Positional service is probably the most prevalent in non-D/s settings. This is essentially customer service; you are in a position to serve and so you serve. The service is defined by a set of itemized expectations.
Read The Article | Find SimilarBy far this is one of the better books on submission I've read in recent memory. I strongly urge you to get a copy of your own!
Read The Review | Find SimilarOne thing I've noticed, with regard to BDSM cases in the media, is that regardless whether or not the law allows for consent, it's usually the first question the media asks. Did the submissive consent to whatever gave the police cause to arrest and charge the dominant? Followed by the question of whether or not the submissive revoked said consent by use of safe word or some other agreed upon protocol.
Read The Article | Find SimilarLet's cover what a safe environment looks like from the people present at the physical location you choose to talk in. A good environment takes planning and mutual agreements to work the way it's supposed to. And you thought that you just had to say, "We need to talk," right?
Read The Article | Find SimilarIt certainly seems that as slaves, we do pass a point where the major force of our resistance and self-defensive mechanisms, the shell, is broken, and we enter a state of pliancy and moldability for our owners.
Read The Article | Find SimilarYour concerns to not want to appear to complain overly much are valid, but in many established D/s relationships it’s not your right to withhold information, no matter how trivial with your partner.
Read The Article | Find SimilarHere's are my questions. I have been communicating with a Dom for about two months and he insists that I am not submitting at all. I disagree but I wonder if I am afraid to submit. Is this normal? Secondly, he said that if I decide to submit I need to express it in a well thought out email. Any suggestions on what that email should say?
Read The Article | Find SimilarA lot can change in five years.
Read The Article | Find SimilarYou can't make someone be a Dominant. You can, however, awaken latent dominance or kink that they may have in their fantasies.
Read The Article | Find SimilarIt can be difficult to achieve a public dynamic that fits the needs of all parties while remaining within the confines of public social expectations.
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