BDSM has long been a sticking point in our popular views on
sex and sexual health. What is it really? Why do people practise it? Who
practises it? Once heavily stigmatized, it has begun to make more frequent
appearances on the pop culture scene.
Yet many misconceptions still exist – one of the most common
involving mental health. Why do some people enjoy BDSM more than others, and
does it reveal anything about our psychology?
BDSM is currently listed in the newest Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) as a paraphilia – an unusual sexual fixation. But a recent study offers a different view. In fact, it reports, practitioners of BDSM actually score better on certain indicators of psychological wellbeing than those who have exclusively ‘vanilla’ sex.
But first, an important question: What is BDSM really?
Breaking Down BDSM
BDSM is a sexual practice that revolves around the four
fetishes of bondage, dominance, sadism and masochism. It does not have to
involve all four. One partner plays the dominant role, while the other is
submissive.
It is often associated with whips and chains, but can also
be subtler; role-playing, blindfolding or tying up your partner can qualify as
light BDSM.
Most importantly, BDSM is consensual. Despite its
dominant-submissive aspect, BDSM is practiced between two consenting partners
as a way to explore sexually.
Testing BDSM
BDSM’s label as a disorder does not sit well with many
practitioners, particularly because no evidence has been found to suggest that
enjoying sex with a side of pain is linked to psychological problems. In fact,
this recent University of the Netherlands study suggests just the opposite.
Both BDSM practitioners and vanilla (non-BDSM) participants
filled out questionnaires on personality, sensitivity to rejection, style of
attachment in relationships and well-being. None were informed of its purpose.
The results
The results revealed that BDSM practitioners were:
- More open to new experiences
- More conscientious
- Less neurotic, a trait marked by anxiety
- They scored lower than the general public on rejection sensitivity (in other words, how paranoid one is about others disliking them), and
- They reported more secure feelings of attachment in their relationships
- Regardless of preference for dominance or submission, no practitioner scored lower than vanilla respondents on the scale of wellbeing – most scored higher.
The researchers couldn’t explain this trend, but speculated
that it might have something to do with better awareness about one’s sexual
needs, which causes less frustration in bed. Accepting unusual preferences may
also require hard psychological work and reflection, which eventually
translates into a stronger and healthier psychological wellbeing.
SOURCE: LINK
SOURCE: LINK
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