, I simply lived alone and
crossdressed on and off, despite my desire to have a girlfriend and to be in a
long term relationship..
Part of me just wants to say fuck it and be alone. But that
gets incredibly lonely. It's only fun for a little while. Part of me wants to
seek out a partner, but I feel like we'd have differing expectations -- what
could I offer her, and what could she possibly expect to offer me?
I mean, if a girl is attracted to the 'male' me and wants me
to be the 'top' in her fantasies, how can I possibly explain to her I am
fantasizing about being in her role? Can this even work? And further, how can I
possibly expect her to accept that *her* role is what I find sexually arousing?
I suppose FirstLove did... I mean I realize it's possible but how to go about
this? The logistics seem impossible. When to bring it up? I don't mind switching
off roles, but I just don't know how to get to that point in intimacy
anymore... I seriously wish this never happened to me.
I avoided all opportunities with women the past few years
due to an immense fear of failure and internal pain. (ie. I am damaged goods,
why should I bother, etc). Recently I decided that , well , I'm 26, I better
try to find a girlfriend if I ever want someone to accept me and to have
children with etc. If I fail, I fail, whatever I'll just live by myself and
crossdress and get on with things.
So I go out and make an effort to find a girlfriend. I've
been working out, staying fit, healthy, etc. I don't really crossdress that
much these days, maybe once every month or two. It's more the fantasies that
are the problem.
Incompatible?
Anyway, this is somewhat successful, and within a few months
I have a girl , lets call her Girl4, who is interested in me. I could now
hypothetically go over to her house whenever I wanted to sleep with her. But I
don't really want to... I do and I don't... For example, we have given each
other backrubs and explored each other's bodies somewhat. But I am scared out
of my mind. I feel like we don't know each other that well, and we have
mismatched expectations. For example, we are lying together, and she's asking
me all the things I want to do to her. She is talking dirty to me in a 'hetero'
way. I just feel so lost.
... Part of the problem here is that we have the SAME
fantasies. She wants to be the female role and to be sexually submissive. ...
She is fantasizing about me in the dominant role! I don't mind indulging this
as long as she understands where I'm coming from.. that I identify with HER
role and I am playing along for our mutual enjoyment. But obviously she doesn't
understand this . because I haven't explained it yet.
I might feel differently if I knew that we were in a
relationship and that she was committed to making things work etc at least for
a little while. Then I might feel more comfortable trying to make things work,
experimenting with my 'male/dominant' role etc. I don't mind 'switching' sexual
roles (dominant / submissive) or trying it at least, if we switch off. I might
even be able to enjoy taking the dominant role , based on identifying with her
reactions . But there is zero commitment here , and I feel she thinks I'm
something I'm not.
I explained to her when she asked that I was 50% dominant
and 50% submissive (which I suppose was misleading because I left out the 50/50
gender component), I also explained that I was nervous about being with a new
girl, it had been a few years, etc. I think she understands that I'm unusually
sensitive and understanding as a lover -- and I can also tell she really likes
it -- but I don't think she understands the full implications and all the
associated problems. I feel like I'm navigating a sea of postmodern
schizophrenic sexuality with no markers or reference points.
I am curious if I can perhaps enjoy sex with her by taking
the 'male' role , then by identifying with her in the submissive role, but then
I get back to , "well, why not just dress up by myself?" This is way
less effort and I know it's at least partially gratifying. Then I think , well
maybe I can make it work with this new girl if I explain to her my fantasies at
some point, and she is okay with it, and we switch off or something. But then
we go through the circle of maybe I should just have sex with her first, then
explain. Very confusing...
So that's where I'm at today. A potential girlfriend and I'm
scared and I just don't know what to do. ...
As for me -- I don't want a sex change, though sometimes I
fantasize about it, but I think that's just a fantasy. I am somewhat
comfortable in my male role. I don't mind leading when I have to. But I also
like to be in a female role sometimes. I feel like I'm 50% male and 50% female.
I am open to fulfilling my girlfriends fantasies if she accepts me for mine,
but reaching this level of intimacy is a catch-22. I simply don't know how to
go forward. It's much easier at this age to be alone, and it doesn't help that
I've cut myself off from female contact for four years.
Not knowing makes it easier
It was much easier when I was younger because I didn't think
about all these things. My girlfriend and I just fell in love. It didn't really
occur to me how messed up I actually was. Part of it was that we were both
virgins and I didn't think about the details. She loved me so much she didn't
care I was damaged goods. But now ... there is a completely different set of
expectations. Girls are looking for guys with alpha qualities, not damaged
goods they can fix up. On top of this, Casual sex is the norm in my peer group
-- but I find casual sex absolutely repulsive. Vanilla Sex in general I don't
even find arousing.
I did enjoy sex with my first girlfriend, but this was
because I trusted her immensely and we loved and took care of each other. Part
of it was also I could get away with autogynephilic fantasizing and my first
love didn't seem to care. She even played along because she loved me. But now I
seem to need to establish a high level of intimacy before I can perform and
even enjoy sex because I'm so scared about the extent of my fantasies. Hell I
don't even care that much about sex. It's more about giving my partner what she
likes , and in return she loves and accepts me.
Two failed relationships though have really made me worried
that I'm too damaged for this anymore.
So I have no idea what to do. Whether I should keep trying
to find a partner, whether I should just give up and spare myself the pain, how
I should proceed , whether I should explain myself up front, whether I should
try to have sex first and then explain myself, how other autogynephiles
approach their sex life, etc.
Anonymous 20+
For More Information about, or an understanding of Autogynephilia (Crossdreamers) please see:
13 Oct 2012
Queen Of Darkness
A poem by Submissive David R.
From the darkness divinity arises, Her beauty eternal
Slender beams of radiance enter
this darkened chamber as I kneel
always a slave, always silent,
frozen here.
My dread grows as the hand of love and pain
falls against my naked soul.
It wounds me, and darkly my
essence drips
to the wicked earth that is my prison.
In pain I beg forgiveness
while the Queen of darkness surrounds me.
Now alone, my cry of mercy falls upon darkened eyes.
This is my salvation.
11 Oct 2012
5 Oct 2012
Five BASIC Types of Submission
1. Fetish bottom:
“I worship your boots and want to serve
them.”Fetish bottoms differ from other types of fetishist in that the object
they eroticise is associated with a top. They are almost invariably male, and
in the pure form have little need to interact with the top or to submit their
will in real life encounters.
2. Masochist:
“I want you to use the needles
tonight.”Masochists take things a step further and grant the top authority to
subject them to pain or humiliation, or perhaps to physical control such as
bondage. However, the dynamic of these scenes is still one of equality, and it
is clear that everything is done for mutual gratification.
3. Roleplay submissive:
“Can I be the
Girl-Caught-Shoplifting tonight?”This involves assuming roles for a temporary
scene (from a few hours up to a few days) which would normally be associated
with inequality and with one person having power or authority over the other:
for example, a store detective blackmailing a shoplifter into obeying him.
However, it is understood that the goal of the scene is direct mutual
satisfaction for both top and bottom (eg, that the “shoplifter’s” desire to be
held down, “ravished” and sworn at is catered to.)
4. Servant:
“What can I do for you now, Sir?”This can
sometimes be difficult to distinguish from a long term relationship involving
role-play submission. However, the essential feature of a servant or service
orientated submissive / bottom is their desire to do things purely for their
top’s benefit (literally, to serve.) Hence, a servant may derive great
satisfaction from doing housework at the top’s home. Nevertheless, this kind of
service is voluntary and is an example of “ongoing voluntary submission”. The
bottom constantly chooses to stay and to serve, even if that choice is just
implicit in their continued presence and obedience.
5. Slave:
“You have the authority to decide things for me,
Master.” A slave differs from other types of bottom in that they have no
(enforceable) rights with respect to the top. In particular, they cannot remove
themselves from the relationship, and cannot themselves chose to impose
restrictions on what is done to them. This lack of rights in the face of the
top’s acknowledged authority over them constitutes ownership. The difference
between a servant and a slave can be summarised by: “Ownership rather than
obedience is the defining quality of slavery; obedience rather than ownership
is the defining quality of submission.”
COURTESY OF: http://bdsmeducation.tumblr.com/
4 Oct 2012
1 Oct 2012
A chosen profession. - Part 1
Part 1:
Occasionally, very occasionally I wonder if my chosen profession
is a good one. The thoughts usually come from self doubt, ideas instilled in my
mind from youth and a general quietness on the business front.
I question the reasons for my career choice, whether I am a
good dominatrix, if I am too hard or too soft. Sometimes I have to remind myself
that, for whatever reason I have chosen this path, it is, like every other
profession, a job - albeit, with sadistic differences - it pays the bills.
In my years as a professional domme, I have met many
Mistresses and Masters. Some 'live' the life 24/7, some pretend to live the
life, some see it as a means to an end and don't enjoy their work. Others, like
myself, don't live a 24/7 BDSM lifestyle, yet enjoy and relish their work.
I chose not to like a 24/7 BDSM lifestyle because I am not wholly
one character or personality. In private, I am quite shy, enjoy my own company
and would rather spend a Sunday afternoon tending to my plants in my garden or
rescuing insects, bugs and other creatures from natural disasters. I find the
company of animals far more satisfying than the company of humans - I don't
have a high regard for the human race. That doesn't mean I'm with Greenpeace or
wear open toed sandals with my socks either. This is just part of who I am - a
complex individual - one who enjoys solitude, philosophy, politics, educating
the mind and meditation.
But, there is the side of me which is sadistic, wicked
and controlling. When I was very young, my family used to laugh at my two
distinct characteristics - the gentle and the wicked - blaming it on generations of "Anatolian
warrior blood" from my mother's side. Maybe so..who knows. That is why I
am comfortable with who I am in the dungeon, relish it and feed off it - but
choose solitude at home.
Part 2: ..... soon
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