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Letters from the Edge of Tolerance

This is where I document life lived with CPTSD, ADHD, DID, OCD, abandonment trauma, rage, and the long term psychological consequences of instability. Not for sympathy. Not for inspiration. For examination.

I write about trauma the way a mechanic tears down an engine. Piece by piece. What broke. Why it broke. What it still does under stress.

You will find poems that bleed without asking to be saved. Essays that dissect ethical BDSM, power exchange, dominance, consent, and responsibility without romantic illusion. Reflections on betrayal, identity, dissociation, religion, rage, control, and the uncomfortable mathematics of trust.

This is not a healing space. It is an honest one.

I do not frame survival as beautiful. I frame it as necessary.

If you are looking for optimism, look elsewhere.

If you want unfiltered analysis from someone who has lived at the upper edge of tolerance for decades and still functions, read on.

Existence is not always a gift.

Sometimes it is a condition.
4 weeks ago. Saturday, January 31, 2026 at 3:40 AM

Monogamy, Polygamy, and Polyamory in a D/S Dynamic
D/S relationships add weight to every relationship choice because power exchange creates deeper vulnerability. That vulnerability can exist in monogamy, polygamy, and polyamory, but the rules of survival are the same across all of them: honesty, consent, communication, and accountability. When those four fail, the relationship fails. When they hold, the structure you choose becomes a matter of compatibility instead of chaos.

This chapter is not about telling anyone what relationship structure is “better.” It is about what these structures require when D/S is involved, and what becomes non-negotiable if you want it to stay healthy.


Defining the Structures Clearly
A lot of confusion and conflict starts because people use these words loosely.

Monogamy is a commitment to one partner, emotionally and sexually, with agreements that exclude others.

Polyamory is consensual non-monogamy that allows multiple emotional and romantic relationships, often with the possibility of love and deep connection with more than one person.

Polygamy is most commonly used to describe a marriage structure where one person has multiple spouses. In modern kink spaces, people sometimes use the word loosely when they mean “one person has multiple partners,” but that is not technically the same thing. The key point is that it implies an intentional, structured arrangement, not casual openness.

No matter what structure you choose, D/S does not replace consent. It does not replace disclosure. And it does not make promises optional.


The First Rule
Your Structure Must Be Chosen, Not Assumed
One of the most common failures in D/S relationships is someone assuming that dominance equals permission to expand sexually or romantically. That is not dominance. That is entitlement.

If you are monogamous, monogamy must be agreed to explicitly. If you are open, openness must be agreed to explicitly. If you are poly, poly must be negotiated explicitly. If someone is trying to keep the relationship “vague” so they can do whatever they want later, that is not flexibility. That is manipulation.

This ties directly back to Chapter Six: negotiation is the prerequisite to a strong foundation. If relationship structure is unclear, nothing else you negotiate is stable.


Monogamy in D/S
Strength Through Focus and Depth
Monogamy can work exceptionally well in D/S because it simplifies the emotional landscape. There are fewer moving parts, fewer shifting agreements, and fewer outside variables. Many couples find that monogamy supports deep trust, consistency, and long-term stability.

However, monogamy only works when it is not used as control.

In a healthy dynamic, monogamy is a shared commitment, not a weapon. It should never be used to isolate a partner from friends, community, or support systems. That is not monogamy, that is the isolation red flag from Chapter Five wearing a respectable label.

Monogamy also requires ongoing honesty about attraction. People still notice others. Lust still exists. Chapter Three addressed that truth directly: lust is natural, but commitment is a decision. Monogamy is maintained by integrity, not denial.


Polyamory in D/S
Love With Structure, Not Chaos
Polyamory can be beautiful in D/S, but it is not easier. It is often harder. It requires more communication, more accountability, and more emotional maturity because you are managing multiple bonds and multiple realities at once.

The biggest danger in poly D/S is confusing hierarchy with consent.

Some poly dynamics have a primary partnership, some are non-hierarchical, and some operate with negotiated ranks or roles. None of those are automatically wrong. What matters is whether everyone involved fully understands the structure and consents to it.

A Dominant cannot ethically use authority over one submissive to control that submissive’s other relationships unless that control is explicitly negotiated, agreed to, and constantly revisited. Even then, it requires extreme care. The moment control becomes coercion, it becomes abuse.

Polyamory also has a unique risk: emotional neglect through overload. If you do not have the emotional capacity to care for more than one partner properly, adding more partners is not expansion, it is fragmentation. Chapter Eight applies here strongly: aftercare and ongoing responsibility do not multiply cleanly. They stack. If you cannot provide consistent care, you should not take on more vulnerability.


Polygamy and Multi-Partner Structures in D/S
Power and Ethics Require Precision
Polygamy or polygamy-like structures amplify power dynamics. When one person has multiple partners, especially in a Dominant role, the risk of imbalance increases. This does not mean it cannot be ethical. It means it must be handled with precision.

In multi-partner arrangements, some of the most important questions are:

  • Is everyone consenting freely, without pressure
  • Are expectations and rules applied consistently?
  • Are partners treated as people, not as resources?
  • Is jealousy addressed with care, not punishment?
  • Is anyone being isolated, financially controlled, or made dependent?
  • Is there a fair process for renegotiation and repair?


This directly connects to Chapter Nine: renegotiation is how you keep a structure aligned with reality. Multi-partner structures demand renegotiation more often because change in one connection affects the others.


Cheating Versus Consent
The Line Is Clarity
The most important concept in this chapter is simple: cheating is not defined by whether sex occurs, it is defined by whether consent and agreements are broken.

Chapter Three established this clearly: cheating is never acceptable. That statement stays true in monogamy, polyamory, and polygamy. If you violate the agreements, you are cheating. If you hide it, you are cheating. If you manipulate around it, you are cheating.

Non-monogamy is not a loophole. It is a structure with rules. Often more rules, not fewer.


Jealousy, Insecurity, and Comparison
They Must Be Managed, Not Denied
Chapter Four covered jealousy and insecurity as real emotions, not moral failures. In non-monogamous D/S relationships, those emotions tend to show up more often because the triggers are more frequent.

Jealousy is usually fear: fear of replacement, fear of neglect, fear of not being enough, fear of loss. The solution is not to punish jealousy, mock it, or demand someone “get over it.” The solution is reassurance, clarity, time, and boundaries.

If someone uses dominance to shut down those conversations, they are not leading, they are avoiding responsibility.


Contracts, Disclosure, and Boundaries
What Must Be Explicit
If you choose monogamy, polyamory, or polygamy, your contract or agreement should address it clearly. Chapter Six recommended contracts because they remove ambiguity and protect both people. This is one of the areas where that protection matters most.

At minimum, you should have clarity on:

  • What is allowed and what is not
  • Whether emotional relationships are allowed, not just sexual
  • What must be disclosed and when
  • Testing and safer sex expectations
  • Emotional aftercare expectations when new partners are introduced
  • Time and attention expectations, so no one is slowly neglected
  • How renegotiation happens when feelings change
  • How conflicts are handled and repaired (Chapter Seven)


When structure is vague, people get hurt.


Ending Dynamics in Complex Structures
Chapter Nine discussed ending dynamics ethically. In non-monogamous structures, endings require extra care because removing one connection can destabilize others. Ethical endings still mean respect, clarity, and no weaponization of vulnerability. When a relationship ends, it should not become a community war or a dominance contest.

Ending ethically in poly or multi-partner systems often means:

  • Clear communication with all affected partners
  • No triangulation or turning partners against each other
  • Careful de-escalation of protocols and shared rituals
  • Emotional aftercare for those impacted, not just the people breaking up


Complex structures require mature endings.


Closing Thoughts
Monogamy, polyamory, and polygamy are not defined by morality. They are defined by structure. What makes them ethical is not the label. What makes them ethical is consent, honesty, and accountability.

In D/S, those requirements become even more important because power exchange magnifies vulnerability. If you want multiple partners, you must be able to provide multiple layers of care. If you want monogamy, you must maintain integrity without using it as control. If you want any structure to last, you must negotiate it clearly, maintain it consistently, and renegotiate it when reality changes.

Your relationship structure does not protect you.
Your character does.

1 month ago. Saturday, January 24, 2026 at 12:31 AM

Sadism, Masochism, and Gorean Kink


Sadism, masochism, and Gorean dynamics sit in a place many people misunderstand. Outsiders see cruelty. Some newcomers see “no limits.” Some experienced players see nothing but risk. The truth is simpler and harder at the same time: these kinks can be some of the most intimate, disciplined, and trust-heavy dynamics in BDSM, but only when they are built on the foundations I have already covered.

If you skip communication (Chapter One), emotional safety (Chapter Four), negotiation and contracts (Chapter Six), and aftercare (Chapter Eight), you are not doing sadism or masochism. You are gambling with someone’s nervous system and calling it kink. If you ignore red flags (Chapter Five), you are not exploring anything, you are walking into a trap.

These kinks do not excuse bad character. They demand better character.


Sadism


The Difference Between Cruelty and Craft
Ethical sadism is not “I like hurting people.” Ethical sadism is “I like consensual intensity, I enjoy control, and I can be trusted with someone’s vulnerability.”

A real sadist is not defined by how hard they can go. They are defined by how well they can read, how well they can lead, and how quickly they can stop. Anyone can swing harder. Not everyone can hold responsibility in their hands without letting ego take over.

Sadism done right requires:

  • Restraint over impulse
  • Calm decision-making under intensity
  • Emotional regulation when someone is crying, shaking, or overwhelmed
  • Respect for limits even when the sadist wants more
  • A relationship to consent that is immediate and absolute


This ties directly back to Chapter Four: emotional safety is what makes intensity possible without harm. And Chapter Six: negotiation is not the opposite of dominance, it is the prerequisite for dominance.

Sadism is also not just physical. Many sadists are drawn to psychological control, anticipation, denial, fear-play, humiliation, or strict protocol. Those areas can cut deeper than any implement, which means they require even more care. Words leave marks too. If you cannot repair emotionally, you should not play emotionally.

A sadist who cannot apologize, cannot accept feedback, and cannot debrief is not a sadist. They are a liability.


Masochism

Pain as Meaning, Not Damage


Masochism is often reduced to “liking pain,” but for many masochists it is not about pain itself. It is about what pain becomes inside a safe container.

For some, pain is grounding. For others, it is catharsis. For others, it is surrender, service, or devotion. Some masochists experience a kind of clarity when intensity strips away overthinking. Some experience emotional release. Some feel closer to their partner through the shared trust of it.

That is why I treat masochism as something that must be respected, not joked about.

A healthy masochist is not someone with no limits. A healthy masochist is someone who knows the difference between intensity they desire and damage they do not consent to. They understand their body, their trauma triggers, their drop patterns, their recovery needs, and their emotional cycles. They do not treat suffering like currency or self-worth like a scoreboard.

Masochism requires honesty (Chapter One) because it is easy to “tough it out” and lie about what you need. Silence is not strength. Silence is how people get hurt.

And masochism requires aftercare (Chapter Eight) because the nervous system does not care how brave you were. Drop can hit hard. Shame can creep in. Emotional vulnerability can linger. The more intense the experience, the more careful the care must be after.

If someone praises your endurance but ignores your recovery, that is not devotion. That is neglect.


The Sadist-Masochist Bond

The Loop of Trust


Sadism and masochism, when aligned, create one of the most intense feedback loops in kink: the sadist reads and leads, the masochist receives and responds, and both people build trust by proving reliability.

This bond is not built by pain. It is built by consistency.

  • The sadist proves they stop when asked.
  • The masochist proves they communicate honestly.
  • Both prove they can debrief without defensiveness.
  • Both prove they can repair if something goes wrong (Chapter Seven).

When this works, it is not chaotic. It is controlled. It is intentional. It is safe enough to be wild.


Gorean Kink
Fantasy, Structure, and the Ethics of Ownership


Gorean kink tends to attract people who crave structure, ritual, hierarchy, and the language of ownership. For many, it is the blend of strict protocol, training, service, control, and identity within roles that creates the draw.

But Gorean kink also sits close to concepts that must be handled with extreme clarity, because the language can easily be used to hide coercion.

So I will say this plainly: Gorean kink in BDSM is role-based and consent-based. It is a chosen framework. It is not a license for entitlement. It is not an excuse to ignore limits. It is not a justification for real-world coercion.

If someone uses “tradition,” “Gorean rules,” or “the way it’s supposed to be” to override consent, that is not Gorean. That is abuse with a costume.

This is where Chapter Six matters more than ever. If you are exploring Gorean dynamics, negotiation and contracts become essential. Not because you need paper to make it real, but because you need clarity to make it safe.

What Gorean dynamics often emphasize


Gorean kink often centers on:

  • Protocol and ritual
  • Training and structure
  • Service and obedience
  • Identity within roles
  • Ownership language and collar symbolism
  • Formal expectations and consequences


These can be deeply fulfilling when consensual, because they create order and meaning. They can also become suffocating if they are used to erase a person’s autonomy.

That is why Chapter Nine matters here: lifestyle D/S is not constant control, it is consistent responsibility. Gorean dynamics often lean lifestyle, which means burnout becomes a real risk if you treat a partner like a permanent performance instead of a human being.

Gorean does not erase humanity


A submissive can choose a role that includes strict obedience and still retain agency. A Dominant can choose a role that includes ownership language and still be obligated to care, protect, and stay accountable.

Your partner is not your property in the way objects are property. Even if you use that language for the dynamic, you are still dealing with a human being with emotions, trauma, stress, changing needs, and a nervous system that can only take so much.

If your structure does not make room for care, rest, and renegotiation, it is not structure. It is pressure.


Negotiation for These Kinks

Where Most People Fail
Sadism, masochism, and Gorean dynamics require deeper negotiation than most other kinks because the stakes are higher. You are playing with pain, psychology, identity, and control.

This is where the tools from Chapter Six apply directly:

  • Define hard limits, soft limits, and “maybes.”
  • Agree on safewords, and I still recommend more than one.
  • Use flags or signals for mood and capacity. Care-only. Scene-only. No sexual contact. No impact. Whatever your system is, make it clear.
  • Define what is allowed when someone is emotional, tired, or triggered.
  • Define what happens if someone safewords. Immediately. Every time. No debate.
  • Define aftercare expectations before you ever play.


If you cannot negotiate calmly, you have no business doing intense play.


Aftercare and Drop
The Cost of Intensity


These dynamics often produce stronger drops, not because they are “bad,” but because they push harder on the nervous system.

Sadists can experience guilt, doubt, or emotional crash. Masochists can experience vulnerability, shame, sadness, or a need for reassurance. Gorean dynamics can trigger identity whiplash if someone snaps from deep role into real life without support.

Aftercare must be treated as part of the dynamic, not a bonus. And ongoing check-ins must be treated as responsibility, not clinginess.

If you want intensity, you also accept the responsibility of care.


Red Flags Specific to These Kinks
Wannabes Love Intensity Because It Hides Their Lack of Skill


These kinks attract “wannabes” because intensity can disguise incompetence. Someone can seem powerful while actually being reckless. Someone can seem obedient while actually being afraid to speak.

Use Chapter Five like a shield.

Anyone who says:

  • “Real subs have no limits.”
  • “You don’t need safewords with me.”
  • “Contracts are for amateurs.”
  • “If you question me, you’re not submissive.”

That person is not advanced. They are unsafe.

The more extreme the kink, the more disciplined the person must be. If discipline is missing, leave.


Renegotiation and Evolution
You Will Not Stay the Same


What you want now may not be what you want in six months. Your tolerance changes. Your emotional needs shift. Life stress rises and falls. Trauma triggers appear unexpectedly. Bodies change. Energy changes.

So these dynamics require renegotiation (Chapter Nine) as maintenance, not conflict.

A healthy Dominant leads renegotiation without defensiveness. A healthy submissive participates without fear of punishment. If renegotiation feels dangerous, the dynamic is already unsafe.


Closing Thoughts
Sadism, masochism, and Gorean kink can be some of the most profound experiences in BDSM, because they demand trust that is earned, not assumed. They require communication that is constant, not occasional. They require consent that is active, not implied. They require aftercare that is real, not performative.

If you want the depth these kinks can offer, you must be willing to carry the weight that comes with them.

Intensity is easy.
Responsibility is the part that proves who you are.

1 month ago. Sunday, January 18, 2026 at 6:24 PM

Lifestyle D/S, Evolution of Power Exchange, and Ending a Dynamic Ethically


Lifestyle D/S and 24/7 dynamics are often romanticized. People imagine constant control, constant obedience, constant intensity. The reality is far less theatrical and far more demanding.

A lifestyle dynamic is not defined by how often you play. It is defined by how consistently you practice responsibility, consent, and care when the scene is over and real life is happening. Bills, jobs, stress, families, mental health, exhaustion, illness, and grief do not pause because someone wears a collar or holds a title. If anything, those pressures become the true proving ground of the dynamic.

This chapter covers three things that matter once a dynamic becomes real: how lifestyle D/S works, how it evolves through renegotiation, and how to end it ethically when it needs to end.


Lifestyle D/S and 24/7 Dynamics


A 24/7 dynamic does not mean nonstop kink. It means the authority and structure exist beyond scenes, and that both people agree to live inside that framework to some degree. That can be light structure or deep structure, but it must be intentional.

The biggest misconception is that lifestyle D/S is about control. In healthy dynamics, lifestyle D/S is about stability.

It is routines, rituals, protocols, communication patterns, and expectations that create a shared rhythm. Some dynamics include daily check-ins, rules around communication, service tasks, or rituals like kneeling, greeting protocols, or permission structures for certain things. Others are subtle and private, visible only to the two people involved.

What matters is not the aesthetic. What matters is whether the structure supports both partners rather than slowly crushing one of them.

The responsibilities increase in lifestyle D/S
In a scene-based dynamic, mistakes are often contained to a single event. In lifestyle D/S, small patterns build into big outcomes. Neglect does not show up as one obvious failure, it shows up as slow erosion.

For Dominants, lifestyle means:

  • Authority must remain consent-based, not assumed.
  • Leadership must include emotional regulation, restraint, and accountability.
  • You must track your partner’s well-being, stress, and limits over time.
  • You must know when to push and when to protect.
  • You must be willing to pause the dynamic when life demands it.


For submissives, lifestyle means:

  • Submission stays a choice, not a trap.
  • You must communicate honestly, especially when you feel fear, resentment, or fatigue.
  • You must advocate for your limits and needs without waiting for permission to be safe.
  • You must maintain your identity and self-respect inside the dynamic.
  • A healthy 24/7 dynamic does not remove agency. It organizes it.

Burnout is real and it destroys dynamics quietly


Lifestyle D/S can create deep bonding, but it can also create burnout if it is built on constant performance.

If the submissive feels like they must always be “on,” always pleasing, always available, they will eventually shut down. If the Dominant feels like they must always lead, always be perfect, never soften, they will eventually collapse into irritability, distance, or control habits.

Burnout is prevented by:

Planned rest and decompression
Regular check-ins that are honest, not performative
Flexibility during stress, illness, or major life events
Time outside kink that reinforces connection as people, not roles
Lifestyle D/S survives when both partners can breathe.


Re-Negotiation and Evolution of Power Exchange


A contract is not a cage. A negotiation is not a one-time event. People change. Life changes. Capacity changes. Desires evolve. A dynamic that never evolves becomes brittle, and brittle things break.

Re-negotiation is not the opposite of dominance. It is what keeps dominance ethical.

When renegotiation is necessary
Some of the most common reasons dynamics need renegotiation:

  • One partner’s emotional needs change
  • New boundaries appear through experience
  • Life stress reduces capacity for structure or intensity
  • A scene causes unexpected drop or discomfort
  • A limit gets tested and the result is not good
  • Health changes, medication, trauma responses, or mental load shift
  • Interest grows into new kinks, or old ones fade
  • Resentment starts creeping in, even quietly
  • Renegotiation is not a failure. It is maintenance.

How to renegotiate without weakening the dynamic


Renegotiation works best when it is treated as leadership and maturity, not conflict.

A practical approach:

  1. Schedule it
    Do not negotiate in the heat of a fight or immediately after a heavy scene. Pick a calm time.
  2. Name the purpose clearly
    “I want to adjust this so we stay strong,” not “I want to take your power away.”
  3. Review what is working first
    Start with stability. Identify what is solid so the conversation is not framed as rejection.
  4. Identify what is not working and why
    Not just the behavior, but the cost. Fatigue, insecurity, confusion, pressure, unmet needs.
  5. Update limits, expectations, and protocols
    Clarify hard limits, soft limits, and conditions. Update safewords and flags if needed.
  6. Use trial periods
    Agree to test changes for a set time, then debrief. This keeps the dynamic from swinging wildly.
  7. Document the changes
    Even if it is not legally binding, writing it down prevents future confusion and protects both partners.

Renegotiation is how you keep the dynamic aligned with reality instead of fantasy.


Ending a D/S Dynamic Safely and Ethically


Not every dynamic is meant to last. Some end because the relationship ends. Some end because the relationship remains but the power exchange no longer fits. Some end because safety is compromised. Some end because people grow in different directions.

An ethical ending is still leadership. It is still responsibility. It is still care.

Ending the relationship vs ending the dynamic


These are not always the same.

  • You can end a D/S dynamic while staying partners.
  • You can end the relationship and also end the dynamic.
  • You can pause the dynamic temporarily for life reasons.
  • Clarity matters. If the structure is changing, name exactly what is changing.

Ending cleanly without cruelty


If the dynamic is ending for normal compatibility reasons, the standard should be:

  • No humiliation
  • No retaliation
  • No public drama
  • No weaponizing secrets, vulnerability, or kink history

Power exchange creates deep access to someone. If you use that access as a weapon on the way out, you prove you were never safe to begin with.

Practical steps for an ethical ending


A clean ending often includes:

  • A direct conversation, in person if safe and realistic
  • Clear statement that consent and authority are withdrawn
  • Return of items that symbolize the dynamic if desired (collar, tags, contracts, personal tokens)
  • Clarifying communication expectations going forward (contact, no contact, check-ins)
  • Closing out shared obligations (housing, finances, community roles, online groups)
  • Emotional aftercare for the ending itself

Yes, endings can require aftercare. Losing a dynamic can cause drop, grief, confusion, or identity shock, especially in lifestyle relationships.

When the ending is about safety


If someone is violating consent, ignoring safewords, coercing, isolating, threatening, or becoming abusive, the rules change.

In that case, ethics means prioritizing safety:

  • Disengage quickly.
  • Do not negotiate with manipulation.
  • Get support from trusted friends, community leaders, or professionals.
  • Protect your privacy and physical safety.
  • Document harmful behavior if needed.

You do not owe closure to someone who harms you. You owe yourself safety.

Closing with respect


An ethical ending acknowledges the reality that both people invested something real, even if it did not work. The goal is not to punish. The goal is to separate without creating unnecessary damage.

If the dynamic was good at its core, the ending should still be dignified. If it was harmful, the ending should still be firm and protective.


Closing Thoughts
Lifestyle D/S and 24/7 dynamics are not sustained by intensity. They are sustained by consistency, emotional regulation, communication, and real responsibility. They evolve through renegotiation, not stubbornness. And when they end, they should end with ethics, not revenge.

Power exchange is measured most clearly in three moments:

  • How you lead when life is hard
  • How you renegotiate when reality changes
  • How you behave when it is time to let go

Those moments reveal whether the dynamic was rooted in responsibility or ego.

1 month ago. Monday, January 12, 2026 at 8:49 PM

Aftercare and Ongoing Responsibility
Aftercare is often talked about, but rarely understood in its full scope. Many people think of aftercare as something that happens immediately after a scene, a blanket, some water, a cuddle, and then it is done. In reality, aftercare is not a moment. It is a responsibility that begins before play and continues long after the scene ends.

In a D/S relationship, especially one built on trust, vulnerability, and power exchange, aftercare is not optional and it is not a favor. It is an obligation tied directly to the authority a Dominant is given and the surrender a submissive offers.

What Aftercare Really Is
Aftercare exists because scenes affect more than the body. They affect the nervous system, emotions, and sense of safety. Adrenaline, endorphins, and emotional exposure do not simply disappear when play stops. Both Dominants and submissives can experience drop, emotional vulnerability, confusion, exhaustion, or unexpected feelings hours or even days later.

Aftercare is the process of grounding, reconnecting, and reaffirming safety after that intensity.

This can include physical care like hydration, warmth, rest, wound care, or comfort. It can include emotional reassurance, presence, gentle conversation, or quiet companionship. Sometimes it means space. Sometimes it means holding someone together while they come back into themselves. There is no single formula, only attentiveness and communication.

Aftercare should be discussed during negotiation, not improvised under pressure. Needs differ from person to person and can change over time. What mattered once may not be enough later. That is why aftercare is not a checklist. It is an ongoing dialogue.

Aftercare Is for Both Roles
There is a harmful myth that only submissives need aftercare. This is false.

Dominants can experience drop as well. Carrying responsibility, control, and emotional weight takes a toll. Guilt, doubt, emotional exhaustion, or delayed emotional reactions can surface after scenes. A healthy dynamic acknowledges this and allows care to flow both ways.

Power exchange does not mean emotional neglect. It means shared responsibility for well-being, even when roles are unequal. A submissive caring for a Dominant after a scene does not undermine authority. It strengthens trust.

Beyond the Immediate Scene
One of the most overlooked aspects of aftercare is delayed response. Drop does not always happen right away. It can surface hours or days later as sadness, irritability, anxiety, numbness, or withdrawal. When that happens, silence and disappearance do real damage.

Ongoing responsibility means checking in after the scene is over and after life resumes. It means asking how someone is feeling the next day. It means being present if emotions resurface. It means not dismissing those feelings as inconvenient or dramatic.

A Dominant does not get to say “the scene is over” and disappear from responsibility. Authority does not end when the toys are put away. Neither does care.

Emotional Aftercare and Validation
Aftercare is not just comfort. It is validation.

Submissives often need reassurance that they are valued beyond their performance, obedience, or usefulness in a scene. They need to know that surrender did not reduce their worth or autonomy. Dominants need reassurance that they did not cause harm, that their leadership is trusted, and that they acted responsibly.

Validation does not weaken power exchange. It stabilizes it.

Ignoring emotional needs creates distance, insecurity, and resentment. Addressing them builds safety and deepens trust. A dynamic without emotional aftercare becomes transactional. A dynamic with it becomes sustainable.

Ongoing Responsibility in Daily Life
In longer-term or lifestyle dynamics, aftercare blends into daily responsibility. This includes paying attention to stress levels, mental health, physical exhaustion, and life pressures outside of kink. Scenes do not happen in a vacuum. Neither do emotions.

Ongoing responsibility means knowing when not to play. It means recognizing when someone needs care instead of control. It means being willing to pause, renegotiate, or step back when circumstances change.

This responsibility applies to submissives as well. Speaking up when something feels off is part of maintaining safety. Silence to preserve harmony eventually destroys trust.

When Aftercare Is Neglected
Neglecting aftercare is one of the fastest ways to break a dynamic. It leaves people feeling used, abandoned, or unsafe. Over time, this creates emotional shutdown, resentment, and fear of vulnerability. Many people leave kink not because of the play itself, but because they were left alone afterward.

A Dominant who refuses aftercare, minimizes its importance, or treats it as an inconvenience is not practicing responsible power exchange. A submissive who is afraid to ask for care is already in an unsafe position.

Closing Thoughts
Aftercare is not weakness. It is strength expressed through responsibility.

Power exchange amplifies experience. Aftercare is what brings people back down safely. It is how trust is preserved, how intimacy deepens, and how a dynamic survives beyond intensity.

Authority without aftercare is exploitation. Submission without care is endurance. A healthy D/S relationship understands that what happens after matters just as much as what happens during.

Aftercare is not the end of a scene. It is the continuation of care, trust, and responsibility that makes power exchange worth engaging in at all.

1 month ago. Monday, January 12, 2026 at 3:20 AM

Trust Testing, Repair, and Long-Term Maintenance


Trust is not something that appears fully formed at the beginning of a D/S relationship. It is built slowly, tested unintentionally, strained by life, and either strengthened or broken by how both people respond when things do not go as planned. This chapter focuses on three closely connected realities: how trust is tested, how mistakes are handled and repaired, and how a D/S relationship is maintained over time.

 

Trust Testing and Reality Checks


Trust testing is rarely deliberate. It happens naturally through circumstance.

Life applies pressure. Stress, exhaustion, jealousy, miscommunication, missed expectations, emotional triggers, and outside obligations all test a dynamic. These moments are not failures. They are reality checks. They reveal whether the foundation you built can actually support the weight placed on it.

A trust test may look like a boundary being challenged unintentionally, a promise being delayed, an emotional need being missed, or a misread signal during a scene. What matters is not that these moments happen, but how they are handled afterward. Healthy dynamics use these moments as data, not ammunition.

Reality checks also involve reassessing assumptions. Early in a relationship, people often present their best, most controlled selves. Over time, fatigue and familiarity strip that polish away. This is not deception, it is humanity. A real Dominant does not remain flawless. A real submissive does not remain endlessly compliant. Trust grows when both people are allowed to be imperfect without fear of punishment or abandonment.

Trust is tested every time someone says “I need space,” “I messed up,” or “This doesn’t feel right.” How the other person responds in those moments determines whether trust deepens or fractures.

 

Mistakes, Repair, and Rebuilding Trust


Mistakes are inevitable. In a power exchange, they carry more weight because vulnerability is higher.

A mistake does not automatically equal harm, but denial, defensiveness, or minimization often do. When something goes wrong, the first priority is acknowledgment. Not justification. Not explanation. Acknowledgment. Recognizing impact matters more than intent.

Repair requires several things working together. First, accountability. That means owning the behavior without shifting blame or demanding forgiveness. Second, corrective action. Apologies without change are meaningless. Third, patience. Trust is not restored on the offender’s timeline. It rebuilds at the pace set by the person who was hurt.

In D/S, repair may also involve renegotiation. A limit may need to be clarified. A safeword may need redefinition. A ritual or rule may need adjustment. This is not weakness or regression. It is adaptation.

There are also moments when trust cannot or should not be rebuilt. Repeated violations, ignored safewords, manipulation, or abuse are not repairable through effort alone. Knowing when repair is possible and when disengagement is necessary is part of responsible dominance and self-respecting submission.

Repair is not about returning to “how things were.” It is about building something more informed, more resilient, and more honest than before.

 

Maintenance of a D/S Relationship Over Time


Long-term D/S relationships do not survive on intensity alone. They survive on consistency.

Maintenance means ongoing communication, regular check-ins, and a willingness to revisit agreements as people grow and circumstances change. What worked six months ago may not work now. Jobs change. Health changes. Emotional capacity fluctuates. A dynamic that does not evolve will eventually fracture.

Maintenance also involves emotional labor. Dominants must continue to lead, not coast on authority earned early on. Submissives must continue to communicate honestly, not default to silence or compliance. Both roles require effort even when things feel stable.

Rituals, structure, and routine help maintain connection. So does intentional time outside of kink. Shared experiences that are not tied to power exchange reinforce the humanity underneath the roles. A dynamic that exists only in scenes often struggles to survive real life.

Maintenance also means watching for slow erosion. Resentment, unspoken needs, emotional withdrawal, or increasing reliance on control instead of communication are signs that attention is needed. Addressing these early prevents collapse later.

A well-maintained D/S relationship feels grounded. Safe. Predictable without being stagnant. Intense without being chaotic. It allows both people to grow without fear that growth itself will threaten the bond.

 

Closing Thoughts


Trust is not proven by obedience or control. It is proven by what happens when things are difficult.

A strong dynamic is not one that never breaks strain. It is one that bends, communicates, repairs, and adapts without sacrificing safety or dignity. Trust testing is not something to fear. It is something to learn from. Mistakes are not the end of a relationship unless they are ignored or repeated without accountability. Maintenance is not glamorous, but it is what separates fantasy from something real.

D/S is not sustained by titles, contracts, or intensity alone. It is sustained by responsibility, repair, and the willingness to keep showing up long after the novelty fades.

1 month ago. Saturday, January 10, 2026 at 5:03 AM

Negotiation and Contracts


Negotiation is one of the most important parts of any D/S relationship, yet it is often misunderstood or rushed past. Before power is exchanged, both Dominant and submissive need to clearly discuss terms, limits, expectations, and intentions. This conversation is not optional if the goal is a healthy, lasting dynamic. It is what sets the foundation everything else stands on.

Negotiation establishes clarity. It defines what the dynamic is, what it is not, and where the boundaries lie. It allows both people to speak openly about desires, fears, hard limits, soft limits, and expectations without pressure or role-play interfering. Without this groundwork, assumptions replace understanding, and that is where harm begins.

Contracts and Agreements


Contracts can take different forms. Some are legally binding documents, while others are personal agreements meant to guide the relationship. Both are valid, and neither needs to be overly complex. A contract can be highly detailed or very brief, depending on what the people involved need.

What matters is not the length of the contract, but the intention behind it.

At a minimum, a contract or agreement should clearly outline expectations, limits, and safewords. It should define what authority looks like, what responsibilities come with it, and what protections exist for both parties. A contract is not about ownership or control on paper. It is about mutual understanding and accountability.

While a contract is not strictly required to have a D/S relationship, I strongly encourage one. Writing things down forces clarity. It removes ambiguity. It gives both people something to return to if questions, doubts, or conflicts arise. A contract protects everyone involved.

Safewords and Flags


Safewords are non-negotiable. They are not signs of failure, weakness, or disrespect. They are safety tools. I recommend having more than one safeword, each with a clearly defined meaning. For example, one word may mean slow down, another may mean stop the scene entirely, and another may mean full stop with immediate aftercare.

In addition to safewords, some dynamics use “flags” or signals. These can be literal colors, bracelets, clothing, or verbal cues that communicate emotional or physical state. A flag might indicate a need for care only, interest in a scene without sexual contact, or readiness for more intensity. These systems allow communication even when words are difficult or when someone is already emotionally vulnerable.

Flags and safewords work together to keep communication clear in moments where misunderstandings can be dangerous.

Why Negotiation Matters


Negotiation is not the opposite of dominance. It is the prerequisite for it.

A Dominant does not lose authority by negotiating. They demonstrate responsibility. Negotiation shows that power is intentional, informed, and consented to, not assumed or taken. It proves that dominance is rooted in trust, not ego.

For submissives, negotiation is how you advocate for your safety, needs, and limits without apology. For Dominants, it is how you learn how to lead without causing harm.

Strong dynamics are not built on mystery or silence. They are built on clarity, consent, and mutual respect. Negotiation and contracts are not restrictions. They are the framework that allows trust, intensity, and surrender to exist safely.

1 month ago. Thursday, January 8, 2026 at 11:27 PM

Red Flags and Deal Breakers
How to Spot an Abuser or a “Wannabe” Dominant

Red flags are warning signs to watch for in any prospective partner, Dominant or submissive. A single misstep does not automatically mean someone is abusive or unsafe. People can be awkward, inexperienced, or simply have a bad day. Context matters.

What matters more is pattern and escalation. If you notice multiple red flags, or the same one repeating, take it seriously. Healthy dynamics do not require you to ignore your instincts, lower your standards, or accept behavior that makes you feel unsafe.

 

Isolation and Control

One of the earliest and most dangerous warning signs is isolation. If someone tries to separate you from your friends, family, or the BDSM community, that is not protection, it is control. The same applies when they constantly criticize the community while refusing to participate in it, especially if that is where they met you. Pay close attention to anyone who pushes secrecy, discourages outside perspectives, or treats your support network like a threat. And if they start monitoring your communications with others, whether that is messages, calls, or chats, treat it as a serious problem, not a “quirk.”

 

Evasion, Secrecy, and Inconsistency

Pay attention to patterns of evasion and inconsistency. Someone who avoids talking about personal details, becomes angry when asked reasonable questions, or responds with vague answers instead of clarity is not being open with you. Changing the subject when accountability is needed, giving conflicting details about themselves, lying, or withholding information all point to a lack of transparency. Multiple online identities within the same communities or disappearing for days or weeks without explanation are also serious concerns. Trust cannot exist without transparency, and without trust, no healthy dynamic can survive.

 

Lack of Accountability

Watch how someone handles being wrong. If they refuse to admit wrongdoing, would rather abandon a friendship than repair the damage, or always find a way to blame someone else when things go sideways, you are looking at a major problem. Be cautious of the person who tries to “fix” conflict with grand apologies, gifts, or dramatic regret, but never follows it with actual change. And if you hear “I’ll never do that again” followed by the same behavior later, believe the pattern, not the promise. Accountability is proven through changed behavior, not words.

 

Rushing and Emotional Manipulation

Rushing and emotional manipulation are major warning signs, and they often get mistaken for passion or intensity. Be wary of anyone who pushes you toward a D/s relationship before trust, communication, and mutual understanding have had time to develop. Pressure to commit quickly is not a sign of confidence, it is a sign of impatience or entitlement. The same applies to declarations of love, ownership, or lifelong devotion made before you have even met in person. Real connection takes time to grow, and anyone claiming otherwise is selling fantasy, not stability.

Pay close attention to how guilt is used. If someone tries to make you feel selfish, inadequate, or disloyal for hesitating, asking questions, or asserting boundaries, that is manipulation. Accusations like “you’re not a real sub” or “a true submissive would do this” are designed to shame you into compliance. This behavior is not dominance, and it is not submission, it is coercion.

Equally concerning is the use of persuasion, scorn, or emotional pressure to override your limits. Boundaries exist to protect trust and safety. Anyone who repeatedly tries to talk you out of them, wear you down, or make you feel unreasonable for having them is showing you that their desires matter more than your well-being. Healthy dominance does not rush, guilt, or manipulate. It leads with patience, respect, and the understanding that consent freely given is the only kind that matters.

 

Disrespect for Boundaries and Consent

A complete disregard for limits and consent is one of the clearest indicators of danger in a D/S dynamic. When someone ignores negotiated boundaries, dismisses contracts, or treats agreed-upon limits as suggestions instead of requirements, they are showing you exactly how little they value your safety. Consent is not implied by a role or a title, and it does not disappear once a dynamic begins.

Be especially cautious of anyone who hides behind authority and insists their power should not be questioned. Statements like “real subs have no limits” or “true Doms never apologize” are not philosophies, they are excuses used to avoid accountability. A healthy Dominant welcomes questions, respects negotiation, and understands that authority exists only by consent.

Safewords exist to protect everyone involved. Failing to respond immediately and appropriately to a safeword is not a mistake, it is a serious violation. Likewise, if a dynamic regularly pushes someone to safeword, that is a sign the scenes are unsafe or poorly managed. Punishment should never come from anger or emotional volatility. It must be calm, intentional, and agreed upon in advance. Anything else is not discipline, it is harm. Violation of consent is abuse. Period.

 

Emotional Instability and Aggression

Emotional instability is a serious warning sign, especially in a dynamic that relies on trust and power exchange. Pay attention to how someone handles conflict. If they lose control during arguments, resort to yelling, name-calling, or shifting blame instead of taking responsibility, that behavior will only escalate over time. Disagreements are inevitable, but how they are handled reveals far more than the disagreement itself.

Public humiliation is another red flag. Putting a partner down in front of others, even as a joke, erodes trust and safety. Likewise, extreme mood swings where someone is affectionate and supportive one day, then cruel or accusatory the next, create confusion and emotional whiplash. This inconsistency keeps people off balance and is often used as a means of control.

Be cautious of those who rapidly turn on friends, going from loyalty to hostility without warning, or who pursue revenge rather than resolution. Avoidance is just as telling. Walking out of confrontation and refusing to revisit or repair the issue later is not strength, it is emotional avoidance. Dominance requires emotional regulation, self-control, and the ability to engage in conflict with maturity, not volatility.

 

Jealousy, Possessiveness, and Surveillance

Excessive jealousy and possessiveness are often mislabeled as care, concern, or protectiveness, but they are something very different. When someone becomes overly jealous, confronts others simply for showing interest in you, or accuses you of wrongdoing without evidence, they are acting from insecurity, not strength. Those behaviors signal a need to control rather than a desire to protect.

Attempts to dictate who you can talk to, spend time with, or interact with are especially dangerous. Healthy dynamics do not require surveillance, interrogation, or restriction of your social world. Trust is not built by monitoring or accusation, it is built through consistency, honesty, and respect for autonomy.

Protection in a D/S relationship means advocating for your safety, supporting your boundaries, and standing with you when needed. Possessiveness, on the other hand, isolates, restricts, and creates fear of punishment for normal human interaction. The difference matters. Possessiveness is not protection, and it has no place in a healthy dynamic.

 

Financial and Practical Exploitation

When someone is always asking for money, framing access to themselves around what you will pay, or leaning on guilt and obligation to extract resources, that is not power exchange. That is financial coercion wearing the language of intimacy. In a healthy dynamic, money is discussed openly, agreed to freely, and never used as a test of worth or devotion. Consent does not come with a price tag, and submission is not something bought through pressure or fear of loss.

 

Substance Abuse and Recklessness

Substance abuse is a serious red flag in any relationship, and it becomes even more dangerous in a D/S dynamic where trust, judgment, and consent are critical. When someone regularly abuses alcohol or drugs, their ability to make sound decisions is compromised. That impairment does not stop simply because kink is involved. It increases risk, not excitement.

Wanting to scene while intoxicated should never be taken lightly. Intoxication dulls awareness, slows reaction time, and erodes the ability to read cues or respond appropriately to distress. It also removes the ability to give or receive clear, informed consent. Anyone who insists on playing while under the influence is prioritizing their desires over everyone’s safety.

Equally alarming is deliberately creating situations where people are likely to get physically or emotionally hurt, whether through recklessness, negligence, or a disregard for consequences. Harm caused by impairment or intentional risk-taking is not an accident, it is a failure of responsibility.

Consent must be clear, present, and sober. If someone is impaired, consent cannot exist in a meaningful way. Impaired consent is not consent.

 

Lack of Humanity

A lack of humanity is a subtle but serious warning sign. When someone only interacts with you sexually or strictly in role, refusing normal, everyday conversation, they are not building a relationship, they are treating you like a prop. D/S is a dynamic between people, not a constant performance. If there is no space for casual talk, shared interests, humor, or mundane life, the connection is shallow and unsafe.

Be cautious of anyone who never shows vulnerability or allows themselves to be seen as human. Emotional walls, constant stoicism, or hiding entirely behind a Dominant persona often signal insecurity or avoidance, not strength. Real Dominance does not require emotional coldness. In fact, leadership demands emotional awareness, empathy, and the ability to connect outside of scenes.

Emotional inaccessibility creates distance and imbalance. It leaves one person exposed while the other remains unreachable, which can quickly become harmful in a power exchange. A healthy Dominant can step out of role, admit uncertainty, show care, and engage as a full person. Titles and authority do not replace humanity. A Dominant is still a human being first.

 

Public Behavior and Character

How someone treats people they believe hold no power over them is one of the clearest indicators of their true character. Rudeness toward service workers, dismissiveness toward cashiers, waitstaff, or anyone in a support role is not a minor flaw, it is a glimpse into how they view hierarchy and worth. Pay close attention to how they speak to people who cannot give them anything in return.

Abusing positions of authority is another serious warning sign. Someone who enjoys belittling subordinates, throwing their weight around, or flexing control where it is unnecessary is not practicing leadership, they are indulging ego. That behavior rarely stays contained. Eventually, the same lack of restraint and respect will be directed inward toward their partners.

Basic courtesy matters. Saying “thank you,” “excuse me,” or “I’m sorry” reflects humility and self-awareness. When those words are absent, especially repeatedly, it often signals entitlement and an inability to acknowledge others as equals outside of negotiated roles. Respect is not situational, and it is not reserved only for scenes or dynamics. How someone treats others in everyday life is how they will eventually treat you.

 

Severe Warning Signs

Some behaviors go far beyond warning signs and enter the territory of immediate danger. Threats of suicide or self-harm, especially when used during conflict or as leverage to control another person’s behavior, are not expressions of vulnerability in a kink context. They are a form of emotional coercion that places an unbearable burden on the other person and creates an unsafe dynamic for everyone involved. These situations require professional intervention, not submission, obedience, or silence.

Intentionally causing physical or emotional injury is never acceptable under any circumstance. Pain in BDSM is negotiated, consensual, and purposeful. Harm that is inflicted out of anger, spite, carelessness, or a desire to punish without consent is abuse. The same is true for any physical injury that occurs outside of explicit agreement. Consent does not exist retroactively, and it cannot be assumed simply because a dynamic exists.

These behaviors are not misunderstandings, growing pains, or things that can be “worked through” with patience. They are clear signals to stop, disengage, and prioritize your safety. You do not owe anyone your presence, your loyalty, or your silence when your well-being is at risk. These are not red flags meant to be watched or managed. These are stop signs.

 

Notes Specific to Social Platforms (Including FetLife)

New or sparse online profiles are not automatically a problem, but they should prompt a higher level of awareness. A very new account may simply belong to someone who is just discovering the platform, yet it still warrants caution until consistency and authenticity are established. Likewise, a bare profile with little interaction, few writings, or minimal community presence can make it difficult to assess someone’s character and intentions.

Pay attention to behavior over time. Sudden mirroring of your interests, kinks, or language may feel flattering, but it can also be a tactic used to fast-track trust. Take time to review how someone participates in discussions, how they respond to others, and whether their words align with their actions. Their interaction history often tells you more than their profile description ever will.

Friends lists can also provide context, but they should be viewed thoughtfully. Some people collect connections casually, while others build them through genuine interaction. If references are available, use them. Reach out, ask questions, and listen carefully to what is said and what is avoided. Healthy people do not hide from transparency. Trust is essential, but it should always be paired with verification.

 

Closing Thoughts

Have control of yourself before you give control to another. That applies to Dominants and submissives alike. If you cannot regulate your emotions, communicate clearly, and hold your own boundaries, then any power exchange will magnify the worst parts of you instead of strengthening the best. A dynamic is not a place to hide from personal responsibility. It is a place where responsibility becomes unavoidable.

A Dominant who does not respect you will not keep you safe. Respect is not a tone of voice, a title, or a claim. It is shown in patience, consistency, and restraint. It is shown in how they respond to your limits, how they handle your “no,” and how they treat your autonomy when it would be easier to take. If respect is missing, the dynamic will not last, and it will not end cleanly.

Honesty is required on both sides. Dominants must be honest about their experience, their intentions, and their capacity. Submissives must be honest about their limits, needs, fears, and expectations. Lies, half-truths, and omissions are not small issues in kink. They are cracks in the foundation. Trust cannot be built on missing pieces.

This lifestyle rewards clarity and punishes self-deception. Watch behavior. Track patterns. Measure what people do, not what they promise. Live by what you observe, not by what you are told.

1 month ago. Thursday, January 8, 2026 at 12:23 AM

Forced Submission Versus Willing Submission


There is a fundamental difference between control that is taken and control that is given.

Forced submission is not dominance. It is coercion. It relies on pressure, fear, manipulation, or imbalance to extract compliance. It may look powerful on the surface, but it is hollow and unstable. The moment resistance appears, it collapses into abuse.

Willing submission is a choice. It is offered, not extracted. A submissive chooses to surrender authority because they trust the Dominant to wield it responsibly. That choice can be withdrawn, renegotiated, or paused, and a real Dominant respects that without resentment.

True dominance does not need force. If you have to corner, threaten, guilt, or rush someone into submission, you are not leading. You are taking advantage.

The strongest dynamics are built on consent that is enthusiastic, informed, and ongoing.

 

Emotional Safety in Kink


Emotional safety is not optional in BDSM. It is the structure that allows intensity to exist without damage.

A submissive must feel safe expressing fear, doubt, hesitation, or discomfort without punishment or ridicule. A Dominant must feel safe admitting uncertainty, asking for feedback, or correcting mistakes without being undermined.

Scenes end. Roles pause. The people involved remain.

Without emotional safety, submission becomes survival instead of surrender, and dominance becomes control instead of leadership. When someone feels they must endure rather than trust, the dynamic has already failed.

Emotional safety means knowing that vulnerability will not be used as leverage later. It means aftercare is not conditional. It means checking in even when everything seems fine.

Kink magnifies emotions. Safety is what keeps that amplification from becoming harm.

 

Jealousy and Insecurities


Jealousy exists. Insecurity exists. Pretending otherwise only makes them stronger.

These feelings are not moral failures. They are signals. Left unspoken, they turn into resentment, control, or silent withdrawal. Addressed openly, they become opportunities for reassurance and growth.

A Dominant should never weaponize jealousy. A submissive should never bury it out of fear of seeming weak. Both roles require honesty about what triggers these emotions and why.

Jealousy does not mean lack of trust. Often it means fear of loss, fear of replacement, or fear of not being enough. Those fears deserve discussion, not dismissal.

Managing jealousy is a shared responsibility. It requires patience, reassurance, and boundaries that are respected on both sides.

 

Affirmation and Emotional Care


Power exchange does not remove the need for care. It increases it.

Submissives often need affirmation that they are valued beyond their usefulness in a scene. Dominants often need affirmation that their leadership is trusted and appreciated. Neither of these needs diminish authority or surrender.

Affirmation can be verbal or physical. Praise, reassurance, presence, consistency. Emotional care shows up in follow-through, in remembering details, in checking on mental state as much as physical condition.

Aftercare does not end when the scene does. Emotional care continues in daily interactions, in tone, in attention, and in respect.

A dynamic without affirmation becomes transactional. A dynamic without emotional care becomes cold.

Power exchange thrives when both people feel seen, wanted, and secure in their roles.

5 years ago. Monday, July 6, 2020 at 6:39 AM

Im going to drop chapter 3 now with some added insight to my own personal beliefs, and everyone will be able to chime in with thier own opinion on it.

 

FAITHFULNESS

 

Now by definition it is someone who is loyal and reliable, steady or firm in thier actions based by belief.

On the other hand what does it have to do in the world of BDSM? What does it mean to us? Well i am going to answer this as simply as i can but also explain it.

 

So Faithfulness can mean different things to different people, someone who is monogamous would see Faithfulness differently than someone  who is polygamous. But between the two they have a similar meaning.

 

Now my grandaddy told me faithfulness is a oneway road where your true to one woman, the one you love. However i have come to learn that isnt exactly the whole truth to it. You see i have a philosophy that i live by, I will look comment and gawk (so have you) at other women, but my heart belongs to my lover (no questions asked). As long as my heart comes home it never strays. So what do i mean? And why can i say that? 

 

Well as a human like we all are we are bound by our primal insticts and that includes lust; I dont care who you think you are we all have looked and been like yea id tap that; lust is nothing but a base urge to procreate life, thats it. However we live in a world now where we dont have to worry about birthing many children, so we have become selective. And thus we lust after beautiful people(we all have the one famous person we want to fuck) but love our partners. 

 

I say this because it is often misinterpreted to be oh yea I am only going to have eyes, heart, soul and everything else for my partner, when we all know that never is the truth, however with that primal instict of lust, faithfulness comes in and says "no i am not going to sleep with that person because that would be wrong." 

 

Cheating is never ok, whether in a polyamourous relationship or a monogamous one, cheating can happen and it is NEVER ok. Period. Yes it can and does happen in both. 

 

I will go further and say that FAITHFULNESS  is even a strong point, and i would throw it into the group of being a foundation trait of a D/S relationship. There is so much that can honestly be said on this subject that i could probably go on for hours on end, but thats not what the intent here is. I want everyone who reads this to gather one thing, be faithful to your partner whether your a submissive or a dominant, be faithful and never cheat, your heart should always go home to your lover.

(DISCLAIMER: This is excludeing those who fall into swingers, traders/swappers, and those who explore this world with permission of their lover.)

5 years ago. Monday, July 6, 2020 at 3:08 AM

Now then i apologize for the long time between the two, but this one took some thought and reflection and i decided to go on a slight tangent with this one and skip some aspects. I am going to point this one more twoards the inexperienced dominants/submissives.For the experienced individuals feel free to correct anything i get wrong in the comments, i am open to criticism, so far as it is positive.

 

The D/S dynamic  is very broad, it covers many aspects which can include Master/slave (M/S), Daddy Dom/ LittleGirl (DDLG), and several others.  In these dynamics its obvious that the Dominant is in control, however that control is li.ite by the the trst given to them by the submissive, DO NOT betray that trust it is the very foundation that this dynamic stands on, whithout it, this dynamic wont exist. 

 

Now for the submissives i always recomend to be careful who you hand control to, get to know them don jump straight into it. There is always the good ones and the bad ones, its just like life they are all around us. So be careful NEVER just jump right into a D/S relationship. If your potential DOMINANT is willing to take the time to get to know you make him even if he isn't, i say if they arent willing to wait, they only want sex. Just move along from them it will save you the heart break.

 

Dominants i will point this out we hold alot on our shoulders, those of us who are willing to be a switch have alot better knowledge because we can put ourselves in the shoes of our subs and ask ourselves "How would i feel if i had this done to me?" Never be afraid to ask for advice from anyone in the community and encourage your sub to remain active in the community, it is thier helpline and ours as well. We should always be striving to learn more of the world of BDSM. Learn new things, new punishments and rewards to. A reward is not necessarily just sex, you could buy them something new, maybe take them on a nice date, there is plenty you can use as a reward, or even as a punishment.

 

Now im going to conclude this chapter for now with an encouragement always feel free to ask me or anyone else questions we all are here to help, thats why its called community.  ENJOY! ?