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Therapeutic Play
Therapeutic play refers to play that involves catharsis, healing, and other
conscious choices by the partners to delve into or modify the bottom's
behavior or feelings. The goal of therapy in BDSM is not to compete with,
pretend to be, or supplant licensed therapists. It is instead an exploration
of the fact that loving, caring partners often do help each other overcome
trauma and challenges, and often do help each other strive for behavioral
changes and improvements in their lives. The therapeutic model of BDSM has
a long history and arises independently in many relationships.
Reinforcing Positive Self-Images and Insights into Oneself For many people,
the intensity of BDSM creates an environment of extremely intimate communication,
connection, and trust between the partners. The experience of such intimacy alone
is therapeutic for many people. Often therapeutic BDSM goes no further than that
-- the reinforcement of the feeling that one is loved and is capable of love,
no matter what one's flaws or previous experiences of life.
But some therapeutic BDSM goes further. For example, it is common for tops
and doms to reassure bottoms and subs about their self-images and insecurities,
or even to engineer play and aftercare to reinforce positive, beneficial
self-views. A person without some inner doubts about his or her beauty,
intelligence, competence, or desirability is rare. D/S offers a natural
framework whereby the dom can sometimes offer the submissive reassurances
and positive experiences bearing on all kinds of self-doubts.
Many people find that they happen on intriguing insights into themselves
via play. The power of a caring relationship, the exploration of fantasies
and new experiences, and the stress of intense scenes sometimes combine to
give people moments of revelation or understanding of their inner selves.
These insights usually come out gradually during aftercare and followup
discussions, sometimes as long as months after a scene. Tops as well
as bottoms find that intense play leads to surprising realizations
that sometimes solve puzzles about themselves. For many people, these
occasional insights into themselves and their partners, and the
intimate discussions to which they lead, are an additional appeal of BDSM.
Behavioral Reform
Some kinds of therapeutic BDSM involve behavioral reform. Perhaps the bottom
wants to effect an improvement in behavior or lifetime goals. Or perhaps the
dom points out that a change in the bottom's behavior or attititudes would
result in long-run benefits. For example, the bottom may wish to learn to
focus more on work or set better priorities in life. A top or dom can help
reinforce these goals by setting rewards and punishments to help induce these
desired changes. Not all tops want to take on responsibility for major lifetime
changes in their bottoms. Nevertheless, it is common for doms to want to improve
their submissives in ways that are commensurate not only with immediate play
concerns but also with their partner's lifetime opportunities.
Behavioral reform via BDSM is complex because punishment may in fact be a
reward for many bottoms or submissives. Often, though, the dom's disappointment
is a severe punishment in itself. Another complication of behavioral reform is
that it is difficult to choose a feasible goal. In general, choosing clear,
simple, attainable goals and working at one step at a time is more feasible
than complex, long-term goals. Attentive repetitions of "Lose three pounds
over the next two weeks" are more likely to be successful than "Lose
50 pounds over the next six months." Both positive and negative
reinforcements matter, as well as the submissive's desire to achieve the goal.
Some methods used in accomplishing behavioral reform touch on conditioning, which
is discussed in greater detail below.
Cathartic Experiences in Scene
Another frequent therapeutic application of BDSM occurs for bottoms who find
that tears flow easily for them in scene. Such catharsis in scene is usually
experienced as joyful and precious by the bottom. It can come as quite a
surprise to the top, though, especially if the top has been causing an unusual
amount of pain or emotional confusion. Sometimes before the tears flow, the
bottom stops communicating or responding in a customary manner. Many tops stop
scenes the first time they see tears to check in with the bottom. In my
experience, though, the quiet flow of tears in scene is almost always
consensual, cathartic, and a desired experience by the bottom. It is
also surprising at first that the bottom usually cannot express why
these tears came. There is no necessary reason; and it does not
seem correlated with any negative experiences in the
bottom's life. It may just be a relief from stress and the sudden feeling
of the beauty of safety and love in the presence of one's partner.
A more dramatic but widely reported kind of catharsis sometimes occurs
for those individuals who have experienced abuse in their lives. People
who both do BDSM and were abused or raped as children (or adults)
sometimes have an experience of enlightenment from playing consensually.
The abuse they were subjected to was by definition not consensual, not
something they could control, and not something they could get away
from. By contrast, bottoming to a beloved under the circumstance
of prior loving discussion and the top's clear concern and fear
to violate consent is an enlightening from a burden of fear that
may have been with the bottom for a lifetime. The simple gift of
having safeword and the ability to stop the action -- and thus also
the ability to choose to go on -- can be an act of joy, self-empowerment,
and catharsis that changes someone's life.
Sometimes tops and bottoms agree to confront some fear or negative past
experience head on by attacking it directly in scene. For example, someone
subjected to rape at knifepoint may have put knives off limits in play, but
may after a while wonder if the top's pulling out a knife, doing a rape scene,
and doing exactly what the rapist did could be a form of self-help.
Confrontational play of this sort is very unusual. Not only do most
bottoms who have experienced such things not feel that they desire
or would benefit from such direct confrontations, but many tops find
they themselves cannot go through with anything so risky when it
comes to their bottom's emotional states, even if the bottom is convinced it will
turn out okay. But for others, it can be an appealing and potentially healing
kind of play.
Experienced tops tend to talk a lot about their encounters with therapeutic
play in one form or another. But one thing that does not get talked about
enough in my opinion is whether playing intentionally in such a way and having
it work out for the better (which in fact is often the case when intensely
therapeutic play is done with lots of forethought and caring between the partners)
does not also reward the bottom for reliving the horror. That is, the very act of
creating a crisis that is resolved in scene via the reassurance and beneficence
of the top's caring aid can be addictive. The risk of the bottom's wanting to
remain dependent and continue to re-enact the catharsis of safety and love may
be well worth taking for the potential benefit of ridding oneself of a lifetime
of other horrible memories and fears. Maybe this kind of addiction is
quite harmless for most people, a kind of fetish no different from any
other fetish. But it is something that seems potentially worrisome that
I have nevertheless not seen openly discussed. I do sometimes see people
doing BDSM get wrapped up in what looks to me like living and reliving
certain angers and affirmations. I do not pretend to have any guidelines,
though, as to what might signal a potentially unhealthy version of such
reliving.
Breaking in Scene
Breaking the bottom refers to the intentional, consensual subjection of the
bottom to some horrifying fear, undesired memory, or terrible experience in
scene to the point that the bottom completely loses self-control and any
background realization that this is a scene with a caring partner. The term
usually implies the top's violating (with prior consent) some limit the bottom
has that is deeply fundamental to the bottom's core. However, sometimes people
break down in scene unexpectedly if an activity cuts too close to the core.
Breaking is unquestionably life-modifying for people. No one gets broken and
comes away from the experience unchanged.
Breaking someone in scene typically requires putting that person
together again. Do you want a lifetime of responsibility for causing
profound emotional disruption to someone in scene? The aftercare for
breaking scenes can last a long time. Allocating a weekend and then
following up with a few weeks of caring discussions might still not
be enough. It is a good idea to talk about extreme possibilities
and responsibilities of each partner in advance.
What happens when a person breaks depends on the person and
the situation. The person might curl up in distant silence, going
away emotionally (see Part 2). Flashbacks, tears, and anger may get
all mixed together. Most commonly, the person becomes both physically
and emotionally out of control, crying, flailing, screaming, or
raging. In the next section on rage we discuss some ideas for how
to handle such situations.
Rage in Scene
Rage is a state that bottoms sometimes get into, sometimes accidentally,
sometimes in therapeutic play, or sometimes during breaking scenes. The
depth of the person's rage varies. Sometimes the bottom has a vague awareness
that this is a scene, but either feels safe enough to let go to strike wildly
at the top or to struggle wildly in the chains. Other times the bottom completely
loses the sense of where he or she is or what is going on.
Rage is sometimes cathartic for individuals to let out of themselves in the
context of a scene with a conscientious, watchful top. The experience of extreme
challenge to the point of being broken to uncontrollable crying or driven to rage
is appealing to some bottoms. However, dealing with rage in scene is risky for
both partners. While all extreme states require alertness on the part of the top,
rage entails some special considerations.
If the bottom goes into a rage there is often no time to consider unexpected
safety concerns. The top instantly has to look to physical safety issues for
both partners. People who are raging do not always respond to pain in ordinary
ways. A bottom who ordinarily might stop from a sharp smack, a joint twist, or
pressing on a pressure point may not respond at all while in a rage.
Although physical accidents in well-considered scenes are amazingly rare in my
experience, dislocated shoulders, cracked ribs, and frightening head-banging
can happen in seconds in scenes if the bottom goes into an uncontrollable rage.
Unconsciousness is also possible. The top as well as the bottom can be at risk,
either because of the bottom's flailing or attack, or because of the top's own
bending over backwards to protect the bottom from self-harm.
In terms of emotional safety, more often than not, the wisest thing for the top
is to press into or at least not draw back from the situation. Suddenly jerking
the bottom out of a flashback or extreme state of rage, panic, or emotional
distance is almost never emotionally ideal for the bottom. Although what is
happening may be frightening to the top, such states are moments for the top
to set aside his or her own fears and focus on what the bottom needs, weighing
both emotional and physical safety factors. Sometimes, the safest thing to do
is to wind the scene down gently or to redirect it. But the observation of many
experienced tops based on their experiences and ex-post discussions with their
bottoms is that if the top has the physical safety issues more or less under
control, the top's courage to stick with the bottom and come out the other side
is usually the better choice. Suddenly calling an end to the scene often turns
out to be the poorest choice. Bottoms who are suddenly yanked out of extreme
states can come back feeling disorientation, humiliation that they caused
such "problems" for the top, panic at what they could not complete,
and incapacitation by what they cannot begin to explain in words in the
near-extreme state they are still in.
Every scene is different. Faced with a raging, hysterical, or curled-up bottom,
you just go by the seat of your pants. If you are the top, then the bottom is
your entrusted responsibility, with no one but you to make the right decisions.
You weigh all the information you have got and do the best you can.
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