Asj online communities
- Visit our online community, including our chat rooms, member profiles, blogs and more.
- For those of the Gorean (Gor) persuasion, yes the Asj chat rooms include a Gorean Chat room, considered to be a safe zone for all who visit.
ask live online
Can't find what you're looking for, have a question about the Asj community, or the lifestyle in general, click the icon to chat live with one of our site monitors. We're proud to be one of the few D/s or BDSM sites to offer this feature.
may we suggest...
A submissives journey - Castle Realm - Thoughts About Submission
Some Thoughts About
Submission
By jade
What is submission?
Submission is a word that we hear
tossed around pretty often lately but I often wonder if most people
really understand what it means. Being a "submissive" has become
very popular in the Dominant submissive, BDSM fad that is sweeping
the chat rooms and websites. There's even a fashion and cultural
trend based on some of the facets of the BDSM lifestyle. You can
find collars and leather fetish items being worn by the rich and
famous or you can have dinner in one of
So what is it?
Submission is the act of surrendering some or all of ones personal
power to another person. It's allowing someone else to control your
body and behavior within certain preset limits. This must be a
willing act on the part of the submissive or the boundaries of abuse
have been crossed. The methods and levels of submission are
infinite. Each person must decide how much and how far this exchange
of power will go but the rules of "safe, sane and consensual" must
always apply.
Why does
anyone do this?
If you asked a
hundred people you'd probably get a hundred different answers. For
some it's a way to add a little more excitement to their love life.
For others there may be deep, psychological reasons that go beyond
my ability to understand. Based on my experience I believe there are
three distinct types individuals who fall into the definition of
submissive. Please understand that these are my OWN definitions and
not some standard issued by the D/s community.
1. The sexual
submissive. Also known as a bottom or sensual sub. This type of
submissive is into it mainly for the sexual gratification derived
from some of the activities practiced in BDSM. Once their needs are
met they no longer feel a need to submit or surrender any other
personal power or control.
2. The
psychological submissive. This group contains many of the
masochistic submissives. They are into it for the pain, punishment
and humiliation often inflicted on them by more sadistic dominants.
Many abused individuals often end up in this category and are not
actually submissives but may have emotional problems that keep them
in the "victim" mode because of their previous experiences.
3. The natural
submissive. Also called true submissive. This type of individual
seems to have been born submissive. It goes beyond the sexual
aspects of the BDSM and is a normal part of their makeup. It is
their nature to please others and readily relinquish their personal
power with little or no urging from their dominant.
Which one is right?
All of them or none of them,
depending on your views. Each person must do what is right and
fulfilling for them. There have been countless, needless argument
over who is and who is not a "real" submissive. Some start out as a
sensual sub with little interest in pleasing anyone but themselves
and end up growing into some of the most beautiful submissives in
our lifestyle. It's not the right of anyone to judge who is and
isn't submissive based on what activities satisfy them or how many
scars or piercings they may have. Submission is a condition of the
heart and only the individual knows what is in theirs.
My Own Awakening
I recall so well those unnamed
feelings I had from the time I could remember. There was always
something different about the way I reacted to authority and the
natural instincts I had when it came to the desire to please people.
I didn't understand it but I sensed there was something about me
that set me apart from some of my friends and playmates. As I grew
older these feelings never went away even though I tried to pushed
them deep inside me because I was afraid of them. I intuitively knew
that these feelings made me very vulnerable to anyone who wanted to
take advantage of my nature. Although I tried to ignore or hide this
nature, it still worked its way into my life in many ways. I was
always willing to give more, expect less, try harder and take so
little in all the relationships I had with people, especially when
it came to those involving my heart.
After a few disastrous
relationships I was finally forced to take a deep look inside myself
to see what made me tick. What I saw were those very things I'd felt
so long ago. The day I met another person who understood what I was
feeling was a day I'll never forget. This dear, wonderful,
submissive lady explained so many things I asked about and I found
out that there were others just like me. It wasn't some awful secret
I had to keep hidden from the world. What I felt had a name and for
the first time I didn't feel like I was some kind of freak of
nature. I felt like I'd been let out of a prison and was free to fly
for the first time in my life. I was a submissive and it was okay to
be who I was.
To me, my submission isn't
unnatural, nor is it sick or twisted. It just is. It's normal in
most species and I believe that humans are no different. It's
important to understand that I see a big difference between being a
"submissive" and being a "bottom." A bottom is someone who will, for
sexual gratification, become submissive for a given period of time,
i.e. for a sexual encounter in the bedroom or during a BDSM scene.
They have no other desire to continue a power exchange beyond the
confines of a particular scene. Many can easily switch roles in
these scenes and become the top or dominant. This is very different
from a natural submissive who, by nature, has submissive desires
that are not limited to sexual activities
Some Different Terms
I'd like to bring up another
"touchy" subject to some lifestylers and that is the difference
between BDSM and D/s. BDSM has been defined as B-D-S-M with the
"B-D" being bondage/discipline, the "D-S" meaning
dominance/submission and the "S-M" for sadism/masochism. Some
consider all these terms to be interchangeable definitions and
activities but I think it's very misleading to most novices. D/s
does not fit in with the other terms for one major reason.
Domination/submission is a description of a lifestyle. BD and SM are
two things people do. Some D/s couples readily accept these two
activities as part of their relationship but a large percent of D/s
couples do not embrace activities that are based on giving or
receiving pain.
So what separates the
masochist from the submissive?
My answer would have to be
motivation. A submissive is motivated by the desire to please and to
serve. When pain becomes necessary for satisfaction or fulfilment,
the relationship has moved beyond my definition of the D/s lifestyle
and had moved more toward S/M. When pain becomes the motivation and
gratification comes from receiving pain, the person could best be
described as a masochist. This difference is often evident in the
behavior of these two types of personalities. A SAMmy (Smart Ass
Masochist) deliberately misbehaves or challenges their dominant in
order to receive the punishment (pain or humiliation) they crave.
Outside the confines of a scene or other sexual encounter there may
be very little submission evidenced in the relationship. A
submissive (one who desires to submit) is constantly striving to
improve their behavior in order to please their dominant by
surrendering to his/her rules and expectations. Submission, in the
confines of a D/s relationship, is not measured by the amount of
pain one can endure, instead it is measured by the amount of control
one has relinquished to their dominant.
Is one better than the
other?
No, not to anyone but the people
in the relationship. Just keep in mind that pain or bondage are not
the basis for determining a dominant/submissive relationship. It's
based on a power exchange and not the trappings of the people
involved. Don't automatically assume all submissives want or need to
feel discomfort or pain (beyond erotic pain) to experience
submissive tendencies and desire to relinquish control.
Here are just a few facts
about submission that might give you some more insight.
Submission occurs in
both males and females in about equal proportions. Although men and
women may express it differently, they share this trait.
Submission is not a
sign of weakness or inferiority. Some of the strongest, most
successful people in our society are submissive in their personal
relationships.
Submission
does not indicate lack of intelligence or motivation. Most
submissives are very intelligent, creative and are highly motivated
people.
Submission
is not a hidden desire for pain or humiliation. Some masochistic
people may turn to the D/s or BDSM lifestyle in order to fulfil
their needs for these things but there are many more gentle, loving
individuals who are quite happy not to receive either humiliation or
pain.
Submission
is not the same as passivity. Submissives are not passive. They
participate actively and are thinking individuals.
Submission
is not something that can be demanded or forced. The definition of
the word means it is a willing act. A submissive submits because
they have chosen to do so, not because someone forced them.
Submission
is not a miserable state of existence. Most submissives are happy,
well balanced people who are simply fulfilling their nature.
Submission
is not slavery. All slaves are submissive but not all submissives
are slaves. A submissive has not given up their right to choose but
has given some of those choices to another to make for them. They
have input into their relationship and maintain their identity.
Submission
does not indicate sexual promiscuity. Submissives are not sex crazed
nymphomaniacs who cannot control their drives. Most are husbands or
wives, mothers or fathers, friends, neighbors, workers, or family
members who have a need to relinquish control of some aspects of
their lives to someone they trust. It isn't a sex thing...it's a
condition of the heart.
Reality
or Fantasy?
Far too many people have formed
their ideas about submission and submissives from such books as
"Story of O" by Pauline Réage, "The Beauty Trilogy" by Ann Rice, or
the Gorean novels by John Norman. While these books may be
interesting works and very erotic to many, they are not a true
picture of what the D/s lifestyle is about. While many may have
experienced the first stirrings of submissive feeling while reading
these books, fantasies such as "O" or "Beauty" don't work well as a
lifestyle. D/s is far more than a fantasy. It's a way of life where
many find fulfilment and peace for the first time in their lives.
If you have these feelings and
have often felt alone or overwhelmed by them I hope it gives you a
bit of comfort to know you're in good company. There are others just
like you who are healthy, happy and functional individuals that are
quite content to be called "submissive." Come and explore the
information you will find on this site and learn what it is that
makes you tick. You just might find you've found yourself somewhere
along the way.
.
Archived from the Original Postings of Castle Realm
Click Here to return to Index of Castle Realm Archives
Contracts - Related Keywords for Searching
Keywords: A submissives journey, Asj, Castle Realm, submission, bottom,submissive, BDSM, chat rooms, Gorean, bondage, discipline