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.
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Consider

Finding Oneself Daily

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Me not having an orgasm for research and science!

I wasn’t intending on writing a blog today, but I found myself multitasking in a way that makes me happy, so perhaps I’m here to gush a little bit as I illustrate… something?… (I’ll have it figured out by the end, I swear!)

This morning I awoke to a plethora of emails that needed to be answered, lovely texts from people I love and enjoy in sexy ways, and debit card issues I needed to call about getting fixed. As I logged into my email account and started reading the FB messages I’ve been ignoring due to busyness, I found that a reader was interested in sharing their writing on the subject of chastity on this here blog! “How lovely”, I thought to myself and considered how to address her message as I answered an email about a vaudeville show I’ll be performing in in a couple of weeks. I let the reader know that I should have my own experience with the subject before I publish an article on it, but when I do I’d love to add her writing into the article as another point of reference. Then I called my bank and while on hold for waaaay too long responded to some beautiful good morning texts from partners I thoroughly enjoy text-loving on. I also asked a couple of them about whether or not they’d be interested in helping me with some ABC’s research homework and explained the chastity theme while intermittently giving my address/driver’s license number/DOB/account information to a combination of computer voices and human people, and then describing the issue’s I’m having with my debit card over and over again as I get transferred time and again to every various office in the banking realm’s Fortress of Frustration…

I hear back from one of my partners — the one who’s a longer distance lover — affirmative interest and excited about the chastity play prospect! Yay! Then I’m thinking, “Well, I want to make sure that my partner who’s away and really into this idea and I are not stepping on the toes of my partner who’s here in town with me who I think I’d also enjoy some interaction with on the chastity front… and with whom I am currently not that chaste”

‘Cause, yeah… submitting to chastity is one of those games that will interfere with all the people you’re having orgasms/paingasms/sexual or other certain types of play with, not just your chastity-Dominating buddy and you…

…So I text back that we should consider my close-by partner and ask my out-of-towner if they’d be interested in conjointly playing this game somehow. An affirmative answer again is returned as well as an agreed upon desire not to step on toes ’round these parts… So I post a great article I’ve been reading about the clitoris on my FB wall, and I text again my Local Love, asking how they feel about how chastity play with someone out of town might effect our play and what boundaries or rules they’d like to have surrounding this chastity research, and also whether they’re interested in some sort of tandem chastity play conjointly authored by themselves and the out-of-towner (whom they’re completely aware of and have met)… my local lovely is probably still sleeping anyhow, so I wait…

But then I see I should schedule some time to meet with a person who organizes an erotica reading series, oh and the bank can’t help me with my card ”cause everything looks fine from our end” grrr… but I’ll get a new card in the mail and until then I should make time for a trip to the bank to get a temporary one. Hang up the phone, schedule coffee date to discuss erotica reading, text Out of Town Lover to find out what they’d like to get out of the chastity play themselves, and receive a delicious answer that I’m not allowed to masturbate to thinking about…

You see, in just a short time a morning can be a wonderful place to be alive. Maybe that’s my point in all of this: thank you Universe for the communities who help me experience life in new ways, the friends who gather to lend a hand, and the strength in my body and mind to schedule for fun, follow through on the things, and still function highly enough to pay rent on time! …And while I’m handing out thanks, thank goodness for non-monogamous partners who are as into transparency, GGGness, and whose enjoyment of my enjoyments are as full as my appreciation and enjoyment of theirs… Also happy Bisexuality Visibility Week!!!

Yes Walt, alongside your beautiful queer ass, I sound my barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world!

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.

S is for SCENE

Tea Ceremony scene with me as Tea Table, featuring an Ikebana arrangement. I am also in spreader bars, though you can't really see them here.

A Matcha Tea Ceremony scene with me as Tea Table, featuring an Ikebana arrangement. I am attached to a spreader bar, though you can’t really see it here, but you can make out some of the ceremony instruments…

Since we’re firing this alphabet blog back up today and it shall be randomly journeyed (until the next organizational whirlwind my brain settles on), I figure why not start out with the letter that has a million kinks?  Today we look at S and what a SCENE is.

So, what is a scene?  “Having a kink scene” with someone refers to the act of doing something kinky with that person.  There is generally a beginning, a middle, and an end – concepts I’ll break down a bit more clearly below.  You can “scene” with one or more people.  The setting matters only in that it is appropriate to your needs, so it can happen in a public play space, privately, or even out in public (where the folks around you might not even know you’re scening).  In general though, if the people involved in the activity agree that it was a scene, it can be called a scene.  Scenes can go well or not so well.  Scenes can be successful and unsuccessful.  A scene can endure for any length of time – 30 seconds to hours long in the playtime.  Scenes are generally not the same as skill practices, nor are they often used to describe teaching demonstrations.  Kinda like sex, how you feel about how a scene went matters when evaluating whether or not to scene with that person again or continue to have interest in the activities you participated in.  Some scenes involve sexual activity, some do not.  There is no one activity that defines whether a scene has just occurred, it is more centered on the feeling that what you’ve set out to accomplish was in some way explored or completed.  Scenes can end early or suddenly because of the use of a safe word, or because the players feel it isn’t going well and would prefer to wrap up their activities.  Scenes often evolve organically, even when they have been negotiated clearly and there is an expectation of what activities are to happen.  Scenes can be a great way of exploring physical sensations, D/s dynamics, s/m, and a plethora of other kinky interests.  Aside from talking about “a scene”, “the scene” is also used to refer to the community of people in any given area who practice BDSM as well.

The anatomy of a scene:  Negotiation.  Play.  Aftercare.  These three elements are what a scene is generally comprised of, and most successful scenes can be dissected into these elements.

Negotiation:  Negotiation is what happens before the scene plays out.  The people who are interested in playing with one another find some way to set up expectations and boundaries for the scene they’d like to have.  How one negotiates depends greatly on how experienced one is, how familiar they are with the partner they’re negotiating with, whether one is planning on topping, bottoming or switching through the scene, how advanced the scene being negotiated is and whether the people negotiating are experienced in that type of play, whether there are health issues to take into consideration, etc…  Basically negotiation is the time before you hit the dungeon where you clear up all the things you need know so that everyone involved feels like they are safe, on the same page, and can show up to the scene prepared mentally, physically, emotionally, psychologically, and toting the correct costumes/props/set pieces/whathaveyou.  It is generally considered bad practice to renegotiate anything you’ve pre-negotiated mid-play/mid-scene because during play people’s inhibitions/expectations/headspace/intellectual or emotional groundedness may be altered.  Consent.  Understanding your partner’s boundaries and wishes.  Making sure you understand one another well enough to be respectful.  If you think of good sex as algebra, kink play is like calculous.  Do your research, know the formulas, be educated in what you are doing as well as who you are doing it with.  It is not cool to leave someone after a scene feeling as though they were taken advantage of, violated, or harmed in any way.  This is the primary reason for good negotiation of a scene.

Play/Scening:  This is the portion of a scene where the action is.  After you’ve negotiated all the things and everyone shows up at the appropriate time and place wielding the appropriate attitude and practicals, it’s time to get down to business…  Need I really say more?  Well, I’ll talk a little about things that should/usually happen during good scenes.  Connecting with your partners is pretty paramount to everyone feeling fulfilled at play’s end, so do that and try to keep it up the entire time.  Checking in is a really important aspect of play.  It might be needed more frequently when you are new to an activity or playing with a new partner, but even people who have been doing the same activity for years with one another can find importance in making sure the bondage isn’t too tight, the submissive can breathe well enough, no one’s shoulder is getting irreparably fucked up, no one is triggered or becoming too anxious, and so forth.  Checking in, when done frequently enough, can be a Top’s best friend for info gathering and inspiration and the bottom’s path to remaining feeling safe and relaxed enough to keep playing.  In a scene you’ll want to warm up and cool down before and after the hard hitting (so to say) portion of play.  Warm up is  meant to help connect the players as well as get the bottom’s mind and body ready for what’s to come.  Think stretching before a marathon or foreplay before a hard fuck.  Cooling down can be equally important, as the mind and body may want to slowly come back to normal after stressful activity or sitting out in subspace for awhile…  Think walking around after a marathon or wriggling around holding one another directly after that good hard fuck.  Having fun is important too!  I know we’re all meanies dressed in leather and spikes, wielding knives and fist sized dildos, but remember that no matter how seriously you are taking yourself, there is always room for a giggle at the moment, a reminder that people fart when they’re wearing lingerie, and sometimes you’re going to react strangely to the activities you are engaged in.  There is room for all the emotions that come up in a dungeon – in fact, many people play this hard for exactly that reason.

Aftercare:  So, you’ve met up with your scene beau, played together and cooled down, now what?  Well, aftercare! Aftercare is the bit of time (usually just after a scene’s play portion ends) when the people who have been involved deconstruct the evening a little bit and have a chance to care for themselves and their partners enough to start a new grounding process.  Everyone has different needs during aftercare, so it’s a great thing to add onto your negotiation list.  All the people who were present in the scene need aftercare to some degree.  Regardless of whether you were the one beating or the one being beaten, ask what your partner needs when it’s time to become regular post-scene people again.  Sometimes your partner will want a massage or cuddling, some people need food and water, some people want to be served, some people find it important to have time alone and come back to talking about what they’ve experienced at a later time or date, some people need sleep, blankets, kissing, silence for a time, mindless chatter, not to be coddled at all…  knowing ahead of time is likely to help all parties get what they need in the end.  The second part of aftercare is also checkins.  Depending on how brutal a scene was physically, emotionally, or psychologically, you may want to make sure you check in with the bottom hours after a scene, the next day, or even every few days for a few weeks.  Again, everyone is different, but due to the advanced math nature of kink, sometimes a person will feel just fine directly after the scene, but after sleeping on it realize they are feeling guilty or sad or messed up or triggered by something that happened.  If you’re going to play, you need to be responsible to your partners through the end.

My most recent brush with a scene:  My most recent scene was the one the picture above was taken during.  The picture itself captures the peace, beauty, deliberation, loving, knowledge, and skill that went into the scene, but I’ve gotta say starting out it was a rocky road to sheer happiness.  My partner and I had negotiated a scene involving the spreader bars he recently made.  I was looking forward to using them as I haven’t used them much in play and I’ve always really liked the idea of them.  When we got further into our negotiations my partner was having a hard time talking about what he wanted from our scene, and I was having a hard time trusting what was going to happen would be pleasing for both of us.  He mentioned a bunch of activities that not only does he not have much practice in, but that we have not explored on their own together yet: rough body play, clothespin zippers, kicking, and temperature play.  The thought of rough body play at the hand of someone who’s inexperienced while I am immobile and unable to physically protect myself due to being strung up on spreader bars made it really hard for us to negotiate a scene that felt safe to me.  I did not feel safe or taken care of in the consideration of the play options put forth.  He was having a hard time feeling confident as a Dominant and so was being a bit careless with his thinking through of the situation.  I had a hard time feeling like I was being a good submissive as I had a pretty clear critique of what he was suggesting…  the conversation was a hard one.

Then we got around to agreeing that if the focus of the scene was centered on what we could do with spreader bars, that he could start there, think of me in them, and connect with a fantasy about what that scene might unfold to become.  He shared a fantasy about me being a table for Matcha Tea Ceremony.  There would be temperature play as the tea water washed over me (and he would test water temperatures ahead of time to ensure I would not get burned), Matcha Tea Ceremony is something we’ve shared before (without me being the table), and it’s something he’s confident in performing in general, and we both enjoy sharing it.  He would arrange Ikebana on me, make himself and me a bowl of Matcha, be able to connect deeply with me throughout, and still get to try out spreader bars and temperature play, and collaring…  this scenario worked for us both really well and we were able to talk it out clearly with one another.

But then there was the time before play.  He was preparing for the scene and again had a bout of low confidence about the entire situation.  He started feeling bad about how the negotiation had started out, and feared he wouldn’t be able to connect with me when the scene started.  He was very afraid of messing the scene up and doing a bad job.  He called me and we decided to put the evening on pause.  We met up and made dinner and talked longer about our feelings and concerns.  We both had emotional baggage in play.  I was afraid he wanted to do something and not have to connect with me, just use me.  He was afraid of getting everything wrong and needing to end the scene early because I’d be annoyed at our lack of connection.  I was afraid, he was afraid, you see a pattern here?  But we each still wanted it.  So we kept talking.  We got better at breathing with one another.  We got better at listening to the other person’s fears and at soothing the other.  By the time dinner was over we found we were both ready and desperately wanted to connect, to play, to experience one another in the way we had both been fantasizing.

And it was wonderful.  And it was the first time we scened without sex.  We were both deeply satisfied afterward.  The connection, the inspiration, and our communication in-scene was beautifully on.  We became more and more relaxed as we explored what was possible in the moment.  Due to that we were able to find action, fun, deep trust, and pleasure.  Next time we play I hope it is rough body play or something we haven’t tried out before.  Trust and a feeling for the pace of exploration is developing well between us, mindfulness is becoming easier and more apparent.

More scene tips and trade secrets:  As always I highly recommend checking out the Kink Academy website.  They have awesome videos and blog articles, just open an account and search “scene”.  You’ll find a bunch of different points of view and an array of ideas about how to scene, how to communicate in scene, how to negotiate, connect, set it all up…  the list goes on.  If you do open an account I appreciate you using one of my links as I’ll earn a commission for the introduction, but regardless of any of that, I really do sing their praises personally.  Kink books abound, and I always recommend anything Greenery Press puts out, Fetlife groups are a great place to glean information from, and don’t be too shy to take a class locally or make it out to a munch!  Going into public is one of the best ways to observe people and relationships as everyone works them out in real time.  Make friends with people who share your interests, free yourself to talk about your fears, hangups, and questions with the people around you who hold some experience.  We all mess up as we learn (and, indeed, as we live and grow), but messing up is one of the best ways to get better at what you do.  Remember your due diligence, you can make almost anything right if you’re willing to examine where it went wrong, take responsibility, and move forward with grace.  Good luck and I hope you learn, laugh, and have fun opening up to all of what’s possible.

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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