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Posts Tagged ‘judging BDSM’

  1. No Place For Judgement

    May 11, 2013 by Nikki Blue

    I studied the short profile before beginning the conversation with her, a self-titled unicorn who expressed interest in playing with Mr. K and myself this coming weekend. I’d already determined that she preferred women to men and that she’d been into the sharing lifestyle for a number of years. The cuffs decorating her wrists and ankles in one of her photographs gave me the impression she was submissive.

    “Do you know what BDSM is?” she asked.

    I snorted, reading the question to Heather who immediately tweeted what we thought was a laughable inquiry. The unicorn didn’t know me, though, and I seriously doubt she was testing my sense of humor. My response was delayed and it led her to believe I was at a loss which also made me snort. I contemplated an answer that didn’t sound all-knowing or condescending, informing her that I identify as a Switch who is much more dominant than submissive. She countered a little too quickly saying she’s “super submissive” and “super aggressive” in bed, which I found super contradictory. She also said she was uninvolved in the BDSM community but belonged to the Farm. To be honest, I have no idea what the Farm is, but I do know she has two Dommes. However, it was her confession that she enjoys sensual, erotic floggings that left Heather questioning whether her Dom has it all wrong and left me with more questions.

    “What are your hard limits?” I asked, hell bent on making some sense out of the increasingly confusing conversation.

    “What is that?”

    Are you fucking kidding me? “A hard limit is something you absolutely will NOT do.”

    “Oh! Blow jobs,” she replied.

    *face palm*

    I peeked at the words on the screen from behind my splayed fingers, unsure where to go from there. Disappointment cast a familiar shadow as the unicorn’s magic began to slowly fade, but the search thus far had been exhausting and I wasn’t ready to throw my hands up just yet. I decided to take a different approach, asking specific questions instead of generalized ones, and the answers I got in return were exactly what I was looking for. This unicorn was submissive, and like the other one I recently met, doesn’t like pain or anything that will leave marks. I told her not to worry because I’m no sadist. Well, mostly.

    Some kinksters would have judged her, calling it quits when it became obvious they were reading different editions of the BDSM dictionary, but I’m not a judgmental person. Except when it comes to dog porn, because that’s all kinds of fucked up. My point is, though, her misunderstanding of the vocabulary doesn’t make her version of BDSM any less valid than mine. That’s the thing that is so fantastically wonderful about kink; there is no rule book dictating strict guidelines. And each fetish can be characterized however your dirty little heart desires or custom fit to meet your definition, whatever it may be. Take anal play, for example. Some kinksters view anything involving the anus as scat play. But that’s their definition, not mine. To me, scat play is excrement with intent. It’s also a hard limit of mine. Like super hard.

    There are times, though, when differences in dialect mean that a person’s newbie is showing, and that’s okay. It doesn’t mean they’re wrong. It just means they’re still learning the ropes. There are no workshops giving demonstrations on the correct way to be kinky, no online classes that give concrete vocabulary that’s used by all kinksters. Each kinkster goes through their own trial, error and research when trying to find their kinky way. But what makes a star student is the willingness to learn. Besides, we all started somewhere, right?

    I’ve had my fair share of judgement from the kinky community and it’s a hard pill to swallow. Whether it’s from fellow bloggers who believe my relationship with Mr. K is destined for failure because we chose a monogam-ish relationship, or from people who find it surprising I don’t have incontinence issues from anal sex; their uneducated assumptions cause my cleavage to flush around my bedazzled blade. In my opinion, criticism is an ill-fitting mask worn in an attempt to cover-up insecurities. It’s an ugly affliction to bare. Kind of like the Elephant Man, but way worse.

    It’s part of the American identity that we think for ourselves. It’s what makes us individuals. It’s also what allows us to make the choices that are a good fit for our needs, so if the unicorn’s idea of BDSM differs from mine, that’s okay. It doesn’t mean hers isn’t right. It’s right for her and that’s what matters. And if I had halted the conversation because of the communication mix up in the beginning, I wouldn’t know that she has experience and specific hard limits. She just didn’t know there was an identifying term for them.

    We’re all kinksters following our own definitions. We’re supposed to be open minded, free thinking and embracing. I think sometimes we forget that.

     


  2. The Weakness of a Closed Mind

    May 31, 2012 by Nikki Blue

    For most of my life I questioned my wants and needs, and I even thought of myself as weak for not having the strength to simply say, “no.” But with the help of Heather and her M, I now understand that strength is what allowed me to surrender to my desires. I didn’t say “no” because I chose not to.

    This way of thinking can be difficult for some people to comprehend, and because of this I have two sets of friends. They are polar opposites when it comes to their idea of what it means to be kinky. I have the two friends who think that using a vibrator or having sex in the hot tub with their husbands after the kids are asleep makes them kinky. And then I have my friends who know who and what I am. Friends who I can give blow job lessons to using a beer bottle, friends who will ask for my opinion on cuffs and anal sex while raving about my homemade brownies.

    Not having any idea that I’m kinky, one of my vanilla friends decided to broach the subject of submission on the phone as she drove her son to school. Her tone was judgmental when she spoke about her limited knowledge of a D/s relationship, and her presumptions were harsh.

    What the fuck was I thinking? I was getting ready to debate kink and esteem issues with a woman who doesn’t think racism is still an issue in America and would vote for Gumby as long as he was Republican. The conversation was doomed from the start.

    Careful not to reveal myself to her, I dove headfirst into an attempt in helping her see that it takes an incredible amount of strength for a sub to give control to her/his Dom/Domme. I wanted to tell her about the overwhelming power I feel when I submit, but she would never understand. Hoping she would see things a little more clearly, I pointed out that in a healthy D/s relationship, power is something that shouldn’t be taken unless it’s given. I wanted to tell her what an incredible feeling that power exchange is, but she would question how I knew. I wanted to tell her the amount of strength it takes to have total trust in my partner when he’s got his hands around my throat, throwing me headlong into an orgasm that leaves me trembling. Instead I explained that strength doesn’t only apply to a D/s relationship. It’s true of any relationship where a person reveals themselves sexually. They trust that regardless of their desires, they will be accepted and appreciated.

    “That doesn’t make any sense,” she said.

    I gritted my teeth as I listened to her rebuttal that made submissives sound less than human. She described us as weak-willed people with low self-worth who let control freaks, aka Dominants, abuse us. In her eyes, wearing a “dog collar” around your neck was degrading.

    She’s wrong. I know the strength it takes to give someone power over you because I’ve done it. And I’ve felt the intimacy of kneeling before a Dom, naked and head bowed, waiting patiently to hear the two words that speak to every fiber of my being.

    Good girl.

    Even though I had the urge to reach through the phone and punch her in the throat, I held my tongue until she called submissives “doormats.” That was it, and at risk of putting all my shit out there for her to feast on, I interrupted her before she could really piss me off.

    I told her to throw that shit she was reading in the trashcan where it belonged. I opened myself up a little more by telling her about The Siren by Tiffany Reisz, and I dared her to find any weakness in Nora Sutherlin. But my focus in that conversation wasn’t on Nora, it was on Tiffany. I praised her talent as a writer, and I stressed the fact that the scenes she constructs so beautifully aren’t bits and pieces of research pulled together from Google. They’re from her own life experiences. She’s not a play sub who thinks it’s hot to be tied up while having no understanding of the headspace that comes from within. Tiffany is proud of who she is and openly lives the lifestyle 24/7. In my eyes, she is the definition of strength.

    I’m a strong woman, and I see now that I always have been. Like Heather, I have children and a business. I make the decisions, I pay the bills. I survived an apocalyptic divorce that could have broken a weaker person, and it made me even stronger. It gave me the strength to be who I am with no reservations, and I “came out” so to speak to my friends about my kink. Okay, all but two of them.

    I’m in a relationship that allows me to be freer than I’ve ever been in my life. And even though it’s not a D/s dynamic, I give him power over me. He recognizes that power as a gift, and he handles it with care. I’m strong enough to be completely open-minded with him which is something I’ve never experienced before. Don’t get me wrong, we’ve reached limits. But because I can be open and honest with him, we’ve overcome them. To me, that’s the epitome of strength.