SubtleHush(sub female)
|
3 years ago •
Nov 22, 2020
3 years ago •
Nov 22, 2020
Miki: "Both strike me as a more visible form of codependence."
(You can take any dynamic and make it into something unhealthy. Codependence is a big thing and there are many who are attracted to a power exchange realm for all the wrong reasons. There are even some who want their partner dependent on them to unhealthy proportions.)
"Those that live "the lifestyle" full time vs couples who enjoy a symbiotic relationship at home but go about daily work-a-day life rather independently."
(Symbiosis is a good way of looking at how close and seamless these relationships can be if done well. That takes time and many miss that part. They think they can fabricate it at hello. No such thing as doing anything in life perfectly at hello.)
"Sure each partner has something to say about certain decisions or moves related to a career path, but once out of the house and in the world, they function as individuals."
(More so it is a thread. They are tied to each other. They each function societally as is appropriate, but like any other couple, their minds are on their partners and they reach out during the day and want to be, even at their jobs, a person their partner could be proud of.)
"The full-timers center their purpose around their dynamic."
(That is not my experience. I center my purpose around my Dominant. That is a full-time mentality. But if we are a committed couple, and he lost his ability to Dominante me, it wouldn't change my mental center around him. I've been in a full-time, 24/7 relationship and you still have a job, and a home to clean, and responsibilities that responsible adults handle with or without control. I don't get TPE at all. So I can't speak for those who have every aspect of their lives controlled or those who can turn off their own existences to control another to that degree.)
"None of this is meant to diss "the lifestyle", but describe it as I see it and why I am absolutely not a "real" sub. I'll never give up my r. l. independence for anything. The masochist side is strictly a function of my sexuality and when the clothes come back on, the masochist aspect gets set aside, put away like night clothing, if you will."
(There is nothing wrong with topping or bottoming to get your masochistic needs met. But that is an in the moment thing. Power exchange in a relationship is a current that runs through the people. And I am this lifestyle, with a partner, single, living with him or living on my own. The 'lifestyle' is more about a population of like-minded people who invest in their beliefs. It's more than the play. It's friendships, and learning opportunities, and shared core beliefs.)
(My former Sir lived 3 hours away. We each commuted to the other every other week. I was driving down to him and the catalytic converter cover on my car came off. I got off the road, the police came and guided me into a rest stop so the mechanic there could check it. I immediately called my Sir and updated him. I was going to be late at best or not be able to come down at the worst. He would worry. So I called him and left a message telling him what happened. THAT to me is service to him. As his submissive, part of my job is to make his life better.)
(I didn't need to be told to get out of the fast lane and off the road.
I didn't need to be told to get into the rest stop and have a mechanic look at the car.
I didn't even need to be told to call him and update him. In my role as his sub, I already know to notify him.
It was an independent action. Borne out of service to him. And you might argue that I would do that in a vanilla relationship
as well, and I would. However, I am NOT vanilla. I am a sub. And my natural way of being in a relationship is to consider his needs
and wants, and that told me what to do. I didn't need guidance.)
(There have been issues in relationships that I knew where the Dom who was bad with money decided he would control his sub or slaves money. That was a no go. And it was a bumpy time but in the end, her being realistic with him about his own shortcomings was more important than feeding his ego and letting him ruin her financial status. So is it true when someone who is not concerned with high-powered jobs hooks up with someone who has a high-powered job. You can't tell someone who has invested decades into their work and education to walk away. Talk, discuss, support... sure. But tell them to walk away? Not fair or appropriate. To someone like me, it's a question of compatibility. So I don't venture into things with prospective Dominants who don't share my value systems just to have someone. It's just too hard to be a couple that way.)
(And in the end, Ds and Ms are about coupling successfully. It's just done with a different list of parameters.)
|