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Under The Whip

A place where a humble blind service submissive can calm her mind and clear out the corners with her thoughts, opinions, stories, experiences, and tribulations.
1 week ago. Monday, March 2, 2026 at 2:32 PM

Over the past two weeks, I have noticed something gentle but profound unfolding inside of me. The fog that had been quietly clinging to my thoughts has begun to lift. I feel lighter. Less depressed. Not only as an individual woman, but as a submissive within my dynamic. As a slave in service. As someone deeply devoted to her Masters and to the structure of their House. The shift has been subtle, but undeniable. It feels like the first warm morning after a long, biting winter, when you open the door and realize the air no longer hurts your lungs. The sun is simply, there again.

 

For a long time, I have prided myself on being someone others can come to. I have always offered my ear, my heart, and when asked, my counsel. I speak from lived experience, from trials endured, lessons learned, mistakes owned. Service to community has always mattered to me. I believe mentorship, when done ethically and with humility, is sacred work. But what I did not realize was how much constant exposure to other people’s relational distress was quietly shaping my own internal world.

 

Over and over, I found myself in conversations where dynamics were criticized, partners were dissected, Masters were doubted, slaves were resentful. And inevitably the question would come: “How did you survive what you went through?” or “How do you make it work?” And I would answer. Thoughtfully. Earnestly. Drawing from my own past pain. What I failed to notice was that this created a kind of emotional merry go round. To help someone feel less alone, I would revisit difficult chapters of my own history. To validate their struggle, I would mentally reenter storms I had already weathered. To offer guidance, I would place myself back into the mindset of hardship rather than stability.

 

Psychologically, this makes sense. Humans coregulate. We mirror one another’s emotional states. Research in social psychology shows that repeated exposure to negative relational narratives primes our brains to scan for similar threats in our own lives. This is called negative attentional bias, the more we hear about betrayal, neglect, resentment, or imbalance, the more our nervous system begins to search for those patterns around us.

 

And when the majority of your conversations center around what is wrong, your mind begins to highlight flaws that were once neutral, or even endearing. I spoke about this once in a class I taught, if you place a happily partnered person in a social circle dominated by divorces and breakups, something subtle begins to happen. They start noticing every minor irritation in their own relationship. Habits that never truly bothered them become magnified. Small quirks become evidence. The lens shifts. Not because the relationship changed, but because the narrative environment did.

 


I now believe this is exactly what was happening to me.



As submissives, and especially those of us who serve within structured dynamics, we often hold space for others. We mentor. We soothe. We contextualize. We help people regulate. But when that becomes the only emotional environment we occupy, we never step out of “advisor mode.” We never return to simply being. And being is vital.

 

These past two weeks, without constant immersion in those heavy conversations, I have felt something realign. My dynamic feels softer. Warmer. My connection with my Masters feels clearer. My bond with their other slave feels more harmonious. The relief has been physical, like a weight lifting from my shoulders. Nothing about my House changed. What changed was the emotional climate I allowed myself to live in.

 

Misery may love company, but I do not need to live inside it to be compassionate. There is a difference between service and self sacrifice of emotional stability. There is a difference between mentorship and marinating in dysfunction. Boundaries are not cruelty. They are stewardship.

 

From here on out, I will still be of service to my community. I will still be present for my friends. I will still offer guidance when it is genuinely sought and appropriate. But I will no longer be constantly surrounded by those who only wish to dwell in negativity. You have to be around me for good times too.

 

If I begin to notice that the majority of our interactions revolve around complaints, bitterness, or cyclical relational drama, I will gently distance myself. Not from lack of care, but from devotion to my priorities. My relationship with my Masters. My harmony within my House. My service to the House of Koch, and my own peace. These are not things I will allow to be eroded by passing friendships or repetitive despair.

 

I am a submissive. My service is intentional. My devotion is chosen. And my emotional stewardship is part of that service. The sun is shining again. And I intend to stand in it.

2 weeks ago. Wednesday, February 18, 2026 at 4:36 AM

I want to say this as clearly and as gently as I can, if you reach out for support, you are not a burden, and it is not a sign of weakness. That is what I am here for. I have no issue sharing space with you when you need it. Whether you need to vent, are looking for advice, or need help locating information or resources to assist you. I do my best to help and to serve our community, and I take pride in being someone who can be there so you feel seen, heard, and valued.

 

Part of why this matters so much to me is because there was a time in my own life when I truly felt alone, like I had no one at all. I never want another person to feel that way if I can help it.

 

With that said, I also want to be honest, I am human. I make mistakes like everyone else, and I have my own struggles, including a very stressful vanilla life situation right now. There will be days when I simply have no spoons to assist anyone. When I say I have no spoons, please understand that it is not rejection. It just means I may need a little time, maybe a couple of hours, to reset before I can fully share space with you in the way you deserve.

 

I am also not a crisis professional, and I cannot advise on crisis situations. If you are in that space, I will always encourage you to contact trained professionals and provide information to help you reach them. There is absolutely no shame in asking me to help you find that support, or even to sit with you while you make that call. If needed, I would even sit with you at a hospital and hold your hand while you talk to doctors and tell them you need help.

 

Because you are valued and you bring something beautiful to this world, even if you cannot see it right now.

I

do want to be clear about one thing though, I am not an echo chamber. Seeking help or support is not weakness, it is strength. You are never a burden for needing help, and you never need to apologize to me for reaching out. That said, sharing space with me should also be a place for growth. A place to learn from mistakes, to be accountable when needed, and to keep moving forward. You will not be judged here, and you will be respected, appreciated, and encouraged to grow into the best version of yourself.

 

We all need help sometimes. We all need support. We all make mistakes. And all of that is okay, as long as we learn, grow, and keep giving ourselves grace along the way. So please reach out. Seek support. Seek connection. And most importantly, be gentle with yourself as you grow into an even more beautiful version of who you are becoming.

3 months ago. Friday, November 21, 2025 at 5:48 PM

A few days ago, my world cracked in half.



I got the news that my sister passed away… finally, after fighting Stage Four Cancer for two long years. I knew this moment was coming, I could feel it creeping closer, but knowing doesn’t make the impact any less brutal. There’s no easing into this kind of pain. It hits like a fucking freight train.

 


Today is her funeral. And I’m not there.



I can’t begin to express how much that tears me apart. I feel sick with guilt, with regret, with the feeling that I should be standing there with everyone else as they honor her life. She’s being given a military service, she served in the Air Force, and she served with pride. She deserves that honor. She deserves every moment of respect and remembrance they’re giving her.

 


And I’m sitting here hundreds of miles away, trying not to drown in the weight of all the things I can’t change.



I keep telling myself she isn’t suffering anymore. That her pain is gone. That her body, which fought as hard as it could until it simply couldn’t anymore, is finally at rest. A part of me really is grateful for that. She deserved peace so much more than she ever got But the rest of me…


The rest of me is just fucking devastated.



I miss her so fucking much. I miss her laugh. Her sarcasm. Her kindness. The way she could ground me even in my darkest moments. I miss knowing she was on this planet with me, even if we weren’t talking every day. Losing her feels like losing a piece of my own foundation. My chest physically aches with how deeply I love her and how violently she’s been ripped away.


I will never forget her. I can’t.



She’s part of my bones, part of my history, part of everything that shaped me, and continues to shape me. I love her with a depth I don’t have words for, and I will honor her memory for the rest of my life. She deserved more time… but I’ll make damn sure her impact doesn’t fade.

 

So this is me… grieving loudly because I don’t know how to hold this quietly. This is me missing her with everything I am. This is me loving her beyond the boundary of life.


Rest easy, sis. You finally get to breathe.

3 months ago. Monday, November 17, 2025 at 4:36 AM

I’m absolutely thrilled about how amazing our Subby Hotline turnout was tonight! We made so many new friends and had such a rich, heartfelt conversation. Tonight’s topic was *Staying in Your Submissive Headspace* and exploring ways our Dominants can support us in that space. The perspectives and ideas shared were incredible.

 

 

Huge love and gratitude to my two besties, Cyn and Tova, for helping make it all happen and to everyone who showed up and contributed. I adore you all so much.

4 months ago. Wednesday, November 5, 2025 at 3:54 PM

TRIGGER WARNING...TALKING ABOUT CANCER, HOSPICE DOWN BELOG!

 

I don’t even know where to begin. My heart feels like it has been ripped from my chest, and I’m barely able to breathe through the grief.

 

For years now, I have been holding my breath, praying, hoping, and watching my dear friend, my chosen sister, fight stage four ovarian cancer. About six months ago, we received what felt like a miracle: she was in remission. My heart soared. I let myself believe. I let myself hope.

 

But nine weeks later, the cancer came back with a vengeance. It spread to her lungs, filled the lining and fluid of them, and left her body too weak, too fragile to handle more chemo. I listened to her, as she told me, that her strength was fading, as doctors did everything they could to stabilize her, but it was never enough.

 

Yesterday, the hardest decision was made: she is moving to Hospice. she told me, if the cancer is at least kind, she might have, two months. Two months.


FUCK! Why is life so cruel?



I have spent all day, all night, crying. I barely ate, surviving mostly on junk food, because food has no meaning when my heart is breaking like this. Every ounce of energy has been drained. I have no spoons. I cannot respond to messages, I cannot get out of bed. I cannot be here in any real way right now. My soul feels fractured, and a piece of it is leaving with her.

 

She chose this path herself, she chose not to fight anymore. And though part of me wants to scream, to beg her to keep going, I support her choice. I respect it. I do not want her to suffer in pain. But losing her, losing her will leave a hole in my heart that I don’t know if I can ever fill.

 

She asked me to share, one last time, her gratitude to everyone online, who helped with her gift back in May. It eased her body, it eased her mind, and it gave her courage to fight. Please, let that kindness linger in your hearts, as it did in hers.

 

All I can say now is this, love one another fiercely. Be kind. Cherish the moments you have. We never truly know how much time we are given.


I love you Ves, my sister. I will hold you in my heart every single day.

4 months ago. Saturday, October 18, 2025 at 10:44 PM

Eeeep! Tomorrow’s the Big Day!

 

I can hardly sit still right now, our first ever Subby Hotline is happening tomorrow! I’m beyond excited because our very first topic is one that’s close to so many hearts: how difficult it can be to be a submissive.

 

We’ve got some amazing discussion questions lined up, and after today’s rehearsal, I’m feeling so confident that everything is going to flow beautifully. This isn’t just another chat, it’s the beginning of something real, something healing, and something that connects subs of all types across the world.

 

I can’t even begin to describe how much I love this community. You’ve all made this dream come to life, and I’m endlessly grateful. Huge love and thanks to my Masters and to the House of Koch for supporting me and letting this little idea grow into something so powerful.

 

Honestly? I feel like a kid at Yule, giddy, sparkly, and full of joy. Tomorrow can’t come soon enough!