Guest Writer: Learning to Scene, Negotiate, and Follow Through

This week’s blog is from a writer who has shared some of their thoughts and experiences about learning to scene with their partner and get over some performance anxiety.  I love how the perspective this person shares is one that’s committed to growing knowing they do not have all the answers and often feel at a loss.  I find it to be a refreshing and inspirational article.  I hope you enjoy it too, I think the experiences outlined in this are very common, especially for people new to play.  Do you have stories or thoughts to share from your own experiences?  Email me at Karin @ ABCsOfKink . com

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

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Photo by Liftarn

Photo by Liftarn

Learning to Scene, Negotiate, and Follow Through

I’ve recently been negotiating scenes with my partner in an attempt to hold myself accountable for following through with plans. It’s not that I don’t want to follow through. I really do. It’s just I get nervous. I don’t feel comfortable divulging fantasies I may have. Even though my partner really wants to hear about them.

I think part of it is that I don’t feel comfortable advocating for my wants or desires. It’s not that I think I don’t deserve what I desire, I just don’t feel right talking about it. Sure, I can advocate for my own needs when no one else is present; when I am only concerned with making myself happy. Maybe it’s a control issue for me. A coping mechanism I learned when I was younger.

Part of me thinks no one but myself will want to know about my desires, let alone enjoy them with me. So it’s sometimes hard for me to let someone, even my partner, know what I desire. When I do try and follow through with plans, let my partner know what I want, it’s hard for me to hear that my partner might not be ok with whatever it is I am saying. Now, my current partner isn’t ever not ok with what I want because she is appalled or disgusted by what I am asking of her. She just sometimes doesn’t feel like I think of her experience when I am telling her about the scene I want to coordinate. That, historically, has made me react and feel like I am not doing something right. After multiple scenes like this, I realized I needed to change.

One thing I realized I was doing was defensively reacting to my partner’s honest, important, and great questions or concerns during negotiation. When I assumed she was telling me about what I wasn’t doing well, I totally missed out on her safety concerns and attempts at helping me think more clearly and fully about what I was proposing.

I didn’t know how to change this at first, but one day, the day before we were supposed to have a scene (and this had happened before every planned scene prior), I was having performance anxieties, I was feeling doubt, and I was generally fearful to the point that I was making myself sick. So, instead of sitting with it and hoping it would go away, I told my partner about it. It was because I told her about these fears that I was able to get over them and have some really great discussions. The reason I enjoyed these conversations so much is because it was at that moment I realized I had control over my fears. They didn’t have to dictate the outcome of the scene I wanted to have and enjoy.

Since then, I still get nervous butterflies, though they aren’t the type of feelings that make me feel nauseous and it’s not difficult for me to get past those feelings and connect with my partner. In trying to keep communication open, I have come to the conclusion that starting and maintaining a connection isn’t as difficult as I have made it out to be. Connection is incredibly important and easy to establish, and once you connect it’s not difficult to stay connected. If I lose my connection, I take a breath, check in, and get connected again. I have found connection is the difference between having a really enjoyable experience and having an un-enjoyable one.

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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: 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!

Readers Write: Coming Out… Normal

I LOVE coming out stories.  They are so personal.  There is something about them I find compelling – in coming out stories the wheels are always turning, something is being figured out or accepted.  People are caught in a moment of turning their brains over and over to find the right perspective with which to claim: Yes!  Me!

So thank you to this next write, a reader of the column, who had some really wonderful words to share with me.  I value your voice, and am honored to publish!  I hope this makes your day too, Other Readers, and please feel free to follow suit and contact me with your own writings, POVs, experiences, thoughts, and ideas.

To Breath and Being,
~ Karin

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Photo by Jacobo Canady

Not a photo of the writer.  Photo by Jacobo Canady

I’m still a bit new to actually practicing any kind of kink (having finally found a more-than-willing-partner), but I wanted to share my story, as it’s something I’ve been thinking about with interest lately.

It simply never occurred to me that kink was unusual. I entered the fantasy/sci-fi/alternative convention scene (with friends, not parents) at the sexual awakening age of 13. People with collars and scratch marks, workshops on proper rope bondage and healthy dom/sub relationships – these things were, while we laughed at them and the blatant sexuality, completely normal. My best friend made jokes about it, didn’t quite understand it, but I was curious.

When I was 16, a few of us traveled south to work a convention. The only eighteen year old in the group (a known kinkster) quickly made friends and disappeared, to play parties and mysterious secrets, returning later with odd marks and fun stories. Again my best friend teased him, but I was fascinated. Too young to attend the parties with him, I marveled the beautiful folks with their red cuts and leather. On the drive home, my friends kneaded my arm with their sharp nails as a joke – and it felt *amazing*.

And finally, years later, I found a boy, at the same convention that opened all these doors to me. We had many good, thorough conversations on our preferences and wishes. Now I am bound and cut up on a regular basis (sometimes for photoshoots!), and it is just as wonderful as I hoped.

I’ve never had to deal with any feelings of ‘this is wrong, I shouldn’t want this, who the hell gets off by being hurt’. It astounded me, at first, to hear people talking about that. If you like it, why should it be wrong? I feel so lucky to have grown up in an environment where all bodies and sensations are loved and valued. I do sometimes worry that I’ll find a partner someday won’t want to bite me until I’m gasping, or run a blade across my neck, and I won’t be able to enjoy it. But I think it will be okay. And I’m excited to return to the convention where I first discovered play parties, for the first time since really figuring myself out…

-Bri

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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!

Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are

Leather Pride Flag atop the San Francisco Armory

Leather Pride Flag atop the San Francisco Armory

This week in our perspectives blog, I am asking for people to write me with their coming out kinky stories.  Having come out in my lifetime a few different times for various reasons, I know firsthand how these stories can be fascinating, moving, inspirational, educational, and transformative to the listener.  Please consider throwing your voice into the mix of people who write about their experiences.  Your perspective is uniquely yours and valuable in the world of understanding our human sexuality more intimately.

Whether you barely remember what it was like to not identify as kinky, or you still are trying to figure out if you’re kinky enough to claim anything out loud, or you’re part of all the variations in between, I want to hear your voice!

Email me at: Karin@ABCsOfKink.com and you can share your story anonymously or credited as you wish.  I am the only one who sees the email that I receive, and I’ll ask your permission and preferences before publishing.  You can also fill out the form at the end of the page, and it’ll go to the same place.

BDSM Rights Flag

BDSM Rights Flag

I look forward to learning more about the diversity of our readership, about the journeys each of you is on, and about what’s possible in the world of meaning making.  I thank you sincerely in advance!

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!

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