Expanding Experiences

Birthday spankings multiplied…

There’s a period of time between when one hears of something adventurous, and the realization that they’re ready to jump in and experience that particular adventure itself. This period of time is different for different people or situations and it doesn’t always look like a neat line from “not ready” to “ready”. Depending on the adventure being considered and the person’s history with that particular subject, the decision to engage might be almost immediate, it may take decades of consideration and even a period of start-and-stop failure to get there, it may include periods of trying the thing out followed by periods of disinterest (or negative reactions that need to be sorted out) and then rejoining later on, or never… and anything around and in between.

This period of time is an important part of any person’s processing, and I don’t think we give enough credit to it when we talk about trying new things. This period of time offers a person the opportunity to face any baggage (past or present), pre-conceived notions, fears, or other judgements they have about the activity. Allowing one’s level of interest to grow and unfold organically can be the difference between a healthy, unhealthy, positive, or negative experience. It can increase or decrease resilience during and after one’s experimentation. Today I’m exploring this concept within the framework of sexy and kinky play opportunities, as a vital part of how one advocates for themselves.

The world of the adult playground is enormous, illusive, and exciting! It may also feel really overwhelming. No matter what you’ve tried in your lifetime, there’s always more out there to consider. Fantasies are wonderful, but they are not the same thing as desires.

Everyone experiences desire. Desires are those things we generally want to have or experience in our lifetimes. Desires can be things we fantasize about, however some desires we definitely don’t fantasize about at all. I desire to eat healthy, however I don’t fantasize about all the good food in my kitchen and how I’m going to prep it (usually).

Alternately, turning an established fantasy into a desire you endeavor to fulfill can be fraught with real world problems, which alter the nature of what you thought you wanted in the first place. It’s important to be attentive to the details pertaining to what you’re asking for, to have a better chance of enjoying the experience.

For most people there’s overlap in the realms of fantasy and desire. For some people, especially those who don’t fantasize frequently (or ever), there might be none. Just because someone both desires and fantasizes about a thing doesn’t mean they’re ready to make it happen. A person who fantasies about impractical and otherworldly things may have a hard time finding their way into engaging those fantasies, however much they’d like to, while someone with an illegal or unethical fantasy may find it easy to potentially create the situation they have in mind, but choose not to. In both of these scenarios role play can be a wonderful tool for actualizing your fantasies in an ethical and non-harmful manner. Of course role play means you’re bringing other people into your scenario, so articulation of what you want must become even more clear.

People fantasize about things they would never want to have happen to them and things that have happened which they wouldn’t want to relive. Our minds are complex. Fantasy serves as part of our internal processing of the world around us, our reactions to it, and the experiences we have.

Fantasizing can be used as a tool to more clearly sketch in the details of an experience you’d like to have, and it’s definitely good at telling you what about a scenario you’re actually into vs. what things you aren’t. Fantasy can help make a situation feel safer or more familiar and less awkward if you choose to play it out. Fantasizing about a scenario repeatedly can help one alter the details to an extent which feels right for further consideration in play.

Fantasies have context, even when they seem not to. For instance, if one fantasizes about a faceless lover, the person they desire may seem without context—meaning anyone with a mask might fill the fantasy part during play. However, upon replay of the scenario and closer observation, one might realize that the fantasy always leaves the fantasizer feeling a particular way, or the sensation of this faceless lover’s body is specific, perhaps the way the faceless person moves is key, how rough they are, whether or not they listen or have their own agenda, what their anatomy is like, or any other number of useful details may be derived from paying attention to fantasy details. In this way fantasy provides rehearsal, an opportunity to provide a clearer picture about what one actually wants and is attracted to.

When trying to play out a fantasy in real life, it’s important to talk about which aspects of the activity and environment matter to you. Think about the mood, think about how you want to feel after sceneing, think about what points you want to make sure you hit during the scene, and what potential actions or situations would take you out of it or interrupt your feeling of safety and enjoyment. It’s as important to talk about what you want as it is to discuss what you don’t want, in order for your scene to have a better chance of working out well for everyone involved.

It’s common when someone’s nervous to charge into an activity, leaning on some preconceived notion of how it’s supposed happen without having articulated any real specifics to the other people involved. This makes anyone involved more likely to make mistakes or unknowingly hit a trigger. Sloppy engagement leaves everyone involved having to play together through a reactive place. Working with people who are reacting instead of being present with their desires and needs can work for some people some of the time, but it’s not a good model. It can be disastrous, and there are better ways to engage.

Being present and prepared are tools I cannot advocate for enough. Presentness is the only way I know to read how emotionally, mentally, or physically “signed on” someone is to the activities they say they want—outside of them using words. Even being completely present and reading body language like an expert isn’t a standard which can be held higher than a person’s own recounting of their experience though. There’s no way to be in someone else’s brain and body, no matter how close to them you feel you are. For this reason, if you’re concerned about mitigating potential fallouts, it’s important to be present and care about consent, responsible negotiation, and check-ins with your play partners.

Consent is the buzzword of the day! I’m sure you have many ideas about why it’s important. I want to sidestep the obvious conversations about consent though, and take a moment to talk about how important it is to be aware of your own personal consent practices, as well as being sensitive to others’. Do you feel comfortable saying “no” to the person you’re negotiating with? If you don’t, then your consent isn’t going to do what it needs to do in the long run by helping to keep you safe. I often say to my partners and clients, “I can’t trust your yes until I can hear and trust your no”.

Practice saying no to yourself and to your partners regularly. Keep that muscle strong and vocal. Practice saying no to new people you meet. It’s never too early to let someone know what you mean, rather than what you think they’d like to hear. Practicing saying no will help you navigate uneasy desires with more clarity when they pop up. It can be hard to say no to something you desire when it’s being offered with red flags waving alongside. If saying no is something you feel comfortable saying, and negotiating a different set of circumstances is something you feel confident about doing, you’re in a great position to get what you want from a scenario. If you aren’t confident, chances are you may get yourself into a disappointing scene, or worse.

Consent concerning other people is also, of course, a very important concept to get comfortable with if you’re not already. Once you’ve gotten clear with yourself, consider the consent model, “FRIES”, to keep yourself in the clear with play partners. FRIES:

  • Freely Given: When consent is freely given it’s given without manipulation, coercion, threat of potential punishment or gain, and it’s given soberly. Evaluate and ask whether you’re negotiating with someone under the influence of anything in order to gain meaningful consent.
  • Reversible: Consent can be reversed or revoked at any time, and it must be honored if it is. Whether something dangerous has happened nearby, or a person is simply not enjoying the activity anymore, no still means no even if the answer was yes a moment ago.
  • Informed: Consent isn’t consent if it isn’t informed. This covers things like disclosing STI status, general health risks, activity related risks, the skill level of the person topping a risky activity, etc. Sometimes we engage in activities that aren’t “safe”. Being informed about the risks involved in play is the difference between signing onto something consensually and being manipulated into it unethically.
  • Enthusiastic: When a person kinda says, “Sure”, that’s not enthusiastic consent. Moving back to the notion of exercising our “no” muscles, one cannot accurately read whether a tepid “yes” is a result of them feeling unsafe to say, “no”, or not. If you’re unsure about whether your partner is really truly excited about engaging in an activity, ask again (if that’s appropriate) or decide to wait until you’re being asked with enthusiasm for that activity.
  • Specific: Consenting to a kiss is not consent to grope. Be specific about what you want and what you expect from a scene with another person. This is where negotiation shines! You don’t have consent for activities you haven’t negotiated prior to playing. And, as a general rule, if you’d like to add an activity to the roster mid-scene, keep that idea for next time. It’s better to have a next time to look forward to, than harm someone as a result of assuming they’ll be ok with more (or different) than they asked for.

Responsible negotiation encompasses more than simply agreeing to do a thing that’s being asked. To responsibly negotiate it’s generally agreed that one should not be under the influence of drugs, alcohol, or other intoxicants. It’s not good form to renegotiate in the middle of a scene, especially once someone has reached any level of sub-space, Dom-space, or heightened emotional/mental/physical experience which releases any number of natural chemicals into the bloodstream, potentially causing a person to make choices they wouldn’t outside of the heightened feelings of the moment. Responsible negotiation asks that people really think for a minute about what they might like during a scene and go over all the options in order to achieve meaningful consent. It also helps people look at a scene differently and synch expectations to a greater degree. If I think sexy cuddle-time obviously ends in genital stimulation, but my partner likes to naked cuddle with no sex involved, we are potentially consenting to two different scenes! It’s important to say all the words.

Check-ins are a wonderful way to make sure you and your partner(s) are still on the same page as your scene unfolds. Sure, you have consent to do the thing and you’ve negotiated how to do it. Checking in allows you to see if the plan is working out or if any adjustments might be needed in order to have a better time. It’s also a great way for D-types to make sure Domspace (the flipside of subspace) isn’t clouding their judgement. Doms and Tops get spacey too, a reality rarely mentioned when the wonderful world of sub-space is discussed. I can definitely say there have been times I’ve looked back on a scene I was topping or Dominating and remember the feeling as if I was drunk—even with no substance use having occurred before play. Intimacy, connection, power, sensual, and sexual activities are powerful rituals which should be acknowledged as such. Not everyone has the same ability to “keep their head” when in these states take over. Check-ins really help.

Aftercare is usually part of negotiation, and it’s an important thing to consider before stepping into play. Aftercare is how you unwind from playing, how you get your needs from the fallout of coming down fulfilled. People talk a lot about subs and bottoms needing aftercare, but not usually Doms and tops. I think everyone involved in play needs to consider what they do and don’t need after engaging in play. Aftercare can be anything and nothing. It can look like service or clean up help or cuddling or having some food and drink. It can look like being alone or not having to talk to anyone for a while. It can look like a check-in the next day or a couple days later, and it can look like payment while walking into the sunset as someone else comes over to clean up the mess and cuddle your bottom. There’s no right way to do aftercare, and it’s best to negotiate it. Sometimes people need radically different things which might have to be creatively worked out.

So, next time an idea you’ve been dreaming about feels like something you want to make happen, consider the details as fully as you can. Do a great job negotiating, gaining consent, building check-ins into the scene, and working out aftercare. We’re on this magnificent planet to connect, as much as we’re here to experience our autonomous lives. Take care of yourself, and take care of each other.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please help me pay rent: join Patreon, offer Support or email me directly. Thank you

Consider

Meet Me by the Seesaw

Nothing beats service that is offered with love and joy

I am happy today. I’m engaged in a number of things which I love. As I write this I’m training a submissive who has been in service to me for a while, I’m writing for my blog (hi!), and preparing to teach a student about Dominance later on. That my sub brought vegan croissants and I’ve taught them how to properly make my coffee certainly adds to my joy as well. Together we’ve created space for joy, deep connection, work to get done, and play. A simple life is often the most excellent one.

Last week was tough. My sub was suffering from the collision of a number of vital life issues which happened to explode at the same time. This (reasonably) thoroughly ungrounded them in the week leading up to our service date. They arrived without having done work I required, and in no headspace to attend to the tasks and adventures I had constructed for us to share that day.

We got the most vital work out of the way, and I redirected the remainder of our time together toward acknowledging and working through what was going on. We spoke at length about their situation and how it could be managed and resolved most easily and stably. Amidst an onslaught of apologies and self-flagellation (something I accept and acknowledge once or twice, but suffer not as a tool of attention seeking or derailment), we found space to talk about what was going on. They spoke to the complicated feelings and triggered fears that were a part of why these problems had such an emotional and destabilizing impact. We built—dreamed even—on how to move into a better place. By the end of our time together they were in much better shape, and ready to face the trials of their upcoming week positively, feeling centered again.

I’m happy to say they came to me this week doing much better, with solutions to their issues in play and moving onward. I do not wish ill on others in any way, but I do take pleasure from being a rock to those I care for. It feels great to be a useful partner, navigating my loved ones out from under their anxieties, and into a place of openness and re-found pleasure.

Mornings like this one make me feel as though all’s right in the world. I wish I was able to command them more frequently… all in good in time.

I wrote a mantra for this sub which I have them recite each time I collar them for service. One of the lines is, “…To follow and to serve Creature Sir most excellently”. Last week for homework they were to write an essay on what this line means to them, to break it down concept by concept, and to speak to the idea as a whole. I was not disappointed with their offering when I read their thoughts on the subject today.

Understanding the reasons why we do a thing or need is a gift. The gift of knowing can be an uneasy one, gratifying, eye-opening, worrisome, pleasurable, and/or a million other things. By understanding our personal motivations, we’re given the gift of choice. Choice to engage further or to end engagement, choice to renegotiate or to stay the course, choice to embrace a moment or to struggle onward, choice to get creative, choice to solve for whatever issues we haven’t fully figured out yet. For myself as Dominant and for those who are switching or submissive, that we come to the seesaw of D/s with an idea of what makes power exchange a positive or important form of play for us as individuals, is to be present at the fulcrum of autonomy and community with dignity, grace, with an ability to ask for exactly what it is we need and desire.

The fulcrum of a seesaw is the point from which all hinges and from where all movement comes. All balances out, clicks into place, or falls apart at this point. The fulcrum is a place where we have the ability to transform and expand. The mundane can become a nourishing and spectacular thing. Any idea or action has opportunity to slow down and be enjoyed deeply when true balance is struck here.

How does one negotiate good balance in D/s? I believe first and foremost we must be willing to listen to our own desires. We must be courageous enough to say what they are, and we must do the internal work of strengthening our abilities to trust and to disengage from untrustworthy partners and situations. We must listen to one another, and we must dedicate ourselves to being beholden to something, anything, which our exchange agreement rests upon.

What do you desire, really truly deeply down inside? Do you dare cultivate a life which includes those things? Can you find partners who you trust will help you, guide you, co-create with you along the way?

Meet me by the seesaw. I love to listen, I love to connect, I love to teach, and I love to instigate.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please help me pay rent: join Patreon, offer Support or email me directly. Thank you

In Defense of Professionals when what You May Actually Want is a Professional

As a professional in the field of sexuality I hear the sentiment of, “I don’t want to pay for X experience“, a lot—whether the experience be a sexual one, to have a particular kink explored, or simply in effort of being Dominated by or submitted to safely and specifically. In and of itself, not paying for any particular thing is a preference—one that also begs a person be able to make the thing themselves, know people who will give it to them for free, or have a trade arrangement (which is just like paying really, let’s not pussyfoot around it). What I take issue with in these conversations are the reasons people cite for not desiring a tailored service from a person with extensive knowledge and abilities in the field of their desire. They usually go something along the lines of, “I don’t want to engage in that sort of thing” or “I want service from someone who actually likes and desires me.”

I responded to a message asking for advice about how to catch the eye of a Fem Domme recently. The writer felt he was failing at the task, and was confused because he himself was a Dom (who also switches), and he figured being a Dominant male should have made it easier to find a willing colleague to provide for him. In the course of his asking for advice he cited both of the anti-sex-worker sentiments above, and made mention that he, “only wanted one submissive experience”—as if it wasn’t a big deal, or was something someone should just easily be able to give him. He was scratching his head about why Fem Doms weren’t easy to attract.

All in all, the tone of his desire for this experience (an experience from a Dominant Woman) was exactly like that of hundreds of cis men who’ve approached me over the years with similar requests. I—and I’m sure many other cis women, genderqueer, and trans people—sense a deep lack of awareness about how they’re coming off to the women, queer, and female people they’re approaching. As this is such a common conversation, I thought I’d share my answer to him and expound a bit further for you. Related side-note: this conversation definitely intersects with race relations and people of other marginalized identities being asked for favors, friendship, and approval from more or differently privileged folk. Though it is not the same conversation as it would be for different experiences of marginalization, it’s a good thing to be aware of—especially when approaching someone whose lived experience is compounded through multiple forms of marginalization. I hope this writing inspires further consideration from people who haven’t thought about imbalance of privilege within circumstances asking for intimate connection. I hope you enjoy my words. If you’ve struggled with this yourself, perhaps you’ll find some new answers or approaches to aid in your struggle.

###

First of all cut the anti-sex-worker crap. It does not make anyone sound superior when they say they don’t want to pay for something because they view it as “prostitution”, (and IMHO Dommes aren’t looking for “superior” subs anyways). What it does sound like is controlling and bigoted and just a little bit whiny. (I say this with a caring tone, not harshness, so you might understand a new perspective.)

Being female and being male in this society are just not the same thing (says the nonbinary trans person who experiences aspects of both). Being a male Dom does not carry with it the same feelings, trials, tribulations, considerations, experiences, or perspectives as being a female one, for the most part. Males submitting to females is not the same game as females submitting to males, or queers, or other combinations of traditional and very not traditional power play… There’s a lot to unpack in each gendered and sexed situation, and each combination of archetypes are not unpacking the same things.

For you, a cis male, to submit to a female and/or woman, you must seek to understand and revere the female and the female’s place in our society; allow yourself to revere that person, recognize them for their strengths and resilience, place yourself beneath that female or woman person. Allow yourself to actually give in ways you might not understand, yet are being told by that person that what they ask for is what they actually need/want/desire… to attract the Domme of your dreams you must want to give meaningfully.

If you don’t respect females and women of all stripes in this society, especially those who take power exactly as they desire to and/or need to from within their disenfranchised lives, perhaps you’re coming off a bit like a do-me sub. You may be declining to offer this Domme-of-your-dreams what that Domme would like to have in order to positively notice you. Whether it’s money or something else entirely is every individual’s fetish/fantasy/empowering key to desire, and they’re all different. They all count equally. It’s fine not to want to hire a professional, but don’t pretend you’re getting a better connection from someone who is not one, when honestly that’s your preference and it isn’t the truth—it’s your feeling, and your feeling is wrapped in judgment, not an understanding of the actual way of the world.

Being anti-consensual/passionate/loving/kickass/career-oriented sex-worker is extremely similar to being anti-feminist, and Dommes are a pretty feminist bunch, when you get down to it. Change your tune and you might attract a strong, kind, intelligent, interesting, skilled, incredible Domme or two who know themselves well enough to tell you exactly what they want—be it respect in monetary form as tribute for their time and attentions, your sex, simply to hogtie you exactly as they wish, or whatever else their very individual right-to-their-own-desires might be.

Though my words are strong, they’re meant openly and honestly. Not to hurt, but to round out a limited perspective and to educate. Take it as you may. All of these things are connected.

###

In addition to what I’ve written, I want to examine the fact that every successful relationship is predicated on a positive give and take. Even in longterm monogamous vanilla relationships there will always be negotiation about whose job it is to do the dishes and whether or not to have sex when one partner has a headache. We humans relate to one another because we want to and need to, and some of that wanting and needing is governed by knowing we’ll get something of value back when we are open to giving.

What professional sex workers have going really strongly for them is that they are people who have dedicated a portion of their active and conscious lives to sexuality in its many shapes and forms. This includes: reading people; developing ways to maintain personal safety at work; learning a LOT about what turns individual people on and off; navigating negotiations so that everyone is getting what they need out of a meeting; learning (and relearning, and adjusting over time) their boundaries and advocating for them responsibly; communicating really well about things most people have a hard time talking openly about; learning how to sustain health physically, emotionally, psychologically, and energetically in an industry which regularly causes the stimulation, draining, and potential triggering of each of these things; tuning into self-worth and personal values, and advocating terms surrounding these things for sustainability… Practice absolutely does make perfect, and when someone has a hard time finding the sexual/sensual situation of their fantasies, sex workers understand how to make those things happen for you! It’s literally our job to, if we take the job.

Most sex workers I know are personable, pretty non-judgmental (at least with sexuality related issues), interesting, intelligent, resilient-as-fuck, and care both about their clients and about paying their rent and feeding themselves and their families. There is absolutely nothing wrong with these things. Therapists, Doctors, and CEOs are not told they are less valuable because they may or may not really emotionally “care” about their clients and employees—as long as they do a great job at what they do and keep those people relatively happy. So true with sex workers. Am I going to fall in love with a client and start a primary relationship with them? No, probably not (though this is not unheard of in all of history). However, I will say that I care deeply for my regulars, and I share my life with them, as they share theirs with me. We are, after all, engaged in a relationship regardless of whether money is involved or not—and if you think hard enough about it, money is involved in almost every single ongoing relationship. Sex workers simply tend to be better-than-average at navigating emotional boundaries resulting from sensual connections. Here I point to necessity, professionalism, and the ongoing practice of connection and detachment as reason for this developed muscle group. It stands to obvious reason.

Do I know sex workers who are angry, impatient, and/or not that great at what they do? Of course I do. As in every industry, consensual-and-survival sex work is made up of a variety of workers, and workers are people, and people come in a wide range of personalities and diverse backgrounds. What I’ve mostly observed is that people who don’t really enjoy some aspect of sex work, won’t last long doing it (again, I would point out this is the norm in every industry). People who moonlight doing sex work get out of the game when it becomes “work”, or they struggle to find clients that pander to their own fantasies of what sex work should be like. Sex work is very much work, and it is complicated. To paint the canvas of sex work with one color so you don’t have to actually look at any details within it, or to sweep the pieces of sex work that you don’t understand under the rug (out of sight, out of mind), is not only potentially cutting one’s nose off to spite their face, but harmful to the workers—the people—who are endeavoring to make a living in a society stacked against them.

Have you noticed that the group of people who are involved in sex work as providers are almost all women, queer people, trans people, people of color, disabled people, and immigrants? Have you noticed that most clients of sex workers are men and frequently white? These are important facts to look squarely in the face when you decide it’s acceptable to degrade sex workers as lesser than for getting your own particular sexual/sensual needs met. It is no marginalized person’s job to feed your fantasies, and if you can’t find someone who’s not a sex worker to play with, I have a hard time finding a reason you wouldn’t hire a professional in order to get the job done safely, energetically, and with an eye toward your specific desires—especially if you’re only looking for a one-time thing, NSA, or ongoing FWB that won’t develop past your own emotional or committal limitations.

If you decide to hire someone for their time and skills to help you experience a fantasy/urge/desire/need, it’s important for you to vet your provider. If you care, as a client, about how your connection with your provider goes, then do your research when you seek the services of a sex worker. You are definitely being vetted yourself, in some manner. Sex workers who don’t offer what you’re looking for, or who don’t feel you’d be a good match for them will sometimes give you a referral for someone they think will be a better match, or they’ll generally politely decline an appointment with you. Sex workers are not available to do all things for all people all the time. That would make them robots, and sex worker people are not robots (unless they’re roleplaying one for you).

Nowhere else in personal or business worlds (that I can think of outside outright bigotry) do we so bitterly eschew potential happiness in favor of lesser skill, “settling”, or simply going without. For example: if I can’t find someone to make me vegan cookies, you’d better bet I’m heading out to a bakery. I probably have a favorite bakery or two as well, because I’m picky and know what I like in a cookie. While looking for cookies, I take the time to discover whether the bakery I’ve been told about actually makes vegan options, and whether their cookie flavors are ones I enjoy. I don’t bother visiting the bakeries I know won’t cater to my needs, nor do I plead for those bakeries to start baking vegan cookies simply for me—though I might request to see if they’re into the idea. In no way do I believe all bakeries owe me vegan cookies baked in my three favorite flavors—that’s insanity. This is true in all commerce and in all industries, everywhere. Hence our entire capitalist system.

It’s important to do a little research to make sure you’re getting what you ask for. It’s important to care about whether the boss is abusing their workers (if you’re not hiring someone who works independently). It’s important to pay attention to the needs of the providers you approach. If you’re going to be a client, be a good one. It will work out better for all parties in the end, I can guarantee it.

Those of us who are good at some aspect of sex work and venture to make a living from it deserve to be paid for our skills, our time, our considerations of our clients, and our constantly evolving expertise. You, the client, reap those rewards. This shouldn’t be a novel concept just because we’re speaking of sensuality and sexuality. I challenge you to consider what shame, what repression, what judgement, even what bigotry you your self are holding onto the next time you feel the need to put down and degrade those who are making their way in the world utilizing sex work as a chosen profession.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

This writing takes time, research, and consideration. It is my art.
Please help me pay rent: join Patreon, offer Support or email me directly. Thank you

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