Leonidas
Posts: 2078
Joined: 2/16/2004 Status: offline
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Age only matters as a function of experience. Experience matters more, or less, depending on the context. A 19 year old at a play party, engaging willing submissives in play scenes under the eye of a watchful DM isn't going to do much damage. IF he's lucky enough to fall into a group with some structure that'll put some energy into his development and IF he hangs around long enough, and IF he's smart enough to know that he doesn't know everything, he'll learn fairly quickly. Thats a lot of ifs. A 19 year old who proclaims himself master and proceeds to take a slave or slaves is probably heading for trouble, and so are the slaves. I know that nobody wants to hear or acknowledge it, but the mundane truth is that you need to have your own life together, and be pretty damn savvy about human nature and the day to day dynamics of dominance and submission to successfully own a slave or be a full time dominant to a collared sub. That generally only comes with time and maturity. The typical 19 year old today is still living with mom-n-dad and is either still in school or has a low-level job that doesn't pay squat. He's master of just about diddly, including his own emotions and where he wants to be in life. Just about as it should be for a 19 year old. Are there six-sigma teenagers out there who were just somehow born brilliant, mature, dominant leaders and have the world by the ass on a downhill pull by 19? Sure there are. It'll be a damn rare event that you'll meet one in a D/s chatroom. The fat-spot-in-the-bell-curve 19 year old who proclaims himself a Dom in an online venue is doing so because, lets face it folks, he googled "sex slave" and found this world full of compliant women online who look as if they might fuck him if he can just act "Dom" enough. Women who might fuck you are, in case I need remind you, just about all you think about when you're 19 and male, and teenagers are very very good at figuring out how they're supposed to act to be "in". Folks, in our way of life, scepticism is a good thing. It's perfectly alright not to take what people say at face value, especially when there's a more likely explaination. In our rush to be non-judgemental, we sometimes forget that a little good judgment goes a long way. Should we exclude someone because he is 19? No, we shouldn't. Should we accept at face value that he's ready to be a full-fledged member of our community until he's shown in spades that he is under some kind of supervision? I think so. For my money, the risk of doing otherwise is a bit high. Take care of yourselves. Leonidas
< Message edited by Leonidas -- 3/20/2004 11:40:43 AM >
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