An article to read & Review
Welcome to Mistress Leyla’s Blog Here you’ll find in-depth articles to help create a real BDSM lifestyle. Obedience, submission and loyalty essential requirements.
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25 Nov 2017
11 Nov 2017
BDSM Is Not an Answer, So Embrace the Uncertainty
"In art, one must throw one’s life away in order to gain it."
Gustav Janosch – Conversations with Kafka (https://www.amazon.com/Conversations-Kafka-Second-Directions-Paperbook/dp/081121950X/)
I think there are many different motivations for seeking out BDSM play or a BDSM relationship dynamic:
• a drive to satisfy kinks or fetishes
• novelty
• escape from societal constraints
• sense of purpose
• a sense of completion from someone with complementary traits and I’m sure there are many other reasons.
I’m personally not self-aware enough to know what drives me to seek out M/s, SM and the variety of kinks I explore. It would be nice to understand it, but it is probably a complex mix of all of the above.
What I am aware enough to do is accept the attraction and harness it for personal growth.
EMBRACING FEAR AND UNCERTAINTY
American Tibetan Buddhist nun and teacher Pema Chödrön writes in When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times: (https://www.amazon.com/When-Things-Fall-Apart-Anniversary/dp/1611803438/)
"Fear is a universal experience. Even the smallest insect feels it. We wade in the tidal pools and put our finger near the soft, open bodies of sea anemones and they close up. Everything spontaneously does that. It’s not a terrible thing that we feel fear when faced with the unknown. It is part of being alive, something we all share. We react against the possibility of loneliness, of death, of not having anything to hold on to. Fear is a natural reaction to moving closer to the truth."
Is it Topping from the Bottom?
No-one is
going to deny that Tops need feedback in a scene. This commonly includes the
bottom communicating needs, discomfort and safety concerns. or communicating
and processing their feelings in aftercare.
At the
same time, a basic working definition of topping from the bottom might be: “an
attempt by the bottom to steer play or the power exchange in a direction they
want”.
The
distinction might be clear to you, and I do think that each of us can make that
distinction in our own encounters, but laying down firm boundaries between the
two is difficult, and communicating to our partner where that boundary is is
even more difficult.
In a
scene, if a bottom were to say “I think that would feel more intense in bent
over position than upright” is that feedback? In many people’s dynamic it is.
Or is it an attempt to top? In many people’s dynamic it is.
IS THERE
A CONSENSUAL AGREEMENT?
Drawing a
boundary between feedback and topping from the bottom rests on an assumption
that there is a mutual understanding of what communication we, personally,
consider good or bad. Effectively, we are saying that topping from the bottom
is communication that violates that agreement.
29 Oct 2017
14 Oct 2017
Is it Topping from the Bottom?
Is it Topping from the Bottom?
No-one is going to deny that Tops need feedback in a scene. This commonly includes the bottom communicating needs, discomfort and safety concerns. or communicating and processing their feelings in aftercare. At the same time, a basic working definition of topping from the bottom might be: "an attempt by the bottom to steer play or the power exchange in a direction they want".
Is it Topping from the Bottom?
2 Oct 2017
BDSM: Mental Health and the Issue of Consent
Consent is the important red line that exists between BDSM
and abuse, and it is important that we see that such a line matters. It’s the
basis for negotiating the distance and intimacies we allow when we let others
approach our body, and our mind.
YOU OWN YOUR LINES OF CONSENT
There is a misconception that there is only one red line of
consent, a kind of universal experience, but in the real world each individual
will have their own red lines and ways of negotiating these. Some people see
being hugged as a breach of consent, others hug strangers without giving it a
second thought.
When you interact with others, you need to see your own red
lines as well as your partner’s. You need to monitor both those lines and keep
adjusting your actions accordingly, and that monitoring is continuous. What
might be off limits at one time is not necessarily off limits at another time,
what is no-go with one person might be OK with another, and any mind-altering
substance (such as alcohol or drugs) can give a dangerous false sense of where
the lines are and need to be carefully accounted for.
MENTAL HEALTH AND CONSENT
The interplay between mental health issues and consent
affects who is responsible and how to form better negotiations.
29 Sept 2017
Can BDSM be a form of therapy?
Can BDSM be a form of therapy? Is it therapeutic? What do we
actually mean when we use the words “therapy” and “therapeutic”?
Therapy means different things to different people. For
individuals dealing with mental illness, therapy can be akin to physiotherapy,
except happening in the mind. We need to stretch the mind in a correct and
suitable manner so our mind can function normally in daily life.
Therapeutic can also mean different things to different
people, but many people use the word to refer to some kind of de-stressing
process. Something that can leave us feeling energised, satisfied, relaxed and
healing.
BDSM activities often involve power, violence, and
behaviours that are outside of everyday normal activities. It provides a space
for individual to engage in transgression that can unlock and free up repressed
areas. Having access to a space of personal (emotional and physical) freedom
can be therapeutic for some people.
Sadomasochistic practices, in particular, have been
discussed as a kind of self-help, in the sense that they hold the potential to
transform an individual by providing a window into his or her identity. Andrea
Beckmann addresses these ‘transformative potentials’ (Beckmann, 2001: 80) of
sadomasochistic activities in her study of practitioners of consensual SM in
London; she makes the point that, for some individuals, SM provides a space
that ‘allows for a more ‘‘authentic’’ (as founded on experience) relation to
‘‘self’’ and others.
(Beckmann, 2009: 91).” – (Lindemann, 2011) from Sage Journal
In BDSM as Therapy, Lindemann’s article in Sage Journal
(linked to at the end of this article), the author outline four overlapping
types of “therapeutic” experiences that may be discovered in the process of
engaging with BDSM activities:
- as healthful alternatives to sexual repression
- as atonement rituals
- as mechanisms for gaining control over prior trauma
- and (in the case of ‘humiliation sessions’) as processes through which clients experience psychological revitalization through shame
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