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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 9:50:47 AM   
wandersalone


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Joined: 11/21/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: wwwkevinww

sorry, I'm very judgemental about certain things.  I have love for humans, but if your no longer human and a savage, you need to be protected from yourself....

if your going to go waving your 9 fingers in my face and say see what I did with a big grin on your face singing koom-ba----ya......I'm going to be calling for the straight-jacket.....

It doesn't take more than one person to find it wrong to be wrong......tell me your 9 finger amy, I dare ya.....

I'm not the only one here who knows the difference between right and wrong.....


Oh boy kevin....Amy took a brave step in sharing with us something incredibly personal in her life and you are acting like a 5 year old, you may not agree, you may not understand, but does this mean you instead ridicule?  Have you no class?


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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 10:10:09 AM   
crouchingtigress


Posts: 4387
Joined: 3/19/2006
From: Maui
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quote:

ORIGINAL: wandersalone

quote:

ORIGINAL: wwwkevinww

sorry, I'm very judgemental about certain things.  I have love for humans, but if your no longer human and a savage, you need to be protected from yourself....

if your going to go waving your 9 fingers in my face and say see what I did with a big grin on your face singing koom-ba----ya......I'm going to be calling for the straight-jacket.....

It doesn't take more than one person to find it wrong to be wrong......tell me your 9 finger amy, I dare ya.....

I'm not the only one here who knows the difference between right and wrong.....


Oh boy kevin....Amy took a brave step in sharing with us something incredibly personal in her life and you are acting like a 5 year old, you may not agree, you may not understand, but does this mean you instead ridicule?  Have you no class?



well we have to give him some props in a way, as the thread asks the question when does BDSM become unhealthy and destructive?

Because he is giving us a larger then life demo: BDSM becomes unhealthy and destructive when someone is so vested in their point of view, and so impenetrable to other peoples point of views, that they self destruct....

_____________________________


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This is him

"Its none of my buisness what other people think of me."




(in reply to wandersalone)
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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 10:33:21 AM   
came4U


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From: London, Ontario
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I didn't read the entire thread so I hope I am not repeating anyone.

Unhealthy or destructive and the use of sanity implies that one's use of or action of 'something' is and goes against a given societies norms/values/mores/culture/laws.

There are no cultural universals.

The mores/laws of another region may be different to us (cannibalism, sexual orientation, or even marriage age of UMs). 

But we are (mostly) in a civilized court-based, governed society that was created 'by the people, for the people' not only as rights but as laws for our own good. 

Sure, boundaries have been pushed legally (adultry, bdsm, same sex marriage etc. for example) but in general, boundaries so far have proven to be a 'necessity' for any given culture by it's government or even villiage leaders.

Despite the lack of these cultural universals, most humans have evolved and adapted to make certain 'taboos' just that...TABOO. 

This is where SSC comes in, in our common interests.  Safe = I can play, but no serious injury should/would be inflicted, Sane = I hope you or I are  not cannibles, Consentual = I allow you to do this/that to me. 

In the OP the issue is..if it is ok for them, then why not let them be?

Simple.  If they want to be heathens, they should be elsewhere (because they are danger to themselves and to the general public) if they cannot abide by OUR laws. 

They may have been Consentual, but they were by no means safe or sane.

So what is unhealthy in bdsm? Legally, almost everything we do (in the legal sense), but that is only because (since slavery was a norm and supposed necessity to make some certain people wealthy) 'it' is judged again as 'dangerous, insane people' who have no morals.

If homosexuality (the biggest fear of the Catholic church and others since the 14th century) has now been legally revered as 'harmless' and a birth given right then I am sure that if the majority of bdsm-ers behave SSC and quit the drama and fear-mongling, it may become mainstream again as it once was (yet not for economic or at a loss of human rights).



*edit to add: what I meant by 'drama and fear mongling' is for example how homosexuals (starting in the 60's) began a flux of the slow underground 'leather and pink' flamers that frankly shocked the shit out of America.  Once that later subsided (post aids epidemic era) and they began acting 'calm, rational and quite normal as citizens' then they gained respect NOT as homosexuals, but as people.  This is how a group becomes mainstream, accepted (by the majority obviously) and respectable in their own choice of lifestyle.

*and NO, not discrediting homosexuals, I used the situation as an example only.  I could have just as easily used the green movement but it just wouldn't apply.

I guess what I meant was the ol "I met a guy after knowing him for 38 minutes online and he beat the crap out of me and left me bleeding in a puddle of my own blood" or "Yeah, sure I have 14 psychiatrists but hey, bdsm will help me right????"

This is the kind of 'romantic getaway mentality' that creates havoc and panic in the eye of the general public (yanno, those other weirdos------- the Vanillas LOL)

< Message edited by came4U -- 6/29/2008 11:05:09 AM >

(in reply to wandersalone)
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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 10:34:18 AM   
wandersalone


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Ah good point.  

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(in reply to crouchingtigress)
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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 10:42:41 AM   
came4U


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It prolly doesn't make sense, I'm 4 minutes away from my old peeps nappy. LOL

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 11:14:14 AM   
stardancer00


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"i think you are right about the common misconception being that there is a mental illness, and i honestly do understand it....20 years ago i was not thinking like this, in fact about 19 years ago i remember having very judgmental thoughts about the harder core SMers in the scene because i just did not understand them. To my way of thinking, they were going down a path that would leave them separate from themselves, and they would need to do more and more extreme things to get off.
and in a way i suppose i was right, because i find myself, always going deeper, always pushing my own limits....but what i did not understand back then is that the things i do now are not just about getting off or getting high..what i realized was that if i can release my attachments to how things are supposed to be....and release my addiction to being right...i can be free
and in that freedom i can explore anything i want....i can connect more intimately with other human souls...i could love in a more deeply and soul satisfying way then i ever dreamed possible.
back then i was a prodom, i had a strange ability to fall in love with my clients, i enjoyed the kinks and flaws of their character, i loved them deeply even though it was briefly, it was love...real love...i was being paid money yet it was real love....and so i started to ask myself the question...what is love?
what i came up with is that love for me is asking the scary questions, wanting to see the hidden and darker parts, wanting to create a safe and sacred space where someone, a total stranger, could feel accepted for the total being he was....and for just one shining moment he could feel completely and wholy....loved.
i don't think all pro doms come into it with that frame of mind but i am guessing a fair few of them do, and there are so many reasons why that does not make sense...but that is love for ya....it rarely makes sense.
right now there is another thread asking the question what do you value out of bdsm and i guess my answer would have to be, learning that i am free to love, and learning how to be free to love. "- crouching tigress

 
The concepts to which you refer here are ones which  obviously meld SM and spirituality. i certainly agree with that. i do not separate the two, and i live my life understanding it as one whole, not compartments. You have shown yourself that you can explore anything you wish. You have taken what some may view as radical steps to feel/find/understand/experience what is freedom, and in doing so, found what is also love. i love people the same way that you do - i understand fully how you felt with total strangers because it is the same for me. When we accept the other completely, we also accept our selves, and in that, there is not a separation. i commend you and i embrace you for your bravery in facing your self in your own ways. Thank you for having the courage to share. It is helpful to me, and i suspect to others, too.




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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 11:34:49 AM   
MasterHermes


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quote:

ORIGINAL: crouchingtigress

quote:

All the things argued in this thread has got nothing to do with spirituality .


i dont think that you can argue that you speak for all spirituality every where on the planet, maybe a better way of phrasing it would be

"nothing in this thread reflects anything i hold in my personal definition of spirituality"....when you speak in absolutes, you negate your validity and effectiveness in discussing points and having a worthwhile exchange of ideas....


I made a statement. Let me state it again: Tricks of ego for covering its own destructiveness has nothing to do with spirituality. Let it be not valid, there is no argument to win.

Hermes

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 11:43:53 AM   
crouchingtigress


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aloha stardancer welcome to the fora....(hint:  is a quick way to quote folks, all you do is click on it and put your quote in the middle of both "quotes")

quote:

The concepts to which you refer here are ones which  obviously meld SM and spirituality. i certainly agree with that. i do not separate the two, and i live my life understanding it as one whole, not compartments. You have shown yourself that you can explore anything you wish. You have taken what some may view as radical steps to feel/find/understand/experience what is freedom, and in doing so, found what is also love. i love people the same way that you do - i understand fully how you felt with total strangers because it is the same for me. When we accept the other completely, we also accept our selves, and in that, there is not a separation. i commend you and i embrace you for your bravery in facing your self in your own ways. Thank you for having the courage to share. It is helpful to me, and i suspect to others, too.


thank you....i so appreciate your kind words, the reason i shared is because i really think that the question "when does bdsm become unhealthy" is a very good question to ask, and this is a discussion that needs to be had at events and in forums all over the world as our numbers grow....i dont agree with SSC but i do subscribe to RISK, Risk aware concentual kink.....and to be risk aware we need to have this conversation and many others....we need to be gentle and patient  with newbees as they question vehimently and probe deeply and scream violently as thier mental construct and world view becomes undone.

and one other thing that got glossed over in this thread is that we have to realise that anyone that uses powerechange in thier relationship is part of our community like it or not, we cant pick and choose who is and who is not.

_____________________________


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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 12:04:50 PM   
IronBear


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Let me say that I have not read any of the replies, so it is possible that someone else has made the same comment that I make.

BDSM like any other set of practices or lifrestyle becomes unhealthy and dangerous when you lose perspective and forget to make regular reality checks. I make this comment as both a BDSM Practitioner and member of an alternative lifestyle together with my personal observations over the decades as well as my professional training and practice as a paychologist and counsellor.

Iron Bear
(Incorrigible, irrepressible and irreverent)
Master of Bruin Cottage
(A Victorian Lifestyle poly home)

The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it.


Omar Khayyam 1048 CE to 1123 CE (Persian Mathematician, Scientist, Astronomer, Philosopher & Poet).


< Message edited by IronBear -- 6/29/2008 12:05:22 PM >

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 12:10:50 PM   
TexasMaam


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I cannot believe the mods in their infinite 'wisdom' haven't deleted this entire thread based on the graphic cannibalism described in the OP.

egads.

TM

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 1:01:02 PM   
WhatUrSeeking


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I decided to compile all of the comments that get at the heart of the question. I did not change people's words but I did shorten some of the responses. I have noticed that collectively we echo a few of the same themes. I know it is lengthy, but I think it is interesting to look at these answers stripped from the other tangents of this discussion thread:

“Paraphrasing Hugh Hefner: Anything sexual is O.K. as long as everyone is a consenting adult and does not commit the act with hate in their heart…

Anything sexual is O.K. as long as it is between consenting adults and it does not cause permanent mental or physical harm.”
Me


“I believe the lifestyle can become dangerous or unhealthy when people with unfinished business use the lifestyle to deal with their baggage…they themselves are not emotionally/mentally healthy…

We all have our baggage and hopefully most of us deal with them appropriately through other support systems outside of D/s but for those who don't...I worry for them.”
Isabelah


“SAFE, SANE and CONSENTUAL”
DiurnalVampire


“Exactly what is unhealthy and destructive is defined by the particular context.”
Softness.


“BDSM can become unhealthy when participants use it as an outlet to deal with unfinished business. It's really a fine line….I think for me, the thing that signals the loudest that a BDSM relationship is bordering on unhealthy or dangerous is when there is an excessive dependance on one or the other to *make* them feel a certain way…to me, whether you are on the "D" or "s" side of the equation, there needs to be a general sense of personal strength within before committing to a D/s exchange.”
Pagankinktress


“I think the answer to this question lies in what happens after in a psychological sense. If anyone is left feeling inappropriately violated (note the qualifier), then a line has been crossed.”
blackbeard519


An important question: “is my fettish going to become dibilitating?”
Crouchingtigress


“I think the #1 mistake people make when thinking about topics like this is that BDSM is somehow "special." …But mental and physical health are more fundamental…The answer to the OP's question would be the same if he asked: When does fencing become unhealthy? or, When does dating become unhealthy?… Answer: When the interaction between the two people becomes addictive, destructive, physically debilitating.”
RedMagic1


“…this is a moral question as well…

For myself.. it is in not enough that all parties mutually consent to the behavior... or that all parties must enjoy it as well. For me.. the more important question is the person better or worse for the experience.

…But then it becomes trade off… is the pleasure of the doing worth the damage that is endured. People smoke, People do drugs, People eat poorly..... They consent to these things... they even enjoy these things at some point..is the pleasure worth the damage.

One also needs to consider the immediate consequences vrs long-term consequences. Today maybe there is not alot of damage doing drug A... but tomorrow the Damage esculates.

Lastly, Does the doing of the act.... inhibit our ability to stop doing the act when we see the negative consequences as being excessive to the pleasure enjoyed. Hell.. can we even properly assess the consequences. Drugs are good example of an act that hinders our judgement and does have progessively worse effects over time. So... when we assess a situation.. is it in the Now... or is it in the Future.

These are difficult questions... and I am not so sure their is a universal answer that we can put out their. However, I do know what is appropriate for me and…

I will not associate or develop relationships with people that fall beyond what I consider to be healthy. I am not one to enjoy train wrecks... in the Now or in the Future.”
KnightofMists


“If you're making an irreversible decision to achieve a high-of-the-moment for the person you are now, you are forever altering the options the future you will have available to [yourself]. That might not be fair to future-[self] -- and, frankly, now-[self] isn't in a position to evaluate that objectively.

I would say it is critical for you to have friends who will give you unvarnished opinions. You need input from people who have loyalty to both present- and future-[self], so you don't base your decisions solely on what you feel and see right now.”
RedMagic1


“I think that there are ways that it can be psychologically unhealthy for one partner or both, as in a vanilla relationship, when one becomes almost obsessed with wanting to please the other….

It is not unusual for their to be double standards in a BDSM relationship…. If you wrap up a bunch of things like this, and then have a bottom without enough of a life or a good enough self esteem, it can become a snowball rolling downhill leaving the sub feeling needy and unappreciated. If they are not mentally healthy they can begin to feel depressed, undeserving of "fair" treatment, and could even become suicidal. … We are each responsible to care for ourselves, but there are times when it is difficult to balance our own needs against the perceived needs of another… I know that I use these boards as a sanity check sometimes; a way to see what others are thinking and feeling…I would hope that if someone feels that their relationship may be becoming emotionally dangerous that they would reach out to someone - even if this is the only place they can turn.”
Chamberqueen


“Usually when it involves dead people and/or emotional/mental/physical abuse then its generally unhealthy…Society as a whole has no clue where the line should be.”
Wwwkevinww


“It is not healthy to permanently injure or disable yourself.”
StrangerinBlack


“kink is not really different from non-kink, and the sanity of kinky acts should be judged with the same criteria that one judges non-kinky acts: the motivation of the participants, and the long-term mindbody ramifications.”
RedMagic1


Responding to Red Magic1’s question: When you say something is a mental illness, do you mean it is classified as such in the DSM IV?

“That works for me. But I would say that it causes lasting impairment or dysfunction in general.
StrangerinBlack


Useful definition of psychosis: “s_-k_'s_s)A mental state caused by psychiatric or organic illness, characterized by a loss of contact with reality and an inability to think rationally. A psychotic person often behaves inappropriately and is incapable of normal social functioning.”
StrangerinBlack


(I would add that sociopathic behavior is much more dangerous than psychotic behavior. The sociopath is generally highly developed at functioning in society, but they lack the capacity to feel empathy. Thus, most serial killers are actually sociopaths not psychopaths. If you feel no remorse or empathy for the victim, in a situation most consider horrific it could be a warning sign, and it may be a good idea to talk with others you trust.)


‘With regard to unsafe wanting self mutilization, it falls under the category of things you should fantasize about, but know better for yourself and not be talked into…. Some people need to be protected from their own destructive desires, impulses.”
Wwwkevinww


“I think the permanent harm issue is big. I suppose it does matter what ones intentions are at the time….

I still think there is something to Hugh Heffner's rule of not doing something where there is hatred in the heart. Even if this does not cause long term physical or psychological damage to the other person it can not be good for the person doing it at the time.”
Me


“Perhapes there are boundaries that society as established that shouldn't be pushed. Like having sex with a six year old, and eating your girlfriends arm.”
kiwisub12


“My answer is basically one word: Perspective…
What we, in this society have identified as "healthy" and "unhealthy", are concepts we've created and measured ourselves against and lived by…. I really believe that any act can be "good" or "bad" depending on the circumstances around it…Our ideas of mental illness are just classified as illness from our society's perspective. They change over the course of time…

For me personally, "unhealthy" is a grey area and I try to create limits and boundaries as seems fit. For me those are at the abuse, and oppression of other's. It doesn't matter their age or context. But even those values, I know ultimately, are subjective to me.”
Onegoddess


“When the purpose is lost to the method, that's when it is wrong…Most 'purpose' is illusionary, transitory value that we assign to the steps we take to approach our true goal, which is growth.

If the act fails to help you and yours grow and prosper, then it is unhealthy.”
DMFParadox


“There can be no harm when there is love.”
MasterHermes


“Well that is where i would ask each person to decide for themselves what is and isnt debilitating....i think that debilitating, just as is human sexuality, is a spectrum...and we all make choices around what is debilitating, an example would be the ballet dancer who knows…that most serious ballet dancers do become crippled in their middle years...but they have the courage to follow their passion. As do boxers, astronaut's, glass blowers. These folks have some very serious data that reflect that following their passion is detrimental to their future lives—debilitating in fact—and yet they chose it, and we honor them for those choices.”
Crouchingtigress


“Each generation has thought their own standards acceptable and the standards of the past and future unacceptable, although the latter generally occurs in retrospect. Similarly, each future generation will deem their own standards to be carved in stone, and ours to be unacceptable. Nothing has remained a constant throughout human history, though some things are very common…

Seems to me that a lot of the arguments are contingent on some assumption that we can and should act on the basis of how our future selves would have found to be best upon looking back…We become the person we will be by the choices we make today…
Aswad


“My hard limits are permanent harm, lasting damage. I happen to think that BDSM consists of repeatable practices, while body modification…You still gonna be happy about it when…?

I prefer to be able to repeat pleasurable moments.”
DelilahDeb


“Any act in BDSM can be unhealthy, there is risk in any activity, nevertheless, it is important to way that risk against potential disfigurement or death…

…some people just aren't mentally healthy enough to…be involved in BDSM in any meaningful way.”
Wwwkevinww


“There truly is…little, if anything, that is inherently either good or bad, but that context and individual experience and belief play a strongly determining role in nearly every situation.”
DominantJenny


A warning: “The human mind is very good at finding excuses. Kill other people for peace, kill yourself for spirituality, cut her legs for sexuality, hate your neighbor in the name of god. We have very noble reasonings for very destructive actions of human ego.”
MasterHermes


“when people can't figure out the difference between fantasy and reality and when people are too stupid for their own good.”
Daddysliloneds


“BDSM gets really dangerous when recently released subs hit the Collarme forums.”
Lordandmaster


“Unhealthy or destructive and the use of sanity implies that one's use of or action of 'something' is and goes against a given societies norms/values/mores/culture/laws…There are no cultural universals…The mores/laws of another region may be different to us…But we are (mostly) in a civilized court-based, governed society…not only as rights but as laws for our own good…Sure, boundaries have been pushed legally…but in general, boundaries so far have proven to be a 'necessity' for any given culture by it's government or even villiage leaders.”
came4U

“…This is where SSC comes in, in our common interests. Safe = I can play, but no serious injury should/would be inflicted, Sane = I hope you or I are not cannibles, Consentual = I allow you to do this/that to me.”
came4U

“In the OP the issue is..if it is ok for them, then why not let them be? …Simple…because they are danger to themselves and to the general public… “
came4U




A warning of classic unhealthy BDSM behavior:
“I guess what I meant was the ol "I met a guy after knowing him for 38 minutes online and he beat the crap out of me and left me bleeding in a puddle of my own blood" or "Yeah, sure I have 14 psychiatrists but hey, bdsm will help me right????"
came4U


“i dont agree with SSC but i do subscribe to RISK, Risk aware concentual kink.....and to be risk aware we need to have this conversation and many others....we need to be gentle and patient with newbees as they question vehimently and probe deeply and scream violently as thier mental construct and world view becomes undone.”
Crouchingtigress


“BDSM like any other set of practices or lifrestyle becomes unhealthy and dangerous when you lose perspective and forget to make regular reality checks.”
IronBear


(in reply to wandersalone)
Profile   Post #: 111
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 1:11:15 PM   
CallaFirestormBW


Posts: 3651
Joined: 6/29/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: IronBear

Let me say that I have not read any of the replies, so it is possible that someone else has made the same comment that I make.

BDSM like any other set of practices or lifrestyle becomes unhealthy and dangerous when you lose perspective and forget to make regular reality checks. I make this comment as both a BDSM Practitioner and member of an alternative lifestyle together with my personal observations over the decades as well as my professional training and practice as a paychologist and counsellor.

Iron Bear
(Incorrigible, irrepressible and irreverent)
Master of Bruin Cottage


Iron Bear -- At this point, I have to ask "Whose 'reality'"? One thing I've come to realize over the years is that the idea that we have a "shared reality" is actually a delusion in and of itself -- 'reality' is truly an individual process of integrating oneself with the Universe in a way that allows a productive (by one's own perception) existence.

That being said, my response to the OP is -- BDSM becomes unhealthy/destructive when ones own actions or the actions of those with whom one is interacting through the BDSM lifestyle (or a combination of both) prevent the individual from experiencing a productive life (defined as a life where one's definition of self exists -- ie, one recognizes one's own existence, is sustainable -- ie, one can continue to live productively in the same manner for at least the present, and makes it possible to get up in the morning without wondering whether it's time to end one's existence).


< Message edited by CallaFirestormBW -- 6/29/2008 1:13:03 PM >


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Said to me recently: "Look, I know you're the "voice of reason"... but dammit, I LIKE being unreasonable!!!!"

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 1:34:16 PM   
chickpea


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From: Los Angeles Area
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There is a huge possibility that BDSM becomes destructive.  Requires a lot of thought, research, and careful planning to reap the benefits.  Probably why it's frowned upon, because a lot don't want to do the research and then just jump right in.

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RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 1:47:32 PM   
Ialdabaoth


Posts: 1073
Joined: 5/4/2008
From: Tempe, AZ
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: crouchingtigress

ok so i guess ill share, even though i am scared too, because i dont really want to be judged....but i have done an amputation scene and it was incredibly intimate and amazing...i plan on doing more. i feel that i am the only one who can make these decisions about my own body, and if i want to live my life with out a bodypart and with a an amazing memory that is my choice. your millage may vary.

is my fettish going to become dibilitating? i dont know, i dont think so, but it is important to note that according to my "peers" on this board, many folks already feel it has already become so....at the end of the day, all i have is my personal barameter, and the hope that it is not broken.


As an adamant transhumanist, I'd like to go on the record as saying that debilitation can be a choice. We have the right to control our abilities - or lack thereof. We have the right to choose our bodies, even if those bodies are less capable than others in certain tasks that most people consider "essential". If you don't own your own physical body - if you don't have the right to do with it as you please, give it away, or augment it to whatever suits your tastes - then what do you own?

(in reply to crouchingtigress)
Profile   Post #: 114
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 1:59:34 PM   
CallaFirestormBW


Posts: 3651
Joined: 6/29/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Ialdabaoth

As an adamant transhumanist, I'd like to go on the record as saying that debilitation can be a choice. We have the right to control our abilities - or lack thereof. We have the right to choose our bodies, even if those bodies are less capable than others in certain tasks that most people consider "essential". If you don't own your own physical body - if you don't have the right to do with it as you please, give it away, or augment it to whatever suits your tastes - then what do you own?



Bravae! Our bodies are our connection between existences -- how we appear, and how we change the landscape of our form -must- be our own decision.

For crouchingtigress -- I could not do what you have done, but I defend to the death your right to make that decision... provided that you thought through the decision and its implications, and you found yourself comfortable with the choice that you were making, and as long as you were not under the influence of something that would cloud your ability to make decisions for yourself, no-one else, short of any to whom you have yielded the right of decision over your body, has the right (or responsibility) to judge that decision for you -- .

Firestorm

PS: For the record, for those who say that it is the government's right and responsibility to prevent people from "hurting themselves", I categorically do -not- yield the right to decisions about my body to any government, secular, or religious body... for some individuals, I might make an exception, but for institutions, I retain ultimate rights (and responsibility) within myself.


_____________________________

***
Said to me recently: "Look, I know you're the "voice of reason"... but dammit, I LIKE being unreasonable!!!!"

"Your mind is more interested in the challenge of becoming than the challenge of doing." Jon Benson, Bodybuilder/Trainer

(in reply to Ialdabaoth)
Profile   Post #: 115
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 2:57:07 PM   
DominantJenny


Posts: 645
Joined: 4/6/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: CallaFirestormBW


quote:

ORIGINAL: Ialdabaoth

As an adamant transhumanist, I'd like to go on the record as saying that debilitation can be a choice. We have the right to control our abilities - or lack thereof. We have the right to choose our bodies, even if those bodies are less capable than others in certain tasks that most people consider "essential". If you don't own your own physical body - if you don't have the right to do with it as you please, give it away, or augment it to whatever suits your tastes - then what do you own?



Bravae! Our bodies are our connection between existences -- how we appear, and how we change the landscape of our form -must- be our own decision.

For crouchingtigress -- I could not do what you have done, but I defend to the death your right to make that decision... provided that you thought through the decision and its implications, and you found yourself comfortable with the choice that you were making, and as long as you were not under the influence of something that would cloud your ability to make decisions for yourself, no-one else, short of any to whom you have yielded the right of decision over your body, has the right (or responsibility) to judge that decision for you -- .

Firestorm

PS: For the record, for those who say that it is the government's right and responsibility to prevent people from "hurting themselves", I categorically do -not- yield the right to decisions about my body to any government, secular, or religious body... for some individuals, I might make an exception, but for institutions, I retain ultimate rights (and responsibility) within myself.



Agreed.

(in reply to CallaFirestormBW)
Profile   Post #: 116
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 3:36:34 PM   
crouchingtigress


Posts: 4387
Joined: 3/19/2006
From: Maui
Status: offline
quote:

“Well that is where i would ask each person to decide for themselves what is and isnt debilitating....i think that debilitating, just as is human sexuality, is a spectrum...and we all make choices around what is debilitating, an example would be the ballet dancer who knows…that most serious ballet dancers do become crippled in their middle years...but they have the courage to follow their passion. As do boxers, astronaut's, glass blowers. These folks have some very serious data that reflect that following their passion is detrimental to their future lives—debilitating in fact—and yet they chose it, and we honor them for those choices.”
Crouchingtigress


it was a very long thread and i dont blame you for not having read it all but i fully agree with you as evidenced in the above exchange.

firestorm: these are big questions and deep topics we are discussing, i cant say where i do draw the line for myself but i can say i absolutly do not feel the government should draw that line for me....

nods to jenny.

whatuareseeking; wow that was a lot of work, interesting what you took away from the conversations....

Iron bear: nuzzles you and licks your knee

TM: sorry that you feel that way, i think that there is much more harm in not talking about these things and having open minded discussion the closeting everything because we are in fear.

masterhermes: your spirituality, differs from mine....thats all, it does not make me destructive or dangerous. what is destructive and dangerous is thinking that all spirituality needs to be the one true way you have decided it should be.....

_____________________________


Service slut, durable plaything, and ponypenquincatdogpig, to Lee Harrington

This is him

"Its none of my buisness what other people think of me."




(in reply to DominantJenny)
Profile   Post #: 117
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 3:58:48 PM   
IronBear


Posts: 9008
Joined: 6/19/2005
From: Beenleigh, Qld, Australia
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: CallaFirestormBW

quote:

ORIGINAL: IronBear

Let me say that I have not read any of the replies, so it is possible that someone else has made the same comment that I make.

BDSM like any other set of practices or lifrestyle becomes unhealthy and dangerous when you lose perspective and forget to make regular reality checks. I make this comment as both a BDSM Practitioner and member of an alternative lifestyle together with my personal observations over the decades as well as my professional training and practice as a paychologist and counsellor.

Iron Bear
(Incorrigible, irrepressible and irreverent)
Master of Bruin Cottage


Iron Bear -- At this point, I have to ask "Whose 'reality'"? One thing I've come to realize over the years is that the idea that we have a "shared reality" is actually a delusion in and of itself -- 'reality' is truly an individual process of integrating oneself with the Universe in a way that allows a productive (by one's own perception) existence.



With most people I have observed or been involved with  both in and out of any alternative lifestyle or kink areas, people have had a reasonable sensible sence of reality and acceptable values of right or wrong and some acceptable form of codes of conduct (all judged by what is commonly accepted in the society where they resided). In other woirds that they were pretty well law abiding in the most and like many here will flout the law when it interfears in some areas of their proivate lives but draw the line at permanantly harming, maiming or killing others. Certainly agree that that is a jolly wide coverage, but it does cover most of the folks I know. My point is that when someone becomes so invilved that they lose touch with the reality of safety and consequences if they follow their fantacy, we have a potential problem. An awfull lot of people I spend time helping, have in some way or in some area, lost their perspective and thus lost touch of the reality of their situation. Often ego and/or emortions are out of control so my job is to, with their help, devise a plan thay will follow to come back to earth safely and move to a point where we as a team can work out ways and means of achieving their desired result in a sensible and safe manner.. Does it always work? No it doesn't but statoistically on case basic from all the counsellors and therapists I associate with, we have a majority of sucessfull cases. The more daunting issues then become when family members believe that BDSM is a curable disease (In the same way that being gay is being infected with a curable disease). This poses different issues and on the odd occasion I find myself in court defending a kink person from their parents and family shrink..  I still believe that and have proved to my personal satisfaction, someone who is loosing the plot can be helped especially if someone can talk to them early on...  I stay from the issues of morality for I don't agree with most about them anyway. I am openly Amoral which means I do not accept or follow the judeochristian morality system but I do have a code of ethics and conduct which works better for me. Just a personal thing. Yes i agree with you regarding the shared reality being mostly delusional and that personal reality is necessary for all of us to integrate with the universe and creation.


Iron Bear
(Incorrigible, irrepressible and irreverent)
Master of Bruin Cottage
(A Victorian Lifestyle poly home)

The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it.


Omar Khayyam 1048 CE to 1123 CE (Persian Mathematician, Scientist, Astronomer, Philosopher & Poet).




< Message edited by IronBear -- 6/29/2008 4:01:08 PM >

(in reply to CallaFirestormBW)
Profile   Post #: 118
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 3:59:39 PM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: StrangerinBlack

I find your statements to be condescending and overly wordy, but light on content. Thank you for finding 1 example of this happening.


You're welcome, though I later noticed that others had mentioned it, too. The case was rather widely covered in European media, unsurprisingly. One of the reasons that this case got so much attention was the cooperation of the other guy, as well as the fact that the court psychiatrist testified that Meiwes was not insane, although he did have an abnormal personality (well, duh...).

As for finding my posts overly wordy, condescending and light on content, I am tired of explaining things twice, so I use more words the first time around. Each word has at the very least one purpose in what I say, and most of the time they will all be part of the full semantic content of what I am trying to convey. When I am terse, people rarely pick up on what I mean unless they are familiar with me and/or my ideas, and frequently find the style even less to their liking.

English not being my native language, I tried to find a concise meaning for the word condescending. What I found was that it's mostly circular, but comes down to pointing out the shortcomings of another. As I did point out some shortcomings implied by your posting, that is probably an entirely correct description of my tone.

Whether those shortcomings were accurately guessed at, is another matter.

quote:

However, i would again like to point out that a wikipedia article is not research


At no point did I make such a claim. I simply provided you with a case you could research. You will undoubtedly find a number of pertinent details on the Internet if you look for them. A quick trip to Google indicated that at least one website carries trial transcripts. If you read German, that should provide most of the publicly disclosed details of the case.

quote:

and we have no idea as to the mental state of either party at the time.


The musings of the court and the psychiatric evaluation are both available.

Meiwes was sane, and found competent to stand trial. If memory serves, he is serving a life sentence on account of there being a plausible risk that the crime might be repeated, but he is not in a psychiatric prison. Brandes may not have been legally able to consent at the time due to blood loss, being drunk, and so forth. I will admit that I'm hazy on the details, as it has been a while since the case.

quote:

If you would like to argue that someone consensually engaging an dangerous, permanently disabling, act which leads to their (predictable) death is not indicative of a mental disorder, more power to you. (I think you will find your view to be in the extreme minority however.)


Consider that voluntary euthanasia fits your criteria for "indicative of a mental disorder."

Again, I questioned your familiarity with the psychiatric field. Until you have established a coherent argument to support your conclusions, they are unsupported opinion. I've no problem with that (I didn't, after all, object further when DV stated that she didn't mean to go past that). But you have repeatedly invoked clearly defined terms that are actually objectively debatable without backing it up.

In short, on what grounds would you assert that this is more indicative of a mental disorder than BDSM in general?

Finally, how do you correlate that to the ability and right to consent, or lack thereof?

quote:

However, the question I was answering was "When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive?", which I feel I have done sufficiently. Try looking a little deeper into what people are saying instead of imposing your interpretation of specific terms used.


When no definition of unhealthy or destructive is employed, interpretation is required.

And I have posited that there is no clearly defined line, but rather a spectrum, which it would seem some have agreed with. If indeed there is a clearly defined line, that raises the question of who draws it. And if a majority is to do so, then society has done that for us already, placing the bulk of BDSM on the side "unhealthy or destructive." That isn't a line I think you would care to agree with. Which raises the question of how it is more appropriate for this minority to draw a new line past the one that has been drawn by the majority, and why another minority is not equally in the right if they decide that they want to draw a third line past the second one, and so forth.

You see, the arguments tend to apply a logic that, if recursively applied, refutes itself.

Some have indeed tried to provide a standard based on permanent harm, which has raised the question of what constitutes harm and how it is healthy and constructive to constrain freedom to determine for oneself what is harmful. Certainly I know that a number of people here would universally reject the notion of prior consent trumping absence of current consent as being harmful, but I also know several people that've overcome great harm and become more psychologically healthy and constructive as results of such supposedly harmful actions.

In conclusion, no one size fits all, and to apply a single standard to all individuals is the closest thing you will find to anything universally unhealthy and/or destructive.

quote:

Oh, and did you actually tell any of all those psychologists that learned so much with you that you wanted to eat other people before they decided you were without illness?


Yes. And I had a very wordy reply to this, but decided this would be more informative:

A doctor can think a mole prevents you from being beautiful.

But unless it is a melanoma, they will not deem it to be an illness. You may still find that they recommend a biopsy, but they will also respect your choice not to have one done, because they respect your bodily integrity and your right to choose for yourself whether said mole is to remain a part of your body or not.

I never said my mind has been universally deemed beautiful by everyone.

I have, however, said that it has been found healthy, apart from the bits I was checking up on, and those bits have no bearing on personality, morality or sexuality (except for a reduction in libido), as they deal with fine motor control and reversible muscle loss. The final point being that I have not been found to pose a significant risk to myself or society in general. If anything, quite the opposite.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to StrangerinBlack)
Profile   Post #: 119
RE: When does BDSM become unhealthy or destructive - 6/29/2008 4:10:59 PM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DelilahDeb

You still gonna be happy about it when the tits or balls are draggin' and the skin is all gnarly and age-spotted?


Consider the converse: will you regret having passed up on life out of fear that you might regret living?

quote:

I prefer to be able to repeat pleasurable moments, hours, or days.


As do we all. A component of rationality is just that: considering whether the cost of an action is justified by the beneft. Both of these are subjective metrics. The cost of fecal incontinence will keep most fisting devotees from going too far, as the benefit of that experience does not outweigh it for them. The cost in future employment opportunity will prevent some from having piercings or tattoos done in visible locations. And so forth.

An act such as described here has a very high cost to the "bottom" participant, and society will extract a high price from the "top" participant afterwards, if caught (and evading that may constitute a high moral price to pay). For almost every person out there who would like to practice it to some extent, these costs outweigh the benefits.

Clearly, that has not been the case for everyone at all times.

quote:

Me, I think they've simply read Stranger in a Strange Land waaaaay too many times.


While some do it to grok their partner, that's hardly the only motive I've seen forwarded.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to DelilahDeb)
Profile   Post #: 120
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