LongerJohnny(dom male)
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10 months ago •
Jan 4, 2024
10 months ago •
Jan 4, 2024
Not surprisingly, I agree with my friend LL. And to elaborate a little on the reasons someone might write the line about "a sub or slave knowing her place":
- As a substitute for establishing an actual Dominant role.
A sub's "place" depends entirely on the nature of the dynamic. More than that, a sub is a reflection of her Dom and as such their shared place will be specific to them, therefore as different as any which is not shared by the same pair (or group). There may be similarities to other dynamics of course but to say that a sub must be prepared to occupy a ready-made position is characterizing their dynamic as a cliche.
- Due to sheer laziness.
If the sub enters the dynamic and, knowing her "place" assumes what she believes to be her duties and responsibilities, acts in ways that she believes are best, perhaps even those that she has experienced in prior dynamics, and then tells her Dom that he may now begin to do his big boy Dom thing - could one not reasonably question which is in fact the dominant party?
- Out of simple ignorance.
Those who would wish to be identified and accepted as dominant; who believe that enhancing their names with superlatives like or 'Master' and 'Dom', and peppering their profiles with phrases such as 'Alpha male' and 'My sub must know her place' in an attempt to be persuasive or convincing are neither.
As has been said many times: If you must announce that you are a Dom - you're not.
- To target naive subs.
There are weasels everywhere in the world, including every social website, seeking out the newest, most vulnerable prey. Places like this are no different except that here we have new subs who fall victim to their own ideals of hierarchies and protocols, often leading them to unwittingly believe that anyone wearing a cape emblazoned with a pretentious capital "D" must be considered superior. The wannadoms in their costumes know this too, and sometimes they put those lines in their profiles so that, to the new sub who doesn't know better, "knowing her place" not only seems realistic, it feels right.
- Maybe they think they are supposed to?
Profiles can be scary things, especially the first time you write one. It's easy to fall into the trap of believing "a Dom is supposed to sound like..." and start copying and pasting random selections from the Book of Dom Quotes 101 while streaming "Dom's Greatest Hits". Because they don't know that's not what they're supposed to do.
Who knows. It could be any or none of these or 100 other reasons.
LJ
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