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Bastinado
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Bastinado:
from the word baston, which in English becomes baton.
A baton is a stick, club, cudgel or truncheon which as
'bastinado' is used to beat of the bottoms of the
feet, generally as a form of corporal punishment.
Falaq, Falanga, Falaka, Fallagas: all appear to be variants
of the same word which is used in mid-eastern cultures to
refer to a small crop like weapon which is approximately
18" in length, with a hardened inner shaft, the outside
made of leather either braided or wound around the 'cane'. The
word/s by extension becomes the practice of using this weapon
to inflict punishment to the soles of the feet.
Feet whippings extend back through history. The practice appears
to have been used or is currently being used globally to punish
miscreant activities. Bastinado is considered to be extremely
painful and has long been used in interrogation and torture
activities as a means to elicit information from the victim.
Some of the Asian cultures tend to use small rattan switches
quite similar or identical to S/m rattan canes to beat the soles
of the feet of their children. This beating is also done to the
soles of the feet of women.
A majority of the currently practicing cultures appear to
favor using bastinado on their children of both genders,
then the male parent appears to use bastinado on his children
and wife. At adulthood the male may only experience bastinado
himself if he is brought into the hands of the militia or
judicial system.
Some cultures believe that to be 'bastinadoed' is to be forced
into a position of overt submission. If a person is severely
bastinadoed they will be unable to place their weight upon the
soles of their feet, forcing them to crawl, a position which
will reinforce the domination of the performer of the bastinado
over them. Some cultures extend this practice beyond caning to
include slicing of the bottoms of the feet and burning the bottoms
of the feet, often these types of injuries are forcibly kept open
so that the victim of the practice must remain 'at the feet' of
their assaulter indefinitely. When a man is forced into this
position he is often seen by many or all within his culture
to be 'emasculated' or removed from 'male status', sometimes
for the remainder of his life.
The furthest extensions of bastinado include removal of the
feet. This and 'hobbling' were practices performed to prevent
escape and permanently enslave the victim without the need of
constant monitoring. Such a victim was often placed in a position
of drudge and made to clean or attend to 'filth' tasks which were
considered beneath the 'level' of a 'human being' or to be used
as a source of 'inescapable' labor.
Hobbling is a practice of cutting of the tendons at the back of
the foot and was extensively used on black slaves right here in
America.
From the perspective of S/m scening. What can you do and
what should you do? First I will tell you how it was and is
done. The person is placed belly down with their feet attached
to a whipping post. Some posts have cross bars for the feet to
rest upon. The person is bound sufficiently to prevent excessive
movement. If you wish to scene bastinado then you should support
and cushion the foot. Some people create and use foot stocks which are
heavily padded.
The foot is an extremely fragile and delicate machine. There
are numerous bones, tendons, joints, muscles and tissues which
are vulnerable to significant injury. What is perhaps more
significant is that most of the bodies nerve system has nerve
endings which are somewhat exposed in the feet. A severe beating
to the feet can cause injury over the entirety of the body, not
just the feet. A severe beating can destroy or damage any of the
foots many complicated and complex systems, reducing or impairing
the individuals ability to walk or doing significant long term harm
to that person. That becomes by extension an 'non-sane' practice and
violates the underlying tenants of Safe, Sane and Consensual. It
also becomes unsafe, in that it can permanently injure.
What can you do if you wish to scene bastinado? First, use a
small switch or cane. Never use a paddle, heavy rod, crop or
other hard object to strike the foot. You are not trying to
break bones here. The bones of the feet are quite small and
very easy to break. Protect the areas around the foot such
as ankles and toes. You can wrap the foot in a towel exposing
only the soles to prevent inadvertent injury. Use objects that
will sting but not damage. Do not try to whip or cane the feet
until bruising. Do not try to break the skin or leave visible welts.
Go for sensation but not damage.
You can safely include the soles of the feet in candle and ice play.
You can with relative safety use 'doctored' clothespins in and around
the toe area as you might on the webbing between the fingers of the hand.
Remember to allow clothespins on any area of the skin for short bursts
of time - recommended time is 7 minutes. Longer clamping of the skin
can cause permanent tissue damage. Take a course in Reflexology and
learn where the most vulnerable areas of the foot are and what to
avoid. Avoid clamping or binding where there is known exposure of
the nerves - this can cause permanent nerve damage and numbness.
(From a watchful member <smiles>) Ask if the woman is
pregnant. There is a trigger point outside of the ankle behind
the ankle bone which can trigger labor in some women. (Thank you)
Scene safe.
Use mild forms of bastinado in small doses. Learn as much as you can
if this is of particular interest to you. Never engage in any practice
which will reduce, diminish or permanently negatively alter the health
and well being of another human being.
Do NO Harm.
all rights reserved by Mistress Steel comments or email
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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
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