Azzabackam(switch male){PawPawGirl}
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5 years ago •
Oct 14, 2019
5 years ago •
Oct 14, 2019
Firstly, hi! And welcome to the lifestyle! For context, I'm a switch as well, with seven years in this. More experienced members can share more of their own experiences. Now, advice:
> A lot of jargon gets thrown around in the kink community. Dom, sub, switch, Master, slave, etc. These terms are... fairly fluid in their definitions. The last two are pretty solid, but the others are used almost as umbrella terms to cover a *lot* of specifics. One Dom's interests and practices could just be a sliver shy of vanilla sex, while another had a fully outfitted dungeon in his house. Switch is the worst of it. What a switch actually *is* varies from person to person. So, whatever it means for you, is what it means for you. Don't sweat trying to figure out if you're a bratty sub or a switch. The distinction between the two, as far as how you'll come to understand them, will come clear both in time practicing the lifestyle, and as you talk to others.
>There are a lot of different aspects to this stuff. Different people do different things. Different people lead almost entirely different lifestyles while *still* being a part of the kink lifestyle. However, across all of these differences, two things hold true as most important for everyone.
-Communication
-Respect
For the first: if you have a partner, you talk to them about everything relevant to the scene you do with them. If you want a Dom to spank you, you make that interest clear to them before hand. If you don't want a Dom to spank you, you doubly make that clear beforehand. It's a very, very important pillar of all this that everyone is talking about what they are, and are not, cool with. If you go into a scene and there's an aspect of it you're not comfortable with, communicate it. Don't roll with things just because you don't think it'll be "all that bad". A lot of people, especially subs, get physically and emotionally hurt by participating in things they either aren't ready for, or aren't comfortable with. And that brings us to-
The second point: Respect. A "good" sub and a "good" Dom, if they're characterized by any one thing, it will be this. A good Dom won't pressure you into something you've said you don't want to do. Won't set expectations they know you can't meet as someone who's new to all this. Honestly, a lot of common sense advice for traditionally vanilla relationships applies here as well. A good way to think of this is as boundaries. Let's say hypothetically, you're very much against being tied up. If you make that clear, and a partner tries to force the issue, or insist on it, or manipulate you in some way (such as saying things like "Everyone does this", "it's just expected", or "If you're serious about this, you'll do it"), that's a wild disregard for your boundaries, and very disrespectful towards you.
I could probably write a book with even more new members should know, as there are whole books written on this very subject (some aren't very good, take them with a grain of salt). But for the most part, those are the two most important. Communicate how you feel, and don't let anyone be an asshole to you/ don't be an asshole to anyone else.
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