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B.E.S.T. slave Training
Resistance & Reactance
Resistance:
(this concept was adapted from Therapeutic Psychology 3rd edition copyright
1977 L. M. Brammer & E. L. Shostrom)
ASSUMPTIONS for the section:
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Resistance is a reaction to change.
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Resistance occurs when something or someone causes a threat to
something of value. The threat may be real or it may be just a
perception.
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This threat causes anxiety.
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Resistance can occur where there is a genuine understanding of
the change or where there is a real misunderstanding, or even
almost total ignorance about it.
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Resistance can effect behavior, emotions, self-image and
thoughts.
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This is not about "brat play" or any other form of
BDSM place. It is about real resistance to change. The Master
and slave are serious and this is not a game.
RESISTANCE and slave training:
Resistance is not a category of B.E.S.T.
slave training
but does deserve special notice to the trainer. Resistance
can often be handled as an interfering belief with REBT
or B.E.S.T. slave training techniques. The source of resistance
is when the topic, expected behavior, situation or her Master is
viewed as threatening. Anxiety is present in any response to a
threat and the slave feels compelled to defend herself against
additional anxiety.
Resistance is a reaction to anxiety caused by the change and the
treat felt from it. It is not directly aimed at the Master.
A slave, like all humans, seeks homeostasis and equilibrium in her
life. she want stability and any change rocks that boat. It is human
nature to resist change. A master needs to understand that in most cases a
slave's resistance is not personal or even directed at him but instead is a
human reaction to anxiety caused by a threat perceived from change.
In many cases she may very well see that she needs to do what her master
asked to deepen her slavery and even want to but this knowledge and desire
does not always reduce her anxiety.
Resistance is classified as
internal or external.
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Internal resistance
is an attempt by the slave to retreat from her Master’s efforts
to explore and alter behavior and/or beliefs. It is anxiety
associated with a change in life status or attitude. The faster
the slave is exposed to change the more the resistance increases
because her anxiety gets stronger.
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Openness is important in a Master/slave relationship. A
lack of openness causes stress when a Master attempts to
explore internal feelings, and beliefs. Because of the
critical nature of openness in the relationship, it should
be strongly stressed to the slave early in the training
process. It is also important for the slave to realize
that you accept her as she is. Yes, you will alter her to
serve, obey and please you, but you accept her and want her
to feel she can reveal her thoughts and feelings to you.
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It is a violation of her duty as a slave to keep her feelings
to herself. If she does open to you, then it is also a violation
of your duty as a Master to act in a way that causes her stress
for having the courage of opening up herself to you. you should
not encourge her to open her thoughts and feeling to you then
use and/or hold them again her. you will destroy trust if you
act improperly.
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One form of internal resistances is called reactance. Reactance
is discussed below in a separate section (Reactance to a loss of
an important freedom).
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External resistance
can be caused by anxiety about being dependent or close to
another person. It can develop when the Master goes faster than
the slave feels she is capable of going, therefore she resists
his attempts. Another source of resistance is lack of faith in
her Master or a lack of readiness to accept slavery. There can
also be a resistance to the amount of time her Master requires
for training when she feels it could be used otherwise or if she
is tired or sleepy. Resistance can also be due to emotional
reactions caused by past life experiences (flashbacks) that may
seem overwhelming to the slave.
The principle value of resistance to the Master is that it gives an
indication of how the slave is progressing in training. After resistance
is seen in the slave then her Master can ignore, reduce, or utilize it.
Resistance also is a window into the slave’s defense structure.
The expressions of resistance depends on the slave’s personality.
People express anxiety differently.
Overcoming Resistance:
For any of the below techniques to work the slave trainee must want
to change so she can better serve, obey and please her master.
Techniques for overcoming resistance:
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Ignoring, but being aware of it and watching for increases.
This may be useful if you are not directly dealing with the
issue at the present time.
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Minor adaptations - slowing down.
Allowing you slave to adjust easier by slowing the changes
thrust upon her. It is a method of reducing but not removing anxiety.
It may cause less stress in the long run by allowing trust to
grow, allowing her more time to analysis the changes and the
threat it causes her, and your behavior. A master needs to
observe the reactions of his trainee when he is changing behavior
rapidly.
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Temporary diversion - re-direction to less threatening areas and
return at a later time.
This is another method of temporarily eliminating or reducing
anxiety caused by change. It simply gives a Master more time to
prepare a trainee for change.
A Master should not viewed himself as being weak if he stops this
current training goals for a short period and re-directs training
in an area that causes the trainee less anxiety.
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Direct manipulation -
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Examination of the slave’s use of resistance with her
How has the slave used resistance to her benefit in
the past. Often anxiety grows into a tool used to
"get your way" and cause others to back off.
It can be a learned defense. Talk about the behavior used
by the slave when the feelings of anxiety are present.
Humans react to change because they:
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fear losing something that believe has value, or
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don't understand the change and it will impact them, or
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don't see any value in changing or it is not logical
to them , or
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find it difficult to cope with the new behavior caused by
the change (can’t cope).
COMMUNICATIONS:
Show your slave the value in changing to your
required behavior. Often providing the slave
with more knowledge about how the behavioral
change will affect her and the relationship
in a positive way helps overcome anxiety.
Show her the positive side of changing her
beliefs and behavior. Discuss ways to make the
change easier in order to enable her to cope
with the change. Often the act of changing from
one behavior to another is more stressful than
the actual change. Discuss the process of
changing. Offer encouragement and let her
know you are pleased with her change any
behavior, this will make additional changes
easier
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Reflection on feelings of resistance Causing the slave to
tell you about her resistance and why she felt as she did.
what past issues cause it.
S. K Piderit (2000) believes that the definition of
the term resistance must incorporate a broader scope.
She states that "a review of past empirical
research reveals three different emphases in
conceptualizations of resistance: as a cognitive
state, as an emotional state, and as a behavior"
(Piderit, S.K. (2000, Oct). Rethinking resistance and
recognizing ambivalence: a multidimensional view of
attitudes toward an organizational change. Academy
of Management -794. A, 783).
Both internal and external resistance reduces as
trust in her Master builds. Of course, building
trust takes time and must be reinforced with
positive examples. Trust involves a belief that
her Master:
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has the knowledge and skills necessary to
re-educate and re-socialize her,
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will keep her safe,
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will accept ownership of her,
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will structure her service in a way that she feels
useful and
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has personal stability and integrity.
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Threats followed by action if necessary to motivate This involves
setting a goal. Then clearly stating consequences for failing to
meet the goals. This can also mean punishment for not meeting the
goals.
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Direct confrontation or direct questioning This means you force
your trainee to discuss the source of her resistance and discuss
ways of reducing her anxiety.
It is confronting the root cause. It is not just
behavioral change but examining emotions and thoughts.
The Master can use REBT and CHOICE THERAPY concepts here.
you can focus on showing her the logic of change or the
illogical stance of resisting change.
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Overwhelming force (meaning that she knows she will not change
her Master's mind by resistance or reactance).
He has issued an order and expects it obeyed. He had
made the choice of her behavior. Her only choice is to
change her behavior to that her Master wishes. If she
maintains her slavery, she is helpless to change her
behavior in the long run because her master controls it.
She is helpless to change her behavior therefore
her attitude must change in order to reduce the
mental conflict. The feeling of helplessness to
change her own behavior is important in slave training.
she seeks peace and calmness in her life and if her
behavior is owned and controlled then she must
change her attitude to achieve it (see Cognitive
Dissonance Theory below).
This requires that a master has already established his
interpersonal forms of power, or the ways one person
manages, trains and controls another. They are listed
below.
NOTE:
The term helplessness as used here means:
that in order to maintain her slavery or continue
on the right path in her slave training and not
displease her Master, she is helpless to change her
behavior. Her Master determines her behavior. It
means that she has made a decision to allow her
Master the right to make her behavioral choices
for her. He has made a choice of how he wishers
her to behave therefore she is helpless to change
her behavior and be a slave. If she rejects his
choice she is rejecting her her oath to allow
him to own her choices and is acting outside
her slavery.
Reactance to a loss of an important freedom:
Reactance is a type of internal resistance that should be expected
from a slave during training. Recognizing and overcoming reactance is
important in slave training.
Reactance occurs when the slave perceives a threat to her
freedoms or and actual " loss of a freedom" that is
important to her and this motivates her to attempt to restore
that freedom. The theory also associates the state of reactance
with emotional stress, anxiety, resistance and struggle for the
slave, and she is motivated to escape from these feelings.
Reactance is not a resistance to the time involved in training
or even a resistance to her Masters efforts to train her, it is
a resistance to a "loss of a freedom" and the emotional
stress that this loss causes her. she attempts to regain this freedom
usually by an emotional reaction to the change. This is a point that
is often misunderstood. It is a personal resistance to a loss of a
freedom as opposed to a resistance to her Master. However, her way
of rebelling against the loss of freedom may be seen as resistance
to her Master.
Restated, reactance is a resistance to a thing (loss of freedom)
not a person. A slave has a reactance to loosing control as opposed
to resisting her Master.
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Example 1) If a slave has taken pride in choosing her own
clothing to wear all her life and her Master now chooses
her clothing for her, the resistance in not against her Master,
it is again the loss of freedom.
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Example 2) If a slave has agreed to move in with her
Master to become a 24/7 slave, she may, at the last minute,
have a reactance to the loss of freedom and privacy she knows
in coming. It is an internal conflict instead of a reaction
against her Master.
One of the major factors in overcoming reactance is for the
slave to feel that no matter how she reacts to the "loss
of freedom, " her Master will
not
give in. She is faced with an overwhelming force and her
only option is to accept the "loss of freedom". Her
behavior is controlled by her Master, therefore she must change her
attitude about the "loss of freedom" in order to reduce the
stress the reactance causes. (see Cognitive Dissonance Theory below)
Brehm, J. (1966). "A Theory of Psychological Reactance" New York:
Academic Press) and (Brehn, S. (1981). "Psychological Reactance: A Theory
of Freedom and Control")
Also additional information can be found at
Reactance to Enslavement
Reactance Theory operates in three sequential phases. The first
phase is the activating step and the key feature of the Reactance
Theory.
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Phase 1. A slave perceives an "unfair" restriction on her
behavior or loss of an important freedom.
The key words are "
unfair" and "
important." A slave
will accept restrictions and loss of freedom if she feels that it
is reasonable, equal, and just. When the slave feels the restrictions
are unfair, she doesn’t know why they are being applied, she thinks
they are too tough, or too important, then her emotions may move to
phase 2.
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Phase 2. The state of reactance is activated.
Reactance can be very motivational to the slave. The slave in a
state of reactance is emotional, single-minded, and can be
somewhat irrational. It arises because she has been wronged
and she is not going to take it anymore. Reactance is important
to understand because it has strong motivational properties and
leads to the final phase.
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Phase 3. The slave must act to remove the reactance.
The motivational qualities the slave has in the state of
reactance are so strong that she must do something about it.
The reactance cannot be ignored or put aside by her Master.
In particular, the slave is motivated to either "right
the wrong" or to get around the restriction. In other
words, a slave with reactance will try to get the unfair
restriction removed or they will try to subvert the
restriction.
Another consequence of reactance at phase three is that the
slave will tend to overvalue the action that was unfairly
restricted. In the study on detergents, housewives rated the
phosphate-based detergent as a better cleaning product than
the one without phosphates even though phosphates have no real
chemical impact on cleaning.
When a slave exhibits reactance to rules, laws, or any other
restriction and/or when she feels a loss of an important freedom
she will:
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Value the restricted behavior more
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Want to engage in the restricted behavior more
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Engage in a different behavior as a reaction to the
restriction and this behavior is usually negative
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Have hostility toward her Master for the restriction.
Four Actions a Master can take when confronted with Reactance
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Brehm said that there is a feeling of "helplessness",
when an important freedom is removed. This can be overcome if
the slave feels she is confronted by an "insurmountable
superior power.
In addition, according to Brehm, the resistance can most often
be overcome by applying "very high force" which is
defined as a powerful force, but a less than insurmountable
superior power. The amount if force that is necessary to use
is dictated by how important the freedom is to the slave. The
more important it is, the more force necessary to overcome
and/or place the slave into a feeling of helplessness.
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REBT can be used as well to identify the interfering belief and
applying the A-B-C-D-E steps to it. Click her for more details on
REBT
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"Choice Decision" Click her for more details on
choicedecision.htm
Interpersonal Forms of Power:
Interpersonal forms of power, or the ways one person manages, trains
and controls another. The interpersonal forms of power are:
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Reward Power -
ability to control the reward a slave wants; reinforcements
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Coercive Power -
ability to cause a slave to have an unpleasant experience; punishment
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Legitimate Power -
based on position or mutual agreement. The slave agrees to accept
her Master and grants him authority. This is why a contract is
valuable in slave training because the contract grants her
Master legitimate power, by establishing his authority in
writing. In addition to setting goals, it allows both Master
and slave to discuss the process and allows her to see and agree
to the authority she is granting him.
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Reverent Power -
an elusive power that is based on interpersonal attraction. The
slave identifies with the Master and the Master is individualistic
and respected by the slave. This is the personal connection between
the two.
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Expert Power -
specialized knowledge or skills the slave needs. Three conditions must
exist; trust, knowledge must be relevant and useful, and perception
as an expert by the slave.
The ability of a Master to overcome the resistance and reactance of a
slave is directly related to the strength and application of the
interpersonal forms of power (see
Interpersonal Forms of Power
). A Master should be aware of each form of power and how it applies
to controlling his slave. Taking steps to improve the interpersonal
forms of power can have a long-term positive effect on training. The
use of reward power strengthens a Master's control by causing the
slave to seek more rewards by pleasing her Master. The proper use of
punishment strengthens coercive power by causing the slave to avoid
displeasing her Master. An agreed to contract and written rules that
are enforced increases legitimate power.
Reverent Power is increased by forcing the slave to act "as if"
and by increasing her personal bond with her Master, this creates a
stronger sense of belonging to her Master. Demonstrating the knowledge
and skills necessary to train a slave increases expert power. All
interpersonal forms of power act together in the process of overcoming
resistance and reactance. Training a slave is not just reward power and
coercive power, in fact, they are of little value without the others
existing as well.
Cognitive Dissonance Theory:
The following explains how changing a slave's behavior and resistance to
change often collide in training and why a slave changes behavior.
Cognitive dissonance says that "when a slave's attitude conflicts
with other personal beliefs or the behavior her Master requires, it
causes a mental discomfort (conflict and or resistance). This motivates
her to change either her attitude or behavior to reduce dissonance."
A Master controls the slave's behavior therefore her attitude must
be changed in order to reduce the mental conflict. she is
"helpless" to change her behavior because it is determined
by her Master. She has given her Master the "legitimate power"
to control her behavior therefore her only option is changing her
attitude. However, resistance to the change is to be expected.
The term "helpless" means that she is helpless to change her
behavior and still maintain her slavery (upholding the contract with
her Master and pleasing him). Yes, she could change her behavior to
one that is not what her Master's wishes but that would be outside of
her slavery.
Her behavior is determined by her Master and her attitude changes to reflect
that behavior, if
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a Master's "legitimate power" is well established and strong,
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the slave believes her Master has the skills necessary to train her
(expert power), and
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she has a sense or desires a sense of belonging to her Master
(reverent power).
If the above exist, then reward and coercive power can be used to change
behavior and overcome resistance. See the section
Interpersonal Forms of Power
for more detail.
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