Netzach
>semiotics?
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2003
- Posts
- 21,732
I'm gonna go out on a limb here.
There's the right healthy proscribed, usually "best practices" way of doing things. It's in the manuals. It's at the conventions. It's in the articles in the library. It keeps people safer, steers them out of trouble.
And then there's reality, and who we are, and what we bring to the table and we're not always perfectly healthy people coming from perfect places of whatnot, and we bring problems, mess, frailties, inconsistencies, lies, weaknesses, and dysfunction with us. I know I do.
And I don't think those things need bar people from doing the nasty. (Or SM. Or whatever.) I don't think that we need to come from this idealized place of honesty and open-ness and clarity in order to express these vital human urges.
I hear people say things like "you must be totally healed before you blah blah blah" and based on my own life I'm like "what planet are you on?"
I think it fucking helps but it comes to the best of us in bursts of illumination and slips away again anyway. Nobody's perfect, most people much less so than they think.
I think Edith is demonstrating knowing the questions. Which is more than most people who have a lot of answers have usually bothered to do.
Yes, ideally, it's not a good plan to play loaded. And people do. People have been always, sometimes the same people who get up in front of convention crowds to tell other people not to play loaded are the most addiction-addled messes of ALL!
In my ideal world, WHEN people play loaded, they let the other people working on them know what they've been doing, and how much. In my ideal world nobody who's actually doing things to other people is loaded, but if they are they're not doing anything complicated (no bondage at all, no breathplay)
I remember being asked by a roomful of gay men I was doing a workshop for (seriously not the demographic I'd been expecting!) "how do you even have that conversation and not come off like an afterschool special with your prospective trick?"
I'm NOT a partier myself, but I'd talked to a guy I knew who is pretty smart about just this thing and just this community and how men actually deal with one another in sexualized environments. I wouldn't present to a crowd I can't understand remotely.
I said, with a little shrug "Been partying?"
These guys treated me like I'd demonstrated the coolest trick in the world. Like I was the David Copperfield of sex - because I understood the planet on which they actually reside versus "sex education" planet.
Even really stupidly simple bondage requires a level of decision making that you have to really know you have, and breathplay, well that's a whole can of worms.
As for emotionally taking responsibility for oneself, I see someone doing that. I don't think there should be a lot of pressure to make this about "pleasing one's Dom" at this point beyond its value as self-exploration (those things being tied together at times) - the transparency might come after a time. I think expecting someone to arrive into an exploration pre-submissive is kind of insane, frankly.
There's the right healthy proscribed, usually "best practices" way of doing things. It's in the manuals. It's at the conventions. It's in the articles in the library. It keeps people safer, steers them out of trouble.
And then there's reality, and who we are, and what we bring to the table and we're not always perfectly healthy people coming from perfect places of whatnot, and we bring problems, mess, frailties, inconsistencies, lies, weaknesses, and dysfunction with us. I know I do.
And I don't think those things need bar people from doing the nasty. (Or SM. Or whatever.) I don't think that we need to come from this idealized place of honesty and open-ness and clarity in order to express these vital human urges.
I hear people say things like "you must be totally healed before you blah blah blah" and based on my own life I'm like "what planet are you on?"
I think it fucking helps but it comes to the best of us in bursts of illumination and slips away again anyway. Nobody's perfect, most people much less so than they think.
I think Edith is demonstrating knowing the questions. Which is more than most people who have a lot of answers have usually bothered to do.
Yes, ideally, it's not a good plan to play loaded. And people do. People have been always, sometimes the same people who get up in front of convention crowds to tell other people not to play loaded are the most addiction-addled messes of ALL!
In my ideal world, WHEN people play loaded, they let the other people working on them know what they've been doing, and how much. In my ideal world nobody who's actually doing things to other people is loaded, but if they are they're not doing anything complicated (no bondage at all, no breathplay)
I remember being asked by a roomful of gay men I was doing a workshop for (seriously not the demographic I'd been expecting!) "how do you even have that conversation and not come off like an afterschool special with your prospective trick?"
I'm NOT a partier myself, but I'd talked to a guy I knew who is pretty smart about just this thing and just this community and how men actually deal with one another in sexualized environments. I wouldn't present to a crowd I can't understand remotely.
I said, with a little shrug "Been partying?"
These guys treated me like I'd demonstrated the coolest trick in the world. Like I was the David Copperfield of sex - because I understood the planet on which they actually reside versus "sex education" planet.
Even really stupidly simple bondage requires a level of decision making that you have to really know you have, and breathplay, well that's a whole can of worms.
As for emotionally taking responsibility for oneself, I see someone doing that. I don't think there should be a lot of pressure to make this about "pleasing one's Dom" at this point beyond its value as self-exploration (those things being tied together at times) - the transparency might come after a time. I think expecting someone to arrive into an exploration pre-submissive is kind of insane, frankly.
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Similar with drugs if your youngish.