C is for CLOTHESPINS

Karin Performing with Clothspins

Photo by Rachel Leah Blumenthal

C is for clothespins and clamps!  These little buggers are some of my favorite toys to play with, and oh! have they been played well…

First off, a tip of the hat to The Toybag Guide to Clips and Clamps by Greenery Press.  For those who like to read their way through first steps, I highly recommend this cute and quick little read.

I love clothespins.  And I fucking hate them.  They can give you the type of pain you just want to feel feel feel for long periods of time, and even the taking off of the little wooden clips is divine…  but I will also admit that nothing has nipped me harder and more annoyingly than them either.  There are places on my body I definitely do NOT prefer the sting and ache of a clamp.

There are a million different types of clamps: clothespins, butterfly clamps, tweezer clips, vibrating clamps, hair clips, the list goes on…  All have their own sensations and degree of evil associated with them.  The game is that of pinching and manipulating to the delight of the players – that can be hard, soft, or anywhere in between.

Photo by M

Photo by M

I have one partner who really enjoys clamping my nipples and waiting until I’m really uncomfortable before wiggling them around causing the pain that’s just started to become manageable to crest all over again.  I had one partner who put me in predicament bondage threatened to rip off my nipples if I put my feet down (I held them up in the air for a very long time).  When it came time to undo the ropes tying everything together, this partner made me take the clamps off my own nipples – I swear to god I’ve never done anything scarier.  Damn it hurt, but I cherish that memory almost as much as the sensations I experienced during the event.  Clothespin Zippers are also a really fun game.  A zipper is made by lining up a row of clothespins over a ribbon or string so that when it comes time to remove the clothespins you can yank all of them off at the same time quickly.  Scary.  Awesome sensations.  Great to do when your partner is about to orgasm!  I’ve performed pieces where I covered my body with clothespins (see pic above), and I’m pretty sure that clothespins were the first pain toy I ever discovered waaay back in the day when I had my first ever kinky play partner.  Sufficed to say, they still make me melt.

Photo by Marmotoons

Photo by Marmotoons

I’ve always wanted someone to give me clothespin wings (though I’d want bigger ones than these).  My birthday is this Sunday…

The trick to clips and clamps is this:  It hurts going on.  Then you get used to it and the pain subsides a bit, even becomes tolerable and sometimes negligible.  Movement changes that and ups the discomfort level, as does weight or vibration.  Then you have to take them off, and that hurts.  A LOT.

What’s happening there is this:  You get clipped and the pinch hurts, it ignites all your pain sensors in the area that’s being pinched.  Over time though you are depleting skin tissues of blood and they fall asleep (not unlike how your foot will when you unwittingly cut off your circulation).  That is what causes the numbness and strange sensations while the clips are on.  When you remove the clamps though the blood rushes back into that area of tissue and it become hyper sensitive to sensation.  You will feel pain, tingling, and other strangeness.  Sometimes this is a welcome relief, sometimes it is excruciating.

You can put clamps on pretty much any part of your body without too much worry of lasting damage as long as you pay attention to the level of pain you are receiving and communicate clearly when you feel it is the wrong kind of pain or getting to be too much for you.  The great thing about clips and clamps is that they can go almost anywhere on the body (nipples, stomach, chest, back, genitals, toes, arms, ears, lips, you name it…), and you can get clamps with a very widely varying degree of intensity; some are even pressure adjustable.

So what have we learned today, Class?  We’ve learned that these versatile, often extremely cheap and easy to find items can be worth their weight in gold for the masochist and hedonist alike.  Play, discover, learn!  I want to hear your stories too, now go forth and have fun pinching one another!

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

If you like my blog, please check out my Patreon Page and consider supporting me, or just click here: Support the Artist

~Thank you.

###

Be an ABCs contributor:  Do you have a story or perspective to share about kink or would you like to promote a kinky event?  Email Karin directly at: Karin @ ABCsOfKink . com or fill out the as-anonymous-as-you-want-it-to-be feedback form below and you could see your writing published as a part of Wednesday’s “Perspectives on Kink: Conversations with the Community” blog on this site.  Don’t know what to write about?  Consider answering some of the Survey Questions I posted recently.  Happy writing, and thanks!

S is for SELF CARE

Photo by Davis Aquilina

Photo by Davis Aquilina

This week’s blog is going to be short and will not follow the format I usually employ.  It’s a busy week for me, and this is the compromise I’ve come to (that in an of itself is a great self care practice).  While most of what’s below can be used anytime and anywhere by anybody needing self care, the intent is to think about this subject in the context of maintaining healthy kink/BDSM/sexuality realities.  Enjoy!

  • Be realistic about the amount of emotional, physical, and mental energy you have to give to others and allow yourself to limit your spending as you see reasonable when those reserves are low (communicating your needs clearly is key if you’re negotiating the practicalities of these realities with others)
  • Clearly ask for what you want and need from the people who matter to you
  • Take time for you!  Sleep in your own bed or space if you’ve got it, keep a journal, make a date with yourself…  there are a million ways to do so
  • Learn to feel safe being vulnerable around those you trust
  • Learn to trust others and learn to trust your gut.  These things are not mutually exclusive
  • Develop good communication skills
  • First ground yourself so that you may share that grounded you with others when you want to
  • Therapy can be a wonderful gift to give yourself
  • Don’t beat yourself up for being wrong or making mistakes, learn from them and live more deeply and intentionally knowing that you’ve failed, you’ve survived, and you’ve grown because of it
  • Touch your skin in soothing and loving ways
  • Masturbate/have orgasms when you want them.  Masturbation is great at relieving stress and grounding you in yourself
  • Take a time out to remind yourself that you are sexy, smart, lovable, and worthy of lightness, fun, good energy, and happiness
  • Put something in your mouth that makes you melt.  Enjoy it through the final shadow of its lingering taste
  • Exercise!  Move your body!  Dance!  Walk!  Run!  Stretch!!!  Your body matters to your mental and emotional reality.  Lethargy can lead to depression quickly
  • Talk with trusted friends and family members about things that are hard for you to reach out about.  Being a human being means you experience similar conflicts and emotions as other human beings.  You can talk about your problems with others – even the kinky/sexual ones – you have permission.  Everyone’s experiences may differ, but we are united in our need for reassurance and help from our fellow community members
  • Meditate
  • Find and face your fears honorably.  They developed because you needed them at some point, if they do not serve you and your desires now, figure out how to let them go or at least be present with them as they arise
  • Remember why you do the things you do, why you are committed to the things you are committed to
  • Do research on stuff that turns you on and advocate for the healthy presence of those things in your relationships and find ways to give those things to yourself
  • Think about whether or not you carry shame or judgement with you into your sexual, kink, or other relations and try to figure out where that those things came from.  Can you leave that shame and judgement behind and find a path to a more accepting and loving you?
  • Play.  Have fun.  Try something new.  Make a mess.  Life isn’t perfect, so let yourself go when you need to
  • Sub/Dom/Top/Switch/Bottom/Pet/Teacher/Slut/Boi/Whatever things you think typify you:  You are not a box, and you were not born with a box shaped body.  Remember that you define your labels, your labels do not define you.  This entire self care list applies to everyone regardless of which roles they do or do not embrace as their own
  • Take responsibility for yourself, doing that may open up doors you never knew existed

Do you have self care techniques that work for you?  What are they?  How did you discover them?  Will you share?  Please comment below.

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

If you like my blog, please check out my Patreon Page and consider supporting me, or just click here: Support the Artist

~Thank you.

###

Be an ABCs contributor:  Do you have a story or perspective to share about kink or would you like to promote a kinky event?  Email Karin directly at: Karin @ ABCsOfKink . com or fill out the as-anonymous-as-you-want-it-to-be feedback form below and you could see your writing published as a part of Wednesday’s “Perspectives on Kink: Conversations with the Community” blog on this site.  Don’t know what to write about?  Consider answering some of the Survey Questions I posted recently.  Happy writing, and thanks!

S is for SLAPPING

Bifurcated Girls Spank, from Vanity Fair's Bifurcated Girls Special Issue, June 6, 1903. This issue showed women dressed in trousers, at the time considered rather risque. What would they think now?

Bifurcated Girls Spank, from Vanity Fair’s Bifurcated Girls Special Issue, June 6, 1903. This issue showed women dressed in trousers, at the time considered rather risque. What would they think now?

Slapping, spanking, striking with an open hand:  classic, enjoyable, and a great introduction to rough body play for both the enthusiastic beginner, and the rough ‘n tumble explorer.

Why slap someone?  Today I wanted to write about slapping because, well, I recently had a scene that was all slapping, and I realized I had a bunch to say about it.  First off I want to recommend slapping for people who are new to impact play and/or would like to get familiar with a new partner’s body, as long as it’s consensual and of interest to all the parties involved.

The hand is a REALLY smart toy.  It learns all kinds of information when it touches, strikes, or lingers over a body part.  The hand is VERSATILE!  You can strike with the finger tips, the palm stretched wide, the fingers held rigid or soft, you can go for a loud crack of a sound or a quick and thuddy pat.  Almost every part of the body can tolerate a slap to some degree as long as it lands correctly, and handprints are ever so divine.  Hands know how hard you are hitting, as the Top’s hand has a direct line to the experience and is feeling every hit as well.  Coordination and target accuracy is easier with an actual body part than with a toy that demands extension.  Warming up is something you have clear physical feedback about, as is moving forward.

What to look out for:  While slapping is a relatively easy activity to figure out, it is not without its own set of guidelines to watch out for.  Face slapping is something you should do research on and be confident about before attempting.  It is not an activity you want to try out and fail at after realizing you’ve blown out someone’s eardrum or dislocated a jawbone or poked an eye.  Aside from the face though, you should bone up on your anatomy/physiology lessons too.  Know about the radial nerve when hitting (or binding) anywhere in the inner upper arm area, remind yourself about the zyphoid process, diaphragm, stomach muscles and the organs they protectfloating ribs, shoulder joints, joints in general…  Most of these you want to know about so you don’t cause damage to your bottom, but some anatomy you want to be aware of so you don’t damage your own hand.  Remember to check in thoroughly with your partner prior to play so you have a clear idea about what’s going on with their body both today and in general.  Know their problem areas, past injuries, current sensitivities, recent hospital visits or illnesses, ongoing health concerns, where their inhaler is, whether or not they have or ever need the assistance of an EpiPen, if there are heart issues to consider or medication that needs to be on hand…  you get the point.  Slapping is the most fun when it is done safely and with the confidence of everyone in the room.

Practice:  Take a workshop on slapping or rough body play at a convention or with a local kink organization.  You can find more about slapping on the Kink Academy website, they have some really great educators who have created how-to videos on the subject.  Start out slow and plan a session with your partner where you can communicate regularly about how everything feels.  Check in frequently when you’re starting out, and make sure you have safe words in play if you are in a scene where the bottom isn’t able to talk or express themselves clearly.  Personally I like Red/Yellow/Green as safewords, as you can use them for shorthand checkin in the midst of play:  Red means stop everything and check in immediately, Yellow means you don’t need to stop but things are getting to be too much or move onto another area or slow down or a checkin would be appreciated, Green means all systems go, keep up the good work!

My experiences with slapping:  …have been great!  I was first introduced to being slapped and slapping in college during Stage Combat class.  It was the only fight technique that we were taught to sometimes actually DO to another person.  On stage the intimacy of a slap across the face cannot always be faked, so we set about learning how to do a contact slap with great lust and much wincing.  Though the information on anatomy and various red flags to look for while you’re slapping someone for a stage performance are the same as what you need to know for kinky hitting fun, there is a solid difference in that you are not trying to hurt your acting scene partner, and you probably are trying to hurt your kink scene partner to a certain degree.  Knowing about what the individual body can stand and where real boundaries lay is important.

As for the kinky end of the spectrum, I’ve been slapped by the best of them, and I always have a great time.  Recently I found myself in the middle of a scene where slapping was the entire point of the scene.  I LOVED it.  It was interesting to have all the different parts of my body be played with in this manner, and for each part of the body to have its own journey through the slap.  We started with arms, moved onto chest, stomach, inner thighs, outer thighs, vulva… and I think there was more, but by then we were three hours in and I was getting mushy brained.  The scene was made better by an excellent amount of conversation and regular checkins as we proceeded or the hitting became more intense.  I was feeling very good and melty, so not in a place where I could accurately discuss the finer points of my experience for some of the later check ins, but we had hand signals and the stoplight safeword system in place so my partner knew I was green and happy to carry on.  I have tiny little pinpoint bruise markings on my inner arms a few days later, which will clear up soon enough, and though I am not marked up as much as I usually am in a scene, it was a wonderful experience that did play with my boundaries to a satisfying extent that I’d love to repeat.  There’s just something so wonderful about looking up into your partner’s eyes and realizing they’re loving what they’re doing to you, that you’re breathing together, and knowing wholeheartedly that the combination of such a great connection, physical pain, and pleasing your lover gets you both really really turned on and… wet.

So, maybe try slapping out?  If impact play is something you think you’d like, give it a more personal touch and make your hands the toy for a night.  Know what you need to watch out for, have a great time with your partners, and let yourself hit or be hit for science!

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

If you like my blog, please check out my Patreon Page and consider supporting me, or just click here: Support the Artist

~Thank you.

###

Be an ABCs contributor:  Do you have a story or perspective to share about kink or would you like to promote a kinky event?  Email Karin directly at: Karin @ ABCsOfKink . com or fill out the as-anonymous-as-you-want-it-to-be feedback form below and you could see your writing published as a part of Wednesday’s “Perspectives on Kink: Conversations with the Community” blog on this site.  Don’t know what to write about?  Consider answering some of the Survey Questions I posted recently.  Happy writing, and thanks!

Age Verification: www.ABCsOfKink.com addresses adult sensual and sexual information, including imagery associated with a wide variety of BDSM topics and themes. This website is available to readers who are 18+ (and/or of legal adult age within their districts). If you are 18+, please select the "Entry" button below. If you are not yet of adult age as defined by your country and state or province, please click the "Exit" link below. If you're under the age of consent, we recommend heading over to www.scarleteen.com — an awesome website, which is more appropriate to minors looking for information on these subjects. Thank you!