UpFromTheAshes(switch gender queer) |
1 year ago •
Nov 3, 2023
1 year ago •
Nov 3, 2023
UpFromTheAshes(switch gender queer) • Nov 3, 2023
My understanding of the word "brat" is that it simply refers to a person who bucks rules and social norms, or who is allowed to live without rules and expectations.
I understand it in a BDSM context as someone who pushes boundaries and tries to find ways around rules. By this definition, I can see how a prostitute might be referred to as a brat, in a time and place when paying for sex with someone you were not married to would be considered well outside of social norms and a breaking of unspoken rules of behavior. Similarly, I can see how as things changed it could come to refer to someone who is sexually open, in a time and place where wanting to have sex just for fun was considered well outside of social norms. And similarly, I can see how in BDSM it has come to refer to an s-type who is always pushing boundaries, breaking rules or finding ways around rules, etc. Extending that to a D-type who also likes to push boundaries and break rules makes a great deal of sense if we look at it from this perspective. PLEASE NOTE: I am autistic, and should you be trying to read between the lines looking for my stance on Brats in BDSM, STOP THAT. Ask if you're unsure and want to know. I'm not sharing my opinion in this post (but I recognize that my sharing of bald understanding often comes off harshly, so I add this reminder). Another point: Language is fluid and it changes over time. I've never heard "brat" used in some of the ways described in the original post, but I know there are pockets and regions where words are used differently. OP, you yourself pointed to your understanding of how the use of the word has changed from generation to generation. I would say that resisting that change just because it's not what you grew up with, or disparaging it as "too many idiots" could even make you a brat |
|