S is for SUBMISSIVE

Photo by Grendelkhan

Photo by Grendelkhan

Submission is an interesting subject for me.  It is one I’m currently working on understanding more deeply within myself.  The first time I considered whether or not I was submissive, or whether the act of submitting was an important one for me to understand more fully was when I read the book Conquer Me by Kacie Cunningham.  My response was extremely intense and emotional, I still haven’t sorted it all out.  It went something like:

Wow!  I’m right here, in these pages.  I’ve never heard someone talk like this before.  This is important.  This is amazing and important and… … and terrifying.

What IS Submission:  This subject is enormous!  To start out, I’ll state that it simply means, “to submit”.  This can happen in any which way from wanting to please or service a Top/Dom/Master/Playfriend, to bear what another wishes them to bear, to be forced into submission, to serve, to surrender to a partner…  there are many great verbs that can be employed in the submissive occasion and everyone will have their own reasons or desires.  Regardless of the reason though, the through line is that the act of submission is equal to a person submitting to the will or desires of another.

Now, identifying as submissive is wholly different than the action of submitting to someone.  Why do I bring this up?  Well, I think people get that a little confused sometimes…  Important: because you are near someone who defines themselves as submissive, it certainly does not mean that they will even entertain submitting to you.  Submissive does not mean pushover, weak, without will, lesser than, powerless, or indecisive (not even close).  Someone who identifies as submissive can be or feel submissive on their own, in a relationship, or in multiple relationships.  A submissive person can do anything they want in their lives without giving that identity up too.  A submissive person could top a scene or activity with their partner, make their living as a Pro Dom or CEO, submit only in one context and not others (sexually and/or out of the bedroom in their primary relationship, submit only as a kinky game with people they trust, or perhaps this person is in a 24/7 Master/slave relationship arrangement where they make absolutely no decisions at all from what to wear in the morning to what chores they’ll get done throughout the day… the options are endless).  Submissive people are into all kinds of things.  Some submissives aren’t even kinky aside from the desire to engage in power dynamic play.  Some submissives are not masochistic in the least bit and have no desire to be involved a scene where pain will be employed, some submissives would never be interested in being in a 24/7 relationship, or serving their partners, or acting as though they are in a “1950’s household”…  What someone does or does not desire to DO is a very different thing than who they consider themselves to BE, and every relationship someone has will be defined by what those people find makes them most happy with one another.  It will change partner to partner as much as it might change over the span of a person’s lifetime.  We (r)evolutionary beings are magnificent that way!

Dresseuses d'Hommes by Luc Lafnet

Dresseuses d’Hommes by Luc Lafnet

So, what does it mean to submit?  This will be very differently answered by everyone who has ever submitted or wished to.  To some the feeling of surrender is what they desire and endeavor to find in their interactions.  This is potentially a very different type of interaction than someone who’s ideal reason for submitting is to bear.  For example, someone looking to surrender to a feeling or sensation with their partner might not get off if they do not like pain and they are being caned by their top.  That person may feel very unable to surrender in this situation, while the person looking to bear whatever it is their partner wishes to throw their way might love the challenge of a painful activity.  That person might find being tied up and fucked just plain boring and unfulfilling in a way that “the surrenderer” could consider ideal.  Now these are just random examples and there are as many ways to define and redefine which type of activities pair best with which root desires as there are submissives with root desires and favorite activities!  For some, submission is an act of giving time and attention to detail within a relationship, or it might mean pleasing a partner through caretaking or pleasuring, others wish to submit physically and never emotionally, while some will submit in the bedroom and not outside of it in their relationships, and other submissives might feel that finding a partner they can submit to heart, body, mind, and sex organs as a whole package every waking (and sometimes sleeping) moment is the holy grail of power play.  No one is more right than anyone else.  What I would say is most important though, is that people find playmates and partners who share similar views on how to get the deed done.  Someone who desires to be a Type A service oriented submissive will probably work out much better with a Militant type Dominant than with a sensualist who has no desire to create rules, give orders, or ask for help getting anything done…  you can see how knowing what your particular brand of submission is might be an important distinguishing factor in finding happiness submitting (as in: I may be submissive, but please never ask me to clean your house – I promise neither of us will be turned on by the result).

My Experiences submitting:  Great segue Karin!  So, submission and me…  This is very much an ongoing exploration.  I find the verb that comes to me most frequently is “to bear”.  There is more to it than that for sure, especially when we take more than kink or sex play into account.  On the emotional front I’d say that “to caretake, to please, to love, and to inspire” match much more closely to my way with long term relationship partners.

I have bottomed to many people, and in the process found myself submitting to their desires, will, or actions in the scene.  I feel I melt at times like these.  Care leaves me, my mind empties, the chatter in my head stops, and I find myself happy and present.  “To bear” is also active though, not just an experience given me.  I am masochistic by nature (or I can take a lot of pain and desire to please my sadistic top?), and when I’m in a scene that requires me to pain process I am actively engaged in taking what I can, setting a (usually pretty non-verbal) pace that will keep my body healthy and the interaction continuing, I am focused on breathing and connecting with the energy of my partner, of taking what they are giving to me, feeling it cycle through my body, and then pushing it back into them to complete our connection and energy exchange cycle.  With this type of communication I feel I can go anywhere I am led, and I desire to.

Outside of the bedroom submission has a different texture though.  I want in my relationships to know what things will make my partner happy and I want to bring them things…  Much like a cat bringing her owner a fresh kill, there is a part of me that wishes no more than to please, to give, to caretake, to shine for my partner.  I desire to feel valued, loved, and as though I have done a good job pleasing.  I love to learn about the subjects my partners are interested in and want to bring those things into our relationship or experiences together.  I like to listen to my partner and pick up on little things that they say, and bring thoughtful gifts or occasions from those ideas to my people.  I very much enjoy care taking as well: grooming my partner, sitting quietly by their feet as a moment of quiet connection, researching subjects we both are interested in and coming up with ways to implement those things in our lives/home/relationship…

I have not had very many relationships with dominant people in my life, and I find it hard to submit sometimes.  I think most people read me as Dominant in general (as I am a workaholic who is constantly engaged in too many projects to count), but nevertheless, in my relationships I crave a steady hand, to relax under a strong and purposeful touch, to trust my partner’s intent and be free to react and encourage, rather than manage and make do.

There is more.  I am curious to see where it will go with me…

Image from "Bizarre" magazine

Image from “Bizarre” magazine

Further information:  On the subject of submission I find that a lot of different sources for continued thought are helpful.  Reading as much as I can about the subject is a great start.  I feel in this instance that actually talking to people who are involved in identifying as submissive is really important and helpful too.  Every person feels differently about themselves and how and why they do what they do, every submissive gets something uniquely their own from submitting, and every relationship a person has with others (not to mention with themselves) further changes the thoughts, ideas, inspirations, and experiences one wishes to pursue.  Community can be extremely helpful in your evolution of understanding and your opportunities to explore.  Even online forums where you can read other people’s posts on various subjects will be great help getting your brain around the plethora different ways there are to approach this lifestyle or these relationships.  Fetlife has been a pretty good resource, I find, as long as you are mindful to keep the extremists, over-opinionated, and too rigid at bay.

Good luck finding what works for you, I think that is one of the best journeys to be on.

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.

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Be an ABCs contributor:  Have a story or perspective to share about kink or want 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!

The People I Meet: Matthew

The blog that I publish on Wednesdays is meant to encompass a plethora of different ideas, perspectives, and experiences in the universe of kink.  Often I ask people to write me with their own experiences and points of view about any aspect of the subject that interests them.  Today I share with you writing that was given to me from the POV of someone coming to terms with their own Dominant side in their exploration of BDSM.  It’s also kind of a sweet love story…

I hope you enjoy the writing as much as I do.  And please, Dear Readers, consider taking a page from this person’s book and share some of your own thoughts and experiences with me.  You can be anonymously credited, have a name or pen name attached, and you are free to write me with whatever thoughts you are having.  Thank you in advance, a very warm thank you to this week’s author, and I hope you enjoy this Wednesday’s “Perspective”.

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

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1946-1959 (years of publication for magazine) Source"Bizarre" magazine AuthorJohn Willie, pseudonym for John Alexander Scott Coutts

1946-1959 “Bizarre” magazine
Author John Willie, pseudonym for John Alexander Scott Coutts

I have been struggling with how BDSM fits into my life. It wasn’t something I always knew I enjoyed.  In fact, I feel as though I have been stumbling clumsily through everything I enjoy.  Sometimes I think I’m not good enough to be competent and confident in my abilities.  Of course, my competency and confidence will grow the more I practice and talk about what I do enjoy.  Despite having some really fantastic first experiences, my doubts still keep me asking why do I nurture these feelings, emotions, and interests.

A moment that really stands out for me involves a cage.  Well, it involves 3 cages.  We were in Seattle visiting a friend of hers.  He is also kinky.  His house was complete with a dungeon and 3 cages of varying sizes scattered throughout his house.  The cages all have stories, were hand crafted, and were of varying sizes and uses.  After going out for dinner, we get a tour of the house along with all 3 of his cages.

The first cage was fairly large.  To give you an idea, you could pretty uncomfortably fit about 6 people inside.  I’m given the key and the lock.  After checking to see if the lock worked properly, I have my partner get in and sit down.  She looks pretty comfortable smiling out at me with a cup of coffee in her hands.  So we all sit in this room, talking about this cage while my partner is happily locked inside.  I wasn’t sure why I wanted to see her locked in but it might have been the novelty of seeing someone locked in a cage.  All I knew was that I enjoyed seeing her behind these bars, sitting comfortably, and drinking a cup of coffee.  Then I remembered there were 2 more.  One of them I saw earlier in the living room.  That was probably 1/3 of the size and the thought of my partner squeezing into this one was even more exciting.

So, I unlocked cage 1 and we were taken back to the living room to play with cage 2.  This cage was much shorter, maybe 2 feet high, so she had to get down on her knees to be inside.  It opened via a hatch on top, where the locking mechanism was built in.  This cage might be about 4-5 feet long.  She could sit and lie down in this cage pretty comfortably for a short period of time, if she bent her body in certain ways, before her limbs would get a little stiff.  She kept smiling at me, as she got comfortable.  We stayed at this cage for a little longer than the first. She was comfortable and I wanted to see her squirm around trying to find the most comfortable spot.

After I unlocked the 2nd cage, we were led down into the basement, where the 3rd cage was kept.  This one was my favorite.  It was a similar size to the 2nd cage but there was extra rods that could be inserted and locked vertically and horizontally.  My partner fit in pretty easily and comfortably to begin with.  First, I started placing rods in random areas just to see how they affected the space.  Once I noticed how my partner was placing her body to accommodate them, I started putting more thought and care into the locations I chose for the remaining rods.  Her body curved over and under iron rods, forcing her to hold the position she was in.  She was on her forearms and knees, her ass resting on one of the iron rods, a couple of them under her stomach, another below her breasts, and one right below her throat.  Her arms were stretched over the last iron rod, she was on her forearms with her hands outside of the cage.  This was her position as she tried to relax into it and find comfort.  She did beautifully.  Her body looked incredible tangled up in a small cage.  Her hands were still free to do as they pleased, though.  I asked our host for a bit of rope so I could bind them together.  That was the finishing touch.  I wanted to sit there and watch her.  Then I unbound her hands, carefully removed the iron rods, and opened the cage so she could exit.

In the car that night, she asked what that was like for me.  How did it feel?  I immediately responded with, “It felt great but I don’t have a cage fetish”.  She looked inquisitive and asked me to elaborate.  The more I thought about it and spoke about my thoughts with her, the more I realized I did enjoy cages much more than I thought I would.  The thought of owning my own cage is very pleasant.

The reason I enjoyed seeing her caged was because I saw that she was giving up her freedom and comfort for me.  She knew I enjoyed seeing her in those positions, little by little trying to take small amounts of comfort from her, to push her a little more.  She gave that comfort up and found her own pleasure in the situation.  The lasting impression I took away from this experience was that of love and devotion.  I put her in those cages because I love her.  She allowed me to put her in those cages because she loves and trusts me.  It was an epiphany that didn’t fully make sense.  Though, there’s no other way to describe it.  I look upon that evening with a full heart and butterflies in my stomach; fully turned on.  This is one reason I want to continue to nurture my explorations into BDSM.

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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:  Have a story or perspective to share about kink or want 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!

K is for KINK

I know, I know, cheating, right?  Well, I don’t think so.  The hotly contested debate on “what is and is not kink” surfaces in most people’s minds from time to time  Often our feelings about the subject results in looking at our various behaviors or desires within the lens of false dichotomy, sometimes either promoting or discouraging our explorations or intimacies.  Let’s take a look at it today, shall we?

What is Kink?  Good question. Dictionary.com has this to say:

bizarre or unconventional sexual preferences or behavior.

And a quick search on Fetlife offers these as some of your options:

Photo by Zee

My tanned hide with a bite mark.  Photo by Zee

Accents, Age Play, Ballbusting, Bare Handed Spanking, Bastinado, Belt Spanking, Blow Jobs, Black Men, Blindfolds, Blushing, Body Paint, Bondage, Boot Licking, Branding, Burlesque, Body Modification, Boot Worship, Boss/Secretary, Braces, Breath Play, Business Suits, Candle Wax, Casting, Chastity, Chastity Devices, Cheerleading Uniforms, Chocolate, Choking, Cigars, Clothespins, Corset, Cinching Corsets, Costumes/Dressing-up, Daddy/girl, Deep Throating, Domestic Servitude, Douching, Energy Play, Figging, Creampie, Cross Dressing, Crying, Cuddles, Female Humiliation, Fingering, Freckles, Hoods, Ice Cubes, Foot Worship, Fur, Goth, Hair Bondage, Hot Oil Massages, Interracial Sex, Kicking, Lingerie, Male Submission, Masochism, Master/Slave, Music, Nudity, Orgasm Control, Intelligence, Interrogation, Kinbaku, Large Labia, Leather, Librarians, Makeup, Master/Slave, Monogamy, Muscle Worship, Pain, Pinching, Posture Collars, Pro Domme, Prostate Massage, Pegging, Petplay, Pigtails, Satin, Sex, Sex In Public, Sex Magick, Sexual Slavery, Sleepy Sex, Small Tits, Socks, Spreader Bars, Swallowing, Swinging, Switching, Toy Making, Victorian Pornography, Puppy Play, Sacred Sexuality, Silk, Sissy Panties, Spitting, Suspension, Switching, Tantra, Tearing Off Clothing, Tears, Toes and Feet, Touching, Transgender, Vibrators, Victorian Lifestyles, Vintage Porn, Violet Wand, Water Torture, Waterbondage, WolfPlay …

Now, this list is extremely partial and at points a bit tongue in cheek, but it may invoke a lot of questions.  Maybe reading through that list you had one or a few of these thoughts pop into your head:

  • Wait a minute: I like that.
  • That’s not kink, that’s just fun.
  • Ew, people actually like that?
  • What does that even mean?
  • How would you turn something like that into a “kink”?
  • No one really does that, do they?
  • That’s offensive.
  • Ooh.  Yeah, I like that one…
  • Ooh.  Yeah, I like that one, but I’d never admit it to anyone or actually do anything about it…
  • That’s not sexual, so how can it be kinky?
  • If I like that one, does that mean I have to identify with kinky people now?
  • If I don’t like ANY of these does that mean I’m not kinky?
  • Why didn’t they mention _________???

And maybe you can answer some of those questions on your own.  Does it matter to you whether you think you’re kinky?  Whether other people would categorize you as such?  Do you worry you do or do not have enough ‘kinky street cred’ to claim your place at the fetish fair?  Do you feel too far outside what you think your friends might think of as normal to fit the ‘vanilla’ label?  Are there aspects of your current or past relationships that were kinky or vanilla or both?  How do you feel about the activities you engage in?  Do those activities ever define your sexuality?

Is this Kink? Photo by Positive Signals

Is this Kink? Based on this image, acknowledging that she is naked but for her wedding ring, who owns her sex?  Photo by Positive Signals

 BDSM:  Let’s take a closer look at these letters and what they mean.  Broken down BDSM stands for: Bondage & Discipline (BD) / Dominant & Submissive (Ds) / Sadism & Masochism SM).  These three pairings talk about some different types of behavior and relationship structures that our culture has deemed to be on the Kinky spectrum.  Bondage and Discipline refers to partner play that involves bondage in various ways (both physical and servitude) and Discipline is a nod to the idea that in roleplay there may be real consequences negotiated between partners.  Dominant and submissive refers to the Top/Bottom, Dominant/submissive, Master/slave, and I’m not leaving out the Switches, relationship dynamics that some kinky people might agree to engage in in and/or out of the bedroom.  In this model of kinky relation there is a power differential at play that pleases both the person assuming a degree of control, and the person who is submitting to that power play.  Kinky or Vanilla, regardless of whether you are subject to a clearly negotiated D/s dynamic with your partners, many relationships work best within a framework where one partner controls more of certain activities and less of others, thus operating most smoothly within a power differential at least some of the time.  By consciously engaging in a D/s relationship many kinky people are simply playing with, accepting, enhancing, or sexualizing the innate imbalances we have as people negotiating relationship.  Sadism and Masochism refer to the acts of enjoying hurting someone, or the enjoyment of being hurt.  This part of BDSM speaks most loudly to the range of sensation activities that kinky people might engage in (flogging, needle play, feathers, scratching, biting, punching…).

Fetish: Dictionary.com says:

any object or nongenital part of the body that causes a habitual erotic response or fixation.

While the terms ‘fetish’ and ‘kink’ are used interchangeably in common vernacular, the proper use of this word is in reference to the person who is turned on by an object (inanimate or body part), and who often can not satisfactorily complete their sexual arousal without that object present (or at least fantasized about).  While having a fetish most certainly is kinky, not all kinks are fetishes, and not all kinky people engage in fetishizing behaviors.

My very own Kinky existence:  I fluttered around the lightbulb of kink for many many years of my life before coming to embrace it as a concept, a practice, and an empowering aspect which feeds my identity and brings me happiness and fulfillment.  I suppose I could think waaaaay back to being young and playing sex games with my childhood friends, or being turned on by the quite innocent games we made up which often contained inherent control/power dynamics within them.  I could look to my pre-teen and teenage years where I stumbled onto powerful seductive feelings fueled by degrading sexual advances and inappropriate situations, aware that my guilt of these very things made me desire them all the more.  As an adult: toys, being tied up, sexuality education as topping activity, learning things for the first time igniting my libido, performing Drag and Burlesque, holding an audience speechless and captive, bearing the will and pleasure of my partners, demo-bottoming, having a rich fantasy life, mutual masturbation as better than sex sex, and other activities were further indication and practice of these kinky tendencies.  And through owning these desires eventually I found words like super-masochist, submissive, pet, fuck-doll, anorgasmic, pan/bi/sexual, and polyamorous.  I am still figuring out my feelings about these things.  There are days I rail against knowing anything, when I reject the very things that bring me happiness because they make me feel vulnerable.  There are days I doubt my identities in full and fear I’ll never be enough to fill the shoes of “someone who’s really like that”.  There are days I’m grateful that I write a kink blog, teach about sexuality, gender, orientation, and all this wonderful stuff, and get to perform my fantasies on stage…  This is all to say:  I am human.  A complex individual.  My emotions hold sway over my thoughts, and my experiences mean only as much as the meaning I attribute to them.  I love my life.  I am inspired by all of these things, and challenged by them to the point of questioning…

Where can I learn more?  When Someone You Love is Kinky by Dossie Easton and Catherine A. Liszt is a great resource both for the budding kinkster and the parent, loved one, family member or co-worker of people who want to be able to openly communicate about their kinks (or be supported and at least understood by the people they’ve given this great book to).  I also recommend checking out Lee Harrington and Mollena Williams (co-authors of “Playing Well with Others: Your Field Guide to Discovering, Exploring and Navigating the Kink, Leather and BDSM Communities“), who have a few great videos up on Kink Academy about kink, the Kink Community, and who ask a great number of questions about how things might or might not work for you.

I guess, in conclusion I have this to offer:  Kink is what you make it.  No more, no less.  If the idea of being kinky turns you on, then be kinky and be turned on.  If the idea of being labeled such is something that stops you from exploring your own desires or getting closer to your partners, then don’t sweat the label and embrace the activities that allow you and your partners to be happy with one another.  Regardless of whether you’re super kinky, kinda kinky, mostly vanilla, or vanilla, learning about the games that us adult people get to play, negotiating conscientiously, learning about the activities you’re engaging in, and communicating clearly are all wonderful parts of being a healthy active responsible adult.  So consider reading up on it all and trying new things out – we’ve only got so much time on this earth to make each other happy.

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:  Have a story or perspective to share about kink or want 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!

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