Forums Dancehall Reggae BDSM

Posted November 13, 2022 11:57 AM

What Is BDSM? Fundamentals, Types and Roles, Safety Rules, and More

If you’ve ever fantasized about getting kinky in the bedroom, you’re not alone. The runaway success of E. L. James’s novel Fifty Shades of Grey — more than 100 million copies sold — not to mention the sales of other books in the series and the movies it’s generated, prove that interest in BDSM — bondage and discipline, dominance and submission, and sadism and masochism — is anything but rare. (1)

Prevalence: How Many People Practice BDSM?
Further proof: Nearly 47 percent of women and 60 percent of men have fantasized about dominating someone sexually, while slightly more women and less men are aroused by the idea of being dominated, according to a study published online March 3, 2016, in The Journal of Sex Research. (2) The same study also found that almost 47 percent adults would like to participate in at least one nontraditional type of sexual activity, and 33.9 percent said that they’d done so at least once in the past. No wonder if you search the phrase “BDSM” on Google it will return more than 500 million results. (The phrase “missionary sex” returns about 163 million results.)

The History of BDSM: Not So New
Explore a little more and you’ll also discover that BDSM is nothing new. Among BDSM’s historical high points:

Art and texts from ancient Greece and Rome show physical pain being used as an erotic stimulus, per the book An Illustrated History of the Rod, by William M. Cooper, first published in 1868. (3)
The Kama Sutra, the revered Sanskrit text on sexuality written in India about 2,000 years ago, describes six appropriate places to strike a person with passion and four ways to do it. It also has chapters titled “Scratching,” “Biting,” and “Reversing Roles.” (4)
The Marquis de Sade, a French aristocrat who lived from 1740 to 1814, wrote a variety of erotic novels and short stories involving being beaten and beating others. Eventually the author’s name gave rise to the term “sadism.”
Similarly, the term “masochism” is derived from the name of Austrian nobleman and author Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, whose 1870 novel Venus in Furs describes a dominant-submissive relationship. (5)
Back in 1953, a Kinsey Institute study found that 55 percent of women and 50 percent of men were aroused by being bitten. (6)
And even pre-Fifty Shades of Grey, 36 percent of U.S. adults reported having had sex using masks, blindfolds, or other forms of bondage, according to the 2005 Durex Global Sex Survey. (7)
Is BDSM Still Considered a Medical Disorder?
At one time, mental health experts were dubious about whether those who practiced BDSM were mentally healthy. But the American Psychiatric Association took a huge step in destigmatizing kink with the release of the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) in 2013. For the first time ever, the guidelines drew a clear distinction between consenting adults who engage in sexual behaviors outside the mainstream, such as BDSM, and those who force others to engage in those behaviors without consent. (8)

That means simply experimenting with, say, whips and chains, is no longer a sign of mental illness that by itself “justifies or requires clinical intervention,” the manual states.

There are true sexual disorders that are similar in theme. Sexual sadism disorder, for instance, involves inflicting physical or psychological pain on another for the purpose of sexual pleasure. And sexual masochism disorder involves deliberately involving yourself in a situation in which you are humiliated, beaten, or abused for the purpose of sexual excitement.

The difference between these two disorders and BDSM is consent, in the case of sexual sadism disorder, and that BDSM does not go to the degree of causing significant distress or impairing function, in the case of sexual masochism disorder.

The Psychology of BDSM: Why Are People Drawn to It?
Most of the available evidence shows that the majority of BDSM enthusiasts are mentally healthy and typical in every respect except that they find traditional (“vanilla”) intimacy unfulfilling and want something more intense.

“People always ask if it’s normal to be interested in BDSM,” says Michal Daveed, a spokeswoman for The Eulenspiegal Society, a nonprofit organization in New York City that describes itself as the “oldest and largest BDSM support and education group” in the country.

“Normal is a funny word to describe a really widespread and diverse humanity. If your definition of normal is how many people are doing this, it’s way more people than you may think,” says Daveed. “And if your definition of normal is ordinary, the BDSM world is full of ordinary people whose sexuality happens to be hardwired a particular way.”

One landmark study published in 2008 in the Journal of Sexual Medicine backs Daveed up. (9) It found that people who engaged in BDSM were more likely to have experienced oral sex or anal sex, to have had more than one partner in the previous year, to have had sex with someone other than their regular partner, and to have taken part in phone sex, visited an internet sex site, viewed an X-rated film or video, used a sex toy, had group sex, or taken part in manual stimulation of the anus, fisting, or rimming.

However, they were no more likely to have been coerced into sexual activity and were not significantly more likely to be unhappy or anxious. Indeed, men who had engaged in BDSM scored significantly lower on a scale of psychological distress than other men.

“Our findings support the idea that BDSM is simply a sexual interest or subculture attractive to a minority, and for most participants not a pathological symptom of past abuse or difficulty with ‘normal’ sex,” the researchers concluded.

“BDSM is a healthy expression of sexuality,” says Filippo M. Nimbi, PhD, a researcher at the Institute of Clinical Sexology and in the department of dynamic and clinical psychology at Sapienza University, both in Rome.

Dr. Nimbi is also the coauthor of a study published in the March 2019 issue of The Journal of Sexual Medicine that compared 266 consensual BDSM practitioners to 200 control subjects who described their sex lives as traditional. (10) Echoing the earlier study, the researchers found that the BDSM group tended to report fewer sexual problems than the general population.

“People engaging in BDSM are usually people who have thought a lot about their sexuality,” Nimbi explained in an email. “They have explored and faced their sexual boundaries. Basically, they know what they like, and they do it. This has a positive outcome on their sexual experiences and on the overall quality of their lives.”

Many people think it’s a pathology or a perversion to, say, want to be spanked hard and to be happy about that, he added. “We each develop our erotic fantasies from our different tastes, experiences, and curiosities, beginning in childhood and lasting until the end of our lives. Everyone is different. We can develop the same fantasy from different stories, and we can develop different fantasies from the same stories. Some people find in BDSM a way to be free, to get wild, to let go, and to play a different role from their everyday lives. And if they get satisfaction and respect the ‘rules,’ why should it be abnormal?”
https://vk.com/@vaniamaria69-1080p-2022-hddeco
https://vk.com/@tante_ernie-detective-conan-the-bride-of-halloween-1080p...
https://vk.com/@anast_tasya-2022-hd-twhk
https://vk.com/@kame_aam-1080p-detective-conan-the-bride-of-halloween
https://open.firstory.me/user/clab103fp08mg01vs172lev83
https://open.firstory.me/user/clab13mqo087301u942gs8x73
https://open.firstory.me/user/clab1a7yb08nc01vsal2z1ebp
https://open.firstory.me/user/clab1eidw088e01u98f0lbc1q
https://www.blockdit.com/posts/61d38972e309185798df2d7b
https://www.blockdit.com/posts/6341c8e54c40cfd8060397e5
https://techplanet.today/post/4k-1080p-hd
https://live.remo.co/e/my-conference-on-remo-15
https://www.podcasts.com/1080p-1/episode/1080p
https://jemi.so/2022hd4k
https://soundcloud.com/xoxom-baskom/2022-hd1080p
https://player.soundon.fm/p/a3fc408d-e948-4313-9088-b3724bc11b8c
https://techplanet.today/post/detective-conan-the-bride-of-halloween-108...
https://www.blockdit.com/posts/633f324ec06ea9f2e63a7f51
https://www.podcasts.com/1080p-detective-conan-the-bride-of-halloween
https://techplanet.today/post/2022-detective-conan-the-bride-of-hallowee...
https://soundcloud.com/black-phanter-842397151/black-panther-2
https://www.podcasts.com/thai-black-panther-wakanda-forever-2022/
https://www.banditroom.site/what-is-bdsm-basics-sorts-and-roles-protecti...
https://articlenetwork.site/what-is-bdsm-fundamentals-kinds-and-roles-sa...
https://mymediads.com/articles/164808?new_advert=true
https://mymediads.com/articles/164809?new_advert=true
https://backlinktool.io/p/3Ue3OwgbNuxBsLsXQbrF.html
https://paste.cutelyst.org/OatC9EaWQ
https://tech.io/snippet/SUJusa4
https://telegra.ph/tyutyu6u-11-13
https://paste.firnsy.com/paste/LA3eynwiquV
https://bitbin.it/RnmWOJ9h/
http://pastie.org/p/5rZ7m2Fa95aoThecKwfG26
https://paste.artemix.org/-/yF~P7g
https://www.pastery.net/fefksv/
https://paiza.io/projects/l_-5uPkKgmqbNhSNa5QeGw?language=php
https://blog.teknik.io/rayrisma23/p/16946
https://pasteio.com/xHpKpSTwSKcW
https://rextester.com/KBXN88721
https://pastelink.net/p2n2nz23
https://ideone.com/qOsowa
https://ide.geeksforgeeks.org/10e49288-bd4a-49b2-ae65-ee3a49e24609
https://jsfiddle.net/gh0qok96/
https://ctxt.io/2/AAAQjfzoEA
https://dev.bukkit.org/paste/5cd668dd
https://rentry.co/2ep92
https://geany.org/p/L0kZ4/
https://justpaste.it/amuhv
https://pastebin.com/8kcUEcWs
https://paste.toolforge.org/view/88633093
https://pastebin.freeswitch.org/view/fa594a81
https://paste.feed-the-beast.com/view/2a234e81
http://ben-kiki.org/ypaste/data/60125/index.html
https://paste2.org/bWWHf33F
https://issuu.com/rayrisma23
https://www.artstation.com/rayrisma233/profile
https://muckrack.com/dodo-dodidi/bio
https://mymediads.com/articles/164814?new_advert=true
https://mymediads.com/articles/164815?new_advert=true
http://blog.ub.ac.id/faridmuzayyani/2022/11/13/what-is-bdsm-fundamentals...
http://toparticlesubmissionsites.com/what-is-bdsm-fundamentals-types-and...
https://mcspartners.ning.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://beterhbo.ning.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://zacriley.ning.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://playit4ward-sanantonio.ning.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
https://caribbeanfever.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://allabouturanch.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
https://www.onfeetnation.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://healingxchange.ning.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
https://webhitlist.com/photo/albums/bdsm-binding
http://www.shadowville.com/board/buyselltrade/what-is-bdsm#p567275
https://articlepedia.xyz/what-is-bdsm-fundamentals-types-and-roles-safet...
https://www.techrum.vn/threads/what-is-bdsm.682461/

The Physicality of BDSM: Why Does It Feel Good?
Patti Britton, PhD, MPH, cofounder of the credentialing and training institute Sex Coach U and a past president of the American Association for Sexuality Educators, Counselors, and Therapists, as well as other experts are quick to point out that seeking the pain-pleasure connection is not unique to the BDSM community. Think of athletes who push past physical comfort to experience a “runner’s high,” or people who chase thrills by engaging in dangerous extreme sports, like skydiving. Think of the bliss that aficionados of super spicy food experience when biting into a pepper sets their mouth on fire, or the rush of fear that riding a roller coaster or watching a horror movie can bring.

“The same chemical cocktail of endorphins, dopamine, and other hormones that make those experiences pleasurable to some makes BDSM actually quite wonderful to others,” says clinical sexologist Francesca Gentille, coeditor of The Marriage of Sex & Spirit, and host of the podcast Sex: Tantra & Kama Sutra. “I like to compare sexual preferences to taste in food. Most of us don’t like bland food, but we have a range of how spicy we like it.”

Roleplaying and BDSM: The Variety Is Endless
Doctor and patient. Teacher and student. Role-playing is a common aspect of BDSM “play.” It may involve two or more people who “act out” a particular scene or fantasy. BDSM role play can happen in person or virtually. It almost always involves at least one individual being dominant and another being submissive. It may be simple, or it may be complicated enough to require a script. And actual sex is not the focus.

“The core of BDSM is the psychological part,” explains Mistress Damiana Chi, a dominatrix in Los Angeles who holds a PhD in clinical psychology. (She asked that her real name not be used, citing privacy concerns.) “For BDSM to be real, it has to involve an exchange of power with a lot of trust and respect. The couple has to decide which role they want to play, the dominant one or the submissive, and it’s that dynamic that creates erotic intensity.”

While chains and whips might excite Rihanna(as she proclaims in the hit song "S&M"), it’s wrong to think all manifestations of BDSM involve inflicting extreme pain. The range of erotic expressions that fit under its umbrella is huge.

At one end there’s “light” BDSM, which includes activities like tickling, using a blindfold, tying your partner to the bedposts with silk scarves, slapping their rear playfully, and making verbal demands, such as “Call me Sir” or “Call me Madam." No pain. No force. Just playful and pleasurable.

At the other end of the spectrum is “hardcore” BDSM. This can include whipping, caning, binding with ropes, dripping hot wax directly on the skin, and hundreds more forms of erotic expression, many of which you might find impossible to imagine.

“There are universal themes, but I’ve seen things that have shocked even me, not because they were unsafe, but because they were so infinitely creative,” says Dr. Britton.

Asking to have clothespins attached to your tongue. Being mummified with plastic wrap so that you’re completely immobilized. Living as a submissive wearing a leather collar while serving a dominant partner. Yes, there are people who choose these activities — the key word being “choose.”

“There are two essential things to know about BDSM,” explains Britton. “It is always voluntary, and the reason people do it is because it feels good. There’s something about transcending pain that can be almost a spiritual experience,” she adds. “It releases the self from the body. I’ve had people tell me, ‘the more my body is restrained, the freer I feel.’”

Common forms of BDSM play include:

Bondage (restraint or restriction)
Wax (dripping hot wax on the skin)
Impact (spanking, slapping, caning, flogging)
Sensation (using tools such as feathers, a paddle, burlap, on the skin)
Sensory deprivation (blindfolds, earmuffs, ear plugs)
The Importance of Communication, Consent, and Using Safe Words
How can having someone strike you, perhaps to the point that you cry out in pain, not be abuse? “Consent is the magic word,” says Nimbi.

“While mainstream sexual encounters also stress the importance of consent, consent often takes the form of an unstated, implicit assumption based on perceived behavioral displays of interest or willingness,” note University of British Columbia psychologists Carol Dunkely, PhD, and Lori A. Brotto, PhD in a paper published April 22, 2019, in the journal Sex Abuse. (11) “The BDSM community takes consent further, demanding explicit rather than tacit consent.”

In a dominant-submissive “scene,” for instance one in which one person is going to be flogged, it’s standard practice for the “dom” or “top” and the “sub” or “bottom” to first negotiate at length and then contract, often in writing, what the sub is definitely willing to do, what he or she might be willing to do, and what is absolutely off-limits before they begin to “play.”

They also must agree on a safe word or gesture that the sub can use at any time to stop the action. That means that if there’s any potential for pain, both players are aware of the rules and of their own limits. Ironically, it also means that the sub actually has more control of the scene than the dom since he or she defines the parameters and has the power to stop the action at any time, for any reason.

“There is no community on the planet more committed to the concept of consent than the BDSM community,” says Valerie White, a lawyer and founder of the Sexual Freedom and Education Fund, a nonprofit advocacy and education group based in Sharon, Massachusetts. “Of course, you can come across a rogue, just as you can in any group. But if anyone crosses the line, they are cast out so quickly it would make your head spin to see it.”

Video CMS powered by ViMP (Ultimate) © 2010-2024