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Negotiation Ideas
by Unknown Author
What Should a Negotiation Cover?
The following questions are very basic kinds of
information that Tops/Doms often ask for during
negotiations with bottoms/subs. Sometimes these
"negotiations" are spread out over many months and just
crop up naturally in ordinary conversation or
flirtations. Other times the top conducts a negotiation
interview covering these topics shortly before playing.
(Some tops also include an activity questionnaire in
such interviews.) It is also common for the bottom to
initiate the conversation by bringing up these
questions.
Negotiation does not necessarily mean: "Ok, I will do
this for you if you will do that for me." It is a
general term covering all manner of topics that the
prospective partners typically want to clear up in
advance of getting started in a scene so that they don't
have to disrupt their play with conversation that is not
quite in the mood of the scene. Of course, that doesn't
mean that the bottom and top cannot communicate about
such things during the scene---and doing so is quite
common! But most people find it works best to get some
things straight in advance.
Many people find engaging in negotiations to be very hot
preliminaries before play. Often the bottom really
enjoys being invited to talk so intimately, and the top
often enjoys listening and getting ideas. Further
discussion usually ensues. Negotiation is most often a
form of flirtation and verbal foreplay, although the
result of it is an agreement that also serves as a
formal contract between the partners.
I ask whatever subset of these questions I think might
apply to whatever I am considering doing. If I skip
something that suddenly becomes a possibility mid-scene,
I either don't do it or I ask about it quietly and
unobtrusively. Often an experienced bottom will offer
the answers without my asking. How and when these things
get discussed is not important so long as they are
discussed. Re-discussing interesting parts of the
negotiated terms during aftercare and sometimes for a
week or months after a scene is also common, in my
experience; as is changing the terms of the
negotiation---things that are originally off limits
often become tempting to the bottom as the relationship
deepens or just as the partners change over time.
There are lots of other good negotiation questions, I am sure, and this is
off the top of my head, so chances are I am leaving
something out.
Questions about both partners' experience levels, the
kinds of play they have done before, and discussion of
the risks involved with playing in whatever ways might
come up. Negotiations with novices typically cover many
things that the top would not need to explain to
experienced players. (Similarly if it is the top that is
a novice!) If I am going to try something new for me as
a top that is risky, I make sure the bottom knows it is
a new experience for me. In fact, for
any
activity I am thinking of doing that is risky, I make
sure the bottom understands whatever risks I believe are
present, even if they are unlikely to happen. I do not
consider consent to be given unless it is
informed
consent, and that means understanding that there are
risks and what they are.
Questions about the person's other partners if they
exist, and how those partners feel about the person
playing with someone else. I usually talk with any
primary partner or SO in advance of playing just to
touch base---it's a standard top's courtesy, and a damn
good idea, to boot.
Do either of the partners drink or do drugs? (Most
players I know do not ever mix alcohol and play because
it dulls the senses and slows reactions times; same for
most, if not all, drugs, though a few specific kinds of
drugs are used occasionally in some play circles.) I
personally will not play with anyone, top or bottom, who
is under the influence of any substance at the time we
are playing---I consider it too dangerous, not to
mention not the point.
I often play in public at play parties with private or
semi-private space, so I might ask if the person has a
preference, if the person has not volunteered that
information already. Often, though, where the play is to
occur is dictated by the nature of the scene itself or
by when and where the bottom and I are getting together.
It is not a bad idea for a bottom to ask specifically
about what the top typically offers in terms of
aftercare and follow-up discussions, including time and
energy commitments. As a top, I usually make my
potential time commitments known in advance; though
also, I know that any time I play there is a risk that I
could have to do more aftercare and follow-up than I
anticipate. But there is a limit on the demands any
individual partner can make on me because I have prior
commitments in my life, and I consider it important for
that to be cleared up if there is any potential of
expectations being out of synch.
In my play circles, tops typically volunteer references
of other play partners in advance, or the bottom asks for
such references and permission to inquire about the top
before playing. Bottoming or subbing to an unknown and
unvouched for top or Dom is done cautiously, and it is
common for negotiations in such circumstances to include
discussions of how to increase the bottom's sense of
safety (such as playing in public or with a friend in a
nearby room or at minimum with a friend expecting a
phone call from the bottom at a pre-specified time).
Getting references is the
norm!
This is one of the most astonishing surprises for those who have not
previously encountered the Scene Community---it is not
common in the vanilla world to go talk to a former lover
of someone you want to make love to, after all. But BDSM
is not vanilla sex---it is physically and emotionally
risky stuff, and the customs differ for good reasons.
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