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The
lagellation Fact Sheet: Reference
compiled by
Dirk
, with
Slakker
and
David Stein
Table of Contents
Reference
Practical
Preface: Tongue-Lashings
Don't
let the title instantly put you off -- this fact sheet deals
with a wider variety of sins than you might imagine. Here we
discuss ANY SM activity that involves striking the body with
a light flexible or semi-flexible implement to produce sensations
on skin contact. This includes the sorts of games people call
beating, belting, birching, caning, corporal punishment (CP),
flogging, lashing, paddling, scourging, strapping and whipping
as well as flagellation. All of these have important aspects in
common and it makes sense to discuss them together.
Not covered here are games where the implement involved is a
part of the body -- striking with the hands themselves is
covered under spanking and punching, with the feet under
kicking -- or a heavy weapon capable of deep bruising and
fractures, such as truncheons, day sticks, clubs and so on.
These latter will be dealt with separately at a later stage.
Why use the term 'flagellation', which for many people has
overtones either of religion or the 'kinky' 1960s with its
'fladge'? As it turns out, no one term is entirely satisfactory.
Some of the terms above, though they are sometimes used more
generally, are derived from the names of particular implements,
and although for some people 'whipping' or 'flogging' don't have
to be done with whips or floggers, for others they are restrictive
and confusing. And new coinages like 'percussion play' (as used,
for example, in Jacques 1993), are too general and not yet in wide
enough use. 'Flagellation', although it derives from a word meaning
'whip', now has a much wider application. Its associations with
religious self-mortification are more appropriate than they might
seem: religious flagellation, like the SM variety, was (in theory)
consensual and not for the purposes of punishment. Both SMers and
psychologists have in the past used the term in its broad sense
and some continue to do so (a recent example is Bannon 1992).
Back to the Top
Terms
Here is an overview of the various terms for activities covered
in The Flagellation Fact sheet. Where the word is a verb derived
from the name of the implement used, you will find the implement
discussed under
What to Use
below.
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Bastinado
- Traditional form of punishment or torture involving
beating the feet. The soles of the feat are very tender
and anyone seeking to replicate this in an SM context
is best advised to be very gentle and to use a soft
whip or other light implement. See
Safety: Where and where not to hit.
-
Beating
- Striking typically administered as punishment,
particularly in connection with childhood punishments
such as spanking, caning or belting but also used
(perhaps more so in England, where some schools referred
to corporal punishment with the cane as 'beating') of
more 'adult' scenes like whipping. Can mean more 'violent',
bruising striking such as punching, as in the expression
'beating up'.
-
Belting
- Striking with a
belt
. In everyday language, sometimes used more generally:
"belting someone in the mouth" is more likely to involve
the backs of the hands than a belt.
-
Birching
- Striking with a light wooden
rod
or bundle of twigs, traditionally from the birch tree.
-
Caning
- Striking with a
cane
, as in the traditional school punishment, normally
across the buttocks. Some notes on caning technique
are under
Running the Scene: Caning
.
-
Corporal Punishment (CP)
- Originally, retributive punishment involving the
infliction of pain, often though not exclusively
through blows administered with some form of flexible
object like a whip or cane, as practiced in some legal
systems and military and educational contexts and within
some families, and now wholly or partially outlawed in
many countries. The term can also include striking with
the hands, an activity covered elsewhere under Spanking.
In an SM context, usually refers to caning or whipping of
some sort, and often implies an element of role-playing
derived from instances of 'real-life' CP in which the bottom
is 'punished' for some real or imagined infraction, mimicking,
say, (British) public school canings, naval floggings, parental
'woodshed discipline' or even a punitive fantasy entirely of
the participants' own invention . In North America, the term
is normally used in the narrower sense; in Britain it is
sometimes used simply to describe the physical activities
of caning and whipping without necessarily implying
role playing or a 'punishment' element.
-
Flagellation (Flag, Fladge)
- Latin
flagellare,
to whip, is from
flagellum,
the diminutive of
flagrum,
a scourge or whip, particularly one used in punishing
slaves, and presumably with a stinging effect since it
was used metaphorically to mean the sting of conscience.
First used in English for the self-whipping of mediaeval
religious flagellant cults, and later for other non-punitive
beatings such as the 18th-century whippings of the mentally
ill carried out as supposed medical treatments or the
'health-giving' birchings traditional in saunas. In the
modern era used by psychologists and sometimes among
practitioners to describe SM-related whipping etc. for
erotic stimulation. Though currently out of fashion on
the SM scene (the shortened forms sound very dated), and
burdened with religious overtones, the term can still be
used in its general sense.
-
Flogging
- A term that can be used for striking with a variety of
different flexible implements, sometimes used as a general
term for these sorts of activities. In British naval usage,
a 'flogging' involved the use of a
cat,
in public schools it is most likely to require a
cane, and it has also been used of
riding whips, as the expression
'flogging a dead horse' attests. Today some SMers restrict
the term to the use of the implement known as a
flogger. Ideas on flogging scenes
can be found in
Running the Scene: Flogging.
-
Lashing
- Striking with a stinging long-trussed implement or lash.
'Lash' is also used of each stroke with such an implement,
as when in 'real-life' corporal punishment an offender is
sentenced to a certain number of lashes.
-
Paddling
- Striking with a
paddle.
-
Percussion Play
- Recently-introduced term used by some SMers to group
together all activities involving striking the body
surface, not yet widely accepted and perhaps too general
to be useful, including slapping, punching and pummeling
beside activities like whipping and caning. Nothing to do
with torturing someone by subjecting them to lengthy bongo
solos.
-
Scourging
- Striking with a
scourge, as once practiced by
religious flagellants (see above). Loosely used, the
term suggests whipping severely enough to draw blood,
and has religious overtones.
-
Strapping
- Striking with a
strap, typically of leather.
-
Whipping
- Striking with a
whip, or any object that can
be used as a whip. Because of the wide variety of
implements covered by the term 'whip' the expression
can be used very generally; although it's not likely to
include the use of less flexible implements like canes
and paddles, there are extensions of meaning, as in the
expression 'pistol-whipping'.
Back to the Top
What to Use
There
are a wide variety of flagellation toys, and each type behaves
differently with respect to the physical factors described below,
consequently requiring its own particular set of techniques. Some
are made to traditional designs, originally intended for non-consensual
use on humans, such as the 'cat o'nine tails' and schoolmaster's
cane, or on animals, such as riding crops and bullwhips. Others
are adaptations or original designs made with SMers in mind, and
still others are improvised 'pervertible' like slippers and
wooden spoons.
All these implements have two basic components: a handle (which
in some improvised implements like rulers can be simply the end
you choose to hold) and a striking surface. This striking surface
is usually what's used to classify the implements. Its flexibility
can vary from the relatively rigid wooden paddle through canes to
the rubber of a purpose-made flogger. It can be flat and broad,
as with paddles and slippers, or thin and long, in which case it
is usually called a tress. Implements with tresses can have a single
one, as with classic whips, or multiple tresses, as with cats and
floggers. It can also combine two or more effects. Some tresses,
for example, have cutting tips. And while only the loop at the end
of a riding crop is intended as the contact point on a horse, some
tops have developed techniques that utilize both the loop and the
more rigid shaft.
Back to the Top
Flagellation Physics
Physically,
what is happening during a beating is that energy is being
transmitted from the top to the bottom's body surface. The
cells are compressed, causing nerve cells sensitive to pressure
to respond, and in most cases at least some of the cells are unable
to absorb the energy and are damaged or destroyed, provoking a
pain response too. Even fairly light beatings cause some tissue
damage, though fortunately you can go a long way before damage
to the surface becomes life-threatening: a greater danger is in
damaging vital organs near the surface, which is why certain
areas of the body should be avoided as explained in the notes on
Safety.
The impact depends to a large extent on the amount of energy
being transmitted, which in turn depends on factors like the
force of the blow, the distance the implement travels and its
velocity when it hits. The other important factor is the manner
in which the energy is transmitted, which will vary according
to the implement and the technique used. Some materials and
designs are more efficient at this than others and will consequently
require less effort for the same effect. A flexible implement will
bounce, with a certain amount of energy reflected back, whereas a
heavier, more rigid implement will not, and may cause deep bruising.
However, a more flexible instrument will also be easier to
accelerate: some of the most dangerous flagellation toys are
whips, because the tip can move so fast. Something with a large
contact area, like a paddle, will spread the energy, giving a
more superficial effect across a wider area; something with a
smaller contact area, like the tress of a flogger, will be more
localized but more destructive, and particularly if it has sharp
edges, is more likely to cut into the skin.
Tony de Blase (cited in Jacques 1993:229-230 and paraphrased
slightly here) has summarized the physical factors involved
in the effects of different toys as follows:
-
Flexibility, from inflexible clubs and paddles to
somewhat flexible rubber hoses, riding crops etc.
to very flexible cats and bullwhips.
-
Weight: consider a baseball bat versus a chopstick,
a fly-swatter versus a paddle, a shot-loaded bullwhip
versus a cheap paper-filled Mexican bullwhip and a
deerskin cat versus a latigo leather cat.
-
Contact surface: generally, for equal force, the
thinner the implement, the more damage done. Surface
characteristics -- a studded versus smooth paddle,
flat versus rounded whip tails, knotted versus unknotted
whip tails, smooth deerskin versus rough hemp rope etc.
-- will also change the feel and force of the toy.
-
The 'stroke' of the implement with its two distinct
aspects, the sting and the thud. A light cat will give
lots of sting but little thud, whereas a heavy rubber
hose will give little sting and lots of thud. This can
also vary with manner of use: a heavy whip laid across
the back will give some sting and lots of thud, but,
worked so only the cracker at its tip will hit the same
back, will give virtually no thud but will cut the skin
bloody.
Back to the Top
Flagellation Implements
Birches
Wooden
rods or bundles of twigs taken from a tree, normally the birch,
and used traditionally either in corporal punishment (on young
offenders in the Isle of Man until very recently) or, as bunches,
for arousing the skin in a sauna. These dried-out rods and twigs
are stimulating but do relatively little damage, and can be used
safely in areas of the body where other implements cannot.
Trimming the thin tips helps reduce whip-round and, since the
twigs are prone to breaking during use, the bottom (and perhaps
the top if the action is very energetic) should have some form
of eye protection.
Canes
Thin,
semi-flexible rods that have a long history as an implement of
corporal punishment. They are made from a variety of materials
and in range of sizes, each one of which has its own particular
qualities. Softer materials, like hazel, are often very flexible
and resilient. They will strike with more speed and more "cutting"
capability, but because of their compressibility they strike with
less overall force than a more dense material such as rattan. Some
modern materials, such as fiberglass, combine flexibility with high
density to produce sensations not possible with natural materials.
However, most caners prefer the psychological effect of natural
bamboo and rattan canes.
Longer canes strike with more power and therefore require more
skill and greater caution; larger diameter canes cause more of
a "thud" when they strike, while thinner canes produce a sharper
stinging. Larger canes are also far less likely to break the skin
and cause bleeding, although they do bruise beautifully. Smaller
canes won't traumatize as large of an area, but they are apt to
slice the skin. For details on using a cane, see
Running the Scene: Caning.
-
The Domestic Cane
is straight, usually of bamboo, with a grip at one
end made of a material like wound string.
-
The Malacca Cane
is relatively thick, and has a knob at one end
for gripping.
-
The Schoolmaster's Cane
is also of bamboo or rattan and is traditionally steamed
or soaked, then bent at one end and allowed to dry, to
create the characteristic curved handle. This can be
replicated at home on a cheap straight bamboo cane
from a gardening supplier.
-
The Switch
is a cane that has been split at the striking end, producing
two tongues.
A good cane should be flexible, allowing it to bend with
each stroke. If made from a natural, porous material, it
should be covered with several good coats of varnish to
enable effective disinfection. Length is typically between
60cm (2') and 1m (3') -- 80-90cm is most common. Longer canes
(up to 115cm/42") are acceptable for experienced caners only
because their use requires greater skill. A diameter of 7mm
(0.25") is good for general purposes -- slightly thinner for
a real sting and larger (up to 20mm/0.75") for a thud.
Cane Care:
Store in a dry, cool place, away from sun, heat and moisture,
hung vertically to keep it from developing curves and bends.
Every year or so, sand the varnish from the tip of the cane,
so the naked wood is exposed. Stand cane, exposed end down,
in a flower vase or other water-filled container overnight,
to allow the wood to absorb the water. Then varnish the tip
to keep the moisture within the cane. This will make the cane
last much, much longer, and will maintain its flexibility.
Cats
Similar
to floggers (see below), except that each tress is terminated
in a knot or a metal weight, which may or may not have a cutting
edge. These can easily cause harm and are not recommended for
novices.
-
The Cat o' Nine-Tails
is the most infamous cat, traditionally made of
three lengths of 'sheet' (rope) cut into three with
each tail knotted at the end. It was a traditional
naval punishment, and could reputedly be laid on so
heavily as to flay flesh to the bone -- though bearing
in mind that offenders were expected to be back at work
the next day, it's likely that some of the more lurid
contemporary accounts are less than reliable.
-
Scourges
- The mediaeval scourge as used by the Flagellants was
of a cat type, made of leather thongs with knotted ends.
Other implements in this period were made of whipcord (hemp):
an example in the museum in Salzburg castle has tiny sharpened
shards of metal threaded into the end of each tress.
-
Improvised Cats
- A cheap but effective version can be made of leather
bootlaces, as suggested under Floggers below, but with
a simple reef knot in the end of each tress.
Floggers
Implements
with a number of flexible tresses. The business end is often made up
of leather straps, but it can be made of many other materials as
well, including rope (whipcord), horsehair, rubber, silk, rawhide
and even IV tubing. Generally speaking, the thinner the material is,
the more it will sting. Thicker, wider, and/or heavier materials
produce less sting, but the loss in sting is offset by a greater
propensity to bruise. The slapping thud of a heavy flogger is
usually easier to cope with than the stinging sensation of the
lighter ones. For details on using a flogger see
Running the Scene: Flogging.
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The Standard Flogger
is a many-tailed whip with a solid handle. The tail
is made from leather straps of medium weight. A basic
leather flogger is a good device for novices because it
is relatively safe, and fairly easy to use.
-
Martinets
are small floggers of French design, usually having six
leather tresses of the same length as the handle and
originally intended for the punishment of juveniles.
-
The Horsehair Flogger
is made from hundreds (or even thousands) of strands of long hair
taken from the horse's tail. At first glance, it doesn't look
like much of a weapon, but each strand of hair whips into the
skin, and the sensation is a stinging you won't soon forget.
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Improvised Floggers -
You can easily improvise your own flogger by obtaining
strips of the correct material such as leather (perhaps
about 1cm (0.5") wide) and plaiting one end together. This
will give you a fairly basic but nonetheless usable handle.
Leather bootlaces are also a suitable and easily obtainable
material, provided you can find them in lengths of 1m (3')
or more.
Paddles
These
are characterized by a broad, flat striking surface attached to
a short handle and are designed to be used at short range on the
buttocks. They are normally made of leather or wood, sometimes of
rubber, in a variety of shapes and sizes; their origin is as a more
comfortable alternative (for the top) to the palm of the hand and
indeed some are even made in the shape of a hand, alongside popular
shapes like rectangles and 'ping-pong bat'-style ovals.
Since the force of the blow is distributed across a wide area,
it is very difficult to cut with paddles and the sensation is
more diffused, though stinging can be achieved by directing
the force laterally across the curve of the buttocks. Some
leather or rubber paddles are reinforced inside with a rigid
rod of wood or plastic that makes them more likely to bruise.
The affinity of paddling with spanking sometimes leads them
to be classed together, though obviously it is possible to
be much more severe with an insensate implement than you could
hope to be with the bare hand.
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The Spencer Paddle
is an oblong paddle about 45 x 10cm (17" x 4") and made
of thin (8mm/0.25") plywood with holes drilled through
its surface.
Inventor Harold Spencer, a schoolteacher in the Eastern
U.S in the 1930s, reasoned that a solid paddle created
an air cushion that softened the blow, and that holes
would allow the air to escape, giving a firmer connection.
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Slappers
are made by hinging another flap of leather over the upper
side of the striking surface. The result is to create a
very loud and distinctive slapping noise, and to lend a
little extra weight and a secondary impact.
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Wooden Spoons and Spatulas
are everyday kitchen 'pervertible' that can be used as
mini-paddles: choose the lighter, smaller kind with the
broadest business end and make sure the surface is smooth
and splinter-free (sand down if necessary). Spoons feel
more intense, spatulas have more a slap. Can be used
lightly and subtly, including on areas other than buttocks:
try light, repeated strokes on thighs. Short, light wooden
or plastic
rulers
(30cm/1') can be used in a similar way; longer
meter (3') rules or yardsticks are more unwieldy
but very dramatic. Be aware that some of them have
metal ferrules protecting the ends.
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Other Improvised paddles
- Before the purpose-built paddle, other objects were
resorted to by the sore-palmed corporal punisher; as the
name suggests, boat paddles may have been the inspiration,
though they could be rather heavy and unwieldy. The
slipper
was a monotonously regular form of retribution exerted on
the British comic book character Dennis the Menace: proper
leather slippers with a reasonably stiff sole are required,
and the rubber soles of traditional gym shoes or 'plimsolls'
were once put to this use in some schools. Plastic and
wooden beach spades have their uses, and anyone with
minimal DIY skills will be able to produce their own
paddles from plywood or chipboard sheets sawed into the
correct shape.
Riding Whips
These
usually consist of a long rod of cane or fiberglass covered in
leather or fabric, thickening at one end for a handle (perhaps
with a loop of leather to help secure the grip) and terminating
in a thin, flexible tress such as wound cord or a leather tongue.
Only the thin end is intended to contact with the horse; the
length is to allow enough leverage for it to be accelerated
rapidly with a controlled flick of the wrist without causing
the rider balancing problems. With consensual games on humans,
however, these whips can be used in all kinds of different ways,
and once mastered they are probably the most adaptable contact toys
of all. The end can be used for cutting and stinging, and wielded
with much more power than would be advisable on horseback; the
solid length can also be used in a similar way to a cane. Best
of all, they are widely and cheaply available from sports and
tack suppliers, so there's no need to pay a perv shop premium.
Try a few to find one with good balance.
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The Riding Crop
is a basic toy that is an essential for beginners,
usually around 60cm (2') long and terminated in a
loop of leather. Broader leather loops have an
additional use: they are ideal for careful ball
beating. Some crops have two tongues like a miniature
slapper (see Paddles above).
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The Lunge Whip or Quirt
is designed for use with carts and coaches, providing
extra length so that the driver can reach the horses -
90-120cm (3'-4') - and terminated in a wound cord tress.
They look very dramatic and although they are not as
adaptable as crops, they can cause intense stinging in
skilled hands. They are, however, prone to breakages and
the tresses can easily become unwound.
Straps and Belts
Belts,
doubled over and gripped at the buckle end, are a traditional
weapon of parental discipline. Lighter, softer leather about
25cm (1") thick is most effective, and obviously studded belts
should be avoided. A number of other purpose-made articles have
been adapted from the belt.
-
The Strap,
sometimes used in education, is a simple strip of leather.
A shorter strip (30cm/1') is more controllable.
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The Tawse
has elements of both straps and paddles: it is leather
with a handle and a striking surface cut into fingers.
The traditional instrument used for punishing Scottish
schoolchildren and young offenders had two fingers,
each about 5cm (2"); other models have more.
Whips
Single-trussed
(single-tailed) implements usually made of whipcord or leather.
Despite their popular associations with SM, real whips are rare
in scenes because they are very difficult to use and can be very
dangerous. The characteristic 'crack' of a whip is produced when
the tip breaks the sound barrier and even a light object moving
at such a velocity has the power to slice flesh to the bone. Being
able to use one responsibly means a good deal of
practice and in most cases they are best left as decorations on
the dungeon wall.
-
Bullwhips,
familiar from their circus use, are the longest and most
lethal whips, made of plaited leather and 2m (6') or more
in length. Swinging such a whip safely requires a large
amount of space and they are completely useless in the
average playroom. Those interested in bullwhip skills
can check out the
Bullwhip FAQ.
-
Signal whips
are similar to bullwhips but much shorter -- less than
1m (3') -- and therefore slightly safer and more suited
to the playroom, though they still require a good degree
of skill to control. They were originally designed to control
dog teams.
-
Lashes
are usually single-trussed whips, or a general term for whips.
See 'Lashing' in the definitions
above.
Back to the Top
Links and Resources
Flagellation Links
Back to the Top
Some of the descriptions of implements are taken from
Slakker's
original ABC of BDSM. Thanks to Ted for the information on the
Spencer Paddle, and to Rodney for suggestions.
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