S&M For Beginners
S&M practitioners tend to be highly educated and
other facts you may not know.
Even if you're not sure what S&M or BDSM actually entails, the
letters alone probably conjure up vivid images: Whips and chains,
leather and latex, a tubby guy named The Gimp tugging on his leash
as he hungrily eyes Bruce Willis in Pulp Fiction. It's common to
assume that sadism-and-masochism enthusiasts are at best unusual or
shocking and at worst downright depraved. But are they really?
Well, The Gimp certainly is—living in a locked crate in the basement
of a pawnshop will do that to you. And anecdotal evidence does
suggest that BDSM enthusiasts differ from"normal" people in two ways:
They have higher levels of education and tend to be very creative.
BDSM (the longer acronym stands for bondage and
discipline,
dominance and submission, and
sadism masochism) is also more common
than you probably think; experts estimate one in five couples
dabble, and one in 20 engage in very serious BDSM play.
"Couples enjoy S&M in part because it lets them explore new roles
and visit different places with each other," says Dr. Pam Spurr,
author of Naughty Tricks & Sexy Tips: A Couple's Guide to
Uninhibited Erotic Pleasure. "Pushing the boundaries as far as you
want can be an exhilarating release from the routine."
It also can solidify a strong foundation of trust and honest. And if
you think you have little interest in BDSM yourself, take a closer
look at your sex life. Pinning your partner's wrists against the
bed, tugging on hair, or biting a shoulder are simply milder ways of
expressing desires that eventually lead some people to devote closet
space to studded leather.
The trick part is figuring out how—and if—you want to take it to the
next level. After Steven Lilla* and his girlfriend, Rebecca Simon,
had been dating for a few months, she told him that S&M
play
typically had been an important part of her sex life. He was
surprised, but not uncomfortable; she brought it up outside the
bedroom, and she didn't put pressure on Steven to indulge her.
Still, he had to confront a belief drilled into his head since he
was old enough to smack toy-hugging playmates. "Most American males
are raised to think it's never OK to be rough with a woman," says
Steven, a 32-year-old martial arts instructor from Los Angeles.
"That was something I had to overcome. But after learning more about
S&M and taking some baby steps, I ended up really liking it."
They went slowly, sitting together—fully clothed, without sex
playing any part—and practiced using ropes and chains so that
neither of them experienced unwanted discomfort. Their toys, kept in
a locked chest, only emerged when Rebecca's daughter wasn't home.
Nine years later, Steven and Rebecca are still together, and
S&M—role-playing, bondage, "forced" sex—is still a major part of
their sex lives. But it's hardly the only part. "A big fallacy is
that if you're into it, it's all you're into," says Rebecca, a
34-year-old who works at a museum. "But we very much enjoy regular
vanilla sex."
They belong to a local club—there are dozens nationwide, easily
found by an Internet search—with classes on safe ways to explore
kinks, and parties where couples can play in front of other members.
("There's music and food like any other party," Steven says. "Except
there are spanking noises in the background.")
There's also an outreach program for law and psychology students and
police officers, to help them differentiate between consensual and
criminal sex. Of course, when cops need assistance sorting out
sexual practice from crime, bringing up that practice with your
partner can be more than a little daunting.
Paula Myers was lucky enough to find an entrée in casual
conversation when her boyfriend told her she needed a spanking for
being grumpy. "That really got me excited," says Paula, a
40-year-old from Seattle. A few weeks later, when he offered to
give her a back rub, "I told him what I really wanted was for him to
spank me, and not stop even if I asked him to."
That Christmas, without prior discussion, she bought him a flogger,
and he bought her a paddle. (Paging Mr. O. Henry...)
One way to take the pressure off is to
let a movie introduce the
subject. With the relatively low-impact play in 9 1/2 Weeks or the
more involved kinkiness in Secretary, you can broach your desires by
first discussing the action on screen.
Point out what you think is sexy, then gauge the response. "Drop
hints whenever the chance arises, " Spurr suggests. "Ask your
partner to let you tie his tie, then mention it'd be fun to put it
to another use sometime."
In other words, you don't need to sport latex underwear and handle a
whip like Indiana Jones to start exploring. Begin with spanking or
simple role-playing; look for substitute sex toys around the house.
"Clothespins can pinch, say, a breast in a way that, when you're
already aroused, can be intensely pleasurable," explains Rachel
Venning, co-founder of the sex shop Toys in Babeland. "And you can
have a lot of fun spanking someone with a wooden spoon."
Building trust, disciplining loved ones, using cooking utensils—BDSM
is actually pretty wholesome. How dirty it gets is up to you.
*All names have been changed.