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Play Piercing
by Dirk
Table of Contents
In the
Source sheet
Introduction
Unlike
the more familiar
permanent piercings,
play piercings are temporary body piercings, usually made
with thin needles, where the needle itself is left in for
the duration of the scene and taken out at the end rather
than replaced by jewelry. This game is usually regarded as
an advanced SM specialty but is actually less heavy than it
sounds, and relatively easy and safe provided proper precautions
are taken.
As with all such techniques the best way to learn is one-to-one
with an experienced partner, but if you don't have this advantage
then at least practice on yourself, with shallow piercings on
innocuous sites such as just below the navel or through the
surface flesh of the arm or thigh, before you unleash your
needles on others and on more delicate regions of the body.
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What's the Thrill?
For
or most people the biggest kick in play piercing is psychological,
perhaps the feeling of being so intimately and invasively penetrated
or penetrating. A thin needle through the surface skin of much of
the body hurts only as much as a minor injection, though it seems
to stimulate endorphins in quantities out of proportion to its
physiological impact! Once the needle is in, it can be manipulated
to stretch the skin, which will release a further flood of endorphins
without really hurting much either. Pain junkies note, however, that
piercing can be made painful by choosing the right sites.
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What to Use
Needles
designed to pierce the skin are not tapered to a point like sewing
needles but instead are cylinders cut off at an angle at one end to
provide a cutting edge: examples include the old fashioned
piercers' needles, 'Medicut' canula needles
and
hypodermic needles
intended for injections and blood sampling. Piercers' needles and
medicuts are much better suited to permanent piercing (see the
Permanent Piercing Fact sheet
). Hypodermic needles are by far the favored choice of play
piercers: they are thin, relatively cheap, sterile, disposable,
and have a plastic fitting on one end designed to attach to a
syringe but ideal as a handle and to prevent them being pushed
right through the piercing.
Obtaining them can take some research and footwork: though they
are legal to buy openly in many territories, and despite the health
problems of drug users having to share needles, some pharmacists
are still unwilling to supply them to just anyone. Good sources
are the large pharmacies that supply to the private medical
profession, such as John Bell and Croyden (see below), who charge
about GBP7 for a box of 100.
Hypodermics are available in various sizes. The diameter, or gauge,
is identified by the color of the plastic cap, with the gauge
numbers increasing as the thickness decreases. Each gauge is
normally available in lengths of 15mm/0.5", 25mm/1",
40mm/1.5" and 50mm/2". The commonest gauges are shown
in the table below.
|
Gauge
|
Diameter in mm
|
Color
|
|
19
|
1.1
|
White
|
|
21
|
0.8
|
Green
|
|
22
|
0.7
|
Grey
|
|
23
|
0.6
|
Blue
|
|
25
|
0.5
|
Orange
|
|
27
|
0.4
|
Brown
|
|
30
|
0.3
|
Clear
|
Generally speaking, the thinner the gauge, the less intense the
sensation. Gauge 30 needles are almost impossible to feel in certain
places, for example. Very sensitive areas require thinner needles
such as 25 and 27; for general purposes gauge 21s are ideal, and
for an intense sensation 19s can be used in all but the most
sensitive areas.
Different lengths suit different purposes. In general, play
piercings go right through the body, so 15mm needles are
usually too short to be useful. 40mm is a good general purpose
length, and 50mm affords the possibility of threading the needle
through surface skin more than once.
Ordinary
sewing needles
are not ideal: they have to be sterilized (see
Doing It Yourself
in the Permanent Piercing fact sheet) first and may not be
sharp enough to go through the body with ease. Furthermore
almost all the widely available ones are made of cheap chromium
plated metal, and these should never be used, since the plating
could come off in the piercing and give all sorts of infection
problems. Solid steel needles are difficult to come by, though
they are sometimes available for marine use, where they are
required to be rust resistant. Pointed needles also hurt a lot
more -- the tapered shape means that the skin is forced further
apart after the initial penetration.
For suturing (sewing) the skin, hypodermics are clearly
unsuitable, and if solid steel sewing needles are unobtainable
or undesirable the alternative is to use
surgical sutures
from medical suppliers. These are small curved needles looking
rather like toenail clippings (!), supplied in sterile packs
already attached to a length of sterile nylon or silk thread.
Unfortunately they cannot be handled successfully or safely by
hand and must be used with forceps. Nylon is stronger but more
difficult to knot; larger sized needles of at least 26mm (1")
length are preferred for most play purposes. See
Suturing
below.
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Hygiene and Safety Precautions
Since
you are about to breach the blood-air barrier and create what
is actually an open wound, special hygiene precautions should
be taken. Most importantly, you should avoid allowing infections
into the wound and avoid blood contact.
Be careful not to accidentally jab yourself or another with
a needle that's been in someone else's skin.
The best way to avoid accidents like this and to do the
neatest job you can is to be sensible about your work area.
Have everything you need arranged conveniently and safely to
hand before you start, just as a medical professional would,
and make sure you can see clearly what you're doing - this is
not a game to be played in a darkened playroom.
Make sure you're sober and undrugged,
and particularly avoid stuff like poppers and speed that are
liable to make your hands shake. You may want to wear surgical
gloves, but unless they're sterile (and these are expensive and
require proper sterile theatre practice to
keep
sterile) they aren't much more effective than a clean pair or hands,
are no defense against sharps anyway and may impair your dexterity.
A minor accident is not a cause for total panic, however: though a
risk exists, the chance of transmission of HIV and Hepatitis etc.
through needle stick injury is not excessive.
Make sure all the skin surfaces and the needles are clean
-- use fresh sterile needles from a sealed pack, or sterilize
non-sterile needles (see
Doing It Yourself
in the Permanent Piercing fact sheet). Do NOT re-use disposable
needles, even on yourself. Wash your hands thoroughly, perhaps
with an anti-bacterial soap like Hibiscrub or Hibiclens (available
from pharmacies).
The following advice for cleaning the skin is summarized from
On the Safe Edge
(Jacques 1993:144-5):
Any part of the body that is to be cut or pierced should be
thoroughly washed, preferably with an anti-bacterial soap
[see above]. An unscented exfoliant, such as a rough-wash
cloth, will help dislodge any ground-in dirt. This will
usually still leave a thin layer of soap on the surface
that could attract dirt. To remove this, wipe with a cloth
or cotton wool dipped in rubbing alcohol. Now wipe the
area first with hydrogen peroxide and then with Betadine
or another iodine based cleaner. Do
not
touch the area again with anything that is not sterile until
play is complete and the area has been properly recleaned and
protected. Clean in a spiral shape working
outwards
from the area to be pierced.
The navel (belly-button) has unseen folds of skin inside. You
will have to super-saturate it with Betadine on a cotton ball.
Then work it around with small circular actions, pushing it
into the navel and agitating it as you go. The foreskin must
be pulled back to make sure any folds are carefully cleaned.
The labia require you to get up under the hood, into the folds
with a Q-Tip [cotton wool bud] with one end in Betadine first,
then the other end dry. Repeat at least twice, then use a Q-Tip
with rubbing alcohol in the same way to remove excess Betadine,
which may cause you to slip.
Note that some of these substances, particularly alcohol, may
cause stinging when in contact with delicate tissues such as
those of the scrotum or vagina. Grit your teeth -- this will
soon pass.
Handle the needles carefully.
They come packed in cylindrical sheaths with the plastic fitting
snug in the top of the sheath so they can be removed without
touching the needle itself. Always hold them only by the plastic
fitting, and avoid contamination by never touching the shafts or
tips.
Have a disposal box to hand before you start.
Used needles and the plastic sheaths they are packed in should
ideally be placed in a proper sharps disposal box and sent to a
hospital incinerator, though such facilities are not easy to find.
If you have to dispose of them in household refuse (garbage) use
something strong like a well-sealed plastic box or an old jam
jar with a screw-on top wrapped in several layers of newspaper.
It's good practice not to put a used needle back in its sheath
so it can't be mistaken for a clean one.
Another rare hazards of piercing is
fainting
(see
First Aid: Fainting.
Take things easy, especially if you're dealing with a first
time piercing bottom: keep the room warm and well-ventilated
and the atmosphere relaxed, and avoid rigorous bondage. This
is probably not a good game to play in the context of a heavy
Dom/sub scene except with experienced players.
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Ways to Play
The First Cut
The
easiest places to start are on fleshy areas like the thighs,
or at the bottom of the navel with the needle aiming downwards.
Clean
the area as mentioned described above, then
remove
the packaging on a needle and take it out from its sheath.
Handle carefully by the plastic fitting.
Pinch
up a few millimeters of surface skin on the site, and
place
the needle so it is aimed to go through the pinched up skin,
with the longest side of the needle against the skin. Then
push
it all the way through and out the other side in one smooth
movement until the plastic fitting of the needle comes to rest
against the entry point. The needles are very sharp and should
need little pressure to penetrate surface skin.
Here's a
tip
that sometimes makes things easier for those new to the game:
when the needle is positioned ready for the piercing, breathe
in deeply, hold your breath for a moment and then breathe out
as the needle is pushed through the skin. It seems to hurt less
that way, or at least is easier to cope with.
Now relax and enjoy the sight. You may like to try gently moving
the needle around to see what effect that has too - but do this
only by holding the plastic fitting. Avoid touching the needle
on the other side of the piercing as that section has to be drawn
back through the wound again on the way out.
One problem with needles once they are in is that the protruding
sharp end of the needle could scratch and irritate the skin. See
under
Genitals
below for suggestions about dealing with this.
How much breathing space you allow the bottom between needles
depends on the scene. An inexperienced bottom should be given
some time to assimilate at least the first few needles while
you watch carefully for any signs of a bad reaction. But some
people find needle play easier to cope with if the piercings
are made in fairly rapid succession.
Remove
the needle as carefully as you put it in, keeping it straight
and taking it out in one smooth movement. A few spots of blood
are usually all you get from surface skin, though there are
particular questions associated with piercings in more intimate
places as described below.
Opinions are divided on
aftercare.
Some people swab with alcohol again, or a sterile disposable
swab -- and as before you should wipe outwards from the wound
itself, not swab potential infection back into it. Jacques
recommends using a spray bottle with a mix of half-in-half
Betadine and alcohol. Others just leave it open to the air
- the little drops of blood that emerge will clean out nasties
from the wound, though you may want to swab away the blood if
there's a lot of it, without disturbing the wound itself. If
properly done, the piercing should leave a barely visible hole
that disappears after a couple of days.
See the
Source sheet
for some personal experiences of needle games.
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Sites for Piercings
Surface Skin
Many
people are quite happy just piercing the surface flesh of the
skin:
thighs, buttocks, arms, tummies, shoulders, cheeks,
and the area on the
chest
or
breasts
around the nipples are favorite sites; those with shaved heads
may contemplate the sides of the
scalp,
though this tends to bleed a little. Some people create body art
by piercing in patterns, such as a ring of needles around the nipples.
Others get into
skin stretching games
by attaching long, thin elastics to skin piercings and attaching
them in various ways. Two dedicated London piercers like to face
each other with matching piercings across the front of their upper
torsos, attach each to its counterpart with elastics and then play
on the elastics like a bizarre human harp. A legendary tale from New
York recounts a scene with a man who was placed face up on an airbed
and had over a hundred skin piercings attached to the ceiling: the
airbed was then let down.
One US-based piercer says her favorite game is 'to put two
parallel rows of needles down someone's chest, and then take
silk cord and lace them together corset-style. This can be
tightened, until eventually they end up slightly hunched over,
in a perfect position for flogging. Making them sit up straight
while cutting the laces makes it easier to see the facial
expressions as the lacing comes loose.'
Genitals
Proceed
here with even more care than with the skin, and be forewarned
that the essential cleaning of the area with spirit will be
rather more uncomfortable than elsewhere!
Skin structures like the
foreskin, scrotum, labia, clitoris hood,
and the skin surface on the
underside of the penis,
can be pierced but special care should be taken to avoid any
obvious blood vessels and irregularities in the skin surface.
The sensation on most of these is moderately intense, but the
male Frenum (the web of skin that holds the foreskin to the
glands) is surprisingly sensitive.
If a blood vessel is hit there will be little bleeding while the
needle is in but the wound may bleed copiously when the needle is
removed. This should cease in a short time. Another possibility
is a hematomas, a bubble of blood inside the skin. These are
almost always no more than a centimeter or so in diameter and
should subside in a day or so leaving just a bruise; large ones,
or ones that keep getting bigger, require urgent medical attention
(see
Ball Torture
for more information).
Another problem with piercing these sites is their irregular
shape, making it difficult to prevent needles scratching the
surrounding skin. Some people cut up little cubes of cork to
tip the needle once inserted, but there are some hygiene concerns
here. Corks are not sterile at purchase, but clean enough to use
for bottling purposes, and their cleanliness can be further
improved by placing them in a microwave oven for a minute,
and then sealing them in a ziplock bag.
Penises with permanent
Prince Albert
piercings are easily dealt with - they can be tied to a piercing
through the navel to keep them still. Or you can use a foreskin
piercing to do the same.
A classic arrangement on the male genitals is to place a column
of horizontal needles through the skin on the underside of the
cock, continuing down the 'seam' in the middle of the scrotum.
Here you can easily pinch a little skin up and put the needle
through. This feels distinctly sharp and invasive. Alternatively
begin at the base and gradually move toward the head, perhaps
making the final two in opposite directions through the Frenum.
Other intimate structures that can be pierced are of thicker
and more sensitive material and consequently cause more intense
sensations.
Nipples
are quite safe to pierce but are tougher than you might expect
and the operation is one of the most painful in piercing play.
The best way is to go in towards the back of the nipple, nearest
the chest, through the edges of the corona. If you are careful in
your placement and you have a serious pain pig on your hands, you
can get two or even three needles through one nipple, perhaps in
a cross or asterisk shape.
One game might be to arrange a series of needles, perhaps in a
star shape, around the nipple first. Measure this by placing a
spare needle of the same size as the ones you intend to use
against the skin so its tip is just short of the corona. The
point where you need to make the piercing is just where the
bottom of the plastic head lies: either make a mental note
of it or mark it with a surgeon's sterile marker. Try a
cross, a St Andrews Cross, a 6-needle asterisk or an 8-needle
star: you will be surprised at the different sensations and
levels of sensitivity in the skin of the breast or chest. In
all cases the needles will seem to point towards the conclusion
the piercing of the nipple itself.
The surface of the
glands
(cock head) and
clitoris
can also be pierced safely but painfully. It is best to keep
the piercings shallow, and expect them to bleed a little. Piercing
the penis shaft should be avoided, since it contains arteries and
many other blood vessels.
Testicular Piercing
The
balls can be pierced safely but great care must be taken. The
most important thing is to make sure the balls do not move within
the scrotum while the piercing is taking place or when the needle
is in: otherwise the outer covering of the testicle could be ruptured,
with serious and extremely painful results. Bind the balls firmly
both around the top of the scrotum and between each ball so that
the scrotum is stretched freely over the balls. Keep the bottom
still and avoid violent movements or any sudden or undue stress
on the needles.
The direction of the pierce is also important: you need to avoid
the epidymis, the attachment on the top of the ball. There are
basically two safe pierces: one going from underneath the ball
using a short needle that will reach the middle but no further,
and one going laterally across the ball, perhaps slightly nearer
the bottom and out the other side. Skewering both balls on a single
needle is very difficult and dangerous and requires an unusually
long needle.
Choose a thinner needle to minimize the amount of internal
tissue damage: a gauge 27 for example. Clean the surface,
then make the piercing slowly and steadily with a very firm
hand. Don't leave the needle in for too long, and certainly
don't attempt to masturbate the bottom with the piercing in.
Remove the needle as carefully as you put it in. Bleeding is
unusual, but you may find a clear fluid squirts out either
through the needle while it is in or at the moment it is
removed. This is the interstitial fluid from inside the ball
and a loss of a little of it is harmless. But be prepared for
it so it doesn't make you jump!
The experience for the bottom is more of a 'mind-trip',
since although the balls are sensitive to pressure they
have no pain receptors inside them. You will feel the prick
as the needle breaches the scrotum and then a slight ache
as it enters the ball, followed by a background throbbing
while it is in. Any serious pain is a sign that something
is seriously wrong: the piercing should be removed immediately
-- but carefully, so don't panic. If the pain continues you
may have to seek medical help.
Anyone contemplating this procedure is advised to familiarize
themselves with the physiology of the balls and what can go
wrong with them -- see the see the
Ball Torture Briefing.
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Suturing (Sewing)
The
precautions for suturing are much the same as for ordinary
play piercing. It can be achieved with sterile solid steel
sewing needles and sterile thread (see
What to Use
above), and, since the whole length of the needle has to pass
through each pierce, the hands that handle it must be sterile
too. This means proper sterile surgeon's gloves, not just
examination gloves. As explained above, there are other
disadvantages to sewing needles, and proper surgical sutures
are a better alternative. But these require learning the surgeon's
technique of sewing using forceps, which requires some dexterity
and practice.
A simple form of suturing that gives something of the effect is
to use a single long hypodermic needle, 50mm or 2", to make
several piercings in a row. A careful hand should be able to manage
three piercings (six holes) and you can achieve some of the skin
stretching effect of sutures. Alternatively use silk thread in
conjunction with piercings as described under
Surface Skin
above.
The most popular purpose of sewing in SM games is
infibulations, the fastening of genitals to prevent
sexual intercourse or arousal. In women either of the
two labia can be sewn together; in men the foreskin can
be sewn shut or the flaccid penis sewn within the folds
of the scrotum. The lips can also be sewn shut. Stretches
of skin on back, buttocks and thighs can be sewn in such a
way as to pull the skin together.
We've also heard of a technique apparently used in hospital
casualty (emergency) departments to tame excessively drunk
and violent patients. The doctor will make several stitches
through the top of the lower arm, and then tie off the thread
to each side of the bed. The patient could, in fact, easily
break the stitches or the thread, but the mere idea of being
restrained in this way is said to be effective.
It is hoped to include more information about suturing here
in the future.
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Links and Resources
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In London, the most convenient suppliers of hypodermic
needles and other surgical items are John Bell and Croyden,
whose shop at 50 Wigmore Street W1 (Underground: Oxford
Circus/Bond Street) is open normal shop hours. Tel +44
(0)181-935 5555.
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For mail order in Britain, check out Mediquip, who have
their own
website.
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In the US, try Chase Products Inc, P.O. Box 1014 Novi,
Michigan 48376; Tel +1 810-348-8191, fax 8394
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Acknowledgement
Thanks to Wolfie for the information on corks and the lacing
idea, and to Tom Gordon for one of the suggestions on cock
piercing.
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