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Just posted this in my blog. But I'll post it here as well, as I'm interested to hear your views on it (if I break any written or unwritten laws of etiquette I beg your pardon).
I recently read a good article on how to spot a ‘creepy dom’. <snip>
The kind who doesn’t play by SSC, doesn’t care if what he does truly hurts his sub… the abuser in the guise of a dominant.
Would you be interested in a discussion on what constitutes abuse? It can be hard to pinpoint.
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It’s the image which kept me from the lifestyle for years. I’ve long known that I got off – a lot! – on women submitting and in pain way before I accepted this was a part of me that was ok. I was afraid of the creepy dom,
just like I guess anyone in the lifestyle should be My fear was that I was afraid that legitimizing my cravings in stating that ‘yes I’m into consensual bdsm’ was just a way of hiding abuse under the disguise of being part of a sexual minority. In short I was afraid that I might be a creepy dom, that the nice guy I usually am were looking for an ‘out’, an ‘excuse’ to shed the bonds of decency and conscience and abuse women.
I got into this whole thing through fantasies of non-consent, rape, and the wrong kind of porn where the objective is giving the girl ‘more than she can take’ (or looking like it at least – have you noticed how a lot of ‘nilla porn is much more abusive than the kinky stuff?) Gradually I discovered the ‘lifestyle’ and being a generally liberal guy I’ve never ever had trouble accepting that others could be into it, and that it could be consensual and beneficial for all parties and so on. But that I should be into it was another matter; were my motives as pure as they should be?
Can you define what pure motives are?
I know you said these issues are in the past, but seeing that you are not at all the only one having or havng had these thoughts and doubts, it might be worth talking about.
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I’m over this now (you guys here are among those who helped me with that!). Falling in love with a sub, and being loved back, helped. Finding out that I didn’t want, or get off from, submissive girls ruined for my amusement helped. Finding out that I deeply cared about the women ready to trust me with their submission, and that I was able to help and support them in our mutual exploration of their submission, helped a lot.
Helped - but did not entirely dispel these doubts??
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In a matter of months this part of me went from my dirty secrets to one of the things about me I’m most happy about.
Great!!
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I still get off on a whole lot of things I don’t approve off, I still have fantasies that should remain fantasies.
Would it be wrong for me to ask more specifically what they are? I know that a lot of people - myself included - get off on fantasies that would be impossible/unthinkable in real life. Sometimes a talk about where the bounderies are is worth while.
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But I’ve found that my way of practicing my sadism has a whole different effect than those fantasies; the fantasies are nice up to the point when I’ve jacked off. What I’ve been and done with my girls I can smile of whether horny or not.
Is that good? It is good, isn't it? But would you like to do more?
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By now this is mostly ancient history. What makes me bring this up is this relationship between our fantasies, our conscience and the lifestyle. As I see it BDSM is at its core about the marriage of emancipation and conscience. It most certainly was the central question for me at least.
BDSM is the marriage of emancipation and conscience. Well put! :-)
Have you found that balance?
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On the one hand we insist that we should be free to get off on whatever we want without feeling ashamed of it. And we should be ready to respect others who get off on things we don’t. On the other hand we have our creeds of SSC or RACK; we may be raging perverts, but we will keep it within the limits of reason and consent, safe and sane and consensual.
Do you see a conflict here?
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Interestingly those principles weren’t what got me to accept my own lifestyle. They certainly made me less worried about others being into this, but again my own motivation was what did it for me.
Excuse me if I am slow or go too close - but may I ask what motivations?
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I guess my problem with SSC and RACK is that you can easily do things that come of as safe and consensual in a fundamentally abusive relationship. The kind of creepy dom that I was afraid off might well obtain the consent of his girl, he might well stay in line with all the obvious safety-precautions needed not to outright hurt the girl (on the physical, short term, level), and he might even argue the saneness of the relationship on the grounds of both parties ‘wanting it’.
What you say here important I think. So it seems to me that the question that keeps floating about is: given that we have no manual here, how do we know if we are doing the right things, if our motives are pure, that we are sensible doms and sensible subs, where are the limits?
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One problem is that there are girls out there claiming to ‘want’ abuse. Browse most fetish dating sites and you’ll find the ads by ‘girls’ stating they want no SSC, no limits, no humanity…
Oh yes! And even more men!
What if they do actually want it? Is it possible that someone can want that, and not be a damaged person?
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I put ‘girls’ in citation marks since I believe (and somewhat hope) that a good portion of such profiles are by someone very different from what they claim to be. Men, or women, who simply get off by writing out the fantasy of a girl wanting this kind of life of ‘pure slavery’.
Fantasies are truly different from realities for a lot of us. But it would certainly be better if people put their fantasies in the stories section instead of giving out false signals - if they know they are only fantasies, I mean.
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But I’m afraid there are some out there who are ready to believe that a life of being treated as nothing but an object of someone else’s pleasure is what they truly must seek.
Must seek? Do you mean as in a compulsory behaviour?
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I guess there are several reasons for that. One I experienced soon after accepting this lifestyle is the ‘now I want it ALL’-approach…
Yes, this starvation can be a problem for both sides, surely. Patience and common sense can be difficult.
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accepting that one is kinky can get so obsessing that nothing else in life seems to really matter.
Yep, been talked about a lot here.
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One of my subby friends did that; became slave not long after turning 18 in a relationship escalating towards where she got cut off from her family…
And that is a clear marker of abuse! One of the few.
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luckily she ran and ran well and is in a sensible D/s relationship now. But I could easily see a girl not having the courage or the sense, or a Dom not only being irresponsible enough to let things go that way but an abuser who wouldn’t let her.
Ok you hear about terrible cases where people are kept chained against their will, and it makes my skin crawl. But most subs are people with their heads screwed on right - and most doms too. I do not think you need be so worried.
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I can feel that way at times, when I’m turned on and ‘sexed up’… can be attracted to lives and relationships wholly centered on the lifestyle… The ‘cum-and-think-about-it-in-the-daily-grind’-test usually cures that, and is highly recommended.
But there is not reason why your life should not be centered around the life-style - many people do that as much as is practically possible. As long as your partner(s) want the same thing.
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But then there’s the subs who truly believe they have no more worth than that… that may understand that they’re cutting themselves of from other kinds of self-explorations, from family, from being loved.
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Hey - you are not saying that a life based on the life style is without self-explorations or without love, are you?
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Or who can think of no other kind of relationship they could handle – or feel valuable in.
In fact many subs would not handle any other kind of relationship - not because they think they are not worth something else, but because they want to live like subs and that makes them feel valuable.
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That is the kind I really fear – or would fear, if I did not trust my own motives,
Which are?
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I still fear for them – because they would give no indication that they are not getting exactly what they want and need even when they’re abused.
I think they would. There is a difference between happy people, and people in an unhappy relationship. If a person is a responsible dom, something would alert this person that the partner is not happy.
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It’s a known fact that abuse survivors do gravitate towards abusive relationships.
Some do, so I have heard too. But I do not think it is an unescapeable destiny. In fact, not a few subs who are former abuse victims have found a dom that helped heal them.
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I know a sub like that, a girl who’s pretty much been abused all her life, and who’s bright enough to know it, and know that even at that she still craves for someone to use her hard… it’s very hard giving her a sense that she’s worth something beyond her sexual attraction – even though I’m pretty sure she understands on a rational level that she is.
Emotions trump intelligence rather often.. 'use her hard' does not sound unusual, but 'use til irreparable damage' would be a different thing.
However, in our culture a woman does not have to an abuse victim to think that her sexual worth is all there is - sadly enough. But surely it would make it worse.
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The problem is that you can so easily advertise abuse in this lifestyle – especially if you’re seeking to be at the receiving end. It is easy, and ‘acceptable’, and perhaps even considered submissive by some to state that you want to be used without limits and without consideration to your needs. I fear it’s a bit easier to want that fantasy, without stopping and thinking ‘is this really a good thing’ when you’re setting yourself up for the abuse.
There are a number of 'everything for Master' sites that would argue for this way. I do not see a problem with that, as long as they do not try to tell people that everybody should do it like that, if they are real D's.
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But the frightening point, and what scared and still scares me about the lifestyle, is that we must admit that it can also be the guise of ‘abusees’ teaming up with ‘abusers’ in relationships that may well be consensual.
First: What is abuse?
How do you spot a damaged sub, or a damaged M?
How do you get to know yourself well enough to know what you are really after?
Secondly: It is good to discuss, even if by far the most relationships are not like that. The reason I say that is that there are a number of research projecs into BDSM, and they all show the same result: BDSM people are no different than anybody else, except slightly better educated. So, the number of abusive relationships is about the same for BDSM people and other people. The risk is not as big as you seem to think, and IMO a person in danger of abuse or further abuse would still be in this danger outside of BDSM. Quite possibly in a lot more danger, as BDSM people tend to be very aware and ask themselves and their partners a lot of questions!
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That’s what I had to be very sure I wasn’t after. But what exactly is this then?
Do you mean what is it you are after? Truly, that is not always easy to figure out.
Might it be a 24-7 Ds relationship?
Do you want to go further, but are not sure that that isn't abusive?
If you have non-consensually fantasies I can tell you that you are not alone. Many people like the fantasy, and to get as close to it as they can. But of course that is one thing you cannot live out.
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My whole point here, and I guess it’s a fairly short one, is that we need to emphasize the ‘sane’ part of safe sane and consensual. It’s not enough for things to be consensual, and nominally safe (you could argue that anything unsane is unsafe on the long term); we also need to ask ourselves the basic question if I could look myself in the mirror after I’ve lived my fantasy and still consider myself a decent person. AND we need to also ask ourselves the question if we’re putting our partners in a position to be decent persons as well.
If this is a lifestyle it’s also about living lives that we can be proud of, that we can feel good about, and that’s about so much more than BDSM. Being into BDSM is no excuse for not being a good person and it’s not any excuse, either, for not expecting others to treat you with decency.
Again, most relationships in BDSM are in fact ones you can be proud of, and the risk of abuse is not, IMO, by any means as big as you think. We are not as different from other people as all that, we still live and love and have children and trouble at work and put our trousers on one leg at a time. It is even scientificallly proven :-)