Online now
Online now

Safe words

angelaffliction​(sub female)
3 months ago • Sep 27, 2025

Safe words

What’s your thoughts on using them? Are they requirement to you? Personally I haven’t had that conversation with my partner and don’t use any type of safe word but I am curious.
JaredMayer​(dom male)
3 months ago • Sep 27, 2025
JaredMayer​(dom male) • Sep 27, 2025
I personally don't feel comfortable without clear boundaries and a safe word is part of that. I had a partner once tell me "just don't kill me", and while that was very hot it meant I spent the entire time second guessing myself, which is not a fun way to top. Apparently a lot of tops will do their best to make the bottom safe word early on, just so they know they'll actually use it.
Miki
3 months ago • Sep 27, 2025
Miki • Sep 27, 2025
Safe words, (or in my case when I was active, gestures), are very important.

Until and unless one has been with a partner long enough to have full trust that they know one's limits----- and they know what they're doing, It's not something one should ever leave to chance.

----------

... and even in a very well-connected relationship it's still a good idea to have words or signals that the bottom is at a limit because ---- most people have days when they're more sensitive to given stimuli than others, and what was understood to be acceptable one day or week before---- might be too much on another.

----------

Better safe than sorry IMHO.
    The most loved post in topic
Anna Lynn​(sub female)Verified Account
Anna Lynn​(sub female)Verified Account
3 months ago • Sep 27, 2025
Anna Lynn​(sub female)Verified Account • Sep 27, 2025
Personally, I use safe words even with people I know very well. I, personally have not known a person who I have played with who has not insisted on me using them particularly in light of my medical condition.

Even without that factor, safety is important.
DrKrall​(dom male)
3 months ago • Sep 30, 2025
DrKrall​(dom male) • Sep 30, 2025
I’m the moron and all of my subs and most of those I’ve played with once or twice are too.
I don’t believe ”Red” is a safer word than ”No” or ”Stop” except maybe in a r*pe scenario where the subject is supposed to fight back and protest.

On the other hand this isn’t anything I’ve done or would ever do with someone I don’t know extremely well and where we have an agreement before hand. In addition to this most of my subs have been with me 24/7 for years so I would think I can see if they are in any kind of distress or has reached some sort of limit without them using a safeword.

I’m not arguing against the use of safewords. I would infact advise new people to establish a safeword before play and I would definitely stop what I’m doing if a sessionpartner yelled Red just as much as I eould if she yelled ”Stop” or ”No”. What I’m arguing against is that everyone not using a safeword is a moron.

There are no cosmic truths here even if some want to believe so. People are different and a Dom using safewords might be just as dangerous to play with (or more) than a Dom who doesn’t.

Safewords can just as easily be a false safety with the wrong people, as it could be unnessesary with the right ones. The Moron is the one who think everyone functions, thinks and believes the same.

The usual disclaimer:
English isn’t my native language.
SirsGoodGirl​(kinky female)
3 months ago • Oct 3, 2025
Consent isn’t static, and safe words keep us connected in the moment. For me, they aren’t just a “kink rule” — they’re about trust, respect, and care. In knowing a safe word has been agreed, I can let go more fully, because there’s a safety net underneath the play.

Using a safe word doesn’t mean someone has “failed” or “ruined the scene.” It means they’ve communicated their limit, and that’s something to be respected every single time. To me, that moment of honesty is just as intimate as anything else people may do together.

Kink should never be about pushing someone past breaking — it should be about creating space where exploration feels safe and safe words make that possible.

For those who may be new or nervous about using one, I promise: there is nothing braver or more empowering than owning your boundaries. And there’s nothing more reassuring than a partner who listens.
DrKrall​(dom male)
3 months ago • Oct 3, 2025
DrKrall​(dom male) • Oct 3, 2025
SirsGoodGirl wrote:
Consent isn’t static

Well, there is TPE …
OC consent can be withdrawn even then, but that pretty much ends the dynamic, or at least forces a re-negotiation of terms. I’m not saying safe words can’t be used in a TPE dynamic. The way I see it anything goes as long as all parts agree.
TopekaDom​(dom male)​{Chaos }Verified Account
3 months ago • Oct 4, 2025
TopekaDom​(dom male)​{Chaos }Verified Account • Oct 4, 2025
DrKrall wrote:
I’m the moron and all of my subs and most of those I’ve played with once or twice are too.
I don’t believe ”Red” is a safer word than ”No” or ”Stop” except maybe in a r*pe scenario where the subject is supposed to fight back and protest.

On the other hand this isn’t anything I’ve done or would ever do with someone I don’t know extremely well and where we have an agreement before hand. In addition to this most of my subs have been with me 24/7 for years so I would think I can see if they are in any kind of distress or has reached some sort of limit without them using a safeword.

I’m not arguing against the use of safewords. I would infact advise new people to establish a safeword before play and I would definitely stop what I’m doing if a sessionpartner yelled Red just as much as I eould if she yelled ”Stop” or ”No”. What I’m arguing against is that everyone not using a safeword is a moron.

There are no cosmic truths here even if some want to believe so. People are different and a Dom using safewords might be just as dangerous to play with (or more) than a Dom who doesn’t.

Safewords can just as easily be a false safety with the wrong people, as it could be unnessesary with the right ones. The Moron is the one who think everyone functions, thinks and believes the same.

The usual disclaimer:
English isn’t my native language.


Yes, I will agree with your assessment of yourself.