Roxanne Appleby
Masterpiece
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2005
- Posts
- 11,231
Etoile said:I don't want to get too personal about Sev and amasterfound, because I don't really know their situation. What you are talking about is known as "negotiation" - it should always be done at the beginning of a relationship of this type, and it may occasionally need to be done again. In this specific case, I would say that there was not enough negotiation/disclosure the first time around. The difference for subsequent rounds is that the Master needs to open the floor to negotiations. Most sensible masters would allow the slave to request negotiation, and if they have half a brain cell they will allow it - but they are not obligated to, according to the previously-established rules for the Master/slave relationship. (What happens if they say no? Well, that's a completely different kettle of fish...but it's a sign that the relationship isn't healthy.)
So in the case of Sev and amasterfound, they don't seem to have negotiated well from the outset. In this situation, I would hope that they both see the need for further discussion. And yes, then they do step onto equal territory, while amasterfound expresses herself. What Sev does with the information, though, is up to him. Part of the responsibility of a master is listening to your slave's needs and keeping them happy and healthy, which means that you might decide to capitulate - but because you chose to, not because the slave has taken on newfound power.
Re-negotiating a relationship involves the submissive contributing their opinion, and the dominant doing what is (hopefully) the best choice for both of them based on what they've heard from the submissive.
Very interesting! OK, I don't want to descend to quibbling or semantic games, but in some ways I think you are saying the same things that I was suggesting, but in the language of this lifestyle.
First off, I've called this a "game," and I think that is the correct term, even though I understand that the usual connotation of "frivolous" that accompanies the word does not apply here. "Game [in mathematics]: A model of a competitive situation that identifies interested parties and stipulates rules governing all aspects of the competition, used in game theory to determine the optimal course of action for an interested party." That is closer to the definition I am using, but it is not exact. I don't think this activity is "competitive" in the usual sense.
OK, I stated that like it or not, it is an existential reality that every human is a sovereign individual, even if you choose to "waive" awareness of it for long, long periods. Given that, who are the negotiators in these "negotiations"? Two sovereign individuals. By definition they must be, or it is not a real negotiation, but coercion.
"(In renegotiation) they do step onto equal territory . . . what the 'master' does with the information, though, is up to him."
I detect a contradiction here. Either they are on equal territory, or not – it can't be both. So within the construct of the "game," it can't be "up to him," or that particular rule is meaningless. Are you sure about your reading or description of this, Etoile? I understand that you are probably trying to sketch in rudimentary terms what appears to be a more fully fleshed out construct. (Hopefully you find delving into these issues with a vanilla bean as interesting as I do, because I have been asking a lot of you here.)
Moving outside the game back into the legal and social world we all inhabit, including the game players, it is not really "up to him," and also, "What happens if they say no?" is quite clear: She can always walk. The 13th amendment is alive and well. The game is over. So is the relationship, if it is completely based on the game.
Reply to Couture citing the contract: I don't have any problem with that document as part of what I have been calling a "game," because it is really just the "rules" of the game. It is obviously not a legally binding agreement, and so is not a genuine contract.
Bottom line: I asked, "At some point don't you have to set the games aside and just be completely genuine, relating to each other as one equal human-to-another, without artifice or restraint?" Although the answer was expressed in the terminology of the "D/s lifestyle," I read it as, "Yes."
I also applied that question to this case study we have before us, asking if this is one of those moments when to preserve their relationship (or to avoid one of the parties capitulating to the desire of the other in a manner that will generate repressed, toxic and cumulative pain and guilt), the two parties must set aside their assumed roles for the moment and relate genuinely as two sovereign individuals. The answer was again expressed in the terminology of the lifestyle ("renegotiation"), but again I read it as, "Yes."
I have asked a lot of you here, Etoile, but I will push my luck and ask if this is the above is a fair statement? (As a gentle and wise woman you may want restate the last point in general terms if you are reluctant to make a statement about these individuals.)

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