onceuponsirsstarrynight:

Pertinent Links

Starry Night’s Guide to BDSM, Part One: What is Dominance & Submission

Starry Night’s Writing

Important Terms

For the purposes of this piece I’ll be using the terms Dominant and Submissive to generally reflect a broad spectrum of BDSM engagement ranging from those who engage in scenes (Top/Bottoms) to those who engage in DD/Lg to those who engage in M/s. If you’re confused as to the difference please refer to my Guide to Dominance and Submission which will help to define those terms for you. Regardless of whether you’re engaging in a scene or a relationship however, the information provided will be pertinent to all forms of BDSM engagement.

Preface

In the world of BDSM there are a few acronyms that are used to describe the way in which responsible practitioners of the art engage with one another. The oldest and likely most well known is S.S.C. (Safe, Sane, & Consensual). Others acronyms have also come into common usage in the past decade such as R.A.C.K. (Risk Aware Consensual Kink) and P.R.I.C.K. (Personal Responsibility Informed Consensual Kink). While all of the terms differ slightly, they all aim to cover the same basic concepts: namely that engaging in Kink is inherently risky, and that it needs to be engaged in intelligently and consensually. While each practitioner will have their preference for one acronym over another, there is one word that is present in all three:

Consent.

That’s no accident.

Consent is Everything

On a purely ethical level, consent is fundamental bedrock of what separates something being done out of love and passion, from abuse and cruelty. As such having a thorough discussion of this multifaceted and critical dialectic is an imperative. For those who don’t understand BDSM, this is often their moralizing struggle: they can’t comprehend that someone may passionately desire to be led, or that they may derive great pleasure from pain. In the world of Psychology the DSM V (Diagnostic Service Manual, 5th Edition) differentiates between what is and is not a mental health disorder (as it pertains to sadism/masochism) based almost exclusively on one thing: consent.

What’s more, in many (though not all!) places consent is the legal basis that separates consensual BDSM from criminality. Consent is what separates lover from rapist; sadomasochism from assault or abuse; bondage from kidnapping.

Consent Prevents

  • Consent prevents pain.
  • Consent prevents miscommunication.
  • Consent prevents misunderstandings.

Consent Protects

  • Consent protects people from suffering abuse.
  • Consent protects people from being labeled as abusers.

Consent Builds

  • Consent builds trust.
  • Consent builds comfort.
  • Consent builds understanding.
  • Consent builds powerful relationships.

Consent Is Sexy

  • Consent allows you to grow together.
  • Consent allows you explore your boundaries.
  • Consent allows you to build excitement and anticipation.
  • Consent allows you to communicate openly about risqué subjects.
  • Consent allows you access to parts of another person no one else gets to see.

Consent and THE LAW

While legal statutes that define the scope of legality of BDSM vary from country to country – and within the United States, from state to state – non-consensual behavior of any kind is almost always illegal

Within the more organized world of BDSM communities, it is often noted at events that most states (within the United States) are what’s known as Non-Consent States. A Non-Consent State, legally speaking, is one in which consent alone does not protect someone from the threat of prosecution.

IE: It is possible (no matter how highly unlikely) that you could face criminal prosecution or civil litigation for actions that had been fully consented to, even if that consent is written. The law in most places does not distinguish between a consensual beating and a non-consensual beating: they can both be prosecuted as assault or domestic violence. The law would not distinguish between someone being abducted and someone being consensually engaged in rope bondage: the law could prosecute both as kidnapping.

That being said, those engaging in highly negotiated, codified, consensual BDSM should rest easy: there have been no successful prospections, and as far as I can tell, no instances of charges being filed against anyone engaging in CONSENSUAL BDSM. The handful of cases that have been prosecuted have only occurred in situations where a party claimed to be aggrieved or to have suffered non-consensual acts.

It should also be noted while I fully encourage anyone engaging in BDSM, whether it is for the purposes of a scene or a relationship, to draft a thorough BDSM Contract/Agreement, these documents are extralegal and non-binding. These agreements neither grant you legal authority, nor offer you the protection of the law. Still they are useful, and indeed powerful tools that can help serve as a guide for your relationship.

There are two really great articles I would recommend regarding BDSM, consent, and the law.

The first was published in the Harvard Law Review and touches on the legalities of BDSM, and explores our communities use of ‘Contracts’ as guides for our relationships.

The second is a really good piece on the legal website, Above The Law, written by Tamara Tabo regarding the legal scope of consent as applied to BDSM.

Consent Is The Cure For Your Cognitive Dissonance

Believe me, Eugenie, the words “vice” and “virtue” supply us only with local meanings. There is no action, however bizarre you may picture it, that is truly criminal; or one that can really be called virtuous. Everything depends on our customs and on the climates we live in. What is considered a crime here is often a virtue a few hundred leagues away; and the virtues of another hemisphere might, quite conversely, be regarded as crimes among us. There is no atrocity that hasn’t been deified, no virtue that hasn’t been stigmatized.”

~ Marquis De Sade

Wherever a person may come from, whatever their background may be, they are colored by the rules, laws, and customs that their society is governed by. As societies we operate best when we adhere to a given set of laws: they provide a moral certainty to our world that gives rise to order and a degree of safety, and in democratic systems, those laws are typically broadly representative of those governed by these laws.

It is a good thing that we know, for example, who has the right of way at a stop light. It keeps traffic flowing smoothly, and people from getting killed. Good laws. And while all nations have traffic laws, not every nation has the same traffic laws. That’s because what is “right” is relative to the people of that nation.

For the most part, while we may think another nations traffic laws are silly (or that our own are somehow superior) we can easily accept the need for these kinds of laws. However, even on the most extreme fringes – say with laws regarding homicide – societies agonize to find broad acceptance for when it is justifiable to take another human beings life, because no matter how much we might believe something to be a universal truth, it rarely is. Virtually all morality, even at the extremes, can be challenged with surprising ease.  

Almost by definition, BDSM relationships play delightfully on the edges of our societies comfort zones. In a world that increasingly advocates for non-violence, equality, and positivity (all good things!) BDSM can appear to be a world that exists beyond these realms, appealing to our darker desires and baser natures. Within BDSM we have the opportunity to explore countless taboo subjects. It is a place where shame, power, inequality, inferiority, desire, sadism, masochism, lust, and passion intertwine to challenge our notions of comfort and security.

For many people who begin their journeys into BDSM full of conflicting doubts and self-loathing, aggressive consent is the ready-made the cure to their emotional torment. Whether you’re a sadist wondering if hurting someone makes you a bad person, or you’re a masochist wondering if if wanting to be hurt makes you sick; whether you’re a dominant wondering if desiring power makes you controlling, or you’re a submissive who worries that giving up control makes you weak. Perhaps you’re a man or woman who considers themselves to be an ardent feminist and worry that your desires to engage in BDSM are somehow incongruent with the tenets of feminism. Whatever your issue may be, consent is likely the cure to your cognitive dissonance.

With consent, there are few things that could truly be considered wrong, and many things that society at large deems wrong, can be desirable.

Affirmative Consent & Limits

In 2015 the State of California made the audacious step of becoming the first state in the Union to pass an Affirmative Consent bill (CA S.B. 967), ensuring it would be the first state to enshrine the concept of “only yes means yes.” While hotly debated and decried by many as too cumbersome and impractical, the truth is that forward thinking California was only catching up to concepts that the world of BDSM has embraced since it’s inceptions.

By practicing Affirmative Consent in our relationships, we ensure that all parties get everything they want, and nothing they don’t. Let’s talk about what that means in a practical sense from the standpoint of categories available for selection on a BDSM Checklist (more on these later). While all checklists will vary to some degree in how they categorize levels of acceptance there are generally speaking five levels acceptance:

Hard Limit: When someone defines a subject as a Hard Limit they are stating flatly not only that they will not under any circumstances engage in this activity, but that they will not even discuss this behavior. Once a behavior has been labeled a Hard Limit, the act of trying to talk someone into it by itself can be considered a Consent Violation, and certainly trying to pressure someone into engaging in it would be considered Consent Abuse.

Soft Limit: When someone defines an activity as a Soft Limit they are stating that they will not under any circumstances engage in this activity. They may however be willing to discuss the activity, however just as with Hard Limits, they should still not in any way be pressured to engage in the activity, and doing so would constitute Consent Abuse.

No: While a “No” itself should be quite self-explanatory, it differentiates itself from a Limit by allowing the two parties to openly discuss, and potentially even fantasize about the activity. However, just as with limits, trying to persuade someone to engage in this activity would be consider Consent Abuse.

Maybe: A maybe is an activity that the participant might be willing to engage in under certain circumstances or at a certain time. A maybe is not an invitation to engage in this activity, it is an invitation to discuss the potential of engaging this activity. Until both parties have provided Affirmative Consent to the activity (both have said YES), a maybe is still a no, and engaging in the activity without that consent is still a Consent Violation, and potentially a crime.

Yes: Yes is the only thing that means yes, and even then it’s important to understand that a yes only pertains to a narrow definition of a given activity. A submissive may agree to having a hand on their throat, but that does not necessarily mean that they are consenting to asphyxiation. The same holds true for impact play: saying yes to a canes does not mean that someone is ok with canes of all types and to all degrees. Saying yes to power exchange does not mean they are consenting to relinquishing all power. Yes should still be considered only an opportunity to negotiate the degree to which that yes exists.

Consent For Dominants

As a dominant you are accepting the burden of leadership within your relationship, and leadership comes with responsibility. The responsibility of a Dominant Leader within a relationship is to protect, provide, and care for their submissive. One of the chief ways you do this as an effective Dominant Leaders is to always insist on engaging in Affirmative Consent relationships.

Insisting on engaging in only Affirmative Consent relationships will help accomplish two things for the Dominant Leader:

First and most importantly it ensures that you are living up to the standards you claim to hold themselves to. It is a clear display of your integrity, your intent, and your actions. It is a deliverable. By taking the time to engage in an aggressive process of consent building and negotiation, you are showing your submissive that you care more, that you pay more attention, that you are more invested in your submissive than anyone else they’ve ever known.

These are powerful actions that differentiate the Dominant Leader from the common person. They are a demarcation line between a vanilla relationship and a D/s relationship. As I’ve stated many times before, dominance and submission isn’t about great, rough, kinky sex: I assure you, you can have great sex outside of a D/s relationship. Dominance and submission are built on greater, more meaningful things, and Affirmative Consent is chief amongst them.

The second reason for taking consent seriously is that it protects the Dominant. Traditionally BDSM has had a reputation amongst the ill informed as being ‘scary’ or ‘dangerous.’ The outsider sees a world in which people get beat or suffer in ‘controlling’ relationships. This of course couldn’t be further from the truth of what a consensual D/s relationship is. By insisting on Affirmative Consent, the dominant ensures that they’re never engaging in behavior that could possibly be considered unethical. That nothing they do could possibly be construed as abusive or harmful.

  • As a dominant it is your responsibility to lead your relationship: That means being the one to bring up consent and negotiation and ensure it happens before engaging in BDSM activities – don’t wait for your submissive to bring up the subject.
  • As a dominant you have a right to insist on not engaging in activities until consent has been obtained. If something were to happen that your submissive hadn’t consented to, you could be opening yourself up to serious legal ramifications. Protect yourself.
  • As a dominant you may not in any way attempt to influence the degree of consent a submissive is willing to give. Suggesting that they try something they do not want to do, encouraging them to do so, threatening or bullying them into doing so – all of these behaviors are by themselves nonconsensual.
  • As a dominant you should be vigilant in ensuring that others aren’t engaging in, or being hurt by those who would practice BDSM without consent. Non-consensual behavior is unethical: and unethical behavior is damaging not just to those affected, but also to the broader image of BDSM as a whole.
  • As a dominant, obtaining initial consent (having a submissive say “yes”) to a particular activity is only an invitation to ask further questions about the extent to which they are willing to engage in that activity.
  • As a dominant you have the right to say NO to something as well. Believe it or not, dominants can have limits too, and if you feel uncomfortable with something you have the right to say so. Whether it’s because an activity doesn’t appeal to you or you feel that you don’t have the experience to practice a given activity safely, you have the right as well as the responsibility to advocate for yourself.

Consent For Submissives

While any dominant worth their salt should demonstrate their leadership skills and BDSM savvy by insisting on only engaging in activities that have been fully negotiated and consented to, the responsibility for ensuring that consent is a pre-condition to any engagement lies with both parties.

Before engaging in negotiations about your relationship or giving your consent to any activity invest yourself – your time and your efforts – into gaining an education into these activities. If you have questions ask another submissive of the same sex and sexual orientation. The most attractive submissives are those who are powerful and intelligent enough to lead a BDSM relationship on their own. Being informed and strong is sexy.

  • As a submissive you have the right to expect & demand that your dominant will not engage in any behaviors that have not been negotiated and consented to.
  • As a submissive if you aren’t comfortable with something: SPEAK UP. You have every right to be heard, and objecting to something that is happening doesn’t make you a bad submissive.
  • As a submissive know that agreeing to a certain action does not mean that you cannot set boundaries to that consent.
  • As a submissive you have the right to withdraw consent at any time and for any reason.
  • As a submissive if you encounter a dominant, or someone claiming to be a dominant who suggests or acts in a way that hasn’t been agreed to in advance, you have a right to leave that situation, and a right to report that situation. Non-consensual behavior is unethical: and unethical behavior is damaging not just to you, but potentially to others and the broader image of BDSM as a whole.

Consent INC.

Be as passionate about your work as you are your lovers; be as professional about your romance as you are your work.”

~StarryNight

Informed

In the medical field there is a term in common usage called, “Informed Consent.” The idea is simple: As a patient, your provider cannot take any course of action or perform any procedure without first informing you of the potential risks and consequences of taking that action, informing you of other potential courses of action, and then obtaining Affirmative Consent for that specific course of action.

In applying that same important concept to BDSM, we need to know what we’re talking about. In applying the concept of Informed Consent to BDSM let us exchange the term ‘provider’ for ‘dominant’ and ‘patient’ for ‘submissive.’ What this means is that the submissive has the right to know exactly what is happening to them and to know that the dominant performing that activity with them is both trained and qualified to do so – or if they are not that the submissive has the right to know that they are practicing this activity with a novice.

A couple of examples:

  1. Wax play can be amazing form of sensation play, tantalizing and tactile. However, there are different types of wax and they have different melting points. Knowing that paraffin melts at ~135º (or less) and wont burn your submissive/bottom is important information that a informed dominant should have. If they were to use a common household candle which could melt at 180º or more and they burn their submissive, that’s a dangerous, and potentially harmful action. Other candles may contain oils that can trigger allergic reactions. These are things that need to be researched, understood, and communicated before an activity is ever engaged in.
  2. The use of a whip can provide an intense form of impact play, but it can also be quite dangerous. A skilled whipster will know that there are dozens of different types of whips made of different materials (paracord, leather, etc…), in different lengths, and with different tails – all of which present unique experiences for their submissives and challenges for the throwers. Learning how to throw a whip with true precision, or to create the terrifying (or titillating, depending on your point of view) crack, is something that is only mastered by having thrown a whip thousands of times. As a new dominant I was taught that if you can’t turn off a light switch from six feet on the first throw – you aren’t ready to throw. That’s because a whip can cause serious injury if it were to land somewhere unsafe – say in someone’s eye. Or if you were to “wrap you tails,” meaning that instead of the tail of the whip landing flush against a flat surface, it  were wrapped around the edge of a body (say a shoulder blade) where centripetal force would propel those same tails to a speed that could rip skin apart.

It is not enough to simply have consent to an action: that action must be informed and understood by both parties. It’s imperative that both parties do their homework and educate themselves about the activities they want to engage in and that they discuss any potential side effects, or dangers that may arise from that activity before doing so. Additionally, a dominant must not be engaging in activities that could harm a submissive if they are not adequately trained and prepared to do so. If they are inexperienced they need to communicate that to their submissive and find ways to practice together safely.

Negotiated 

As stated earlier in this piece, it is not enough to simply understand what a party (submissive or dominant) is willing to engage in. We must also ascertain the scope and degree to which they want to engage in that activity. Determining these things requires us to engage in effective questioning:

Within a dominant and submissive (D/s) relationship, negotiating power exchange is of critical importance and it’s crucial that both parties be upfront about exactly how much power they’re looking to either give, or accept responsibility for, and to be crystal clear on what that means.

For example, the idea of consensual slavery (24/7 TPE) may sound appealing, but as a dominant – or to use proper terminology, Master – are you really prepared to accept responsibility for making virtually every decision in your slave’s life? Deciding what they wear every day, what they eat, how they’re to act, and maintaining a potentially high degree of protocol? That’s a lot of work. And are you as a submissive truly prepared to relinquish that degree of power over the control of your own life?

When entering into a new relationship and negotiating your first Relationship Agreement (see below for more on this), it’s wise to stick to the things that are well within your mutual comfort zones. You can always renegotiate the terms of your agreement to include newer, more challenging concepts as your relationship grows and evolves.

When it comes to a specific kink activity, let’s use the aforementioned example of choking for the purpose of illustrating how we effectively negotiate desire, scope, and degree.

  1. How interested in this are they? Is it a passive interest, a genuine curiosity, a passion?
  2. Is it something they’ve tried before? If so, did they enjoy it, love it, hate it? If they loved it, why? If they hated it, why?
  3. What is it that they’re drawn to about the experience? Are they connecting with the fear, the feeling of being small or helpless? Understanding WHY someone wants something is every bit as important, if not more important, than simply knowing that they want it.
  4. In what ways do they want to experience this? Do they want a hand on their throat with no pressure applied? Do they want to actually experience airway constriction? What about true asphyxiation?
  5. How often do they want to have this happen? Should you be doing it when you kiss them? When you have sex? Casually around the house?

Take the time to get more than just a simple “yes.” Invest yourself into truly knowing and understanding your partner, what they want, what they need, and most importantly – WHY.

Codified 

A key component in ensuring consent is getting it in writing. There are two key documents that assist us in this lifestyle.

The first is what’s known as a BDSM Checklist. A quick Google search of the term will lead you to many decent ones, but the more comprehensive they are, the better. A BDSM Checklist is a fantastic tool for both dominants and submissives because it will allow you to both track your growth and progress over time, as well as provide a ready-made list of your levels of comfort with different acts that you can share easily with your partner(s). They should be exchanged, discussed, and understood by both parties before ever engaging in a BDSM scene, or a D/s relationship.

A comprehensive list of BDSM checklists can be found on the website, SubmissiveGuide.com

The second is a Relationship Agreement. Traditionally this may be more commonly known as a BDSM Contract, however I eschew the term simply because a contract implies legally binding agreements that cannot, do not, and will not exist within the context of BDSM.

Boiled down to it’s simplest forms, the Relationship Agreement is a tool that allows those engaging in a D/s relationship to lay out the rules that will guide that relationship. What each party needs from one another, how they will conduct themselves in private, in public, and around friends and family. How they will handle and resolve disputes. How they will handle communicating with others. What their limits are, what the rules are, and what the consequences for violating those rules are. Putting together a comprehensive Relationship Agreement can take time and effort, but isn’t ensuring that both you and your partner are getting everything you could desire and all the protection and security they need worth it?

Looking for some help writing your own Relationship Agreement? Check out these interesting links:

BDSM Contracts 

Our Contract 

Safewords & Safe Signals

Safewords are something that exist for the protection of dominants and submissives alike. They ensure that we are able to remain attentive to our partners and operate within the boundaries of consent. Neglecting to react to a safeword (or safe signal) which is direct sign that one party has called for the action to cease either temporarily or permanently is a direct violation of consent. All parties have the right to assume that upon the use of a safeword the action will cease and they will be promptly provided support and security.

While theoretically any word can be utilized as a safeword, there are two words which are universally accepted within the BDSM community. They are:

  • Yellow: Yellow is the term used to communicate that the submissive is either approaching their limit, at their limit, or that they request that the dominant party immediately communicate with the submissive about where they stand. In either case it is the responsibility of the dominant party to immediately cease what they are doing and communicate with their submissive. If after communicating it is determined that the scene can continue, you may do so in an agreed upon way.
  • Red: Red is a far less ambiguous term. It is used to communicate that whatever is occurring needs to cease immediately.

In addition to safewords, intelligent BDSM practitioners also utilize safe signals for those times when audible communication may be impossible. For example, if the submissive has a ball-gag in their mouth, or if the dominant is deaf, it would be impossible to use a safeword like “red” or “yellow” in an intelligible manner. Enter safe signals.

Safe Signals may include the dropping of an item held in the hand of the submissive: A frequent one is a small bell or ball that when dropped can either be clearly seen or heard. It could also take the form of “tapping out” – rapping the palm of your hand three times against a surface. In either case the same protocols exist as they do with safewords. Whether the signal is to check in, or to cease all action, Safe Signals need to be respected and adhered to without delay in the same way that Safewords are.

A couple of additional useful tips for safewording:

  1. Use the safeword more than once, and don’t be afraid to say it loudly. A pilot doesn’t passively throw out a “mayday” call when they’re in danger of crashing, they say it loudly and repeatedly, using the same logic in BDSM is wise “RED, RED, RED!” is more likely to be heard and understood quickly and accurately than meekly whispering it once. If you’re using a safe sign, don’t gently tap your hand, slam it down as hard as you can repeatedly. It’s important not just to communicate, but to communicate for effect.
  2. When using audible communication signs (safewords) ensure that there is nothing to muffle the sound. If you’re a dominant and you choose, in the moment, to place a ball gag in your submissives mouth, make sure you’re also placing a bell in their hands and that you communicate that to them before you begin playing again. If you’re a submissive who is trying to safeword, don’t do it while screaming into a pillow. Help your partner by ensuring they can hear you clearly.

Safewording Doesn’t Make You A Worse Submissive

I’ve occasionally heard from submissives that they’re afraid of using their safewords. They either want to prove to their dominants who strong they can be for them, or they fear that they may be letting down their dominant partners. 

This is absolutely untrue.

There is nothing wrong with using a safeword. They exist to protect us and to help ensure strong communication. No dominant of repute would ever make you feel ashamed of using your safeword. In fact, they’ll be proud of you for doing so and for allowing them to be protective of you. Ethical dominants, no matter how sadistic, always prioritize the health, safety, and happiness of their submissives above all else. Safeword if you need to, they’ll appreciate you and respect you more for it, not less. 

“Finding Red” Doesn’t Make You A Worse Dominant

One thing I’ve noticed in my own trials as a dominant – and something I’ve heard from countless others – has been the fear of pushing someone too far, or too hard. Indeed I’m often held back not by willingness to engage in an act, but from a fear of hurting someone too much. When preparing to engage in a scene that I know will challenge my own comfort zones, I occasionally need to step back and remind myself that what I am doing is not only consensual, but indeed it is what my submissive desires. Pushing them harder is what they want, they want to find their limit, and I need to summon the willingness to help them do that. And when we do find that limit, when we “find red,” it’s not a bad thing. We fall back on our training and offer our submissives powerful, loving, attentive aftercare. 

There Is No Such Thing As A NO SAFEWORD Relationship

I’ve seen this topic come up more times than I care to remember, so I may as well address it here and now: the concept of engaging in a relationship without safewords.

Let me dispel you of the notion. No-safeword relationships are inherently contradictory to the concepts upon which BDSM is built. While a participant may voluntarily choose not to use a safeword, they always have the right, both legally and ethically, to have their safeword heard and respected.

Everything BDSM stands for is built upon the foundational concepts of safety, trust, and communication, and whether you are a submissive or a dominant, safewords are our firewall. They are our failsafe. They are the thin red line that separates us from safe, safe, and consensual – and violence, abuse, injury, and potentially even death. They protect submissives from injury (physical, mental, or emotional) and they protect the dominant from being ostracized, shunned, or even prosecuted.

Consent Accidents, Consent Violations, & Consent Abuse

In a utopian world there would be no instances in which consent is broken. Unfortunately we don’t live in such a world. We live in a world filled with human being; most well intentioned, but all imperfect. Despite the best of intentions, people make mistakes and issues arise. Sometimes those mistakes arise due to negligence. Other times because of incompetence. Still other times issues arise not because of malice or negligence or incompetence – sometimes imperfect human beings, even those well trained and with much experience make genuine mistakes. Other times “mistakes” aren’t mistakes at all, they’re simply abuse. 

Regardless of the reasons why consent is broken, when it occurs it wounds those who’s consent has been violated. And while we should all strive for a world where incidents of consent violation are reduced to the greatest possible extent, we must also aim to properly understand what happened, why it happened, and in doing so, determine the best way forward. With that in mind, it’s important to understand that there are three primary forms of Consent Violation, and they are as follows: 

Consent Accidents 

While consent is a line that should never be crossed, we must also accept that the activities we engage in are dangerous. An experienced dominant may be highly skilled with a particular instrument, but even skilled operators can have something go wrong: a flogger may miss it’s mark by a couple of inches and strike an area a submissive had labelled as off limits if it’s located in close proximity to an area that was ok to strike. An experienced rigger may run into a situation where despite their best efforts, their rope work pressed on a nerve and caused unintended pain or numbness. A submissive may quite accidentally act in a manner that violates their dominant’s acceptable limits for behavior. A dominant may say something that triggers an undisclosed trigger in their submissive.

Sometimes when we play on the edge, accidents happen quite unintentionally.

These are the dangers inherent in the things that we do, and they differentiate themselves from Consent Violations in an ugly grey area that can be difficult to define. Since we cannot place ourselves into the minds of another person, we cannot ever truly know whether or not someone intended harm. We can however measure how they react when an incident arises. If an incident occurs either in a scene or a relationship that violates consent, but is immediately addressed and corrected when a safeword is used, or a situation is brought up for discussion and reacted to with love and protection and commitment to their pre-existing agreements made by each party: this is most likely a Consent Accident.

Those who respect safewords, communicate effectively, and provide attentive, loving aftercare and learn from their mistakes are generally less likely to be those engaging in Consent Violation.

Consent Violations 

Consent Violations can differentiate themselves from Consent Accidents both in how they are handled and how they arose in the first place. A Consent Violation can occur when someone intentionally engages in a behavior that either party has labelled off-limits, coerces someone into engaging in an activity they aren’t comfortable with, or when someone engages in an activity that they have not been properly trained for.

If, for example, a dominant IGNORES a safeword during the same flogging scene mentioned above: this is a Consent Violation as safewords must always be respected. If an individual knowingly engages in a behavior that is unacceptable to either party: these are Consent Violations. If a party misrepresents their level of experience to another party: this is a Consent Violation.

What’s more, engaging in these types of behaviors can be crimes and they can put the affected party into a situation where there limits are not being respected, and they are exposed to physical, emotional, or mental harm.

Consent Abuse 

Once someone has labelled an activity as a Soft Limit or a Hard Limit, or they have also labelled the subject off-limits for negotiation. Trying to coerce, manipulate, or guilt another person into doing something that have said NO to is abusive behavior. Limits exist to be respected and regardless of whether you are a Dominant or a Submissive, you deserve to have those limits respected. Never hesitate to stand up for yourself and your right to have your limits respected.

What To Do When You Experience Or Believe You May Have Observed Consent Violations

  • If you are the victim of a Consent Violation, you need to report it. Sometimes these violations rise to the level of criminal behavior. While consensual non-consent, and impact play can be intense and enjoyable forms of CONSENSUAL play, they are not covers for rape or violence. If you are someone who has suffered from these times of crimes, or you know of someone who has, you should report them to the police.
  • If you feel that you are being victimized by someone – whether that abuse is physical, mental, or emotional – you should seek help from friends and family members, and leave that situation as quickly as possible. Abuse is never ok, and staying with your abuser in the hopes that they will change will not work. Learn to spot the signs of abuse, and leave.
  • If you feel that you have suffered criminal abuse, mental, or emotional abuse and you are an active member of your kink community – or you are aware that your abuser is a member of the kink community – you need to speak up. Not just for your safety but for that of others.
  • If you are uncertain if what you have been told or have witnessed is abuse, or you have concerns that it may be, you should first discuss those concerns directly with the person you believe might have been victimized. Ideally this conversation should happen in private and in a safe, neutral place where the person can speak freely and without fear. It is vitally important to keep in mind however that sometimes the things we witness at a play party, or hear about from the participants themselves feels like it may be abuse (and indeed it may be) but it’s always best to be certain. Sometimes those things we think are abuse are instead completely consensual acts that both parties enjoy and the last thing we’d want to do is start making allegations of abuse that could harm the reputations of others. You may also choose to discuss this with people you trust in the kink community if you have ongoing concerns after speaking directly with those involved.

Postscript

My writing, like myself, is always a work in progress. If you have a way to help me improve either please let me know via the MESSAGE function.

Have a question or topic you’d like to have me write about? Please let me know via the ASK function. That way I can share the answer with others. Remember, if you’re asking, you’re almost certainly not the first to have had the question.

Want to tell me how amazing I/my writing is and pump up my already preposterously overinflated ego? Let me know via the ASK function. That way I can shamelessly show others that people think I’m awesome. I’m vain like that after all. Fuck it, serotonin feels good.

Acknowledgements

Thank you to all of my mentors over the years who’ve helped guide me on my path. I appreciate all the wisdom you’ve been kind enough to share with me. To all the submissives who’ve invested their time into relationships with me: thank you, you’ve made me a better dominant and a better man. 

Special thanks to those who helped proofread this post before it went out:

A very special thank you to @eatmyprettykitty​ for all of your kindness, love and support over the past two years. You’re an amazing friend.

comicbookj82:

sirseverything:

dominantropedaddy:

stallionbull:

shedaydreamslove:

cancerlove67:

motherofmetal:

blastoffbetsy:

verbilevixxxen:

dlslubunny:

daughterofaphrodite828:

dominantandkinky:

asmodeus-cain:

1sadisticlover:

onceuponsirsstarrynight:

What is Dominance and Submission

Dominance and submission (abbreviated D/s) is one subset of the broader BDSM subculture, and while there are many misconceptions within western society about what BDSM truly is, it’s something that has seen an explosion in popularity within mainstream culture thanks to the commercial success of books such as Fifty Shades of Grey series and the rise of the internet. That commercial popularity has led to significant advances in social acceptance and the destigmatization, both good things, but it has also ushered in an unprecedented amount of misinformation. While a fundamental inability to grasp what BDSM truly is in vanilla society is forgivable, what’s truly shocking is how grossly misunderstood BDSM is not just amongst the vanilla, but the kinky themselves.

I believe that the roots of that misunderstanding stem from beliefs that are rooted in BDSM fantasy: whether it’s the dungeons of the middle ages, or the image of the taking of slaves as the spoils of war, or torment and humiliation of the weak. And while no great discussion of BDSM – or dominance and submission – would be complete without a deep dive into it’s decidedly non-consensual ancient heritage, for today’s purposes we’ll be discussing dominance and submission in it’s contemporary form and, hopefully, shattering a few misconceptions while providing guidance and perspective. With that being said, let’s begin the process of providing clarity about what D/s is, and what it is not. We’ll start with the acronym itself. BDSM is a three part acronym combining three separate abbreviations into one, they are as follows:

  • (BD) Bondage and Discipline
  • (DS) Dominance and Submission
  • (SM) Sadism and Masochism

While these three abbreviations fit nicely together, there is no need to think of them as separate entities: how you choose to engage in BDSM is entirely at your discretion, and as you’ll hear from anyone with enough experience, there is no right or wrong way to go about it. For this exercise though, let us focus primarily on dominance and submission.

At it’s core, dominance and submission is about power exchange. Power exchange within the context of dominance and submission is a consensual, mutually agreed to, negotiated, and codified relationship wherein one party voluntarily requests to be led by another. In this relationship, the person giving power is referred to as the submissive, and the one agreeing to accept the responsibility of power is known as the dominant. The scope of that exchange of power is something that is entirely within the purview of it’s practitioners, but fundamentally it is critical to understand that DOMINANCE AND SUBMISSION IS NOT ABOUT SEX.

This is something that is absolutely critical to understand. For some this may seem surprising since many people’s preconceived notions of what D/s is are almost always sex-centric. Before they actually engage in the lifestyle, many (most?) people are under the impression that dominance and submission is all about rough sex, sadomasochism, slavery, and bondage. While all of those things may or may not be present within a D/s relationship, that is not what D/s itself, is.

Rather, dominance and submission is about establishing the rules, roles, and methodologies of engagement that will define that couples interactions. When I attempt to explain dominance and submission to those who are not involved in BDSM I let them know that dominance and submission is nothing more than a normal relationship in which the parties engage in active, continual communication, establishing the rules and roles each party is obligated to fulfill. They fulfill those roles in order to ensure each parties mutual happiness, with one party accepting the responsibility of leadership and ensuring that both parties adhere to their negotiated, and consented roles.

That’s it.

Dominance and submission need not have anything to do with sex, whips or chains, rope or pain, leather or latex. It is simply a method of engaging in a relationship – how you choose to dress that up is entirely up to you and your partners wants and needs. For some that may mean sacrificing control over certain parts of what happens in their sex life, for others it may include sadomasochism, for others it may be entirely relationship based with little, or even no correlation at all to what happens in the bedroom. The permutations of how a couple could choose to practice are as infinite as the universe, and every bit as diverse. There are however some basic tenets that those in the lifestyle operate under, namely what we call Safe, Sane, and Consensual – or SSC.

Safe: Meaning that however you choose to practice, no matter how extreme it may be, should be done safely. There are so many things that can be done in our lifestyle that, if not practiced safely, by people well trained in their application, can lead to devastating injury, emotional damage, or yes, even death. While you’re under no obligation to practice anything outside of your comfort zone (your limits), know that if you choose to do so, you should only be engaging in their practice with people you know are well trained, and whom you trust explicitly. Even seemingly benign this like rope bondage or nipple clamps can lead to injury due to loss of circulation. Before you ever engage in any activity, invest yourself into your education, and ensure your partner is as well. Safety is everyone’s responsibility, not just yours.

Sane: Meaning that the things you do should pass a basic common sense test. If something seems wildly outlandish, it probably is. Keep in mind that much of what you see in BDSM pornography is fantasy. It is something that was intentionally designed, and set for that purpose. Public sex may seem exciting, but if there are kids around (or even other adults) don’t do it. Consensual non-consent (rape fantasy) may seem exciting and intriguing, and for some it is, but keep in mind that for many, many others it’s a brutally painful trigger for past trauma.

Consensual: Meaning that every single thing you do must be negotiated and agreed to first. In our lifestyle this is paramount, and I’m a firm believer that everyone who chooses to engage in BDSM should first obtain Affirmative Consent: meaning that only YES means YES, and everything else means NO. It’s also important to reiterate what should be obvious, people with mental handicaps and those who are under the influence of drugs or alcohol cannot provide affirmative consent. It does not matter if they’ve been your partner for a decade, if they’ve been drinking, their ability to give consent, and more importantly, their ability to properly parse what’s happening to them and protect themselves by “safewording” is impaired, and that’s no way to practice with someone you should love and care for.

What Dominance and Submission IS NOT

Dominance and submission is not a cover for abuse, or rape. Dominance and submission is predicated on negotiated relationships between consenting adults. The only time in which physical interaction of any sort is allowed is when both parties have made it explicitly clear to the other that that is what they want. If the person you choose to engage with is making you feel uncomfortable, or trying to get you to agree to things that you don’t want to do, or making you feel worse about yourself run, don’t walk, from that situation and make others aware of that persons behavior immediately.

If you’re looking to take on the role of dominant understand that you are not a dominant to any submissive until she has consented to a very exact, very well defined scope of power exchange. Until then, they are to be treated with absolute respect. If you wouldn’t talk to the person you respect most in life that way, don’t talk to a submissive that way.

Dominance and submission isn’t about cheap, easy, no-strings attached sex: It is a deeply intimate relationship between two (or more) people who have taken the time to know one another on an extremely intimate level and who have developed deep bonds of trust and respect that allow them to explore incredible, and sometimes dangerous or emotionally sensitive aspects of their lives.

What is a submissive?

The term submissive alone is enough to make some people’s skin crawl as it conjurs images of someone who is weak-willed, timid, cowardly, enslaved, or abused. Thankfully as I’ll try and highlight, that image of the fading man or woman couldn’t (usually) be further from the truth. Indeed, most submissives tend to be exceptionally strong willed people who are perfectly capable of being assertive, and they are equally as likely to be as intelligent and capable as their dominant partners. Most submissives are highly competent at their chosen professions and they’re every bit as likely to be well educated as the next person.

A submissive is not someone who is weak, on the contrary, more often than not they are abundantly powerful people in their everyday lives – they are simply someone who enjoys being the one to take on the role of follower in their personal relationship. Perhaps they want the FREEDOM to not have to lead for once in their lives. They may passionately desire that instead of being the one who must make all the decisions, that they’ll have a strong, intelligent, loving, and capable partner whom they can entrust to handle that decision making for them.

Submissive is also a blanket term for a wide variety of sub-categories of submission, the four most prominent being:

  • Bottoms: Those who serve in the submissive role during BDSM sceens. They agree to negotiate a degree of power exchange before consenting to the interaction(s), and maintain the right to renegotiate that agreement at any time.
  • Littles: This is far and away the most critically misunderstood of all the submissive subcategories, both by those on the outside looking in, and those who actually identify as littles. But critically, they are those who enjoy a relationship with more of a parent/child dynamic than the adult-adult that exists within the standard D/s dynamic. Typically the little is defined by having child-like tendencies. IE: enjoying time to color, play at the park, sleeping with and playing with stuffed animals, etc… While they can function within adult society, they very much act the part of the child – because internally they identify as a child. While the little may enjoy other forms of play such as age-play, ABDL (adult baby, diaper lover), incest play, these are NOT prerequisites to the dynamic. They agree to negotiate a degree of power exchange before consenting to the relationship, and maintain the right to renegotiate that agreement at any time. This article is highly recommended reading from The Submissive Guide with some little-to-little wisdom for those who think they may be a little.
  • Submissive: Someone who enjoys being in a relationship in which they freely consent to give some degree of power to their dominant. They agree to negotiate a degree of power exchange before consenting to the relationship, and maintain the right to renegotiate that agreement at any time. They are a partner, not a slave.
  • Slave: A slave differentiates themselves from standard submission in that they are agreeing to total (or near total) power exchange. They still retain the rights to safeword and leave the relationship (they are not true slaves) but they voluntarily give up the right to renegotiate their agreement once it’s been agreed to. That doesn’t mean the agreement can’t or won’t be amended, but that it’s at the discretion of the dominant party.

What is a dominant?

A dominant is the counter-point to the submissive, and the one who accepts responsibility for their relationship. They are not infallible or all-knowing, they are not the sole proprietors of truth and wisdom, or emotionless automatons. They are entrusted with ensuring that the mutual happiness of both parties is attended to, both by upholding their role within the dynamic, and ensuring that their submissive partner fulfills their role.

They agree to take on the burden of leading the relationship and assume responsibility for the ultimate success, or failure of that relationship. Their chief role is not to be the whip-wielding slave driver (though some couples may enjoy that) but rather to be the one who leads by providing everything their agreement outlines. They are responsible for developing and maintaining a safe, secure, nurturing, loving environment, replete with strong communication, and adherence to their agreement.

Just as is the case with submissives, ‘dominant’ is a blanket term for a wide variety of dominant sub-categories, the four most prominent being:

  • Top: The top is the counter-point to the bottom. They are responsible for the safety and protection of the bottom with whom they’ll be screening, and ensuring that the agreements they’ve made are adhered to.
  • Daddy/Mommy: A daddy or mommy is the counter-point to the little. Like any dominant they are responsible for the care, nurturing, guidance, growth, safety, love and discipline of their little. Additionally, they may also be responsible for setting bedtimes, cooking meals, ensuring their littles get playtime, etc… They assume the parental role and ensure that the couples negotiated agreement is fulfilled and that each parties wants and needs are met.
  • Dominant: A dominant is the counter-point to the submissive. They are responsible for the care, nurturing, guidance, growth, safety, love and discipline of their submissive. They assume the leadership role and ensure that the couples negotiated agreement is fulfilled and that each parties wants and needs are met.
  • Master/Mistress: A master or mistress is the counter-point to the slave. They are responsible for the care, nurturing, guidance, growth, safety, love and discipline of their slave. They assume the leadership role and ensure that the couples negotiated agreement is fulfilled and that each parties wants and needs are met.

In Summation

Just as is the case with submissives, dominants can assume more than one role, and operate on a spectrum. A master could be called daddy (instead of the more typical title of master), and he could be very soft, tender, and nurturing toward his slave. Conversely, a mommy could be called mistress and be very harsh and strict with her little boy.

It’s important to understand that every dynamic is unique, and that there is not “right” or “wrong” way to engage in dominance and submission – it’s about finding two (or more) people who agree to a dynamic that makes them happy and fulfills their needs.

Is Dominance & Submission For Me?

I’m a firm believer that dominance and submission could be for anyone who has longed for something more than their previous relationship. One of the most frequent comments I’ve heard from both men and women in their life is that they feel like they’re partner has forgotten about them or, “stopped trying.” They feel neglected in their relationship. Dominance and submission, with it’s requirements for open communication, negotiation, and (hopefully) written agreements provides a potential solution to that. 

It seems silly to say, but when each party can go back to their agreement and say, “see, you promised that you would do X for me,” it provides a solution for holding people accountable to meeting one another’s needs. For the woman who says, “you promised me you wouldn’t stop taking me on dates, but we haven’t been on one in two months,” or the guy who says, “I told you I needed to have sex at least once a day, but we haven’t had sex in weeks…” pre-negotiated, codified agreements present a potential solution. 

What you choose to agree upon could be literally anything you can imagine. It could be physical, emotional, psychological, financial… you name it. 

Of course with dominance and submission being part of the broader BDSM subculture, it also typically involves kink (and lots of it!). That’s because the confidence and trust we can develop in a relationship of this nature is boundless, and it is that trust, and that confidence that provides us with the security to open ourselves up and expose our true nature, our hidden desires, and our darkest fantasies to a partner we know is completely invested in our happiness, our safety, and our fulfillment.  

It’s important to understand however that relationships that require deep trust, also require phenomenal communication, and leaders of the absolute highest character. The sort that is born of both emotionally honesty, and emotional vulnerability. It requires partners that are emotionally intelligent enough to be deeply and keenly sensitive to their partners emotional needs as well as their own. This is not for the immature, and it is not for the reckless. It’s important that you understand what you’re getting into, and the very serious responsibility that you’re agreeing to take on. But if you’ve spent your life unfulfilled and you’re looking for something more out of your relationships, D/s might just provide the answer. 

Take out your pad and pen and get ready to take notes. My friend and phenomenal writer @onceuponsirsstarrynight is taking us to school. Read up and get ready for part two later today. And for god’s sake follow the man! You won’t find a better BD/sM resource on tumblr!

♌️👌🏽

What they say.

I’m learning so much today. It is a good day💖💖💖 thank you

#dlslubunny

Everyone should read this… it’s not just being bossy or obedient

🚀

THIS. THIS RIGHT HERE.

Really Awesome and informative!!

Communication is key.. ⚜️🔱

Solid information from a man who knows, cares, communicates and exudes sexual pleasure! 

If you are into BDSM or are just curious. This is some great information.

I enjoyed this and have learned lots. Thank you

Long read but very worth it! 😊

the-romantic-dominant:

Let’s Dispense With The Self-Doubt

Seriously ladies, you fucking pick yourselves apart until their is nothing left. I can’t count the times I’ve heard “I am too fat” or “I don’t look good right now” to find out you are own worst enemy and you look fucking hot as hell.

You should see a few extra pounds as a mechanism to vet the most shallow of men. Same thing with some stretch marks, which eats at some of you.

God damn women are beautiful in so many shapes and sizes. The thing that is least sexy about an extra 25 lbs is the relentless self-deprecation that seems to accompany it.

I got news for you. Nobody looks perfect. But you can be sexy as fuck nonetheless so fucking stop making yourself so unattractive by saying you look like shit when you clearly don’t.

I’m not saying I chase obese women. Hardly. I however see the beauty in a woman, and a couple sizes past where you want to be makes no fucking difference to anyone but you.

Throw on a pair of matching bra and panties. Stand across the room from me and fucking own it. Cause you look fucking good and you better believe it when I grab you by the fucking hair and make you feel it in your bones.

Saddle up cowgirl. Daddy is throwing the kitchen sink at you and you can take that extra few sizes and bite down on em, cause I’m gonna steamroll you babydoll.

wickedlittlebtch:

female-orgasm-denial:

nbhorndog:

As JuNO Comes to a close, here’s a Bingo sheet to see what you have and haven’t done! Fill yours out and reblog with your results! See how far you’ve come! See what you could try to finish in the last stretch! 
Congratulations everyone 🙂 Happy end of JuNO! 

How great is this?!

Oehhh, awesome. Let’s see…

Nipples only: Not an option as I only get to touch them with permission.

Denial buddy: Well, maybe, in a way, Sphinx is my denial buddy. But he’s also under my control. So, halvesies?

Touched without permission: I always have permission to touch, so, yeah.

Public edge: Technically I did one… I touched myself outside, naked, anxious as fuck. But I didn’t get aroused at all.

Been punished: There was no need. 😇

JuNO is over. Here are my results.

image

Edged for 1+ hours : one time at least

Been Plugged : everyday during my last edge before sleeping

Soaked Underwear : five days a week, when working. No panties while I’m at home

Mantra : once in a while, while masturbating, such as “cumming is good, edging is better”

No touch : one week-end to rest my over-sensitive clit

Did tasks from internet : from time to time. As an example, 3 edges, standing, not allowed to lean on anything. Each edge in different room and each one at least one hour apart.

Sex while Denied : well… yes…with my Hubby

Free (edged) : almost everyday as I could make as many edges as I wanted but not less than 3

Woke up horny : once in a while

Posted Nudes : from time to time, on my Tumblr mainly

Ridden your Edge : as often as possible

Hypno : almost everyday, from ViVe or Nimja

Public Edge : as often as possible, at work, in the restroom

Denied Month : on my way to 200 days without a real orgasm

Been Punished : One time because I have forgotten to report one edge to my Hubby. I have had to handwrite 50 times “Being a mindless slut is not an excuse for not completing my most basic duties”

And I wish to add : 94 edges among which 40 hard, mainly with my hand, sometimes with a vibro (when it was late at night and i was a little bit tired).

say-no-to-the-o:

In celebration of our one year anniversary, we are inviting everyone in the entire world to do his, her or their best to deny every adult clit across the World Wide Web of Female Orgasm Denial.

If we join together we can create a world of needy, achy, throbbing clits.

Help make the world a better place. Do you part and SAY NO TO THE O to ever clit on July 1!

Find out more HERE.