evergrey(sub female){Ashigeru}
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6 years ago •
Nov 29, 2017
6 years ago •
Nov 29, 2017
Gonna answer my own post now!
*Do you go out into real life meatspace and interact with your local kink community?
Yep, once or twice a week, usually. Been in the community about 20 years now.
*Is there one?
Oh, yes! This is the San Francisco bay area!
What's it like?
I truly feel that we are the kink capitol of the world. Two public dungeons in the city, as well as a skeevy bathouse dungeon, lol. Multiple dungeons in other parts of the bay area. I'm not even sure how many munches. Classes and organizations galore! And at the heart of our community, we have Wicked Grounds, a cafe by and for kinky folks, bolstered by community support, providing a safe space for all. Hell, they even have dog bowls people can drink out of. I've been suspended from the ceiling there, lol! We also have Folson Street Fair and Dore Alley, as well as Dark Odyssey, which is a kink convention. There are a number of Kink BnB spaces, as well as a number of pro dom Houses. In the city itself, you can often see folks from the Leather community openly walking around in said leathers. Mr S Leather has their brick and mortar here, as well as Leather Etc. The Society of Janus, Foundations, Leathermen of SF, and a bunch of other organizations are here.
How accepting towards kink is the area you live in?
Some jobs and custody cases would still be in danger if the people in them were outed, but overall, it is VERY accepting.
Put it this way- the city of San Francisco has a big trunk full of leather pride banners that they hang twice a year, and there are leather pride art pieces on the streets, as well as permanent monuments for the leather and BDSM community.
Is your kink community healthy and supportive?
Overall, YES! Sure, there are always predators trying to come in, and sometimes we have high school style clique issues with the "in" crowd, but the scene is so massive that one can always find good folks easily enough. There is a lot of emphasis on education, communication, and support. I love my community, and it's one of the reasons I hang on here despite it being insanely expensive to live in the bay area.
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