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Which BDSM book hooked your female imagination the hardest?

darlingdiana​(sub female)​{Master Ron}
2 months ago • Nov 2, 2025
[quote="Anna Lynn"]The book that really resonated with me is *9 1/2 Weeks* by Ingeborg Day.

I loved both the book and the movie.

Reading the book inspired me to write my own story which , allowed me to appreciate the journey in a new way that I hadn't before.

I also loved this movie, its a rewatch everytime it plays. Micky R was just delicious in the day.. Lord have mercy
darlingdiana​(sub female)​{Master Ron}
2 months ago • Nov 2, 2025
[quote="FutLug"]Thank you for your response. It says far more than many pages I have read while searching for light within the female mind. Your words have a rare clarity and sincerity, and they go straight to the most complex point: that subtle border between freedom and surrender, between control and trust.

I completely understand how delicate and powerful all of this is at the same time. I also believe that the mind is the real center of everything. Without the mind, nothing else in the body truly awakens. It is there that desire, calm, fear, and surrender are born. Everything begins with an invisible exchange that does not need visible gestures to be real.

The metaphor of the sculptor you used is beautiful. As Michelangelo said, it is necessary to remove all the excess marble to free the form hidden within. It takes strength, precision, and extreme sensitivity to know where to stop, to shape without hurting the material. I think that in the most authentic relationships, whatever their nature, something similar happens: two people shaping each other, without destruction, seeking the truest form the other holds inside.

I also want to thank you because, through your words, I feel you are helping me move beyond an exclusively sexual imagination, which is unfortunately very limiting, and enter instead into feminine complexity — the one made of mind, sensitivity, depth, and intuition. It feels as if through your reflections, desire itself turns into understanding rather than mere impulse.

I am happy for you that he was able to do such deep work, helping you free yourself from the layers that once limited your life and expression. It surely was not easy, but the way you describe it shows it was worth it.

In the end, I believe everyone must pursue their own happiness as far as possible, even when the path is unconventional or hard to explain to others.

Thank you again for sharing your thoughts here and for giving voice to something that is rarely expressed with such clarity and grace.

You are welcome, it was a nice relic of memories to remember. The bad news is that all good things must come to an end~ nothing is forever. Romanticizing the good could be misleading and i want to assure You it was not all skittles and rainbows all of the time. The more intense, the sharper the environment and the more it cut.
We still talk today, it is hard to let go. Having said that, we may never be where we were or involved in eachothers lives now or in the future, in a way we had once hoped and believed. Evolution happens, growth and forgiveness, occurred on both ends was the chosen route and a gift. Deciding on communication is better than loss of the other long before time runs out, was ideal after such a bond. Sticky business and I think that dynamic always had me looking for the same heights or more. I wouldn’t want to go back to vanilla now but i will always strive for improvement and am more aware of what I want or do not. It has made me a much better woman and learn the ability to deal with life’s strongest pains. I think this is common of many “firsts”.
Best~ diana
Heart of Persephone​(sub female)​{owned}
2 months ago • Nov 5, 2025
I will be totally odd here. the book/movie that lit my core fire is; Beauty and the Beast- yes that one. probably opened my desires of fantasy shapeshifters and Stockholm syndrome smut books I know it is not a true BDSM book, but if you look deep enough into may mainstream books there might be glimpses.
FutLug​(dom male)
2 months ago • Nov 5, 2025
FutLug​(dom male) • Nov 5, 2025
You're not odd at all: there's a very strong erotic tension, and you nailed it.
Belle is kidnapped, yes, but true submission isn't in the chain: it's in restraint.
The Beast could exploit his power (he's stronger, he owns the castle, he has total control), but he controls himself.
He holds back. He waits.
And that very gesture, not taking immediately, is what makes his dominance authentic.
It's a lesson that works beyond fairy tales:
Dominating isn't just giving orders. It's also knowing when to withhold them.
(After all, that final bit of control is what separates us from the beasts… otherwise we'd all be furry and wearing bow ties.)
darlingdiana​(sub female)​{Master Ron}
2 months ago • Nov 7, 2025
I agree HoP,Belle was locked up and caged. She also fell for her captor and understood beauty in forms not many will ever be able to see. Gustav represents all the so called perfect men who are anything but when looked at through wanting more than being a trophy. We have all dated and left a Gustav (who was lousy in bed)! Heh hemm some of us married one and eventually ran to a divorce lawyer..
FutLug​(dom male)
1 month ago • Dec 12, 2025

Normal People

FutLug​(dom male) • Dec 12, 2025
Hello everyone,
I recently finished reading "Normal People" by Sally Rooney (I haven't seen the series, and the book was more than enough for me). I picked it up mainly out of curiosity about how it handles BDSM-related themes, but I have to say it does so in a very superficial and marginal way – it didn't convince me at all, and overall the book didn't thrill me.
One aspect that made me think is Marianne's dynamic: she takes a submissive position not just with Connell, but pretty much with all her subsequent partners. This leads me to a more general question, detached from the book itself: beyond the usual talk about millennial existential voids or childhood traumas (which often get brought up), can masochism be an attempt to "patch" an inner sense of emptiness? Like, using pain or submission as a way to feel something intense and fill a hole?
And then, from an ethical standpoint: is it responsible to start a sexual relationship from a dominant position, knowing that the other person might have fragilities or very sensitive emotional triggers?
I'd be interested to hear what you think, especially if you have personal reflections or psychological perspectives on these topics.
Thanks for any contributions!
FutLug​(dom male)
1 month ago • Dec 17, 2025
FutLug​(dom male) • Dec 17, 2025
The Story of O is a surreal, extreme, almost dreamlike fantasy: it's fine as that, but it's light-years away from the reality of anyone who practices BDSM in a healthy, conscious way. It's pure aestheticization, a literary exercise in absolute power and the annihilation of the self, rather than anything credible.

Marianne, on the other hand, had enormous potential precisely because she started from a realistic place: a girl with a toxic family background and low self-esteem who keeps repeating a pattern of submission (sometimes bordering on actual abuse) with different partners. Rooney could have dug deeper there, explicitly linking unresolved trauma and emotional emptiness to the attraction toward pain and surrender, not to claim "the one truth" about masochism, but at least to explore one of its many facets seriously instead of superficially.

Instead everything stays on the surface, almost accidental, and in the end it feels more like a narrative shortcut to make the relationship feel "intense" than a real psychological or erotic investigation.

The bigger problem, in my opinion, is exactly this: decent middle-ground literature about BDSM simply doesn't seem to exist. You either get total aestheticization (O, Venus in Furs, Nine and a Half Weeks, etc.), where everything is beautiful, symbolic, almost artistic and free of real consequences, or, when someone tries to be "realistic", it quickly slides into pathology or therapy-speak, with BDSM reduced to a symptom of trauma or an unhealthy coping mechanism.

I can't think of a single novel that manages to treat power exchange and submission in a mature, consensual, adult way while still acknowledging both the deep pleasure and the emotional challenges, all wrapped in genuinely high literary quality. Has anyone here ever come across something like that? Or are we forever stuck between unrealistic fantasy and cheap psychopathology?
1crazygirl​(sub female)
3 weeks ago • Dec 26, 2025
1crazygirl​(sub female) • Dec 26, 2025
I have loved and been drawn for a long time to the fairy tale/fable "Little Red Riding Hood" which was passed down as an oral tale for years. The first known written and published version was by Charles Perrault (1697) according to sources. Charles Perrault's version had Red Riding Hood eaten by the Wolf as a warning tale to young women about seductions.
Having a Big Bad Wolf chasing after me through the woods into bed sounds yummy to me:)icon_wink.gificon_smile.gificon_wink.gif!!!
FutLug​(dom male)
3 weeks ago • Dec 28, 2025
FutLug​(dom male) • Dec 28, 2025
Haha, @1crazygirl, you're wicked for bringing up Little Red Riding Hood as a hot fantasy... but you're right, it's a classic predator/prey vibe that hits all the right shivers!
If we're talking truly disturbing Perrault fairy tales on the erotic front, though, Bluebeard and Donkey Skin take the cake by a mile. Imagine reading kids the story of a serial killer who collects dead wives in a secret room (complete with bloody keys) or a father who wants to marry his own daughter because she's the only one beautiful enough for him... yeah, the subtext there is so heavy you almost feel guilty saying it out loud.
Thank goodness kids today (and back then) only hear the sanitized version and pick up nothing: "Oh yeah, the big bad wolf, the forbidden room, the princess in donkey skin... cute!". Lucky they can't read between the lines, or half of them would be in therapy before age 10.
Which one do you prefer as an "adult forbidden fairy tale"? Sadistic Bluebeard or incestuous Donkey Skin? Or do we stay loyal to our Big Bad Wolf chasing us through the woods?