- Post starter
- #13
rightkindofme
Diamond Member
Ok, well phrased. That is very deflecting and I appreciate that.
There is a lot more to the story. Yes, I am very familiar with re-enacting trauma. I'm a lot more deliberate about it. I didn't stop and write out the twenty page dissertation on why this was a low risk decision for me. Feeling intense anxiety is not a reason to *not* do things. He is someone in a community I occasionally think about visiting but I see them once or twice a year. He doesn't have a lot of reach.
In the community in which I met him such a comment would not only have been appropriate it would have been sought out. Given that he took care to be quiet and unobtrusive he had reason to believe it might be welcome. He misjudged.
I don't think all men are dogs. I think men are people. I think that when people cross a boundary they need to be given a chance to find out why and how they did so and be given a chance to make amends. I don't give second chances. I have never told this man anything about myself and I met him in a community where I was a 24/7 slave. It was ok to say that kind of thing to me.
In the past I have solicited this man for sex (before I was married) and he said, "I don't do that. But if you ask my wife very nicely she might let me hit you and you can blow me." I'm really not worried about him trying to get me to cheat. Really and truly.
I make carefully considered decisions. I know this is a person who has been critical of "big name" people in the bdsm community who are abusive. He isn't a bad person. He does, however, spend most of his time around women who like being told that they are hot enough to drag off. He thought he was being nice. His little enclave is weird and twisted but all of the interactions are very consensual.
Ok, I did feel offended but I choose to think that today was such a win that you get a free pass.
I did take a risk. He might have reacted in a way I didn't like. I rehearsed a variety of scripts in preparation. And I got what I wanted. And discovered an ally who shared his experiences and who promised to never talk about my sexuality again. Given that I know he has been very successful in his business life I believe he can respect those boundaries when he chooses to.
He gets one chance. He didn't know he was doing wrong.
I just can't damn people for one mistake like that. :( That kind of shunning has happened to me so much.
There is a lot more to the story. Yes, I am very familiar with re-enacting trauma. I'm a lot more deliberate about it. I didn't stop and write out the twenty page dissertation on why this was a low risk decision for me. Feeling intense anxiety is not a reason to *not* do things. He is someone in a community I occasionally think about visiting but I see them once or twice a year. He doesn't have a lot of reach.
In the community in which I met him such a comment would not only have been appropriate it would have been sought out. Given that he took care to be quiet and unobtrusive he had reason to believe it might be welcome. He misjudged.
I don't think all men are dogs. I think men are people. I think that when people cross a boundary they need to be given a chance to find out why and how they did so and be given a chance to make amends. I don't give second chances. I have never told this man anything about myself and I met him in a community where I was a 24/7 slave. It was ok to say that kind of thing to me.
In the past I have solicited this man for sex (before I was married) and he said, "I don't do that. But if you ask my wife very nicely she might let me hit you and you can blow me." I'm really not worried about him trying to get me to cheat. Really and truly.
I make carefully considered decisions. I know this is a person who has been critical of "big name" people in the bdsm community who are abusive. He isn't a bad person. He does, however, spend most of his time around women who like being told that they are hot enough to drag off. He thought he was being nice. His little enclave is weird and twisted but all of the interactions are very consensual.
Ok, I did feel offended but I choose to think that today was such a win that you get a free pass.
I did take a risk. He might have reacted in a way I didn't like. I rehearsed a variety of scripts in preparation. And I got what I wanted. And discovered an ally who shared his experiences and who promised to never talk about my sexuality again. Given that I know he has been very successful in his business life I believe he can respect those boundaries when he chooses to.
He gets one chance. He didn't know he was doing wrong.
I just can't damn people for one mistake like that. :( That kind of shunning has happened to me so much.