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Why is SM taboo?
Based on materials written by Rob Jellinghaus; © 1999-2001
...is SM criminal, unnatural, immoral, unethical, or unhealthy?
If what we've been saying in this FAQ is accurate, then why
haven't more people heard this? Why are the prevailing images
of SM so negative?
There is no doubt that
they are negative.
Not long ago I was informed that there are some members of
the Winnipeg (Canada) police department who believe that
soc.subculture.bondage-bdsm is "a textbook on how to
torture women for sexual pleasure. It's obscene." Said
police were considering how to deal with s.s.b-b on obscenity
grounds. In England in 1991, a group of gay men who had
gathered for an SM play party in which they were using whips
for pleasure were arrested and charged with battery, EVEN
THOUGH they had all agreed to be doing exactly what they
were doing, and WANTED to be doing it. Consensual SM is
illegal in England. How can this be?
The crucial distinction here is between consent and non-consent.
The difference between whipping someone in a scene and assaulting
them on the street is the difference between sex and rape. If
everyone involved agrees to what is happening, it is not a crime.
If they do not, then it is. This distinction is not in principle
difficult to understand, and being involved in SM makes it very
clear. SM practitioners are
more
familiar with consent issues than most, and as such are
less
likely to commit crimes of the sort that people confuse with SM.
And NONE of the material in this FAQ advocates ANY kind of
nonconsensual, criminal behavior.
Unfortunately, there are many who would be arbiters of what
others may and may not legally consent to do. I believe that
consenting adults should be free to do as they wish in the
privacy of their homes. There are many who don't believe this
is acceptable. It serves them to confuse the issue by claiming
"SM people are sadistic rapists" when in fact we
are nothing of the sort. Criminalizing consensual sexual
activities (sodomy, SM, even prostitution) is an old tradition,
but in my view, an unjustifiable one.
This problem is exacerbated by the body of "scholarly
research" on SM and related practices. Almost all the
books written about SM and other alternative practices in
this century have been written by psychologists and therapists
(i.e. people outside the scene), and almost all have portrayed
SM as a dangerous practice, indulged in only by "unhealthy"
individuals. The reason? Healthy individuals weren't the subjects
being studied; rather, the subjects were all seeking psychological
treatment from the authors of the books! The "studies"
completely ignored the many many well-adjusted, happy people who
were also into SM. It's easy to conclude SM is harmful when your
only experience is with psychologically maladjusted SM people,
and when you aren't interested in presenting a balanced view
(as few authors are--psychologists can be as sexually judgmental
as anyone).
More recent events in the psychiatric community have shown a
change in opinion about SM. The Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Psychiatric Conditions is a document produced by
the American Psychiatric Association. The DSM-III, published
in the late '80s, classified "sexual sadism" and "sexual
masochism" as disorders for which treatment was
recommended. The APA, in the DSM-IV, reclassified SM as
not
necessarily a disorder, unless the practice of the SM
produces clinically significant ongoing emotional trauma,
or leads to death, serious injury, or disability. The DSM-IV
is recognition by the therapeutic community that SM can be
practiced in a psychologically healthy way. Specifically,
DSM IV,
© *1994*, page 529, §302.83, "sexual masochism": Classed
as a paraphilia, not a disorder, lacking negative implications unless
"the fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors cause clinically
significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or
other important areas of functioning." Sexual sadism is
discussed 2 pages later, §302.84, with similar qualifications.
As for "natural": people have practiced SM
behaviors throughout history. Many are the saints who
scourged themselves in the name of the Lord. Using
intense sensation to reach altered states of mind
is a practice as old as humanity itself--and hence
can be considered in no way "unnatural".
Our society (as do most societies) tends to ostracize the
different. If you don't fit the mold, you're weird and dangerous.
People into SM don't fit the mold. This is why there is such
pressure to remain anonymous in the scene; people have lost
their jobs, partners, children, and liberty by having their
sexual preferences revealed to their community. This stems
from the same source: lack of understanding of what we do
and why, and lack of respect for what is different.
Of course, there are plenty of people who just aren't into
SM. (Most people, in fact.) There's nothing at all wrong with
not being into SM, or with not wanting to be exposed to people
who do various forms of SM; many people have emotional issues
with some kinds of SM activities and may be repulsed or
disturbed by witnessing them. These people should clearly
avoid SM (and probably should avoid soc.subculture.bondage-bdsm).
I would hope, however, that even these people would manage to
learn about consensuality as it relates to SM, and learn how
SM, practiced carefully, is not abuse.
Some people feel that any power exchange between people is
unhealthy. The argument is that giving power to someone else
is tantamount to giving away your essential right to
self-determination, which must be considered an unqualified
evil. Moreover, there is no doubt that many social evils--wars,
abusive relationships, et al.--derive from one group of people
seeking power over another; therefore, the argument proceeds,
it is always wrong thusly to seek power.
In reality, there are many situations in life in which
someone chooses to give some of their power over to another,
because they trust that other to use that power wisely. Examples
include entering the Army (which regulates your life for the
duration of your service); getting married (which is often a
commitment to abandon some of your personal autonomy); taking
a job (which restricts your choices of how to spend your time);
and, of course, entering a BDSM scene (during which your top
has authority over what goes on). All these power exchanges
are mutually agreed upon, and are mutually beneficial; when
they stop being beneficial, the exchange itself should stop.
People whose moral codes state that all power exchange--consensual
or otherwise--is wrong should clearly not be involved in BDSM.
Certainly such people have a consistent ethical system that
defines BDSM as immoral. Short of such an ethical system,
however, it is hard to see how a BDSM relationship is any
more intrinsically immoral than a stint in the Army, or a
traditional 'death-do-you-part' marriage. As for me, I
believe that in a free society, morality requires permitting
each citizen to make his or her own choices of how to live,
and how to express themselves, including sexually. Sexual
rights are human rights. If we lose our freedom to love as
we choose, we lose a vital part of what it is to be human.
These issues are very controversial, even now. In the 1992
Oregon state ballot, voters narrowly overturned a measure
named OR 9, which contained the following paragraph:
"State, regional, and local government and their
departments, agencies, and other entities, including
specifically the State Department of Higher Education
and the public schools, shall assist in setting a
standard for Oregon's youth that recognizes homosexuality,
pedophilia, sadism, and masochism as abnormal, wrong,
unnatural, and perverse and that these behaviors are to
be discouraged and avoided."
Homosexuality, sadism, and masochism are neither wrong nor
unnatural. All three are consensual ways of living and loving
that many people enjoy. They are not for everyone, but nor should
everyone be told that they are for no one. Note also how this
measure seeks to confuse the issue by grouping homosexuality,
sadism, and masochism together with pedophilia, a practice
which is in most places legally nonconsensual. (It is not
my intent to enter here into the debate over whether
children are ever capable of fully consenting to sexual
acts. Suffice it to say that whether they can or not has
no bearing on the fact that
Adults CAN consent to
SM play.)
Legislating what consenting adults may and many not do in
private is neither healthy nor democratic.
(In recent years there has been a spate of articles about
how SM is entering the mainstream. Madonna's book "Sex,"
her movie "Body of Evidence," and the movie "Exit
to Eden" are examples of this trend. Hopefully this will
lead to more people feeling free to express their
love as they choose
--so long as it's consensual!)
The most extreme forms of SM come closest to the line between
consent and non-consent. Most SM people have established safe
words which they will use if need be, though if they've known
their partners for long, that's rather seldom. Some people,
though, do play without safe words--whether because they know
their partners well enough to stay within their partners' limits
and read their partners' responses, or because they enjoy the
rush of playing without an escape clause. This latter sort of
play is sometimes known as "consensual non-consensuality,"
and involves scenes in which the bottom literally cannot escape from
whatever the top wishes to do. This is very advanced SM; it
requires exponentially more negotiation and introspection, and
even then is hazardous. Not many people do this, or want to,
but some people do, and find it exhilarating and uplifting. More
info is available on s.s.b-b or in some of the references... or
on s.s.b-b itself, which is one of the best places in the world
to hear a myriad of voices speak out about their individual ways
of doing and living SM.
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