D
Deleted member 35429
When I first got into BDSM, finding men to sexually enslave me felt like a biological urgency that couldn't be controlled. I was driven to it and obsessed with it. When I was being dominated and flogged, tied up, etc I would tremble with adrenaline and complete submission.
Fast forward two decades and I finally had enough PTSD symptoms to send me to therapy. As soon as I found a therapist I felt a desperate urgency to be there as much as possible. I felt like he was my oxygen mask and I couldn't hardly breathe between sessions. I would tremble with a high heart rate before and during each session.
I kept telling my therapist that this experience feel just like when I'd go to dominant men for BDSM sex. I realize now BDSM was not only a way for me to know and understand my dissociated past, but it was a desperate need for someone else to see it and experience it with me.
Anyone else feel there are similarities between a BDSM relationship and a therapeutic relationship?
Fast forward two decades and I finally had enough PTSD symptoms to send me to therapy. As soon as I found a therapist I felt a desperate urgency to be there as much as possible. I felt like he was my oxygen mask and I couldn't hardly breathe between sessions. I would tremble with a high heart rate before and during each session.
I kept telling my therapist that this experience feel just like when I'd go to dominant men for BDSM sex. I realize now BDSM was not only a way for me to know and understand my dissociated past, but it was a desperate need for someone else to see it and experience it with me.
Anyone else feel there are similarities between a BDSM relationship and a therapeutic relationship?