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Consensual Dominance

Thoughts from a guy obsessed with the theory and practice of power exchange
3 years ago. October 7, 2020 at 1:16 AM

Stop me if you’ve heard this one: “The one with the real power in a D/s relationship is the submissive, because they can choose to revoke their submission any time they want.”

I hear this idea pretty frequently, and it’s always struck me as a really weird thing to believe. Do people think that the dominant partner can’t equally well revoke their dominance any time they want? It’s a consensual relationship on both sides; so if “real power” is the power to end the power exchange then both partners hold it equally. So I could understand thinking that consensual D/s relationships are really, fundamentally egalitarian, but this idea that being able to end the power dynamic means submissive partner holds all the cards just doesn’t make any sense.

Well, I think I’ve got it figured out. I don’t think that anyone actually believes that dominants can’t end their D/s dynamics; it just doesn’t occur to them to think that they ever would. Because they’re imagining D/s as a thing that the submissive partner gives to the dominant one, an idea that often goes by the name the Gift of Submission, or “GoS” for short.

In the GoS vision of D/s, the dominant partner is the one accruing most or all of the benefits of the relationship and the submissive partner just gives and gives. So if the dynamic ends then the dominant partner loses a lot and the submissive partner loses little or nothing. Because they weren’t getting anything in the first place, yes? They were just giving, giving and giving submission.

Imagine a relationship where I just came to your house and gave you a hundred bucks every day. You’d be pretty invested in that relationship continuing because, hey: free money. Pretty likely over time you’d even adjust your lifestyle so that you were counting on that free money coming in, and then you’re dependent on me. But I have no reason at all to continue the relationship; I can end it on a whim and lose nothing but hassle and expense. That’s how charity can turn into manipulation, and that’s how you end up with the submissive having all the real power.

So here’s the thing. If you think of D/s as something that the submissive partner gives to the dominant one, then yes: you’ve trapped yourself in a world where submissives have all the real power, because they have nothing to lose and the dominant partner has everything to lose. But if that isn’t where you want to be, there’s a simple way out: recognize that there’s as much or more to give from the dominant side of the slash.

If you’ve been doing GoS D/s from the submissive end, think about those times you retracted your gift from a dominant and ended a D/s dynamic. Did you feel like you lost nothing? Maybe you did, in which case you were probably dealing with a lousy dominant. But if you did feel a sense of loss, then try and notice what it was about. Did you lose structure? creative cruelty? parental nurturance? That’s what your dominant was giving you. Learn to notice and appreciate it during a relationship, and you’ll stop feeling like the one with all the real power—`cause you’ll be invested in the dynamic along with your partner. Stop looking for a dominant who is worthy of your gift, and start looking for one who dominates you in ways you can hardly believe you’re worthy of. Then you’ll feel dominated without that little asterisk that says actually you’re the one really in charge.

If you’ve been doing GoS D/s from the dominant end, think hard about what you have to offer to a D/s dynamic and how you could get better at it. Then start insisting on having your contribution recognized. Stop thinking of yourself as the lucky, passive recipient of a gift and start thinking of yourself as a contributor to building something awesome and hot between two people. Yeah: it means that you have to do some work instead of lying back on the couch and getting submitted at. But you won’t feel like a beggar just hoping your partner doesn’t take their ball and go home.

So hey: you know who really has the most real power in a relationship? It has nothing to do with dominant or submissive roles. It’s the person who needs the relationship less. This is the Principle of Least Vested Interest and it is both unavoidable and a little depressing, kind of like gravity. In any kind of consensual relationship, whoever has the least to lose (or thinks they have the least to lose) is the one with the most leverage. The GoS idea, and deducing from there that submissives hold all the real power, is just a version of least vested interest.

So do you want to have real, fundamental power in your relationships? Here’s the answer in two easy steps (the “easy” part is a lie).

  1. Make sure that you’re giving your partner a lot of what they value, and that they recognize it. That means listening and learning what it is that they value, investing serious time, attention and energy into making it happen, and not standing for being taken for granted.
  2. Be bigger than your relationship. Develop hobbies, passions, friendships—maintain an identity and a sense of your worth that doesn’t depend on being your partner’s partner. Build your life so that if your relationship ends you will mourn, but not be crushed.

That’s it. Those two things are the foundation of having real power in any consensual relationship, whether you’re coming at it as a dominant a submissive or neither. Any special dominant skills or tricks have to be built on top of that foundation, and without it your partner really is the one holding all the real power.

 

Find all my power exchange education work at www.ConsensualDominance.com

kajirasubm{On Hiatus } - could the concept of power attributed to the submissive, be based upon the fact that the submissive is the one who can decide when a scene ends.
using the safe word is the " power "

I never saw power as power to end the relationship. For that basis, both would hold that power.
3 years ago
MrFulmen - Can a dominant not decide to end a scene?
3 years ago
kajirasubm{On Hiatus } - of course the Dominant can.
But I think the power of using the safe word, is where people will say the submissive has the power to end a scene.
I understand your point that it's both.
3 years ago
SweetSirRendering​(sub female) - power exchange is an equal exchange, or should be. <3

as for safeword:
the D (or left side of slash) should be deciding when a scene ends or whatever was mutually decided. the safeword ends a scene immediately, yes, but this should not happen frequently if ever...

obviously, safeword if necessary, but what i mean is that it should not be the way the scene ends as a rule.

typically, having to call a safeword means something went wrong. all parties need to really evaluate what happened when a safeword is called to avoid overstepping in the future as much as possible. unless... that is the kink enjoyed by the players. i personally appreciate that my D pays attention and avoids these scene ending situations and i communicate as appropriate to assist. if you find yourself having to call red often, maybe speak with your partner(s) and discuss the use of a “yellow” word.

<3
3 years ago
Cherry2000​(sub female) - I have always seen both as having a gift to give. There is so much work put into being a Dominant. following up with tasks and routings. Following through with punishment and planning well thought out scenes. There is so much a Dominant gives also. It truly is as cyclic relationship. It doesn't work unless both are giving to each other
3 years ago
Devil's damsel​(sub female){HandsomeDe} - I really like this. I’ve never liked the idea that the submissive holds all the power. It almost defeats the idea of submission to me. If I’m in this relationship where I’m the submissive, but in the back of my head is the idea that I’m the one who is really wearing the pants, well that’s not very submissive is it?

The way I see it, a submissive’s power is in not giving her “gift” to just anybody. Her power is in making sure to give her submission to someone who will give his dominance in equal measure.

I do not hold the power in my dynamic, nor do I want to. He and I are in this together, forged as one. He has given me the gift of His Dominance and I have given Him the gift of my submission. We both equally have as much to lose as the other if either of us were to withdraw. I believe that is how it should be in any committed relationship.
3 years ago
majordomo{cocksucker} - @MrFulmen If one reads the title "power exchange" it can be assumed that both are in a power exchange, where the Alpha takes on the role of dominant by accepting the submissives, submission. That is as long as it is a true situation of "Consensual Dominance"
3 years ago

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