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ABUSERS AMONG US
It is fundamentally true that within the BDSM community are
physical, emotional and mental abusers. The numbers appear to
be fairly small but tracking or identifying these abusers within
this community is very hard. When their mask does fall away enough
for others to identify them it is often too late for the subs they
have victimized. Within this community open and freely exchanged
communication is essential. Those that limit or attempt to limit
this communication or attempt to isolate their subs from contact
with others should be heavily scrutinized. If the Dominant cannot
trust their sub with open, clear information then either they are
controlling the flow of information to direct or pervert that sub's
understanding or their self esteem is so low that they cannot allow
anything which conflicts with what they say to enter into it. This
indicates a closed mind. The protection of ugly secrets is dangerous
and damaging. If a person attempts to hide something it generally
means they have something to hide.
Members of this community are far more vulnerable to being
accused of abuse than any other minority community existent.
Because of that the community tends to talk about abuse and
consent a lot. The line between BDSM and abuse is consent.
Misrepresentation, deceit, failure to be honest in any form
in order to attract, lure or seduce someone into a controlled
position simply to proceed with no interest or regard for that
individual's consent is abuse. Finding and identifying abusers
and policing our community is our job. Within the BDSM community
networks exist. People gossip, share information, warn each other.
What we do is dangerous, illegal and unacceptable by society.
This does not mean we are people without good instincts, morality
or strong ethical character. Tolerance of nonconsensual play is
0%. If you or anyone you know of is in a nonconsensual situation
it is important to understand that this is not D/s. If you are
a submissive and someone injures you. Tell the other sub's or
Dominant's in your area. Prevent this predator from victimizing
again and again.
The best line of defense is communication. Isolation is one of
the primary tools used by an abuser. A good Dominant will encourage
the external life of their submissive desiring for that submissive
to remain well rounded, with interests, hobbies, a career etc. If
a person is causing you physical, mental or spiritual harm then
they are not acting as a positive force in your life. If the
results of your activities leave you injured, feeling subhuman
or afraid and detached from your beliefs . . . get help!
Many of the people within this community are abuse survivors.
They have NO desire to be re-victimized. When a person identifying
themselves as a dominant uses language such as 'my victims' they
are expressing something which can be felt to be an abusive trigger.
We do not make 'victims' of our submissives. To consider a submissive
as discardable, a throw away, incidental and unimportant are huge
clues that something is very wrong with that person. We are sensitive
to language and we do weed out and find these predators. They have
no welcome mat here.
For those of you reading this who may be an abuser. Eventually we
will see you. If you came to this community looking for easy sex
with the freedom to hit, humiliate and destroy, we will find you,
we will learn and we will know. As a community we are judged by
the least of us. To tolerate you inside of our community lowers
all of us to your standard, and that is intolerable.
For limited release, re-posting, web-sharing information regarding
any of the articles on this website, please email
SteelBfl@sonic.net.
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