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TPE. Isn't that what we used to do in high school in the trees of our friends' houses at night with rolls of toilet paper?
In the end, in a relationship, there are two people who decide what the relationship should be. If they can't agree, they don't have a relationship. If they do, and it works, then they are the experts on that relationship, and everyone else's opinions can go to hell. TPE, SSC, BDSM are initials that cover wide ranges of opinion and practice. One person's sane is not another's. Unless someone's overtly breaking the law or getting hurt (not oooh ouchie mmm hurt, but permanently damaged or unwillingly enslaved), I'd recommend not trying to decide what works for other people. Or trying to discern who has the power in a relationship, or even what that means.
You can Google TPE and find 4 different websites with 4 different definitions. One I just ran into claimed the submissive in a TPE relationship enters into a lifelong commitment and does not have the right to leave. (Extreme, to say the least.) That's exactly the problem with "experts" when it comes to sex or relationships. They, like certain people here, think they have the power to define what a relationship should be.
In the end, in a relationship, there are two people who decide what the relationship should be. If they can't agree, they don't have a relationship. If they do, and it works, then they are the experts on that relationship, and everyone else's opinions can go to hell. TPE, SSC, BDSM are initials that cover wide ranges of opinion and practice. One person's sane is not another's. Unless someone's overtly breaking the law or getting hurt (not oooh ouchie mmm hurt, but permanently damaged or unwillingly enslaved), I'd recommend not trying to decide what works for other people. Or trying to discern who has the power in a relationship, or even what that means.
Write all the fiction you want - that's why we're here. But anyone here who confidently expects they understand anyone else's positions or relationships - let alone thinks they are in a position to judge the validity of either - badly misunderstands their own importance. Fools rush in, they do say. Try not to prove it, is my advice.
What you say is correct to a point but here is where we differ. What you get from fiction and real life are two different things. Most BDSM communities set out guidelines, not rules but guidelines, for personal safety. That is where SSC comes in. Under those guidelines half of the crap masquerading as BDSM here isn't.
I've been in the lifestyle most of my life so i am speaking from experience.
Over 4000 people have read the story so far. Out of them, about 100 have voted it at 5, and about 10 have voted it at 1, with nearly nothing in between.
What does that tell you?
9 out of 10 want this to be a BDSM story.
You are making the very strong assumption that I sit in a dark closet, furiously typing on a keyboard with my blinds on, oblivious to the real world, while you (plural) are the collective with all the real-life experience, and can speak for them.
The point I am making is that I trust that the readers are intelligent enough to make the distinction between fantasy and real life, and any other line of thought would be an insult to them.
Love,
Ala Moana
You are reversing the causality in this case. My point is that reading noncon doesn't make people act out the narrative.
Love,
Ala Moana
Double-blind experiments have proven the opposite. People who are willing to act out a noncon narrative also happen to read and fantasize noncon more readily than people who do not. To take the discussion a step further, reading noncon acts as a pressure relieve valve to the vast majority of readers. I am surprised we even argue about such base case scenarios here. This is psychology 101.
This is from a recent study. Please ignore the terminology, as BDSM by today's standards is still classified as deviant psychopathy between/among healthy consenting adults (which many are trying change, but that's unlikely).
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...an interaction between psychopathy and level of fantasizing was observed for unrestricted and deviant sexual behavior, such that participants who reported high levels of fantasizing about these sexual themes were more likely to engage in that behavior if they also reported high levels of psychopathic traits. These findings suggest that psychopathy is related not only to interest in particular sexual behaviors, but also to whether individuals will translate these fantasized behaviors into reality...
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The source is pay-walled behind my sci-journal subscription, and I can't post a link here. You can go to the nearest university library and borrow the study.
I understand that the above will bring the ire of quite a few members here, but I'm willing to follow through with it.
Love,
Ala Moana

The point I am making is that I trust that the readers are intelligent enough to make the distinction between fantasy and real life, and any other line of thought would be an insult to them.
Love,
Ala Moana
Double-blind experiments have proven the opposite. People who are willing to act out a noncon narrative also happen to read and fantasize noncon more readily than people who do not. To take the discussion a step further, reading noncon acts as a pressure relieve valve to the vast majority of readers. I am surprised we even argue about such base case scenarios here. This is psychology 101.
This is from a recent study. Please ignore the terminology, as BDSM by today's standards is still classified as deviant psychopathy between/among healthy consenting adults (which many are trying change, but that's unlikely).
=======
...an interaction between psychopathy and level of fantasizing was observed for unrestricted and deviant sexual behavior, such that participants who reported high levels of fantasizing about these sexual themes were more likely to engage in that behavior if they also reported high levels of psychopathic traits. These findings suggest that psychopathy is related not only to interest in particular sexual behaviors, but also to whether individuals will translate these fantasized behaviors into reality...
=======
The source is pay-walled behind my sci-journal subscription, and I can't post a link here. You can go to the nearest university library and borrow the study.
I understand that the above will bring the ire of quite a few members here, but I'm willing to follow through with it.
Love,
Ala Moana
There is no backward link between adults practicing S&M to being abused as young (the set of S&M practitioners being much larger than that of the ones being abused physically or psychologically when young).
This boggled my mind. How do you (or anyone) know the set size of either S&M practitioners or of those abused when young?
If you knew how close you are to the truth you would die laughing.
Love,
Ala Moana
Question:
Recently I got a comment that a story of mine should be in SSC (?) if I interpreted the comment correctly.
If anyone please enlighten me what SSC is, I would be grateful.
Here is the comment:
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BDSM ??
why is this even in BDSM ????? what happened to SSC
===============
Of course, conveniently, this comment was posted anonymously, so no way to contact the original poster.
Is this a troll or did I do something wrong? Just in case, this is the link to my story:
https://www.literotica.com/s/and-the-sun-set-east-pt-01
Thanks!!!!
Ala Moana