Byrdie(switch female){rl only}
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1 year ago •
Mar 8, 2023
1 year ago •
Mar 8, 2023
I've read "Venus in Furs", which was written by the namesake of masochism - Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, a submissive masochist - and published in 1870.
The main character, Severin, first sees Wanda in a hotel lobby and is struck (har, har) by her demeanor. He approaches her for conversation and makes his offer: she wears furs, orders him around, beats him up, and he'll pay for her room and board and other items. It's suggested that Wanda has had no kinky experience before, so I'm unsure if this counts as a making-of-a-pro-domme story, thought it certainly flirts with that concept as well as financial domination.
So, can latent tendencies be coaxed out of someone who has no kink experience? Depends on the person. A lot of kinky people can trace an interest back to their younger years: creative uses for jump rope, watching superhero shows and either wishing to be the hero tying people up or the villain getting tied up, tickle play, pretending to be an animal, being very precise about tea parties with dolls and / or friends, etc.
I don't think that everyone has latent dominant - or even kinky - tendencies, at least not that they're willing to admit to. Is enjoying having your partner grab your wrists and holding them down during intercourse kinky? Or cover your mouth so that you're less inhibited about screams when living around thin walls? Or is that just them being GGG - Good, Giving, and Game? Folks identify the way they want to identify. However, kinky folks realize that they're kinky in various ways. Some people want more, some people want to hold it at a little bit of extra bedroom tomfoolery.
But if you're approaching a kinky person who already has a fixed submissive or dominant role and try to coax out a latent opposite, you're likely to meet some resistance. At best, some dominants I know have a sense of humor about it and take teasing as a form of community love. Most, though, balk or get actively angry at the very suggestion.
I used to attend local dominant women's teas, and watched as folks who were on the bottom / submissive side were handed implements and encouraged to top someone else: the cognitive dissonance was amusing, but very real: they were caught between wanting to follow an order and wanting to stay true to their idea of their role.
Many people can be talked into trying something once, but there's no guarantee that attempt will tap into any latent tendencies - assuming there were any to begin with.
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