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Going Deep: Top space, Bottom space, and Sado-Erotic Ecstasy
Top and Bottom
By
ChrisM
© 1998-2002 Of SubBondage.net
For most activities SM folk engage in, some are drawn to the passive role
(the bottom, or submissive), others to the active one (top, or dominant).
Still others prefer to let personal chemistry decide what role they will
play in the sado-erotic ritual. There are a lot of choices in describing
the duality of the SM encounter, dominant-submissive, master-slave,
sadist-masochist.... But the one I'll try and stick with is the top
and bottom metaphor because it reminds me that the two roles fit together
as the top and bottom half of the SM encounter, not mirror opposites, but
complements, like yin and yang, fitting together to create a satisfying
and complete whole.
Sacrifice, Suffering And Submission: The Bottom
For strangers to SM, bottoming may be the hardest SM experience to
understand. Who would want to feel suffering? In many traditions,
suffering was ascribed to the justified punishment of the wicked.
Freud explained human motivation in terms of the "pleasure
principal," namely, that we steer towards experience that will
feel good to us, and masochism seems unbalanced indeed when measured
by that frame of reference. The prevalence of pain and suffering in
the world has long been advanced as a philosophical proof against
the existence of God. Pain seems to be something you would almost
have to be sick to enjoy. The truth, of course, is that some kinds
of suffering can be very sweet, indeed.
Some examples: Southern Californian that I am, I enjoy cuisine -
Thai, Hunan or Mexican - so hot that it is painful to eat. Rock
music, perhaps the most popular music ever, fairly assaults the
ear (Pete Townsend of The Who crafted his onstage guitar sound
to make it physically hurt to listen to). Humor is often predicated
on the emotions of shame, humiliation, and embarrassment. The athletic
experience gives participants and observers an opportunity to encounter
and combat the cleansing fires of physical agony, the thrill of victory,
as well as the agony of defeat. The Bosa Nova is another example, a
bittersweet music and dance reveling in the mournful joys of unrequited
love. The Blues is an American counterpart, a musical tradition celebrating
poverty, desperation, suffering, insanity, and death. On the scriptural
front, the bible dedicates long passages to sacrifices, fasting and
labyrinthine rules and regulations dictating submissive compliance. The
humiliating rite of the confessional rewards us with absolution for
confronting our darkest, most shameful secrets (it's a lot like therapy
in that respect). The portrayals of martyred saints often pair beatific
facial expressions with violent bodily ordeal. Bernini's statue of St.
Theresa expresses perfectly both spiritual ecstasy and sado-erotic rapture:
her head thrown back in swooning bliss, eyelids fluttering, mouth lolling
open, while a leering cupid fires arrows into her breast. In fact,
cherub-faced, leering Cupid, hunting for lovers to impale with his
bow and bloody arrows makes a nice compact expression of love's
sado-erotic joy. The mushy tear-jerking ballad, the deafening rock
concert, the blood splattered "action adventure" film. Even
Hebrews 12:11 says "For the moment all discipline seems painful
rather than pleasant; later it yields a the peaceful fruit of righteousness
to those who have been trained by it." Clearly, some kinds of pain are
actually desirable.
Pain can be a welcome antidote to numbness. Much of contemporary urban
life panders to the concerns of the ego: the immediate gratification of
desire and deliverance from sickness, discomfort and want. Many of the
world's religious practices are designed to do exactly the opposite:
break the reliance on comfort and easy living, to challenge us to do
the hard work of becoming better people. The principal behind this
sort of deliberate pain is its ability to turn off the loud demanding
mouth of the ego. The ego focuses on abundance of food, strength, shelter,
success, and sex. But the ego is often nearsighted, and not always as smart
as it thinks. A life lived for the ego's pleasure can leave the rest of
you starved and impoverished. The ego may be gratified by wealth, health,
and good fortune, while the soul is gravely ill, wounded or starved into
spiritual anorexia. It is easy be successful and still miserable. Ask
Richard Cory.
It is when we move past the selfish concerns of the ego, that we encounter
our capacity and need for higher human experience: love, worship, justice,
purpose and compassion. When we are free of the yammering of the ego, these
things come to matter far more than our short term needs and wants. At
times, the soul may even be willing to lay down life itself in sacrifice
for a higher ideal. In pure ego terms, sacrifices of that magnitude make
no sense. But when you consider the totality of human motivation, the
ego is only a small part. Rituals and lifestyles that humble and
chastise the ego do so with aim of reigning in hubris and arrogance,
to facilitate awe and reverence of all that is sacred in the world.
Pain, carefully orchestrated into educational ritual is one of the
paths forward. It can be the pain of forsaking pleasure and willing
acceptance of hardship, toil and deferment of reward. It can be the
physical mortification of the body. It can mean deliberately humbling
yourself through the submissive posture and mindset of prayer. It can
mean sacrificing things you treasure. It can mean toiling for the
benefit of the less fortunate; improving the world in some modest
way. It can mean confessing your darkest, dirtiest secrets in confession.
The great Western religions advocate fasting and endurance of hardship
as proper spiritual practice. Even Zen Buddhist literature is rife with
cane swinging monks who whack their students if they become insolent or
lazy. Other examples include boot camp, fraternal hazing, the gauntlet,
the Aboriginal walkabout, and countless coming of age rituals around
the globe.
While these experiences may humble, traumatize or even temporarily
annihilate the ego, they are intended to strengthen and nurture the
soul. The rites of passage in many pre-industrial societies use pain
as a transformational catalyst. To complete a demanding, frightening,
or painful ordeal is to cease being a frightened helpless child and
become a capable, brave person, one who can endure the hardships of
adulthood. The novice is transformed from someone who doesn't know
if they can do it, to someone who has done it. Ideally the initiate
emerges stronger, wiser and, hopefully, because of their first hand
experience, more empathetic towards the suffering of others.
Another purpose of religion is preparing the faithful to contend with
the suffering we inevitably encounter in life. Buddha went so far as
to say "life is suffering". The shortest verse in the Bible
is "Jesus wept." Together these statements show a scriptural
recognition that suffering is a necessary and deliberate part of this
world; not even gods and holy men are spared. World mythology has shown
that life and adventure are always entwined with peril, risk, and
suffering. C. S. Lewis once said, "Pain is the megaphone that
God uses to awaken a deaf world." And Nietzsche said "What
does not kill me , makes me stronger". And athletes will tell
you "No pain no gain". To reach Dante's Paradise you must
traverse all nine rings of Dante's Hell.
While the concept of pain as a soul nutrient is not an SM invention,
it is a central principal of SM practice. By saying yes to pain, we
are saying yes to life, even at its worst. For some, SM embodies the
surprisingly religious belief that pain and suffering hold purifying
and enriching qualities that surpass the ego's comprehension, while
speaking directly to the concerns of the soul. For others, genuine
suffering may be preferable to the bland pleasantness or numbness
that is the culturally advocated norm. SM, in contrast, embraces
suffering with a vengeance.
Having said all this, lets turn our attention to the bottom himself.
In theory, the bottom is the top's complement. That element which when
added to the top completes him or her. The bottom is an embodiment of
whatever fantasy the top and bottom collectively decide. If the top's
job to transport the bottom, the bottoms role is to be the initiate,
the acolyte, worshiper, penitent, victim lashed to the alter of top lust.
The bottom is witness to the top's performance, whose purpose there is to
get high, be swept away, discover the languid joys of surrender. The Bottom
is also something of a connoisseur: one who has developed exquisitely fine
tastes analogous to those learned to appreciate fine discrimination in
savoring an wine, a work of art or performance of a piece of music. By
this I do not mean a snob or a know it all, but someone who knows how
to get high from a painting, from music, from a poem, or a from really
hot scene. A good bottom has refined his or her tastes to notice and
appreciate subtle distinctions that would be lost to less discerning
tongues. And like the proverbial wine snob, a good bottom knows how to
process experience into joy, has learned to differentiate magnificence
from the run of the mill. This is not to say that bottoming is a rarified
experience. There is in the bottom a bit of the dog or cat flopping onto
their back and exposing their belly to be petted into Nirvana. As any beast
lover knows it is a simple joy that sends both top and bottom on a blissful
voyage. The bottom may define themselves with respect to their dominant
partner as a sort of servant or an underling. Some Masterless slaves or
unpartnered submissive have taken to calling themselves Ronin, the Japanese
term for an unemployed Samurai with no master to serve, to describe their
unfulfilled desire to serve.
So lets look at some of the flavors of pain.
Submission means turning your care, focus, and trust outside of yourself,
as opposed to concentrating on your own wants. In bottoming, the means are
fairly handy for doing this: you offer yourself, your pain, your dignity or
your servitude as a sacrifice. Humility, acceptance of an externally provided
edict, puts your trust in something outside you, something bigger, something
higher.
Sacrifice has long been part of spiritual practice. By forsaking something
you desire, you bind yourself more tightly to the object of your devotion.
It is a ritualized setting of priority, explicitly raising your devotional
commitment above the temporal desires of your ego. It can be a powerful soul
building exercise. Sacrifice means "to make sacred" and giving
something up to a god, goddess, ideal or person to both exalt them and bind
the worshipper and worshiped in a consecration rite. Sacrifice is the essence
of gift giving in general, when the pleasure given away is greater than if it
had been kept. This is different from the concept of investment, which is a
willingness to forgo gratification today to reap greater return later on. In
sacrifice, the act of giving is the reward itself.
The concept of sacrifice is also essential for tops, if more subtle. A good
top should sacrifice years of work in mastering her or his craft, should
always be ready to sacrifice one's immediate desires in the interest of
building a scene satisfying to both themselves and their partners. Regardless
of your role, you should be able to savor the joys resulting from your
sacrifice. The feeling of "here is why I demean myself, here is why
I accept the pain, here is way I practiced all summer with my whip"
is a great feeling indeed, both because it feels wonderful, and because
it teaches us, again and again that great experiences await us in unlikely
places. Sacrifice brings wisdom as part of its reward.
Pain and Soul Damage
I don't want to leave the false impression that all pain and suffering
is beneficial and good. Some events are so terrible and traumatic that
they demolish both ego and soul, leaving their victims brutalized,
isolated, and incapable of loving themselves or others. Some religious
institutions have scandalous records of crushing the souls of their own
faithful, in the vain attempts of afflicting the egos through harsh
discipline. To stay with the athletic metaphor, instead of the incremental
tearing down and building up of muscle, soul trauma is akin to traumatic
physical injury: a wound that cannot heal without proper care. Pain can
mean permanent injury. More on this later
The Top
If the previous paragraphs describe the trip the bottom takes during the
SM ritual, the top is the sculptor of that experience. In Christian tradition
the top would be a priest, confessor, a conduit to holiness and mystical encounter.
In older traditions the top would be a shaman one who guides his patient through
ritual exploration of self (This aspect of the tops function has similarities to
today's psychotherapist). If the bottom is initiate or acolyte the Top is master,
teacher, and guide.
While the top is the one who is captain of the voyage the bottom is not
sent alone. The top is both guide and participant in the ceremonial
exploration of self and the experience of the divine.
Mysterious, powerful, sexually charged, loving but cruel, the top is
an amalgamation of mythic characters common to many of the worlds great
cultures (Carl Jung called these characters archetypes). Hidden just below
the leathery surface of today's dominant top, are a number of recognizable
archetypes.
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The Warrior
- Someone trained and skilled in the use of potentially deadly force,
like a ninja, or samurai, who is empowered to wield destruction. Someone
dangerous, brave and decisive, who is comfortable taking or dishing out
punishment and pain.
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The Lover
- A sharer of pleasure and intimacy, a Casanova, Don Juan, or Mata
Hari. A giver of small, beautiful gifts, possibly a bit of a sexual
virtuoso. Someone who can make their partner come all night, and beg
for more.
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The Dancer
- The dance is an amazingly apt metaphor for SM. It's a ritual
of closeness, physicality, and beauty, in which beginners and
advanced practitioners can participate. One leads, the other
follows. It can be shared with many partners as a cordial social
activity or it can be smolderingly intimate. My friend and mentor,
Gil, even while he was teaching me the secrets of BDSM, was always
running off to square dances with his partner which I always found
pretty nelly. Now I understand.
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The Bully
- A powerful figure who is willing to use that strength to dominate,
terrorize or torment others who are helpless to resist. One who takes
delight in doing bad things and loves an unfair fight.
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The Connoisseur
- One who has cultivated unusual, discriminating tastes, even
of cruelty or pain.
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The Artist
- Like a painter, a dominant uses the body of his submissive
as a canvas creating works of beauty for the top and bottom's
shared pleasure. Being an artist, godlike, they create characters
and make things happen to them. They kill, rape, torture and subject
them to peril. They belong to the artist, to dispose of how they wish.
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The Alchemist
- Just as the alchemist mystics took base elements of lead,
earth and water, and attempted to turn them into gold, we
take the base feelings of aggression fear, shame, pain and
loss, transforming them into works of beauty and illumination.
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The Scholar/Teacher
- One who has worked to amass a wealth of knowledge and has
distilled it into wisdom, one who is skilled and willing to teach
this wisdom to students.
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The Tribesman
- One who is a member of a group of peers who share a tribal
identity and culture. One who belongs to something larger than
oneself, who knows people, and who people know, who has a connection
to others like themselves.
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The Parent
- If you'll pardon the incestuous metaphor, the parent-child
metaphor is intimate, loving, supportive, but unequal in authority,
with the parent having responsibility for educating, training, and
disciplining the child. Daddy' lap, mom's hairbrush and the woodshed
are all standard symbols in the scene.
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The Animal/Familiar
- The familiar is an alternate identity that lives within us,
in animal form, and is often associated with shaman, witches or
warlocks. This other identity often has greater strength and
endurance, and rich carnivorous appetites. There are a surprising
number of scene folk who identify with animal familiars. My friend
Joseph has a lion personality that emerges during play. Bernadette
Wright of Baltimore becomes a puma. The popular horse and pony
extravaganzas speak for themselves.
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The Healer/Shaman
- The holy man or high priestess who performs magic, casts spells,
works cures on and heals the sick. In the shaman tradition, the
healer takes the subject (bottom) on a spiritual voyage, a visionary
exploration, from which they return wiser and more healed than before.
Where the artist uses the body as a canvas, to the shaman, it becomes
both alter and sacrifice. The dungeon is the temple or sacred cave:
rituals and candlelight are used in both. And, as it turns out,
pre-industrial societies have great many rituals and rites that
strongly resemble some of the things we do in the dungeon.
At his or her best, the dominant is a cousin to the martial artist, the
Arthurian Knight, the ever-so-slightly-Zen western gunslinger, the
Renaissance man or woman. Readers of romance novels recognize the
dominant as the "tall dark stranger" when male or as the
"femme fatale" when female. Both are dangerous, desirable
and promise eroticism and adventure.
Top And Bottom Together
The ancient Buddhist text, "101 Zen stories" includes a Koan
about a skilled harp player whose best friend was a skilled listener.
When the harp player played sang about a river the other could see it,
and hear the lapping waves. When the player sang about a love like wine,
the other could taste it. When the listener fell sick and died, the player
cut the strings and never played again. That's what the bottom contributes:
the purpose for the top to perform their craft. Without the bottom, the
listener to the tops music, the top is nothing.
Between bottom and top, SM is the language spoken, and the message is
always the same: Life is good, even when it hurts. Even when there's
suffering. Even when there's humiliation. Even when its arduous. The
experience of pain is a crucial training for survival. It teaches us
that when you are dealt a crippling blow, even a tragic one you can
and must go on. Many of the painful initiation rites implicitly teach
this lesson: Hardship can be endured, can be ennobling, can lead to
strength, courage, and joy. Sin can be expedited. Retribution can be
made. The suffering and confusion in this world can be transcended.
It's a message of survival, the same message of the Fakir meditating
on his bed of nails, the aboriginal leading others in the firewalk,
the yogi contorting his body, the tribal initiate enduring the agony
of scarification, the holyman letting a ceremonial bonfire take the
finest livestock in a ritual of sacrifice. Peace comes from the
conquering the fear of pain.
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