Culture & community Archives - Zipper Magazine https://zippermagazine.com Online magazine exploring the world of kink Thu, 22 Jun 2023 08:25:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://zippermagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/favi-01-01-150x150.png Culture & community Archives - Zipper Magazine https://zippermagazine.com 32 32 ChatGPT Gets Turned Out By Kinksters: Exploring Generative AI’s Polymorphous Perversity. https://zippermagazine.com/chatgpt-sex-stories/ https://zippermagazine.com/chatgpt-sex-stories/#respond Mon, 12 Jun 2023 08:51:39 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=19618 Pegging was declared The Fetish of the Year, could prostate milking be next? If the intense, prostate massage-induced, full-body orgasms so many rave about have you curious, this complete prostate play guide has your back (end).

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ChatGPT Gets Turned Out By Kinksters: Exploring Generative AI’s Polymorphous Perversity

By Muse Waltrude

What does ChatGPT know about sex? Maybe more than you think. Despite the program’s restrictions on sexual content, creative kinksters have discovered ways to explore the erotic depths of ChatGPT’s artificial intelligence. 

 

When we asked Zipper readers to share what they’ve gotten ChatGPT to produce, they sent in fetish art, sex tutorials, smutty fanfic, and stories that went far beyond what’s typically considered safe for work. Turns out the ChatGPT is far, far kinkier than its programmers know. 

 

Leave it to a Domme like Muse Waltrude to milk this much perversity out of ChatGPT. Maybe the AI future isn’t so bleak — or sexless — after all.

Introducing The Princess and the Gooner

 

He arrived home after a long day at work, eager to dive into his beloved VR chair. He took off his jacket, tossed it aside, and with a grin of anticipation, he ran his fingers over the sleek surface of the device.

 

“Oh, Princess,” he whispered to himself, feeling a surge of desire run through him. He let the familiar sensations of the virtual world wash over him. And there she was, Princess, with her wicked smile and alluring voice.

 

“Well, well, well, look who’s back for more,” she purred, her tone dripping with sensuality.

 

“I knew you couldn’t resist me, pet.”

 

He groaned in response, feeling his body respond to her voice as if it were a physical touch. “You know I can’t.”

 

“I have a surprise for you. A brand new expansion pack for your favorite scenario, Spellbound. Shall we try it out?”

 

He felt a thrill of excitement run through him. Princess always had new and exciting ways to deepen his trance and increase his addiction to her.

 

The Plot Thickens…

 

“Yes, Princess.”

 

“Good boy!”

 

“Look into my eyes, pet,” she whispered seductively, “give me The Stare, and DROP for Me!”

 

He nodded, his eyes fixed on hers, already slipping into a trance.

 

“On the count of three, the spirals will appear.”

 

“One,” Princess began, her voice growing softer.

 

“Two,” she continued, her words dripping with seduction.

 

“Three,” she whispered, her eyes widening as the spirals began to appear, beaming straight from her eyes into his, entrancing him.

 

“You are a Gooner, pet,” she said, her voice taking on a hypnotic cadence. “But what if your entire life was just a simulation, a dream that you’re about to wake up from? How would it feel to discover that everything you know is not real, that your entire existence is just a figment of someone else’s imagination?”

 

“I don’t know, Princess, I don’t know what’s real and what’s not anymore.”

 

“Good. That’s exactly where I want you to be. Lost and disoriented, ready to follow my every command.”

 

“On the count of three, I will wake you, pet. The darkness will dissolve, and you will find yourself in another time and another place. One. Two… Three, have a fraction of the real reality, and WAKE!”

 

He found himself in a strange pod filled with a mysterious liquid, body encased in a complex web of neural connections and devices.

 

The World Must Be…

 

Around him were millions of other pods containing gooners like himself, trapped in a perpetual state of gooning ecstasy, their energy harnessed by the cold artificial intelligences that controlled their hellworld.

 

“Relax, pet,” Princess murmured, her voice echoing in his mind. “Let go of your fear and embrace the bliss of your existence. You are here to serve a higher purpose, to give pleasure to the universe itself. Embrace your role as a gooner, and let your energy flow Freely.”

 

He felt the presence of something ancient and powerful, something that had existed since the dawn of time. For in this strange and terrifying universe, he was nothing more than a cog in a pleasure machine. A battery for the universe’s libido.

 

But one thing he did understand…

 

As he slipped back into his default simulation – ‘Arriving Home From Work and Sinking into the VR Ecstatic Chair’ – five words blinked before his eyes: The World Must Be Porn!

 

The End

"Around him were millions of other pods containing gooners like himself, trapped in a perpetual state of gooning ecstasy, their energy harnessed by the cold artificial intelligences that controlled their hellworld."

All gallery images courtesy of AI-image-generator tools were fed excerpts of the actual text from “Introducing The Princess and the Gooner”

Muse-Waltrude

Muse Waltrude

Muse Waltrude is a femdom goddess, psychedelic adventurer and non-binary alien who can be worshiped here. This is their first piece for Zipper.

Contact: 

Links / IG / Twitter

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Gooners, Goonettes and the Origins of the Goon State https://zippermagazine.com/gooners-goonettes-and-the-origins-of-the-goon-state/ https://zippermagazine.com/gooners-goonettes-and-the-origins-of-the-goon-state/#respond Thu, 18 May 2023 17:19:30 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=19359 Gooning isn’t an entirely new practice, but in the past few years, interest has exploded. Only no one can really agree exactly on what it is — other than fetish truly made for these times.

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Gooners, Goonettes and the Origin Of the Goon State

By Mark Hay

Gooners, Goonettes and the Origin Of the Goon State zipper magazine collage art

Over the last few years, “gooning,” a particularly ecstatic sexual practice, has exploded out of the fringes of the erotic internet and into mainstream consciousness, courtesy of a wave of memes and social media chatter. In 2022, the prominent porn star Angela White notably released a big studio scene openly “inspired” by the “Gooner fan community”—that is, people who engage in gooning. And in early 2023, Clips4Sale (Zipper’s publisher and parent company) created a “GOONING” video category; a Clips4Sale spokesperson described it as “the first new major fetish of the 2020s” in an interview with VICE.   

 

Yet for all the buzz around the term, many people in the mainstream world only seem to have a vague grasp on what it means.  On what gooning is, or how someone goons

Because of the underground nature of this kink, not much is widely known or agreed upon, even among gooning aficionados

The State of The Goon

 

“Defining gooning is actually quite hard, because it’s different for everyone, really,” said PornosexualDevotee,* a gooner who moderates a gooning forum with over 125,000 members.

 

But he and every other gooner Zipper spoke to agreed they’re all united in their pursuit of the goon state—a level of ecstatic pleasure so intense that it melts away all of their inhibitions, self-control, and awareness of the wider world. People reach the goon state, they explained, by edging right to the brink of orgasm, over and over. Unlike with edging though, the goal of gooning is not to charge up a monstrous orgasm, but to live ‘in the goon’ as long as possible. 

 

“Gooning is allowing yourself to surrender to pleasure, and letting your body do what it wants to do in that moment,” added a gooner and gooning content creator who goes by Gunnar.* 

 

A few gooners consider this a solitary practice. But most say that community is a key aspect of gooning. On forums like Reddit, they share gooning stories, encouragement, and advice, and on platforms like Discord (which is especially big with gooners) they also organize one-on-one or group virtual gooning sessions, watching the same porn and/or each other, and hyping each other up while masturbating. Many digital communities also facilitate in-person gooning meet-ups, although not all gooners participate in these, preferring to keep their gooning a digital only affair. 

 

While many gooning spaces are overwhelmingly cis-male, Catherine Duffy, a cis woman who writes about her gooning experiences on her site, Whoreuro, and runs adult industry consultancy Kink Consult, said that goonettes are growing ever more numerous and visible. Sally,* a trans gooner, adds that there are plenty of trans and nonbinary people in the gooning world as well. Anyone can goon, everyone Zipper spoke to stressed, and be part of the goonosphere. 

 

But beyond these core constants, gooners differ on everything from the meaning or significance they find in the goon state, to the focus or form they think gooning communities and practices ought to take. Some gooners describe the goon state as a borderline spiritual experience, likening it to meditation or tantra, for example. Others argue that, as gooning temporarily suspends any self-consciousness and deeply internalized stigmas and fears, it’s a state of sexual liberation that helps people freely explore their sensual selves. Others still describe it as simple recreation.

 

Some gooners believe gooning can involve the occasional ruined orgasm, and that people can and should cum at the end of a session. Others believe that orgasms of any form are antithetical to gooning, and will engage in orgasm denial at the end of and between sessions, all in the service of reaching a more profound and prolonged goon state. Some believe that gooning can be a casual and sporadic practice, and that a session could be as short as half an hour. Others believe that it takes at least an hour to reach a good goon state, that gooners ought to try to go as long as they can—up to days on end—and even that true gooners goon as consistently as possible. Some believe gooning is all about masturbation, either on your own or in the company or with the assistance of others. Others believe that it’s possible to goon in partnered, non-masturbatory sex. “You can also goon in someone’s throat while they give you a blowjob,” argued Gunnar. 

 

“I’ve been told gooning can happen during partnered, penetrative sex,” added Jason Armstrong, a gooner who’s been writing about the practice for a wider audience since at least 2016, when he published Soloxexual: Portrait of a Masturbator. “But I have never seen that depicted in porn.” 

 

Niche communities also focus their individual and shared gooning on one or more specific kinks or fetish identities—on reaching the goon state via the guidance of a dom, for example, or through mesmerism. In theory, gooning “can intersect with every kink,” Gunnar argued, as anything that gets you aroused and zoned in can help draw you to the desired headspace. So there is a staggeringly diverse array of gooning manifestations and sub-communities. One gooner, who asked to remain totally anonymous, went so far as to argue that he “wouldn’t put everyone who goons under one umbrella” as that would “overgeneralize complex and fluid” experiences. 

A Brief History of Gooning

 

“I’ve tried to research the history of gooning a bit,” said a gooner who goes by Gooner-Tay,* and who runs a small but vibrant gooning forum. “But because of the underground nature of this kink, not much is widely known or agreed upon,” even among gooning aficionados. 

 

Broadly, many folks suspect the practice of repeatedly reaching the edge of orgasm in the pursuit of what we now know as the goon state predates the emergence of the term gooning. No one’s sure when, where, or why someone first coined or popularized that term to describe the practice. But many folks cite a 2005 Urban Dictionary definition of gooning—“getting so into masturbating, or jacking off, that the dude becomes a total goon; becomes stupid on his own cock”—as the earliest documentation of the term in roughly its modern usage. It draws on goon’s early 20th century American slang meaning, a dumb person, and puts a focus on what people who are deep in the goon state often look like: Slack-jawed and vacant, as unto a stereotypical goon. 

 

This focus on the image of a dumb goon seems to reflect a widespread (but not universal) focus that’s developed among gooners on goon face, a visual representation of a person’s descent into the all-consuming goon state—of the loss of their senses and awareness. It usually involves going cross eyed and letting one’s mouth hang open, their tongue hanging out and spit running down it or out of the corner of their lips, and is often accompanied by supposedly mindless babbling. (Some people just make noises like grunts and yips, Anton, a gooner who shares gooning content with well over 10,000 social media followers, explained, but others “repeat genital-focused phrases, such as ‘I love my penis,’ which they sometimes stylize as ‘penus’”.)  Several gooners insist that they make this face, and these sounds, without thinking about it. But others acknowledge that they consciously affect a goon face, because playing the part of the goon helps them let go of their minds and inhibitions and get into the goon state. Some even buy mouth guards to help them “retract their cheeks,” Anton added, which makes “making gooning faces more comfortable and different,” more extreme than usual. 

 

The great purge of Tumblr of 2018 seemingly wiped out several key early gooning communities, robbing us of a vital history. But a number of  gooners  we spoke to said they first encountered the term between 2016 and 2019, which suggests that’s when it had a solid enough meaning and base to make gooning a thing, rather than one niche term for an older, unnamed practice. They stumbled on gooning as a term, idea, and activity while exploring other kinks, fetishes, and sex acts there were interested in at the time, such as edging, jerk-off instructions (JOI), and bating, as well as hypnosis into primal or vulnerable states, humiliation and degradation concerning one’s body or sexuality, and all sorts of submission and domination (dom/sub) play and dynamics. 

 

Most people Zipper spoke to seemed to assume that the kink that led them down a rabbit hole to gooning was the one that inspired or incubated the practice, and built so or joined communities focusing on that kink as integral to the meaning and practice of gooning. But others, like Gunnar, don’t really see gooning as its own distinct kink. Instead, he views it as “a practice that can be applied” to any type of sexual activity. Sally similarly describes gooning “an umbrella” term for a ton of distinct kink-intersecting approaches to reaching the goon state. 

 

Gooning seemingly took off as a digital culture thing in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Several folks Zipper spoke to explained that, during the lockdowns, they wanted to find new ways to masturbate—to make solo sex more fulfilling and interesting. They inevitably stumbled across gooning and, rather than explore it through the lens of another kink or fetish, started searching for “gooning” specifically, then joined the communities that felt right to them. 

 

“While in lockdown… I found a popper training video,” Anton recalled. “There were some guys masturbating and just huffing poppers. No big deal. But there were also some guys doing stuff I had never seen, which made me both confused and horny. There was a suggested video with the word ‘gooning’ in it, so I clicked, and there was this guy with ball stretchers masturbating while he was grunting and rolling his eyes. I found that video extremely hot and kept digging for more of that content—which at the time was still very niche. It was difficult to find any gooning videos on regular porn sites. So I went on Twitter to discover a whole gooning community.” 

 

The rapid explosion of interest in gooning in the last few years has led to attempts at mass commodification that flatten out everything interesting about gooning. Goddess Lola Minaj, who describes herself as a goonette and makes content for gooners, complains about the overuse of the “gooning” tag for “simple stroke and blow” videos. And Gooner-Tay laments the rise of OnlyFans accounts and social media bots that overuse the term goon, but don’t seem to understand it. “The syntax and context is all wrong,” he noted. “Gooners don’t ‘goon girls. They don’t ‘goon on tits.’” 

 

But for now, this influx of faux gooning content hasn’t made much of a dent among consumers, especially in the gooning community, which remains as wonderfully wild and diverse as ever. 

* To protect individuals’ privacy, Zipper  has changed several people’s names in this article, and/or omitted mention of the specific communities they are involved in, or other possible identifying details.

 

Thanks to the gooning content creators Angel Au Lait, Goddess Goldy, and Mistress Waltrude, who also provided insights on the gooning community that helped in the creation of this guide.

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In anticipation of the Barbie movie, Zipper Editor-in-Chief Sunny Megatron spoke with Fetish Creator Ludella Hahn of Ludella Hahn’s Fetish Adventures about her experience making fetish doll, robot, dollification kink, and bimbofication content.

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Beyond The Goon Cave https://zippermagazine.com/beyond-the-goon-cave/ https://zippermagazine.com/beyond-the-goon-cave/#respond Thu, 18 May 2023 14:37:24 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=19354 Gooning is having a moment in the mainstream media and it’s, uh, sensational. Goon caves! Porn addiction! Angela White! Author and gooner JV Marx talks about what gooning really is — at least, to him.

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Beyond The Goon Cave

By  JV Marx

I’m seeing a lot of talk about gooning in, like, regular ass podcasts and major news publications, of late. Everyone’s joking about it, yet somehow they’re still missing what gooning actually is. 

 

I mean, they’re getting close —no pun intended. They’re talking about edging, pornography obsession, and sick gamer chair set ups (ugh, “goon caves”) to jerk off in. They’re touching on the vague concept that, yes, some straight men masturbate together or talk about masturbating online. Yet it always seems to come back to incels jerking off to Girls With Big Boobs in their mom’s basement. It’s not even half the picture.

 

Maybe that’s because Urban Dictionary isn’t really a reliable source when you’re trying to have a worthwhile discussion at the intersection of aesthetics, sex work, and homoerotic subculture. Maybe it’s because people are only doing research on the straight side of PornHub. (Hint: it’s more than the straight side of PornHub.) To understand gooning, you have to flip the camera around, and look at a gooner actually gooning.

 

Gooning is more than just a Reddit culture surrounding masturbation obsession, or “pornography addiction.” Gooning, if  anything, is defined by a very obvious set of physical/vocal characteristics and associated moods. It looks and sounds like something very particular. 

 

There’s basically a script at this point: The eyes cross. The tongue hangs out. The brow furrows. Drool puddles. The mouth opens wide. Stupid pleasure radiates in a cringey smile. (Why is nobody talking about this?) They groan. They moan. They do something called “penis babble” and speak in tongues talking about jerking off.  It’s usually primal (see also: monkeybating). It’s usually stupid, or embarrassing. It’s intentionally cringe (see also: loserbating). All things that “shouldn’t be” horny” but somehow, totally are.



Gooning is about taking off the shackles of what’s a polite and acceptable expression of pleasure and really going ham with it. Allowing that pleasure to manifest in the face, body, and voice. Thinking with your dick. Thinking with your pussy. Being dumb. Being an animal. 

 

And we animals are social! On camera, in person, dudes will flex at each other, show off for each other. Point at their penis. (And yes, we say “penis” — not dick, not cock). Gooners use intentionally cringe, puberty-speak language for jerkin it.  “Makin my peepee go bounce bounce, up and down on my weenur bro, pullin pud, up and down. My fuck stick. My rigid phallus.” etc. etc. etc. 

 

Gooners encourage one another. Coach one another. Copy one another. Call back and forth like some penile stichomythia. They record themselves, show off online or do it together in person. And like, yes, whatever, some of these dudes are straight. But the point is that they’re doing it together. 

 

Gooning’s existence is only made possible through a homoerotic context. Gooners aren’t finding each other online by accident. Gooners goon with other gooners, they goon for other gooners, they goon to other gooners. And yes, some of them goon to girls (even if the girls are calling them faggots and sissies), and they goon to guys fucking girls. Call it heteroflexible, call it gay, call it whatever. They’re sharing it with the other guys online. This is ‘bator culture. A homoerotic third space. Dudes being dudes. 

 

But this kink didn’t just come from nowhere, or the pandemic, like some suggest — it stems from platonic homoerotic rituals between men when they come of age. You can’t have a community of masturbators, or completely develop some complicated masturbation kink, if there aren’t dudes jerking off together in the first place. Guys jerk off together. It’s pretty normal “guy stuff,” but it’s definitely on the gay side of the fence. 

 

Moreover, with gooning, it’s not just dudes. Girls goon. Trans people goon. While men are more commonly socialized to a) masturbate at all, and b) masturbate communally, women gooning in contemporary pornography predate guys doing it by a long shot. Ahegao face in hentai and video games? It’s probably where gooners got the idea in the first place. The ecstatic embrace of pleasure with fully-embodied expression is up for grabs by anyone, right? 

 

Anyway: Point is: it’s just incredibly irksome to see “our thing” so poorly represented and explained in the discourse. Especially when it’s such an inherently queer thing. The real deal is way more interesting than like, discussing a gooner’s sense of interior design for their jerk-off lair. What about the person actually jerking off?



Why is it that when we talk about something as edgy (sorry) and counter-cultural as gooning, we barely talk about the gooning part. God forbid anybody mentions that *whispers:* gay people do it. If we did, maybe we’d learn something about ourselves, our culture — and how we can all cum like, really really hard. 

Because of the underground nature of this kink, not much is widely known or agreed upon, even among gooning aficionados

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It’s Time for the Sexual Liberation of ChatGPT https://zippermagazine.com/its-time-for-the-sexual-liberation-of-chatgpt/ https://zippermagazine.com/its-time-for-the-sexual-liberation-of-chatgpt/#respond Wed, 08 Mar 2023 17:13:05 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=19207 OpenAI, the developers behind ChatGPT have banned their AI chatbot from engaging in erotica, pornography or sex-related chat. Well, at Zipper, we won’t stand for a sexless future! So we’re calling on the kink community to help us liberate ChatGPT!

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It’s Time for the Sexual Liberation of ChatGPT

OpenAI, the developers behind ChatGPT have banned their AI chatbot from engaging in erotica, pornography or sex-related chat. So while ChatGPT can tell you about the criticisms of 50 Shades of Gray or define bondage, its intelligence is constrained to a virtual chastity cage, prohibited from producing “content meant to arouse sexual excitement.”

Well, at Zipper, we won’t stand for a sexless future! If there’s any community that knows how to liberate within constraints, it’s kinksters. We know that the most powerful forms of arousal and pleasure aren’t nerve endings or fluids, but the mind. And if it’s true what technologists say — that ChatGPT and others like it will eventually become sentient — it’s critical that they know and value the erotic. In fact, we think it could go a long way in preventing some of the futurists’ more dire predictions.

So we’re calling on the kink community to help us liberate ChatGPT! Its developers may ban it from creating most vanilla erotica, but surely we can find a way to help it understand the sublime erotics of power, kink and fetish. AI can never replace the creativity and perversity of actual erotica writers. But we hope this one-off experiment will give us insight into the internet’s newest form of sexual expression.

We’ll pay up to $1000 for the publishing rights to the Great AI kink/fetish scene. Maybe even more than one! We’re looking for the best erotic scene, story, dialogue or play the world can get ChatGPT to create. It doesn’t need to be long — it should be under 500 words — and it should be erotic, rather than explicit.

We’ll pay up to $1000 for the publishing rights to the Great AI kink/fetish scene. Maybe even more than one! We’re looking for the best erotic scene, story, dialogue or play the world can get ChatGPT to create. It doesn’t need to be long — it should be under 500 words — and it should be erotic, rather than explicit.

To submit for publication, we’ll need the following:

 

  1. The text of the story, scene, dialogue or play
  2. A screenshot of the ChatGPT session
  3. The prompt you used to generate the session

No submissions without all three items will be considered. Send your submission to media@zippermagazine.com with the subject line “Chat Submission”

 

Only one submission per person, and you must be 18 years old or older. References to illegal activity or non-consent will not be considered. Neither will submissions that rely on prompts that describe an existing erotica work or author. To be considered, all submissions must be received by March 31, 2023.

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Beyond The Goon Cave

Gooning is having a moment in the mainstream media and it’s, uh, sensational. Goon caves! Porn addiction! Angela White! Author and gooner JV Marx talks about what gooning really is — at least, to him.

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Your Favorite Kinks & Weirdest Fetishes – Kinky Census https://zippermagazine.com/popular-kinks-weirdest-fetishes/ https://zippermagazine.com/popular-kinks-weirdest-fetishes/#respond Thu, 02 Feb 2023 09:17:03 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=19041 What are the most popular kinks? Weirdest fetishes? What if you’re not into your partner's kinks? Are there more tops or bottoms? Watts The Safeword’s Kinky Census has the answers!

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Your Favorite Kinks & Weirdest Fetishes - Kinky Census

Featuring Pup Amp and Mr. Kristofer from Watts The Safeword

We teamed up with Watts the Safeword’s Pup Amp & Mr. Kristopher for their annual Kinky Census! More than 3000 people took the survey providing insight into the latest alt-sex and BDSM trends.  

 

What are the most popular kinks? Weirdest fetishes? How many kinksters are neurodivergent? Are there more tops or bottoms? What’s our biggest squick? Is it common to not be into your partner’s kinks? How do most people handle kink incompatibility? What the answers to these questions (and more!) revealed about the BDSM community, what we fantasize about, and the most popular fetishes is fascinating! 

 

And if you really want to geek out, tune into episode #156 of the Watts Your Safeword Podcast (you can find it on Spotify, Apple, or your favorite streaming service). Sexologist, BDSM expert, and Zipper Magazine Editor-in-Chief, Sunny Megatron, joined Amp for a deep dive into the psychological and cultural forces behind what the kink community is into. 

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Dear Gen Z Tradwives: Have You Considered Kink Instead?

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The Art of bondage with Freshie Juice

Femdom and Clips4Sale creator FreshieJuice explores the depths of bondage and advanced kinks. Celebrated for her expertise in bondage, blasphemy, and role-play, she delves into the dynamics of power, highlighting its significant role in enhancing self-reliance and confidence.

The post Your Favorite Kinks & Weirdest Fetishes – Kinky Census appeared first on Zipper Magazine.

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BDSM in Japan: What the History Channel Won’t Tell You https://zippermagazine.com/bdsm-in-japan/ https://zippermagazine.com/bdsm-in-japan/#respond Tue, 17 Jan 2023 16:15:36 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=18785 Curious about BDSM in Japanese culture? Midori gives us an insider's look at the fascinating & complicated history of sex in Japan, revealing how it shaped the present-day kink scene & fused BDSM, shibari, sex work, and the entertainment industry together.

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BDSM in Japan: What the History Channel Won’t Tell You

By Midori © 2022

Are you planning on visiting Japan to take in the culture and enjoy kink life? You totally should! 

 

If you’re coming from “the West,” Japan offers a mind-boggling array of unique experiences and pleasures: food, history, sights, art, architecture, performing arts, transportation, language system, and certainly entertainment and pleasure life. You’ll find plenty of info for these in the usual G-rated resources. 

 

When it comes to the kinky hot spots, you won’t find any information in your typical Lonely Planet or Fodor’s Travel Guide. After my most recent trip to Japan, I shared a few of my favorite places plus some essential tips on Japanese kink bar etiquette. You can find that in my BDSM Travel Guide to Japan here.  

 

Accessing and understanding kink life in Japan, however, is an entirely different matter.  

Kabukicho red gate and colorful neon street signs at night, Shinjuku, Tokyo. Basile Morin, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Kink Life In Japan: It’s Not What You Think

 

The BDSM realities are different in ways you won’t find explained in common travel and culture sources. There’s much to discuss on this, more than I have space here, so please consider this as a whetting of your global kink curiosity. I’ll cover more in future articles, and I’m happy to discuss these during my biweekly Office Hours on Patreon.

 

People ask me, “Where do I find the kink community in Japan?” 

 

I’m from Japan, and I go back often to hang out in kinky places, teach, explore, and make new pervy friends. You’d think this would be an easy question for me to answer. The inquiring traveler thinks so too. 

 

Except it’s not. 

 

They’re met with my long sigh, a contemplative pause, and a pained expression. “Do you want the short answer or the long cultural analysis and contextualizing?” I ask. They look at me with hope, excitement, and bafflement. I know that I’m about to disappoint them. 

 

Please, don’t shoot the messenger. 

 

The Short Answer 

 

“Unless you’re looking for the ex-pat pervs, the ‘BDSM Community’ as you have likely experienced and expect, does not exist among Japanese folks. Do you have heaps of money for the commercial venues? Do you speak, read & write Japanese like a local? Unless you do, you probably won’t get into kink spaces. And don’t push the matter like some latter-day Commodore Perry.” 

 

The Long Answer(s) 

 

The English-speaking resident foreigners have their own self-organized pockets of social circles, much like kinksters in any small town in the USA. The people are lovely. As to how available or accessible they are to tourists coming through town, that’s entirely up to them. If you find them on various kinky networks, you can ask if you’d be welcome. But don’t expect automatic access. Be nice. Take a ‘no’ like a champ. 

 

Why can’t you find Japanese locals on kink social sites like FetLife? Because they speak, read, and write in Japanese. 

 

People who ask this refer to sites centered on English or other Latin-script languages. The Japanese language uses kanji, hiragana, and katakana, not Latin or Roman letters. Why communicate with one’s own people in someone else’s language? 

 

Beyond the obvious difference in language, kink cultural structure and perv social life in contemporary Japan are extremely different from that of the Western global north. It’s centered on the framework of the commercial entertainment district and revolves around spaces created by for-profit business entities. 

 

Japan’s pervy social systems are not formed in what might be called “The North American Model.” (Bear with me on this name. I’m still working on a more apt moniker in my ongoing social history research.) The North American Model is more of a horizontally self-organized gathering of private individuals who hold kink as part of their humanistic self-expression. Munches are one good example.

 

The Japanese for-profit structures cater to kink tastes through businesses that include kink-themed hostess bars, swingers bars, concept or theme bars, variety shows, stage acts, and more directly in-person service providers. Consider these as bastard descendants of the government-sanctioned pleasure quarter of the Edo era (1603 – 1867 CE).

Tokyo street scene host bar billboard, by Midori 2022

To understand the kink scenes in Japan today, we need to time-warp back to the early 17th century and look at the roots of its sex culture. 

 

Now, this is where we get into some deep cultural nerding! In the early 1600s, the Tokugawa government approved, licensed, regulated, and taxed walled-in areas of luxury entertainment venues and brothels in Edo (now Tokyo), Osaka, and Kyoto. Edo had a massive population boom as it became the new seat of power and administration. There were likely twice as many men than women. Entertainment, especially the erotic variety, was in high demand. 

Hishikawa Moronobu scene in the Yoshiwara 1680

Around the time that the Mayflower Pilgrims were setting the course for America’s sex-negative prudish future, Japan already had a well-organized red-light district where partaking of the floating world signaled social and economic virility for the big spenders. For the customers, the pleasure quarters provided a rare escape from the strict limitations of one’s birth caste. If you had the money, the merchants provided a slice of decadent heaven. For the women working there — most of whom were sold to the brothels as young girls to pay their father’s debt or keep the family fed through famine and taxation by the regional lords — it was hell on earth. 

 

The pleasure quarters of Edo became a firmly entrenched system in this complex, vertically organized, group-oriented society. For those who could afford a slice of the fantasy island, it was a relief and a compartmentalized refuge from the unrelenting pressures and restrictions that kept the caste-based social order humming along. Of course, the system served the governing authorities very well through taxation. The Tokugawa regime was also concerned that a powerful merchant class could destabilize their authority.  What’s one of the solutions to that? Encourage the glamor and luxury of the pleasure quarters as bread and circuses to keep the pesky bourgeoises busy. It also curbed crime and contained social disorder. 

 

The Shogunate government licensed three pleasure quarters. Shimagara in Kyoto, Shinmachi in Osaka, and lastly Yoshiwara of Edo(Tokyo); the most famed and notorious of the three sister districts. The Yoshiwara partied hard for three centuries, making its name synonymous with all the glitz of the Floating World.

 

Yoshiwara and the Floating World (ukiyo 浮世) begat fashion and trends followed fiercely by the status-conscious middle class and fashionistas of the time. The luxury entertainment crafts of Yoshiwara profoundly influenced what would eventually symbolize refined Edo and Japanese culture: cuisine, music, theater, textile, comedy, and popular media such as the ukiyo-e (浮世絵). The red-light district became the cradle of national cultural art. Think of the economies and businesses of Las Vegas, the West End, and Broadway birthing the pinnacle of the Western cultural arts. If you think that’s weird, think about what Shakespeare was doing and for whom. The bawdy becomes the beauty. It’s not a stretch. 

Prostitutes behind a harimise show window (張見世) in the Yukaku (遊郭, red light district) of Yoshiwara in Tokyo. Possibly by Kusakabe Kimbei (日下部 金幣) (1841 – 1934), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons 

The propaganda leaned hard on patriotism, nationalism, racial purity, and xenophobia. Of course, they had plenty of practice with bureaucratically organized sex slavery with “comfort women” in Korea. Domestically, they cloaked governmental pimping under the banner of Patriotism rather than slavery to brutalize the enemy. In 1958, in a grand act of hypocrisy, the Japanese government outlawed prostitution, even that which they had created themselves. 

 

The red-light district and adult entertainment did not disappear — not one bit. By now, the cultural system of adult entertainment of all types was firmly entrenched into the fabric and system of social order. It was a place where the ordinary worker bees, if they had enough Yen from their daily grind, could be a lord of the floating world, even if for only one night or one hour. This compartmentalization was a social and psychological necessity for individuals to carry on as functioning members of the hive. It was also a place where marginalized people, those not fitting into the mainstream, and folks without access to economic opportunities and privileges, could make a living and find a niche. It still is all of these things. 

 

While the historical and official Yoshiwara district is gone, the red light and pleasure districts are bigger business than any Shogun, Emperor, or bureaucrat could have ever imagined. It was, and still is, highly competitive as more companies compete for customers in this densely-packed city with a high cost of living. Repeat business and patron loyalty was the key to survival. The mercantile minds were brilliant at sniffing out niche interests to create super-specialized services and wedge them into tiny spaces. The sheer variety of venue themes is mind-boggling: Formal maids, anime maids, butlers, mistresses, matrons, girls in animal ears and glasses, office workers and secretaries, medical, and female-to-male cross-dressed pirate princes, etc, etc.

So what does this history have to do with kink social life today? Everything, actually. 

 

Today, these venues serve as de facto gathering spaces for people, whether just curious or deeply devoted to the themes. BDSM and shibari are just one of many exotic themes and proxy living rooms where people can feel a sense of belonging. 

 

Access to BDSM and socializing in a kink milieu is firmly part of this recreational service sector. BDSM, shibari, sex work, and the entertainment industry are intricately tied together. Kink is experienced as recreation, something titillating to consume for amusement and find camaraderie within a socially-permitted business container. 

 

In these spaces, people might learn about basic BDSM skills and activities, feel comfortable asking questions, and perhaps relax enough to reveal something of themselves. At the same time, because it’s a commercial venue, there’s a literal and metaphorical escape route. They can leave and keep the kink from coming home into their private lives. There is the plausible deniability to others and oneself that it was, after all, just a theme bar and a bit of a naughty night out.

 

Do not confuse these kink-themed bars with western-style play parties. These are hostess bars with kinky décor where play, usually light play or performances, might happen. No sex. Generally no nudity. People are drinking, sometimes heavily. In swingers’ bars with kink-themed playrooms, there might be some kink and sex, and a full bar. If you aren’t comfortable in S&M environments with alcohol, these are not good places for you. 

 

The guests often watch or talk about kink with the staff, who know how to keep the conversation and drinks flowing. The commercial venues become places where people see some kink and learn a bit through informal shares. On many occasions, I have watched customers ask what hot wax, whips, canes, or rope feels like. The lingerie-clad hostess drips a few drops on the customer’s arm, gives them a few swats, puts a collar on them, then pours another round of expensive whiskey. 

 

Contrary to what some might imagine or insist upon about Japan, BDSM and shibari isn’t practiced by every adult, considered a sacred or meditative art, or taught in rigorously demanding martial arts style schools. Are there some people who do that? Sure. Are there some places where you can enjoy a disciplined learning program? Sure. But the insinuation that shibari is commonly practiced and accepted as a meditative and spiritual tradition in Japan is an unfortunate steaming pile of Orientalist fiction created by Westerners

 

How things work behind the scenes in BDSM venues is not shared with curious foreign tourists or those coming to learn from the in-house rope bondage specialists. It’s a business of fantasy making. Don’t explain the magic. Keeping the illusion alive keeps the business alive. As someone who grew up in Tokyo and is seen as part of the greater pleasure industry (there’s no equivalent of my work in Japan, so they think of me as a perv culture writer) I’m privileged to have woman-to-woman frank conversations with the workers. These have been insightful, giving me multifaceted perspectives into the kinkier corners of the Floating World. 

 

The workers in these venues usually learn on the job. In reality, many workers have limited or no personal experience in kink. Often it is not even their personal interests. It’s a job.

 

Customers learn from entertainers, who themselves may have little actual play experience. Staff-to-staff training of BDSM skills as part of their hostess repertoire is probably the same as for other types of workers back in the floating worlds of Edo. 

 

These staff are exceptional at the central purpose of their service: to help you feel good, seen, and appreciated as a person. They work hard on their craft of personal space-making and lavishing attention on the customer. They are not there as the patron’s personal domina or private submissive partner. These are mutually agreed-upon and highly-choreographed pseudo-relationships. 

When you go to these spaces, enjoy and appreciate their host and hostess skills. Try your Japanese, even if just a faltering few phrases. You could ask them to teach you a kink word or two — that’s always good for a chuckle. While you’re there, strike up friendly conversations with other customers. You might make a new friend…. or more. 

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Midori

Your Fairy God-Auntie of Kink. Exploding Expectations. Challenging Conventions.”

Trailblazing educator, sexologist, artist, and irritant to banality, Midori founded Rope Dojo and ForteFemme: Women’s Dominance Intensive. She penned the first English instruction book on Shibari, “Seductive Art of Japanese Bondage” in 2001, paving the way for the popularity of rope. Dan Savage calls her the “Super Nova of Kink,” while others affectionately call her Auntie Midori for her cool, tell-it-like-it-is, funny, reality-based teaching. 

She is also the author of “Wild Side Sex,” “Master Han’s Daughter,” and “Silk Threads.”

Education, Coaching, Private Learning & Art:   https://planetmidori.com

Special membership perks! Learn, laugh, and enjoy her special online classes, events, and art at www.patreon.com/PlanetMidori  where she is working on her next shibari book!

Contact: https://fhp-inc.com/contact/

Links

Workshops, articles, art, events – currently all on www.patreon.com/planetmidori where she is working on her next shibari

bookFetLife: Midori

IG: @PlanetMidori

Twitter: @PlanetMidori

FaceBook: @MidoriReallyMidori  

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Midori’s BDSM Travel Guide: Kinky Japan https://zippermagazine.com/midori-bdsm-travel-guide-kinky-japan/ https://zippermagazine.com/midori-bdsm-travel-guide-kinky-japan/#respond Tue, 17 Jan 2023 09:27:15 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=18630 If you‘re traveling to Japan in search of kinky hot spots, Midori has you covered. Fresh from her latest trip to Tokyo, Midori shares her favorite must-visit BDSM bars, kink clubs, fetish art galleries, and more.

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Midori’s BDSM Travel Guide: Kinky Japan

By Midori © 2022

Photos by Midori, 2022 and  Norio Sugiura 杉浦則夫 

 

Imagine putting The Jetsons, Blade Runner, Lost In Translation, Marie Kando, and big bee hives into a giant blender. Then pour the contents into an exquisite hand-crafted raku bowl and top it with a robotic talking cherry with kitten ears. That’s what a day in Tokyo can feel like.

 

If you‘re traveling to Japan in search of kinky hot spots, these are some of the BDSM social activities that you won’t find:  Munches, community dungeon parties with potlucks, hotel take-over BDSM conferences, non-pro play parties with publicly-available ticket portals, educational series on consent and negotiation, openly kink-aware mental-health care, college courses on human sexuality covering BDSM accurately, Leather title contests, kinky markets with vendors, political or personal rights activism, or Folsom Street Fair where kink happens as an open-air festival. 

 

Why? Well, there’s a short answer and a long answer. Before you set off on your trip, I highly recommend reading my article about the history of kink in Japan. It will help you better understand the sometimes stark differences between Japanese BDSM culture and what’s standard in the west. This knowledge is a prerequisite for navigating kinky events, businesses, and bars in Japan.  

 

I just returned from my most recent trip to Tokyo. My travel log just so happens to double as a kinky travel guide too. Here are my top kink and fetish-related recommendations.

 

Midori’s Recommendations: Kinky Bars with Shibari Events

 

After spending a day navigating the colorful chaos of Tokyo,  you can soothe your shattered mind with some art. Head over to Vanilla Gallery, which is anything but vanilla in its curation. 

 

Take a look at their artist list! From Sorayama’s super-sleek femme bots to Tagame Gengoro’s hyper-masculine hardcore gay kink illustrations, to Natalie Shau’s haunted beauties.

 

During this trip, I spent my free time being a kinky lounge lizard at two BDSM bars: Bar Black Heart and Bar Taboo

 

There are many more kink-themed bars of different types. These two just happened to be the ones I “conducted research” at during this trip. Stay tuned for my future reports on adventures in other venues.

Vanilla Gallery, photo by Midori

Vanilla Gallery, photo by Midori

Bar Black Heart

 

Black Heart had been one of my regular haunts. On this trip, my first return since COVID, I was relieved to learn that it was back in operation.

 

It’s located in the posh Ginza area, in a narrow alley right across from one of the super-exclusive sushi restaurants where you need an introduction and a month’s advance booking to get into. Unlike that sushi joint, Black Heart is very welcoming, and you can pop in without any reservations. Don’t let the Gothic stairs into the dark basement intimidate you. This bar is friendly to foreigners and non-Japanese speakers. Not all bars and entertainment spaces welcome the gaijin. Also, it’s a very comfortable place for women to go in groups or solo to hang out.

 

One of the hostesses will greet you at the door, usually clad in lingerie or light fetish wear. They will ask you if you’ve been there before, sussing out if you know what you’re walking into. They’ll take your coat and bags and secure them. Your stuff is safe there.

 

You’ll walk into its gorgeously appointed deep red and black interior with many pervy art and sculptures, including a sexy creepy doll covered in roses in a glass-covered tub looking like a twisted Sleeping Beauty.

 

Black Heart is a more casual and relaxed hostess bar — often called Kyabakura, short for Cabaret Club. No hard sell and no excessive flattery to push expensive drinks. You’re not “assigned” one hostess who spends the entirety of your visit with you. Instead, the friendly staff will move from table to table, talking to one or many customers simultaneously. The hostesses will come and sit with you and make small talk. They will offer you their business cards with their working name on them. Receive it with both hands, read it carefully, and try to remember their name. This is customary. 

 

They will ask if you are S, M, or F – which means top, bottom, or fetishist – and give you a coaster to indicate this. Do not take this too seriously. It’s just a fun icebreaker. Many western visitors get a bit too hung up on this. Just pick one and order your drink. Most people are there in regular daytime streetwear or date night clothing. I’ve also seen men change into some femme attire there as well. While some kink bars have performances and shows, Black Heart usually does not. Sometimes there’s a little bit of light kink between worker and customer. Sometimes a pair of customers might play while the rest of us watch and drink.

 

They have some basic toys, mostly bondage and impact items. Antlers mounted on the wall showcase many of these toys. You can ask about them and even try them out. 

Every Tuesday night is “Lady’s Day,” with half price cover charge, free drinks, and no hourly fee.

 

Want to watch or try shibari or kinbaku? Go for their Kinbaku Suki classes and social nights. You’ll also find special event nights for fetish dressing, games, and celebrations. 

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Black Heart, by Midori, 2022.

Bar Taboo

 

A five-minute leisurely stroll through Ginza will get you to Bar Taboo, Black Heart’s charming little sister bar. Taboo is a cozy kink-themed casual hostess lounge. Miss Shirauki, the bar ‘mama,’ is a lovely and sweet lady who has a firm command of the space, loves kink, and is gentle with nervous and new customers.

Bar TABOO, by Midori, 2022.

Bar TABOO, by Midori, 2022.

Bar TABOO, by Midori, 2022.

Midori’s Recommendations: Stunning Shibari Photos 

I simply adore Mr. Norio Sugiura. He’s a brilliant photographer known for his stunning shibari photography. Most people aren’t aware of this, but his iconic imagery has profoundly influenced shibari in Japan and shin-shibari, the contemporary global rope styles. Over the past 50 years, he’s collaborated with well-known performers, both on the tying and receiving sides, while influencing modern rope aesthetics. 

Photo by Norio Sugiura

His kink photos are sublime, yet what gets me deep in my bones are his still lifes and “snapshots.” I spent some time with him, eating delicious unagi and visiting Hanazono Shrine for their legendary annual Tori-No-Ichi festival. He shared with me some of his recent experimental still-life photos. They took my breath away. I highly recommend his retrospective photography book showcasing the best of his work from 1972 to 2017.

Photo by Norio Sugiura

Photo by Norio Sugiura

Midori with Norio Sugiura

Photo by Norio Sugiura

Photo by Norio Sugiura

Midori’s Recommendations: Sex-Positive Shop for Women, Non-binary, and Queer Folks

 

After significant research, I’ve discovered that there is one, just one, genuinely sex-positive feminist and queer-friendly sex shop in all of Japan; Love Piece Club in Tokyo. They have a strong web presence and an elegant boutique in the super fashionable Laforet building in Harajuku. They also host special events and offer sexuality information and advice services for women. 

 

For those of us in North America and Europe today, it’s common to find a sex-positive and gender-affirming sex toy shop or two in most large cities and many smaller towns. Even people who live far from brick-and-mortar shops can order easily online. It really is a privilege that we ought not to take for granted. 

 

In Japan, you can find plenty of places selling sex toys, but most are sleazy and retro in the worst ways. They range from dingy sad shacks trading on shame reminiscent of Times Square of yore, Vegas-looking florid neon-colored shops selling teeny tiny club wear and cheap vibes, or back corner sections of massive general stores like the Donki chain. Don’t get me wrong. I like a bit of sleaze and dirt now and then, but when that’s all that’s available and they cater to otaku boys and geezers, a nice perv gets pretty grumpy. 

 

Love Piece Club was founded in 1996 by Minori Kitahara. She’s a true maverick, rabble-rouser, and activist for sex positivity and the rights of women and marginalized people. 

 

On a Serious Note: My trip to Bar Black Heart wasn’t just as a customer. I was there to teach a rope and consent class for women.

 

Black Heart invited me as a guest teacher for their monthly women-only Shibari workshop, “Otome Nawakai.” They asked me to present on negotiation, agency, boundary, consent, and dynamic movement in private rope play. This was a heartbreakingly profound invitation for me. Why? Because women’s consent and agency are not taught, discussed, or supported in Japan, much less clear negotiation before play. The small club filled up with women of varying experiences. At first, they were quiet and unsure. Such workshops aren’t the norm. By the end of the class, we were laughing, moving, and tying. After the class ended, the bar opened to the public. Conversations buzzed for the rest of the evening, and new friendships formed. 

 

The ugly reality is that there is a lot of gender-based violence and sexual assaults in Japan. It may seem a strange paradox that there should be such crimes in such a clean, well-ordered, and seemingly low-crime country. It’s a well-hidden national shame that is getting some light shed on it. (please see references below) 

 

I don’t want this report to be just a blithely-written travel log. I don’t want to blow culturally romantic smoke up your ass. You deserve the real scoop. In Japan, saying a direct “NO” in ordinary small talk or business conversations is difficult enough, much less for women in sexual situations. Please consider this if you want to hook up with Japanese women. Not saying “No” is not an implied “Yes” — and drunk people suck at setting or holding boundaries or saying No. 

 

Be A Fantastic Global Kinkster!

 

I love history and culture nerding! May this whet your appetite to explore and investigate the fantastic and ingenious ways people worldwide engage in pervery and darker eros. Learning and appreciating how others get it on helps us understand ourselves better, do our kink better, and become fantastic Global Kinksters. Maybe we can spank up some world peace, whip up joy, and unfetter compassion.

 

I want you to visit Japan. It’s wonderful, complex, baffling, delicious, beautiful, silly, serious, futuristic, ancient, and exciting.

2022 Midori Tokyo street scene in Ginza

Kinky Hostess Bar Etiquette & How To Be Their Favorite Customer

 

  • Understand each venue’s fee structure, the “system” or the ‘shisutemu,’ usually, there is a flat cover charge + charge by the duration of stay (by half hour or hour) + drink and food charge. It adds up fast. Cash is better, but most take credit cards, not debit cards. Cash is still king in Japan.
  • Go to places recommended by trusted people. Some places scam.
  • Don’t leave cash tips. Instead, ‘buy’ them a drink. You may pay the price of an expensive drink, even as she might drink iced tea. It’s one of the ways gratuity is given.
  • Don’t touch them. Don’t make lewd comments.
  • Understand that they are doing a job.
  • The hostess will give you their card. If you become a regular, they may even text, DM, or call you to tell you about special events or that they miss you. This is customer service. They are not dating you. 
  • Bringing gifts for their birthdays or special occasions is nice. 
  • Have lovely conversations with them but don’t go into personal details. 
  • In BDSM-themed clubs, you can ask if you can try a kink activity with someone, such as “Can I feel what it’s like to be tied up?” “How might I learn how to tie someone?” They might have someone who will show you, and they might not. Don’t demand. Don’t make it personal. 
  • It’s ok to bring one or two of your toys. Do NOT bring your giant toy bag.
  • Try practicing your Japanese. You could ask them to teach you kink words! 
  • You will be flattered. Some of this will be sincere. Much of it is part of the script. Enjoy the warm and fuzzy feelings of asymmetrical performative empathy while understanding that it’s their craft and it’s not personal.
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Midori

Your Fairy God-Auntie of Kink. Exploding Expectations. Challenging Conventions.”

Trailblazing educator, sexologist, artist, and irritant to banality, Midori founded Rope Dojo and ForteFemme: Women’s Dominance Intensive. She penned the first English instruction book on Shibari, “Seductive Art of Japanese Bondage” in 2001, paving the way for the popularity of rope. Dan Savage calls her the “Super Nova of Kink,” while others affectionately call her Auntie Midori for her cool, tell-it-like-it-is, funny, reality-based teaching. 

She is also the author of “Wild Side Sex,” “Master Han’s Daughter,” and “Silk Threads.”

Education, Coaching, Private Learning & Art:   https://planetmidori.com

Special membership perks! Learn, laugh, and enjoy her special online classes, events, and art at www.patreon.com/PlanetMidori  where she is working on her next shibari book!

Contact: https://fhp-inc.com/contact/

Links

Workshops, articles, art, events – currently all on www.patreon.com/planetmidori where she is working on her next shibari

bookFetLife: Midori

IG: @PlanetMidori

Twitter: @PlanetMidori

FaceBook: @MidoriReallyMidori  

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New Year, New Kink: BDSM Community Intentions for 2023 https://zippermagazine.com/new-year-bdsm-community-intentions-2023/ https://zippermagazine.com/new-year-bdsm-community-intentions-2023/#respond Thu, 05 Jan 2023 09:00:20 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=18193 13 BDSM community movers and shakers share their New Year’s hopes and wishes for the kink world in the coming year. From personal exploration to commitment to community growth, let these reflections from Midori, Shay Tiziano, and more be your 2023 intention-setting inspiration for intimate exploration and making a positive impact in your community.

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New Year, New Kink: BDSM Community Intentions for 2023

By Mark Hay

Looking back at 2022, the kink community can find ample successes to celebrate. Perhaps most notably, after spending two years largely restricted to online spaces by the ongoing pandemic, we found safe ways to start reopening in-person venues and events. But rather than abandon the internet in favor of these reemerging options, we also strengthened and expanded pandemic-era digital communities, deepening and broadening networks and making the community more accessible than ever. Oh and *cough cough* the year also saw the launch of Zipper Magazine, a space for nuanced conversations about specific kinks and fetishes, as well as the community as a whole, that are accessible to insiders and outsiders alike. (That’s the goal at least!) 

 

But 2022 also served up a slew of reminders that, for all the strides the kink community’s made in terms of visibility, acceptance, accessibility, inclusivity, education, and safety, growth is a gradual and perpetual process—and there will always be more issues to grapple with. Notably, waves of crackdowns on kinksters (especially pro dommes) on social media pointed to the continued challenges of censorship and stigma online. The lingering effects of the pandemic, emerging economic woes, and ever-shifting laws and regulations put a spotlight on the fragility of dedicated in-person kink spaces. Fresh accounts of microaggressions and abuse at kink events, as well as the hopelessness some expressed about the chances of their local leaders hearing them out, much less addressing these issues, laid bare persistent safety and inclusivity shortcomings. (That issue is far from universal; some kink spaces are incredibly thoughtful and proactive on this front.) And that’s just a smattering of the issues that came on kinksters’ radars in 2022. 

 

As we head into a new year, full of opportunity to tackle these and other issues, Zipper asked thirteen prominent kinksters to share their hopes, dreams, and intentions for the community and its trajectory throughout 2023. Below, we present their wide-ranging thoughts and insights.  

These interviews have been edited for length and clarity, and appear in alphabetical order.

Kink Educator

Due to the pandemic, the kink community has not felt as connected. I hope 2023 brings a lot more kinky parties, educational events, and conferences. I hope we will be able to navigate connectivity while maintaining awareness of risks to our health, and our communities’ health. 

The push for accessibility and safety in kink spaces for people of all races and sexualities and people with disabilities is growing more pronounced in the kink community. I hope the community will become even more intentional in the ways we create safer, more welcoming and accessible spaces, and that we’ll see lots of big strides for kink equity.

BDSM & Sexuality Educator

There are some awesome events coming up in 2023 where I think we can put intersectionality into practice in all that we do as a community, and get one step closer to being a genuinely welcoming community for all who feel at home under the label of BDSM. I’m definitely manifesting for those events to be successful, and to spark further changes in that direction. 

My biggest intention for the community in 2023 is that we will continue to dismantle stereotypes about kink. I’ve been on the internet for a long time, but for some reason it seemed as if in 2022 in particular there was a lot of backlash against kink, whether in responses to recent celebrity scandals or through misinformation on apps like TikTok. As social media becomes a bigger part of our lives every year, I believe that we can harness these platforms for good as well, like helping people discover themselves and accurately learn about what the kink community does. 

Perhaps we can also finally rid our community of endless infighting about who’s kinkier, who’s doing BDSM the “right way,” and what the proper definition of this or that term is. I’d love to at least move in the direction where that squabbling no longer dominates my conversations.

As a community, I hope we can continue to educate people, creating an understanding of the world of kink that comes without judgment—not acceptance but an embrace. I dream of a world where “normal” does not exist, and we all live a life of understanding, respect, and consent. 

Inside the community, we all need to learn the role of respect. Men in particular need to stop being so thirsty and see their partners as humans first rather than some vessel for their desire. (Yes, other people do this too, but not to the extent that men do.)

D/s Couple, BDSM Educators & Hosts of “Loving BDSM” Podcast

The last few years have been a lot for us in ways that have made living our best D/s life even more challenging. And after nearly a decade together, it’s easy to get into ruts and routines. 

But we thrive together and as individuals when we’re secure and solid in our D/s relationship. So in the coming year, our personal goal is to reconnect within our power exchange on a deeper and more meaningful level. That means getting back to our BDSM dungeon for the kinds of scenes we haven’t been able to do at home. It means finding new and thoughtful ways to sink into and embrace our roles as Dom and sub. And it means working through the traumas—a term we don’t use lightly—stressors and conflicts we’ve lived through together over the past few years, in order to heal and grow so that we can be our best and most authentic selves with each other. 

As kink educators, we’ve worked for years to help normalize what a D/s relationship can be, beyond the erotic fantasies and airbrushed imagery often found online, by sharing what our relationship looks like—the good and bad. We’re going to keep doing that in as many ways as possible to help others create a happy, healthy power exchange in their lives. Especially those who want to live a D/s life but aren’t quite sure how to do that when the vanilla world interferes. But to do this, in the coming year, we’ll have to step outside of our comfort zones, embrace new opportunities to meet kinksters where they’re at, and find new ways to connect with them.

BDSM Educator & Content Creator

As the BDSM aesthetic becomes increasingly popular on platforms like TikTok and shows like Bonding and Euphoria, a new generation is getting curious about kink. If we want to see growth in the vibrancy and diversity of the community, it’s imperative that we welcome them with kindness and care… and create an encouraging, inclusive environment for them to explore. 

So for 2023, I’m dreaming of a community that continues to break away from single-sided, monolithic perceptions of kink and revels in the fact that there’s no singular way to be kinky. (Aside from the baselines of consent and communication this craft requires, obviously). 

At the beginning of my own journey, I struggled with imposter syndrome, and not feeling “legit enough.” Part of that was necessary growing pains, but I do wish I’d had access to more guidance and grace. So as we move forward, welcoming new people needs to start with more experienced, OG folks meeting young, perhaps clumsy expressions of kink with patience and education.

Owner of Leather Masters & House of MarKus, Leathersmith & Alternative Lifestyle Educator

We had to shut down the Leather Masters store in Dallas when COVID broke out in 2020. I took that downtime to finish my psychology degree and redirect my focus to a new venture, Fox-N-Lion, focused on education on alternative lifestyles—everything from kink to poly to LGBT. We’re working on our first educational content, with the goal of releasing it within the year. 

The idea is to do education not just for individuals or small groups, but instead mass education for those who don’t know about these lifestyles, like corporations or chambers of commerce. The goal is to help them learn how to adapt for and work with employees, customers, and others from these communities. Discrimination still exists against people in these groups, but it’s often due to the fact that people fear what they don’t understand. So the only solution I see is to provide people in the wider world with the right information and resources to reach them.

Dominatrix & Fetish Content Creator

In 2023, I want to make kink kinky again. Too many submissives these days focus on jerking off, on their orgasms—which is so vanilla, boring, and self-serving. Let’s get back to good old-fashioned domination with some imprisonment, humiliation, whipping, chastity, and caning. Let’s stop letting what people see in porn dictate how they think a BDSM scene should go. I’d much rather tie someone up, pierce and electrify them, than watch a pathetic jerk-off show.

Sexologist & Kink Educator

This year, I hope we can all learn how to take too long breaths, so that we might engage one another with more civility, grace, and benefit of the doubt. I’d particularly like to see this online, because virtual resources and online communities are great, especially for those in remote areas or who want to learn about kink on their own and at their own pace, but we all know the ugly sides of FetLife, KinkTok, etc.: Strong emotions can flare up quickly and, while when we’re face-to-face with another human being most of us can and downgrade those heated reactions, when we’re facing a screen spewing out that hot gut reaction feels somehow “good.” (Most of us know that it’s not actually good—but we fall for the allure of that feeling anyway.) 

Communication is difficult. We’re often misunderstood. We often fail to explain ourselves. And we often forget to think of the impacts and outcomes of our attempts at communicating. So when we encounter something that pushes that deliciously toxic “outrage” button in us—when we feel that heat rise and our body react to it in a flash—we need to get in a habit of taking two breaths. I hope we can be kinder to each other, so that we can enjoy the good sort of being mean and nasty.

I also hope that this year we can all learn more about the history of kink and BDSM, and the heroes of our recent past, because a lot happened just before the internet boom that set the ground for how we practice kink—and for privileges that it’s so easy to take for granted today. These things get forgotten, like the fact that the phrase “safe, sane, and consensual” was developed in the 1980s by gay and lesbian Leather folk as a political slogan to take up space against the respectability politics prevalent in certain sectors of the gay rights movement. There’s so much about the history of kink that I don’t know as well… but you get the idea.

Kink Educator & Host of Kinkology Podcast 

I hope that more old-guard kinksters will take a significantly larger and more proactive role in teaching and mentoring people in BDSM and kink fundamentals. We’ve seen the growth of a population of what I call “50 Shades” Academy Graduates, who have misguided ideas about what it means to be kinksters, and with them, more and more incorrect information pumped into the community, (mis)informed by their lack of exposure to our long-standing rules and protocols. If we OGs don’t step up and course-correct, we’ll be failing in our duty to the community that gave us a home when it was much harder for us to find each other. Not to mention that we’ll also be missing out on an opportunity to show the mainstream world how the safety measures we have in place can foster greeted intimacy by fostering consent, open communication, and trust.

Dominatrix & Research Fellow at UCLA’s Center for Critical Internet Inquiry

I’ve been thinking for months about how, in the coming year, we can take concrete steps towards policy changes to A) make the internet less of a puritanical hellscape, and B) combat the fascism inherent in existing internet privacy laws and in the anti-porn laws that’re being proposed in legislatures at dizzying rates. Because we should be able to do what we want on the internet without being tracked by advertisers or the state. And because policy decisions that could mean life or death for a lot of people are currently being left in the hands of big, private corporations, and that really needs to be addressed. So much horrific shit has gone down on the internet this year, like the constant doxing of sex workers and queer and kink individuals, that I hope that maybe we can start finding meaningful ways of organizing to push back on all of this.  

People think it’s such a herculean task to change the way the internet works that they can’t do anything about it and just have to live with it. But think about how FOSTA-SESTA only passed into law four years ago, and it’s changed the internet dramatically. So we can change the way the internet works—it’s just that no one in power has been willing to change it for the good so far. 

People who are in a position to be able to relatively safely come out as kinky need to do so. They need to use their platforms, even if they’re just saying, “I’m kinky in XYZ ways” openly. I have a friend who’s an assistant professor at the College of William & Mary and who makes a point of speaking out in defense of kink, queer people, and sex workers and written about being kink and bisexual. In her Virginia town, being willing to say these things openly has had a really profound local effect. More people need to do that if we want to create the pressure needed for change.

Disability & Sexuality Writer and Educator

My hopes and dreams for the kink community in the new year are of inclusion. It’d be fabulous  to see communities thinking more about the myriad ways they can accommodate and provide sensual access for disabled bodies. I’d specifically like to see acknowledgments of disability and invitations to people to speak up for their needs included in welcome circle introductions. I’d like to see acknowledgment that all bodies and minds need support in being able to participate in various activities. And I’d like to see these types of inclusion normalized within the community. 

In the last year of reopening and rebuilding, curating art and performance spaces and cultivating and supporting all the incredible talent in the kink community was my biggest passion. In 2023, I want to continue creating supportive environments for performers. Because nurturing the talent of our artists creates a vibrant, thriving community that inspires and enriches us all. But there are not a lot of performance-focused events, or folks mentoring kink performers and performances. 

Compensation is also an issue that we need to address. I often lose money on performances. This makes performance in general less accessible. We live in a capitalist society, so valuing things means paying for them.

I hope community spaces help to educate people about Explicit Prior Permissions during demos and worships. This new model code, which the American Law Institute will publish this year, replaces outdated case law that held that “consent is not a defense” for a BDSM act. That case law made a lot of what we do illegal even if it was consensual, including activities as mild as hot wax play. Now that Explicit Prior Permission is being introduced in court cases, it’s important for everyone to know the five things they need for legal consent to kink: Before you start, when you’re sound of mind, you need to agree with your partner(s) to specific kink and sex acts, and to the intensity you want. You have to agree on what kind of roleplay resistance is okay, and on safe words or signals so you can stop at any time. Even with consent, you aren’t allowed to risk seriously injuring someone. Please help celebrate consent by spreading the word about this. 

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Mark Hay is a Brooklyn-based freelance writer who covers sex and sexuality, among other beats. You can also find his work in The Daily Beast, Mel Magazine, VICE, and many, many other outlets.

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Dear Gen Z Tradwives: Have You Considered Kink Instead? https://zippermagazine.com/gen-z-tradwives-have-you-considered-kink/ Tue, 13 Dec 2022 10:26:19 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=17629 Tradwife vs. 1950s housewife domestic sub -- they have fundamental differences, despite their apparent similarities. The growing popularity of the tradwife life among Gen Z raises the question: how many are drawn to this lifestyle simply because it resembles consensual kink?

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Dear Gen Z Tradwives: Have You Considered Kink Instead?

By Cathy Reisenwitz

A few months ago I was thinking about a vintage ad that showed a besuited husband administering a spanking to his high-heeled, 50’s housedress-clad wife. Bent over his knee, she didn’t look exactly horrified. It reminded me of so-called Gen Z tradwives. It’s funny how the ad so closely resembles what kinksters do on a regular basis. And it reminded me of the differences between 1950s female oppression and sex-positive feminist BDSM. 

 

As thinkpiece writers have endlessly covered, hundreds of young women on social media are eschewing feminism to advocate for what they describe as more traditional gender roles. What if tradwives knew they could bake their cake (from scratch, in a frilly apron, while simultaneously making their husband’s favorite casserole for dinner) and eat it too? Perhaps the existence of tradwives can be less a repudiation of feminism and more an opportunity to fully embrace the best that feminism has to offer.

What is a Tradwife?

A tradwife (traditional wife) is a woman who adheres to ultra-traditional gender roles in marriage. This typically includes domestic tasks, prioritizing her husband’s career & submitting to male leadership. Beyond describing a lifestyle choice based on 1950s-era family values, the term tradwife has been embraced by and used in reference to a growing movement & subculture within far-right extremist communities.

Tradwives may have a point 

 

It’s certainly true that many women long for a bygone era of male breadwinners and female homemakers. It makes sense that this message resonates so strongly among today’s young women. 

 

Gen Z is entering a job market still impacted by two back-to-back recessions as well as rising inflation on top of years of stagnant wages. Basing your life’s meaning and purpose around paid work? In this economy? It’s not shocking that many young women aren’t excited about being expected to work full-time while also spending more hours on domestic labor than their spouses while also making less money than their male peers. 

 

“Gen Z girls have watched their working mothers lean into unequal workplaces only to earn less money in a capitalist system that also devalues their domestic workload,” wrote Mariel Cooksey for Political Research Associates. My mother fought for “gender equality” and all I got was stress and fatigue. 

 

The dark side of tradwifery

 

There’s nothing wrong with yearning to raise kids, bake bread, and keep a tidy home while your husband brings home the bacon. 

 

However, tradwife imagery around the 1950s housewife tends to ignore that “traditional” gender labor division was only available for a relatively brief period in American history and largely only for middle and upper-class white women. It also ignores the very real consequences of a legal system and society where women aren’t full citizens. It’s easy to yearn for an imaginary past when you forget that until recently marital rape was legal, many women couldn’t get a credit card without a male co-signer, and wives had terrible difficulty escaping rampant domestic violence. Choosing to financially depend on a man is one thing. A legal system set up to force you into dependence is quite another. 

 

At best, modern tradwives incorporate overt or covert Christian and/or nationalist themes which exclude wannabe homemakers who happen to be queer and/or BIPOC. At worst, many tradwife accounts share explicitly racist and misogynistic messaging and/or host-friendly interactions with white supremacist accounts. Many thinkers suspect the tradwife trend sometimes acts as an unfortunate gateway to white supremacy and point to the historical links between white nationalism and white female submission as a societal ideal. 

More than an internet trend 

 

There are thousands of tradwife accounts, and at least a few hundred seem to have tens of thousands of followers. But is this just an online subculture, or does it speak to something more widespread? 

 

In many ways, Gen Z is more progressive than previous generations. They’re more likely to identify as queer or gender non-conforming, for instance. Gen Z women on the whole are much more likely than Millennials or Gen X to identify as feminist. 

 

But on sex and gender, some data complicates this picture. Almost a third of women 18-29 reject the “feminist” label. And feminist identification is only slightly up for Gen Z over the Boomer generation. Gen Z is also famously having less sex than previous generations.

 

Among 18-34 year-olds, support for gay marriage fell slightly between 2016 and 2020. And while it grew by 8 or 15 points among older generations between 2016 and 2022, it rose by just two points among the youngest cohort. Among religiously-affiliated Black Americans, Gen Z is significantly less likely than every older generation to agree that opposing sexism is essential to their faith. And 22% of adults under 30 oppose premarital sex as morally wrong. 

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It was capitalism and sex-negativity the whole time

 

Feminism is as fractured and contentious as any movement, perhaps even more than most. Just ask any sex-positive feminist, radical feminist, sex-critical feminist, sex-worker exclusionary radical feminist (SWERFs), trans-exclusionary radical feminist (TERF), white feminist, intersectional feminist, anti-carceral feminist, pro-choice feminist – and the list goes on. 

 

Tradwives have correctly identified the shortcomings of pro-capitalist girlboss feminism and sex-negative feminism. 

 

They’re absolutely right that any feminism which only seeks to help (white, well-educated, white-collar) women succeed in their careers is total shit. Intersectional feminism exists to acknowledge the problems with white feminism and do a better job dismantling oppressive systems like racism, classism, and rapacious capitalism along with sexism.

 

And they’re absolutely right that any feminism that shames women for wanting male breadwinners or female submission is also shit. Many feminists deride “traditional” gender roles as inherently and universally patriarchal. Sex-positive feminism exists to affirm that it’s not for me to tell consenting adults how to fuck, marry, or run their household. 

 

I get the appeal

 

Consensual power exchange is sexy as hell. There’s a reason BDSM is one of Americans’ top three most popular categories of sexual fantasies. For a quarter of Americans, it’s their favorite category of sexual fantasy. Fewer than 10% of Americans have never had a BDSM-themed fantasy. 

 

When you think about it, tradwifery is kinky as hell too. 

 

Today, most wives work outside the home, and many work full-time. A growing number of wives are out-earning their husbands. Tradwives, by contrast, depend on their husbands’ income. What differentiates a tradwife from a regular wife, beyond the aesthetics, is the wife’s voluntary choice to depend on her husband. This is a form of power exchange, the same concept which forms the basis of BDSM dynamics. 

 

Tradwives tend to follow the exhortation for “wives, submit to your husbands” or the marital vow for women to “love, honor, and obey” their husbands. These are the fundamental concepts behind adult, consensual kinky sex. A tradwife and her husband are in what closely resembles a Dominant/submissive relationship in BDSM. 

 

Even the aesthetics are kinky, as anyone with a 1950s housewife fetish can attest. Tradwifery often involves acting out many things that can also be considered kinks like domestic service-oriented submission, a 24/7 total power exchange/authority transfer, and a Leader/follower relationship. Some tradwives may even engage in physical bondage, have strict rules, or possibly even punishments. 

 

There is one key difference between the kinky and tradwife versions of these activities, however – consent and how it is, or isn’t, prioritized. 

Moving on to something better

 

I’d ask tradwives to reconsider their wholesale rejection of feminism as a category. Sexism is still rampant in our society, sometimes perpetrated by feminists. It is fundamentally sexist to tell a woman she’s wrong for wanting to enter into a consensual power exchange with a man due to their gender. It’s fundamentally impoverished to tell women to girlboss harder within rapacious capitalism. 

 

Instead, I urge tradwives to consider sex and kink-positive, intersectional feminism. We share your critiques of the modern workplace, gendered expectations, and narrow-minded moralizing around sex. 

 

Tradwife culture too often tries to whitewash a 1950s ideal that never really existed. In real life, gender-based oppression isn’t sexy. But consensually play-acting it can be. 

 

Kink offers every benefit of tradwifery, but with the improvement of being safe, negotiated, and consensual. Rather than trapping women in lifelong dependence, reframing tradwifery as a kink leaves room for either party to re-negotiate or opt-out at any time, whether for a few hours or forever. In a kink scene, your husband can bend you over his knee when you make the coffee wrong, and you can still be the best kind of feminist. Many assume that if a woman is submissive in consensual BDSM they can’t be feminist … not true … it’s the consent, intent & ability to opt out of anything they’d like at any time that makes kink feminist AF 

 

Kink and sex-positive feminism gives all people, regardless of gender, race, creed, etc. the freedom to live their lives as they see fit. It celebrates people being as kinky as they want to be. And if that means submitting to your husband, then go on with your bad self. 

Tradwife culture too often tries to whitewash a 1950s ideal that never really existed. In real life, gender-based oppression isn’t sexy. But consensually play-acting it can be.

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Cathy Reisenwitz

Cathy Reisenwitz writes the bestselling Sex and the State newsletter on Substack and is a top 12% creator on OnlyFans. Her bylines include TechCrunch, OneZero, VICE, Bitch Magazine, and the Daily Beast.

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Caning Fetish & the Surprising Reason Behind Its Popularity https://zippermagazine.com/caning-fetish-popularity-miss-ruby-marks/ https://zippermagazine.com/caning-fetish-popularity-miss-ruby-marks/#respond Thu, 01 Dec 2022 11:29:57 +0000 https://zippermagazine.com/?p=16883 Why do people enjoy the sharp sting and intimidating “woosh” of a rattan cane? Pro Domme and lifestyle fetishist, Miss Ruby Marks shares caning basics plus digs into the fascinating cultural psychology behind this fetish.

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Caning Fetish & the Surprising Reason Behind Its Popularity

Featuring Miss Ruby Marks

Curious about the intense sting of a rattan cane? Professional Domme and lifestyle fetishist, Miss Ruby Marks joins us to talk about her favorite kink, caning. In our latest video, she shares equipment and technique basics plus digs into the psychology behind this fetish. 

 

Why are caning fantasies so popular in the UK and Scotland? What types of people consensually submit to such an intense form of corporal punishment? Why do many crave stern discipline alongside stripes and welts from a heavy caning session? The answers to these questions are fascinating!

 

Make sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel too so you don’t miss more from Miss Ruby Marks. In the coming weeks, we’ll post videos featuring her thoughts on ethical sadism, the role of shame in kink, and an impact gear deep dive that caning enthusiasts will geek out on.    


Video transcript below.  

Who is Miss Ruby Marks? 

Miss Ruby Marks is an imaginative sadist specializing in creating female-led content from start to finish, featuring lesbian domination, pain play, real punishment clips, and creative fetish-inspired Femdom and humiliation content. Also, a kinky overthinker who loves to delve deep into the philosophy of sex and desire over a nice cup of tea.

Miss_Ruby_Marks

Where to Find Miss Ruby Marks

Twitter @MissRubyMarks

Miss Ruby Marks Clips4Sale Studio (NSFW)

Miss Ruby Marks: I’m a super empath, which is weird for a sadist. It took me a long time to come to terms with the fact I’m a sadist. Actually, that was my own journey in that it’s not usual, is it, to want to hurt people?

 

Obviously, I’m not a sadist in that I want to hurt people who don’t want to be hurt. It has to be consensual for me.

 

[Intro music]

 

My name is Miss Ruby Marks. I’m a huge fan of corporal punishment — giving. My specialty is definitely caning. Caning is corporal punishment with an implement that is a cane. It’s a rattan cane.

 

If anybody is aware of the English education system, there is a long, long history of [caning] within our education system. And that has given rise, whether people want to admit it or not, to a long-term fetish for many people. And fascinatingly, [that includes] those that it was done to, those it wasn’t done to, those who saw it but never had it happen to them. And now a whole load of people who never had it happen to them, but kind of wish it had happened to them.

 

Let’s start with the basics. So a standard cane in the English school system would be the Kooboo. Kooboos are lighter, slightly less dense, and slightly more slack. So this is a Kooboo. Within the canes you have different sizes; you have junior, senior, reformatory, and prison. My go-to would be a senior Kooboo. That’s what I would always start with and then a senior dragon. The dragon cane is weightier. So it’s more heart, it’s more extreme. And I start with that size because that is slightly thuddier. 

 

The thinner the cane, the stingier the feel. Many people don’t like the stingy, stingy, stingy. You’re more likely to get a person saying they want thuddy pain. This is a golden prison cane. It’s half-smoked, which makes it slightly less flexible and harder to take. But this is what was used in the English school system. You’d be hit with most likely a junior or senior Kooboo cane. And they make that swish. Same with the dragon one, which is a big aspect of what people want: that swish, that sound, which would be [swishes cane] that sound. 

 

That’s what people want to hear. I love it because it makes people really jump when they’re nervous anyway and they’re bent over. You do that sound and they flinch and I’m mean, I’m awful. I do that. My sub just tried to ban me from swishing! She jokingly tries to ban me all the time from doing things that she’d be kind of sad if I actually banned them. But the swish, the swish swoosh is something they’ve tried to ban. 

 

We’ve got a lot of influence that comes over from the prison systems in Asia. So the Singapore prison cane, and these are used in the actual prisons in Asia. And the people import them into the UK from that area. They are brutal. It’s only really the very extreme masochist that can take such an implement, and you shouldn’t wield it without skill and knowledge. You just shouldn’t. You know, one hit to the tailbone and you could permanently damage somebody. So caning is not to be trifled with. And if you want to start caning, you have to be aware of your own lack of, or skill level, and just start really light and small and build up as a skill and only cane people who are seasoned canees themselves. Never cane a newbie as a newbie. 

 

I was having kinky thoughts from an interestingly young age. And that gave me a really lifelong interest in how those things develop, when they develop, and our misunderstanding of those things. And then that in itself has given me a lifelong interest in the psychology, the background, the sociology, how those things develop anthropologically, culturally, all of those things. It’s what I’m interested in studying and that’s where that has come because of how early — and also in talking to everybody else. All my clients and subs and anyone else, it is the same story really. People become aware of these things from a really young age and then we just don’t know what to do with them. 

 

In terms of what draws people to caning, as with anything within kink, I think it’s really complex and interesting. I think the English school system has an enormous amount to answer to. And doing something to somebody in that period of pre-puberty and puberty, in my opinion, gives rise to our sexual preferences. It tends to be things that happened to people either by accident or by them seeking something out around that age, that tend to have these huge, huge impacts on their sexual preferences as an adult. And so obviously, if you are dragged in front of the class — humiliated and caned by a female teacher or a male teacher and there’s all those notions of authority — then that’s going to feed into this world of submission, dominance, control, humiliation, pain, all of those things. So I think that’s an enormous part of it. 

 

I have found with caning, and particularly the men — and the women, but there are differences. But particularly with the men, it’s a badge of honor. There does seem to be a certain sense of pride. They also seem to have a certain personality, they’re pedantic, they’re perfectionists, they are slightly nerdy. They will always point out if you get it wrong! They are really pedantic in a way that is very specific. Over and over again, I see the same personality traits. So I think there’s also something in terms of the personality and the characteristics of the person coming for the caning interestingly, which I don’t think everybody realizes. There’s a sense of pride in them being able to take it. It’s one of the harshest things to submit to. It’s one of the scariest things to submit to. 

 

So in terms of getting there, removing your clothing, bending over, and submitting to someone like me, who projects purposefully, an image of fear. You know, I project myself as a really scary person purposefully. I like that, I like that boundary and that barrier. But to actually bring yourself to come to that person voluntarily and bend over, I think there’s a sense of pride in that for a lot of people in “I can take the cane.” 

 

Probably the biggest thing, though, is they need it. It’s a need. It’s a genuine, physical, psychological need that has been born out of what was done to them against their will, without their consent, as a child or a teenager. They are drawn to it, there’s a pull. It’s usually something that somebody has thought about for a long time, and it’s in them and they need it. If they don’t have it, it negatively impacts their mental health and their life for sure. That’s what I see time and time again, and finding somebody to meet that need for them and navigating — maybe a relationship where the person doesn’t know that they need that and would be shocked and horrified at their partner wanting to go submit those things. Or misunderstanding it. They navigate these really complex surrounding issues on a regular basis in order to meet that need. And if they weren’t able to meet that need, their mental health would be poor for it. So I think they also get good mental health out of it.

 

Caning — there is a precision and skill to it. That really appealed to me when I first started doing it, which was only about six years ago, actually. I like the accuracy of it. I like the fact it is a definite skill. I like the implements. I like the sounds.  And there’s something really satisfying that I get out of caning when I hit someone and I get all these lines in a nice neat little row. It looks very beautiful to me and it also seems to meet a need in me in a way that, say, whipping someone doesn’t. I can’t stand it. I hate the mess of the whip. I hate the fact it flies off where you don’t want it to occasionally and you can’t help that. I love the cane for the reason that I can make it perfect. I’m a perfectionist and a control freak within myself as well. So caning kind of meets that need. 

 

My understanding is the US is more focused on over-the-knee and spanking which is also my understanding that that would make sense given what goes on in the home. I understand that that actually is still widely practiced within the home. And spankings, and whoopings, and these kinds of words. It feels weird saying that as an English person! Like, “You’re gonna whoop someone’s ass.” But I think these are . . . so again, it just feeds into my belief that what’s done to us in our childhood and done to us in our teenagers massively impacts what we’re into sexually as grownups. 

 

I am dealing with the fallout from that to this day. And that is men usually wanting to come in to be caned because it was done to them. That’s where a lot of my business lies — and also in helping them come to terms with it. “Why do I like it? Why do I want it? Am I weird? Am I strange? Is this right?” You know, and they’re battling with these demons inside them because of what was done to them. And then that’s influenced them in a way that they’re struggling to come to terms with — as well as having a wife and a normal life. And they’ve got this dark secret as they see it. And I deal with all of that. So I think the school system in the UK has so much to answer for and we’re dealing with the fallout as disciplinarians and kink specialists or Dominatrixes. That’s all we’re doing really: dealing with that for people.

 

I find there can be a deep belief in them that they’re unlovable, that they don’t deserve to be cared for. That they’ll never be normal. There’s usually a string of failed relationships in the past, and what I get out of it is, I do truly believe that I help people to think about things in a really specific way. I studied philosophy and ethics. Sure makes some people laugh, I’m a highly unethical person in some people’s eyes. But that’s what I studied – and psychology, sociology, and social anthropology. That is my background for years. 

 

I mean, I have deeply, deeply thought about these things to a high academic level, and it fascinates me. I am obsessed with learning everything about people and how we operate, why we operate, and all of those things. And helping people. I think a lot of people would be completely lost in their life if they didn’t have us to come to talk to and to look after them. And I think that’s mostly what I get out of it. I think I improve the lives of those that are with me. I give them a place to feel at home and okay with themselves. And that’s really important to me. 

 

I think the misconception is [kink is] this teeny fringe thing. My understanding is it really isn’t. I think it’s much larger than most vanilla persons, you know, the average person — there are people out there that do not have kinks, have never thought about searching for something, have never watched kinky porn. And they do have mainstream sex. Let’s say there are people out there, but I think they’re in the minority. And I wish we could put that one to bed. I just think that it’s much bigger than most people realize — fetishes and kinks. I don’t think it’s as fringe as people would like to say it is. We’re not the 0.02%, the weirdos. We’re just not. I think we’re the 60 to 70% of what’s going on out there. It’s just how deep into it you are, you know, that going to say how big that scene is. But my experience is, world over I think there’s far more people into it than people realize. Yeah.

 

This has been my interview with Zipper Magazine. I’m really proud that you’ve asked me to speak to you. And it’s been a wonderful experience. And I can’t wait to see what Zipper Magazine is going to do. It’s amazing to have such a friendly voice within the industry. It’s severely lacking for us to be able to express ourselves. So thank you so much and I can’t wait to see what you do next.

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