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The Unspoken Reality
By Jack Rinella
from Issue number 52 Sunday, December 12, 2004
I’ve just finished the first draft of my next book, which is about
becoming a slave. In it I outline the search for a master, giving
guidelines, an in-depth look at what is mastery and service, and
advice about the process. As I thought about an appropriate and
inspirational ending, I wanted to write about love between master
and slave.
So I did a word count and found that I used the word "love"
or one of its variant forms less than 50 times in a manuscript of more
than 85,000 words. "What does that say about love in mastery and
slavery?" I asked myself.
Reflecting on my own query I remembered the many discussions I’ve
had over the years, repeated in chat rooms and newsgroups, I’m
sure, about whether masters and slaves can, should, or do love
one another. The usual answer varies across the spectrum: yes,
no, sometimes, in some ways, maybe, yes for the slave and no
for the master, etc., etc., etc.
The question is compounded by the wide variation in the way
we use the word love. It’s a sad fact that the English
language is much too vague in its usage and meaning of
the word "love." After all, there are many kinds
of love and the manifestations of each of them is certainly
quite different from one definition to another. We love
parents in one way, children, sex partners, chocolate,
life, movies, songs, friends, uncles, cousins, and our
careers each in their own way.
What compounds the discussion of love between kinky associates,
be they masters and slaves, tops and bottoms, husbands and wives,
significant others, good friends and fuck-buddies, etc. is that
each of these pairings can be held together by many qualities,
love being only one of them. When love, however you mean the
term, is a quality in a kinky relationship, it too may widely
vary in nature from one set of partners to another. There’s
nothing to say, for instance, that one sadomasochistic couple
has to share the same kind of love as another.
Still I wondered about the lack of love in my manuscript. In
continued reflection it was obvious that the master/slave
couples whom I know best did in fact love one another, though
to call them lovers lent a decidedly inaccurate view to their
relationship. Just as calling a married couple lovers seems to
be somewhat erroneous, even though one would hope that they
were in fact in love with each other and loved one another
and based their relationship on love.
I asked a slave applicant who has been coming around for about
six weeks if he loved me and he hesitated in his answer. I
understand that hesitation very well, as life experience has
a way of changing one’s appreciation of the value of "falling
in love." Is that because we view love differently as we
mature? Is there something about romance that loses its charm
as we age? Is emotional love, a la Romeo and Juliet, something
only for the young or the foolish? Does love lose its ardor
because we become wise or because we become jaded?
In my continued reflection I realized that a similar count of
the frequency of the word "air" in my manuscript would
show that I only used it once, unless you also count the number
of times it appears joined with the word plane as in
"airplane."
Then I breathed a sigh of relief. Love permeates our relationships
in the same way that air permeates our lives. It is ubiquitous
and essential to them. Love is everywhere but seldom noticed.
Just as we speak of air in terms of its manifestations, so too
we talk not of love as much as we speak of its effects.
Just as the air is windy or cold or breezy or smelly or pleasant,
love is affectionate, caring, careful, attentive, devoted,
enthralling, captivating, wonderful, trusting, concerned,
pleasurable, or intimate. We see not love itself but its
effect. We talk not about loving one another but of how we
love.
Very often, too, we don’t even speak about how we love.
Instead we just do it, as simply as we breathe.
Patrick’s first letter to me, for instance, contained the
telling phrase, "I do not seek a lover." We began
our relationship without love and for the first several years
when I asked Patrick if he loved me, he would only reply that
he loved being my slave.
The basis of our relationship was domination and obedience,
responses to our individual awareness of who we were, what
we needed, and what we wanted. We liked one another to be
sure. We clicked right away as master and slave. Together we
found great pleasure in the other, but we were not lovers. It
may even be safe to say that we have never fallen in love with
each other either, as that romantic, emotional response has
never seemed to be part of our lives.
Do we love one another? That is another question. Shall I count
the ways? Like the air we breathe, it permeates our lives
together. Friends see it readily in how we treat each other.
We know it well as we manifest it in concern, in affection,
in devotion, in the ever-tightening bonds that unite us as
partners, as a couple, as friends, as fuck-buddies, and kinky
players, as joint home-owners, and as life-mates.
We are soon approaching the ninth anniversary of the day we
met and of the night when we knew we were somehow "made"
for each other. That understanding of belonging has never left.
It has changed only in quality, as day after day the bonds
tightened, the intimacy grew, and affection prospered, our
love deepened.
I once conducted a weekend workshop on mastery and slavery
at the end of which I was challenged to "go home and
tell Patrick you love him." I accepted that challenge
as it was an easy one, though to simply say "I love
you," doesn’t give much indication of what I meant.
He is best friend, spouse, partner, delightful slave,
devoted assistant, faithful servant, protective and
watchful guard, excellent cook and careful provider.
He supports, advises, performs innumerable household
chores, encourages, critiques, caresses, satisfies,
nurtures, and even worships.
Is there love? How can it not be seen? How can it not
be there? Still, like the air it is best noted in its
effect -- a sweet, vital, essential, refreshing, sustaining,
and necessary element so clear as to be invisible and so
fundamental as to be over-looked.
It’s easy to miss that fact that love is present, just as
we take the air we breathe for granted. Still it is a
many-splendored essential. Take a deep breath and be
thankful for it. Tell those you love that such is so.
Have a great week. You can leave me email at
mrjackr@leathermail.com
or visit my website at "
http://www.LeatherViews.com
Copyright 2004 by Jack Rinella, all rights reserved.
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