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SM Recognition Signs and Leather
ASK THE THERAPIST
October 1993
by William A. Henkin, Ph.D.
Copyright © 1993 by William A. Henkin
<Q>
Are there any clothes, lapel pins, or whatever, that can be worn in
public and yet will signal to others in the SM scene, "I'm a
dominant in search of a submissive," or "I'm a submissive
in search of a dominant"?
<A>
Outside the scene, none that I know of. Most people clad in their
Brooks Brothers' finery are signaling about other kinds of power,
and if you're such a person, a whip or a set of keys swinging from
your belt is only likely to sign to your confreres that you've
lost your marbles.
Within the scene the signs don't so much say that you're
looking,
but rather that you
identify
(or wish to be identified) with one position or another, at
least for the moment. (Stories are legion about switches
switching things around once they've spotted some hot number
dressing on the same side they are – but I digress.) This is
sort of like the gay bar hanky code that was popular in the
1970s & 80s, and is still used to good effect by people
with the brain capacity to remember all those colors. These
days, in the San Francisco Bay Area, for example, keys (or
a hanky, or a wrist strap or a cockring) worn on the left
generally signal that you're a top; on the right, they
generally signal that you're a bottom.
The signs may vary from one locale to another, however, or
from one decade to another, so if you're slinging your keys
from the left in 2001 Kuala Lampur and some sweet thang
impresses you into a different sort of chain gang, don't
say Daddy didn't warn you. In any case, after you've done
a certain amount of cruising and have ascertained that the
person you want to play with dresses on the opposite side
from the one you've adopted, a little bit of verbal communication
is probably still the best way to be sure you and your potential
partner are looking for compatible evenings.
<Q>
Why is leather the symbol of SM? Does something fundamental connect
leather and erotic power exchange? Or is this just the way history
evolved?
<A>
Oh, Gentle Reader, I'm a psychotherapist – I don't think
anything
is "just the way history evolved"; I think
there are reasons for
everything.
But I may be wrong. Still, my readings, my keen psychological wit,
and some conversations I've had with a few very long-term players
suggest several associations between leather and SM.
First, leather itself is a fetish for some people: they like
and may be erotically aroused by the sight, smell, and/or feel
of what they regard as a "second skin" – hence
Skin Two,
the posh British leather-fetish-fashion magazine, took its name
from the second definition of "skin" in a dictionary.
Where the
fetish
for leather comes from is harder to answer – especially for me,
since I don't share it. When they were little tots did lots of
future players crawling around on the floor come nose to toe
with a bunch of shoes and boots just at feeding or changing
time? Does the skin of another animal trigger a response in
the most primitive portions of our brainstems that says,
"Hunt. Kill. Eat"? Or did the hides of animals make
the toughest available flexible fabric when warring folk needed
shields and armor, so that leather could acquire some SM fetish
feel as a consequence of its association with raw power?
Animal skins of all sorts have totemic power in many societies,
and wrapping up in the hide of a slain enemy – or of dinner –
is thought to have mystical value in some still-existing
pre-Industrial civilizations. Certainly wearing leather
must have come before wearing much else than leaves, if
only because such hides make a quick and obvious solution
to the need for clothing.
But this particular fetish may also have some specific
cultural cachet – as many fetish costumes have.*
Much of the leather-and-lace garb affected these days by both
serious professional Mistresses and the cartoon Mistresses of
salacious porn springs straight out of the pages of Victorian
governess control drag, with only a little augmentation or
diminution for what we moderns believe to be the more explicitly
erotic features of the female body. And the chest harnesses
affected by the most spectacularly pectoralled men at the
Drummer
contests and the Folsom Street Fair sometimes seem to me
intended not only to make a comparison between the skin
that defines the muscle and the skin that defines the skin
that defines the muscle, but also to remind the casual
onlooker of macho bandoliers full of phallic bullets –
now reduced to studs.
This last association takes me back to the answer I
offered a couple of months ago to the reader who asked
why the color black has come to symbolize the SM community.
We are to some extent genteel descendents of the rowdy
1950s motorcycle gangs. Their black leathers were
utilitarian – they didn't show dirt, but more important,
they protected men against cold, rain, and long 75-mph
shoulder-skids on asphalt and concrete. As we adopted
their protective coloring, so, perhaps, we adopted their
protective cover as well, and for some of the same reasons:
to say, We are here, we are outlaws of
some
sort, and – yes – we are proud of who we are.
*
For example, adult diaper fans who were babies in the era of
washable cloth diapers tend to prefer washables as adults,
whereas those who grew up after the advent of disposables
tend to prefer the throw-away variety.
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