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After Care
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Affectionate care and attention following any type of traumatic or mentally
challenging event.
D/s relationships are engaged with a passion and intensity that are often
so strong that they can strip away at the barriers and defenses that we
normally use to protect ourselves from exactly those extremes. To 'feel'
that intensity means that we are not 'as safe'. To some extent we have
stepped across our own thresholds of security and exposed some or all
parts of our inner selves to the scrutiny and possible damage of others.
Sceneing can or may be seen as a compromise between what the submissive
is seeking or desiring and how close to achieving those desires the
Dominant's own fears will allow them to go. This is a stretching in
'both' directions. Both the Dominant and the submissive often venture
into areas they have never gone before. These areas can test their
inner strength and resolve, their will and compassion. To retain
'personal integrity' or a belief in ourselves we have to stay within
the 'codes' that we live by and believe in. In learning about ourselves
we often test these codes to see if they are indeed 'our' codes or codes
we have simply adopted by rote at some point along the way.
The road to 'emerging' as a Dominant or submissive is filled with these
kinds of moral and ethical choices and the contradictions and apparent
paradoxes that they present. Reconciling these contradictions and forming
'true' choices of who we are and what lines are inviolate within the self
is a process that takes years and perhaps the entirety of our lives to
discover fully.
When we 'expose' ourselves to another human being there is an expressed
obligation by both people to refrain from injury or damage, offer solace,
nurturing and care until that sense of exposure recedes. We call this
period of time 'aftercare'. Most often we associate this term with the
time frame immediately following a 'scene'. However, this term is equally
applicable at many other points and times and many times is not associated
with BDSM or D/s at all. Essentially it is an 'understood' promise that
should exist prior to anyone agreeing to engage in any type of relationship.
Often it is overlooked or ignored as an 'incidental'. The concentration or
focus of many people appears to be on the action 'events' such as any and
all forms of BDSM or sexual interaction that may and in many cases will
occur as part of the relationship. Minimizing the importance of aftercare
is a mistake. Aftercare is a period of necessary 'recovery'. This is a
fundamental recovery of the self into a form competent and 'safe' to
independently interact with other people.
Some aspects of BDSM trigger responses much like intoxication. The ability
of the brain to rationalize or make important or serious decisions may be
seriously impaired for a substantial period of time after an event or scene.
Scening can and sometimes DOES summon up long hidden memories, feelings,
emotions and traumas that the individual has kept safe behind the barrier wall
or mental defense system that during a scene may suddenly no longer exist. We
maintain these walls through diverting a portion of our mental energy to them
at all times. In periods of low stress this constant trickle of energy is
negligible. In periods of HIGH mental activity the brain diverts energy
toward activities which take PRECEDENCE. Managing a BDSM scene will OFTEN
become an activity of such PRECEDENCIAL choice. When this occurs the brain
is no longer sustaining the wall and it may simply VANISH, exposing what is
behind it.
We maintain personal barriers and walls of defense to protect ourselves
from things we know but perhaps have serious trouble dealing with. An
example of this would be an automobile accident. Some portion of the brain
does 'know' and fully experienced all that occurred during the accident or
'event'. The extremes of the experience may be so great that a self protective
determining factor inside the brain decides that it is 'unhealthy' for the
cognizant areas of the brain to experience this event through memory loops
over and over again. At that point this determining factor selectively places
this event in a 'safe area' or behind one of the brains natural mental barriers
or walls.
Should one of these 'events' become exposed then the individual may reexperience
the event. It is vital to remember that these hidden events were considered to
be potentially damaging when the real event occurred so much so that the brain
took ACTIVE steps to protect the individual from them. Supporting and assuring
the person who has re-experienced one of these events that they are 'safe' is
profoundly important. The new 'information' may be of a nature that they DO
have great difficulty coping with it and in some cases they may need good
professional assistance from a qualified therapist.
Normal aftercare occurring WITHOUT such an exposure is often the
simple nurturing of one human to another. The support and protection
of and from revealed intimacies and aiding and assisting in rebuilding
the former protective walls, barriers or defenses. These protective mental
measures appear to rebuild naturally as a simple part of how the brain
functions and manages over a period of time. That time frame will vary
with the individual and with the intensity of the experience itself.
Aftercare in its most simple form is just being there WITH your partner
for a sufficient time period that THEY feel safe and no longer feel the
need to cling to you. It is equally important to recognize that
aftercare is for BOTH the Dominant and the submissive. If either
person leaves too soon then their partner may feel abandonment or
loss far exceeding the apparent parameters of the
interaction.
It is also important to recognize that aftercare may be a serious
factor when a relationship ends and especially when that ending is
through the choice of one person and not the other. To some extent it
remains the obligation of the person who makes that choice to extend
aftercare support in a form agreeable to the person who has not made that
choice until they have reached a point where they feel emotionally less
devastated or more able to cope with the changed aspects of their life. In
these days of acrimonious breakups it is common to act without dignity or respect
for yourself and for the person whom you have engaged in a serious relationship
with. This type of attack damages everyone involved and is seldom decent but
most often reflects cowardly and selfish actions.
The information on this page is designed to inform and entertain, it is not
meant to offer professional or legal advice. The content of this webpage may
be excerpted from
Extreme Space, The Domination and Submission Handbook
,
Safe, Sane and Consensual
,
Dangerous Choices
or other books by F.R.R. Mallory, all the content is copyright
protected under United States and International Copyright Law.
Please click on the book title for information on how you can
order a copy of these books and others by
F.R.R. Mallory.
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