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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 12:58:06 PM   
GhitaAmati


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I wanted to go back and clarify something...because I went back and read my original postings. And yes I did talk about us having an equal marriage for the first few years of our realationship. I didnt get into deeper aspects because well..I dont know, maybe I should have.

To me it is natural to be submissive, even in a vanilla relationship I will submit to the Man in my own ways. I have given him control and he has handed back to me all the little things he'd rather not have to worry about on a day to day basis. So I decided what groceries to buy and how to fold the laundry and well..we just arent very micro-managed to quote another thread. Many see this as not being D/s...but I defer to him when I need to and I know when he'd rather I not. I know in ways I have contradicted myself many times in threads....well...our whole relationship is a contradiction in ways...Im not asking anyone to justify it...I am what I am, I am what he wants me to be, and Im ok with that...

_____________________________

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Sex without love is a meaningless experience, but as far as meaningless experiences go its pretty damn good.
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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 1:04:46 PM   
Rover


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In point of fact, ghita, the vast majority of those in the armed forces are taught to follow orders.  Period.  Only a select few are chosen for leadership training.
 
John

_____________________________

"Man's mind stretched to a new idea never goes back to its original dimensions."

Sri da Avabhas

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 1:07:11 PM   
Archer


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The capacity for dominance is then what is at issue rather than can it be taught at all.
Within a reasonably normal bell curve of personality you can certainly teach the skills it takes to be a leader.
Almost everyone in the military becomes an NCO Non commissioned officer leading a small group of younger less experienced members within a couple years. Fire team leader Squad leader Section Leader etc.

You cannot give somone the experience of what it is like and thus seperate the theory from the practice in most clasroom settings. This seems to apply across all disciplines. (I've lost count of the engineers who design things that a field tech knows won't flippin work in the real world) I also found much of the theoretical aspects of management classes to be dull and lack real world feasibility, but when the lessons can be applied, and tested against various situations the value is often found but rarely where they say it will be. Leadership reaction courses (likely 40 hrs total time) in the military taught me as much if not more than all the classroom hours combined.



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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 1:25:15 PM   
sierraflowr


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Wildfleurs

quote:

ORIGINAL: SimplyMichael

In talking to Jack Rinella (A well known BDSM author) last night after his speaking engagement, he pretty much blew holes in the "natural dominant" bullshit adhered to by many.  My opinion is that dominance is a skill like any other, one can learn to do it even if you don't enjoy it.  How many of us become good at a job that they have to PAY us to do after all.  You can't teach someone to enjoy it and want to do it for free but it CAN be taught and learned.


Did Jay Wiseman have some conclusive randomized double blind study of dominance that I missed?

I'm trying to figure out how he blew holes in a theory without some conclusive proof.  Unless this is just an issue of differing theories, of one that you happen to ascribe to.

C~

Edited for typos.


Wildfleurs, it was Jack Rinella that did the talk, not Jay Wiseman.
Simply Micheal i'm SO upset we didnt' end up being able to go, but i'm not going to miss the next one, and maybe the one in Chico ;)
did you take notes ? :D

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O};-
When I let go of who I am,
I become who I might be.
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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 1:38:09 PM   
Archer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Rover

In point of fact, ghita, the vast majority of those in the armed forces are taught to follow orders.  Period.  Only a select few are chosen for leadership training.
 
John


Actually to be promoted past E-4 you have to attend a leadership school according to current policy.
WLC leadership training for E-3's and E-4's
BNCO for E-4's 5's 6's
ANCO for E-6's and 7's
Command Seargent Major's School for E-8's and 9's.


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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:00:01 PM   
GhitaAmati


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Ok, compleatly agree with you Archer...lived through all of that...I guess what I meant to say is that while everyone is tought leadership skills..not everyone applies them very effectivly.

ghita~

_____________________________

I said I was a submissive, I never said I was a GOOD submissive.


Sex without love is a meaningless experience, but as far as meaningless experiences go its pretty damn good.
~Woody Allen

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:00:15 PM   
Rover


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

quote:

ORIGINAL: Rover

In point of fact, ghita, the vast majority of those in the armed forces are taught to follow orders.  Period.  Only a select few are chosen for leadership training.
 
John


Actually to be promoted past E-4 you have to attend a leadership school according to current policy.
WLC leadership training for E-3's and E-4's
BNCO for E-4's 5's 6's
ANCO for E-6's and 7's
Command Seargent Major's School for E-8's and 9's.


I don't dispute your facts a bit, and readily admit that I'm not aware of the specifics as they relate to either commissioned or non-commissioned officers.  However, intuition tells me that there are far fewer generals than privates, and that valuable military resources are spent on those demonstarting the most potential.  After all, the armed forces are not a democracy.
 
John 

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:05:47 PM   
Grlwithboy


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(general reply)
When I was professional, I came into contact with another pro. She had it all. The looks, the psychological insight, the cojones, the stamina, the compassion, the love of play, the love of submissive men - she had it all--

except any interest in doing it at home without being paid.

You can definitely be taught to be dominant.  You cannot be taught to be *A* dominant. I had nothing on her skills wise, or otherwise, but I *need* it at home and I need it in my life.

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:13:41 PM   
Archer


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When you define Dominant as someone who is fullfilled by being the dominant party in their personal relationship then you can't teach that.
However when you define Domiannt as someone who is capable of exerting dominance effectively then that can be taught.

Of course most of us are discussing the fine lines we have drawn to organize our own thoughts and trying to refine them with additional perspectives and information, and at the same time defend (read force differing opinions to clarify enough to warrant any changes we ight or might not make in that veiw) It's overall been a good discussion.

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:21:06 PM   
Rover


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Grlwithboy

(general reply)
When I was professional, I came into contact with another pro. She had it all. The looks, the psychological insight, the cojones, the stamina, the compassion, the love of play, the love of submissive men - she had it all--

except any interest in doing it at home without being paid.

You can definitely be taught to be dominant.  You cannot be taught to be *A* dominant. I had nothing on her skills wise, or otherwise, but I *need* it at home and I need it in my life.



And I  believe that is the distinction I was trying to make (not always so well).  One can be taught a skill set that is often exhibited by Dominants (such as your acquaintance).  But it is not the skill set itself that makes one Dominant. 
 
I'm fond of saying that the lifestyle does not descend upon us like the Holy Spirit and "make" us anything were not already (such as Dominant or submissive).  We make and define the lifestyle for ourselves.  It does not make or define us as individuals.
 
For example, I could be taught the skill sets often associated with submission.  I can kneel.  I can serve.  But it would surely not make me *a* submissive.
 
Ok, no snickering.
 
John

_____________________________

"Man's mind stretched to a new idea never goes back to its original dimensions."

Sri da Avabhas

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:22:46 PM   
SimplyMichael


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Archer you beat me to it!

What we, or at least for myself, am talking about is whether or not a 35 year old guy with little PREVIOUS interest in BDSM can become a decent dominant.  If I can do it, anyone can.

If someone said can someone with no inclination for dominance become a world class dominant and learn to love it and live for it, I doubt it.

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:23:30 PM   
LadySeraphina


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Grlwithboy

(general reply)
When I was professional, I came into contact with another pro. She had it all. The looks, the psychological insight, the cojones, the stamina, the compassion, the love of play, the love of submissive men - she had it all--

except any interest in doing it at home without being paid.

You can definitely be taught to be dominant. You cannot be taught to be *A* dominant. I had nothing on her skills wise, or otherwise, but I *need* it at home and I need it in my life.



I think that's a lovely point, and many of my boys (read: clients) comment on that - what a difference it is to play with a lifestyler.

_____________________________

"Men are like wine. They start out as grapes and its up to the woman to stomp the crap out of them until they turn into something acceptable to have dinner with." -Unknown

www.LadySeraphina.ca

www.SeraphinasToybox.com.

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 2:41:38 PM   
Grlwithboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: LadySeraphina

quote:

ORIGINAL: Grlwithboy

(general reply)
When I was professional, I came into contact with another pro. She had it all. The looks, the psychological insight, the cojones, the stamina, the compassion, the love of play, the love of submissive men - she had it all--

except any interest in doing it at home without being paid.

You can definitely be taught to be dominant. You cannot be taught to be *A* dominant. I had nothing on her skills wise, or otherwise, but I *need* it at home and I need it in my life.



I think that's a lovely point, and many of my boys (read: clients) comment on that - what a difference it is to play with a lifestyler.


Yeah, but I co-topped with this woman in a scene and it was an eye-opener for me. I had nothing whatsoever on her - not the joy and intensity, not the skills, not the sadism. My point is that a person in love with her job can have as much to offer as someone with a need, and sometimes more breadth and flexibility - the things I *thought* separated me from non-lifestyle D's weren't in fact separating me at all from this particular person. She was very atypical in her talent and her immersion and her thoughtfulness though.

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 3:09:01 PM   
DarkDaddyZ


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The mental element of being a Dom in power exchange as well as other parts of your life? I don't think so I think it's natural. I do think however that you can learn how to be a balanced dominant and and if into the BDSM aspect of Power Exchange as a Dom, you need to learn how to do certain things. I believe in learning often, teaching a little :)

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 3:30:57 PM   
slavegirljoy


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From: North Carolina, USA
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Rover

In point of fact, ghita, the vast majority of those in the armed forces are taught to follow orders.  Period.  Only a select few are chosen for leadership training.
 
John


Actually, this isn't true for the army or, at least wasn't true when i was serving.  i enlisted in 1974 and served until 1987.  Everyone, not just a few chosen ones, was required to attend and successfully graduate from the army's Primary Leadership Development Course (PLDC), in order to be promoted to sergeant.  It can be delayed for awhile, under certain circumstances (such as serving in a combat area) but, once redeployed and remaining in the service, attendance and completion of PLDC is required.  But, even prior to that, in Basic Training, we each had to spend at least a day being the squad leader and learning to march the squad and give commands to come to "attention", go to "at ease" or "parade rest", etc.   i never wanted to be in charge of anything, but when the army has a need, it fills it with whoever is available.  For one thing, if a squad is out in the field and the squad leader gets taken out, someone had better be able to step in and take charge of the rest of that unit or it will be a very messed-up situation and that wouldn't be good for those soldiers or the army.  They need to be able to carry-on, even when the designated leader is no longer able to lead.  That means that every person in that unit needs to be trained well enough to, at least, lead what's left of their unit, back to safe ground.  Being a soldier is a lot more than just being able to follow orders.  Soldiers are not a bunch of mindless robots.  They are (for the most part, with some exceptions) well trained, well disciplined, well motivated and well organized.  They learn to do a job.  Not all soldiers are trained to be snipers or machine gunners or "killers."  In fact, the vast majority of the army is trained in support roles, not combat roles.  For every infantryman, there are at least 6 other soldiers doing "desk jobs" to support him.  Every soldier has to learn and be qualified to fire an M-16 rifle, but that is as much for self defense as it is for assault purposes. When the female sergeant, who was the non-commissioned officer in charge (NCOIC) of the female barracks (yes, back when we were housed separately from the males), was transferred out of our unit, the First Sergeant informed me that i was the new NCOIC of the female barracks.  i didn't like that job.  It was a huge pain, to me.  But, i was the one put in charge and that's what i had to do.  When i was promoted to sergeant, i was also made the squad leader of 8 guys, (yes, all males) in my radio-teletype platoon.  i had to be in charge of them getting the work done or my ass was the one that would get chewed out. i never liked being in a leadership position, but i was put in that role and i did it.  It was just a part of my job requirement.  Neither the training nor the experience as a small unit leader, within the army, made me become a Dominant.  It never changed me from my submissiveness.  But, my submissive nature is and always has been a characteristic of my personality that is only relevant and apparent within my personal and intimate relationships, never in my work relationships. Just the perspective of this particular army veteran and submissive female. slave joyOwned property of Master David "Commitment transforms a promise into a reality."



< Message edited by slavegirljoy -- 7/18/2007 3:38:13 PM >

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 3:50:47 PM   
DarkDaddyZ


Posts: 805
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quote:

ORIGINAL: slavegirljoy

quote:

ORIGINAL: Rover

In point of fact, ghita, the vast majority of those in the armed forces are taught to follow orders.  Period.  Only a select few are chosen for leadership training.
 
John


Actually, this isn't true for the army or, at least wasn't true when i was serving.  i enlisted in 1974 and served until 1987.  Everyone, not just a few chosen ones, was required to attend and successfully graduate from the army's Primary Leadership Development Course (PLDC), in order to be promoted to sergeant.  It can be delayed for awhile, under certain circumstances (such as serving in a combat area) but, once redeployed and remaining in the service, attendance and completion of PLDC is required.  But, even prior to that, in Basic Training, we each had to spend at least a day being the squad leader and learning to march the squad and give commands to come to "attention", go to "at ease" or "parade rest", etc.   i never wanted to be in charge of anything, but when the army has a need, it fills it with whoever is available.  For one thing, if a squad is out in the field and the squad leader gets taken out, someone had better be able to step in and take charge of the rest of that unit or it will be a very messed-up situation and that wouldn't be good for those soldiers or the army.  They need to be able to carry-on, even when the designated leader is no longer able to lead.  That means that every person in that unit needs to be trained well enough to, at least, lead what's left of their unit, back to safe ground.  Being a soldier is a lot more than just being able to follow orders.  Soldiers are not a bunch of mindless robots.  They are (for the most part, with some exceptions) well trained, well disciplined, well motivated and well organized.  They learn to do a job.  Not all soldiers are trained to be snipers or machine gunners or "killers."  In fact, the vast majority of the army is trained in support roles, not combat roles.  For every infantryman, there are at least 6 other soldiers doing "desk jobs" to support him.  Every soldier has to learn and be qualified to fire an M-16 rifle, but that is as much for self defense as it is for assault purposes. When the female sergeant, who was the non-commissioned officer in charge (NCOIC) of the female barracks (yes, back when we were housed separately from the males), was transferred out of our unit, the First Sergeant informed me that i was the new NCOIC of the female barracks.  i didn't like that job.  It was a huge pain, to me.  But, i was the one put in charge and that's what i had to do.  When i was promoted to sergeant, i was also made the squad leader of 8 guys, (yes, all males) in my radio-teletype platoon.  i had to be in charge of them getting the work done or my ass was the one that would get chewed out. i never liked being in a leadership position, but i was put in that role and i did it.  It was just a part of my job requirement.  Neither the training nor the experience as a small unit leader, within the army, made me become a Dominant.  It never changed me from my submissiveness.  But, my submissive nature is and always has been a characteristic of my personality that is only relevant and apparent within my personal and intimate relationships, never in my work relationships. Just the perspective of this particular army veteran and submissive female. slave joyOwned property of Master David "Commitment transforms a promise into a reality."



slavegirljoy is 100 percent right, while I won't put out all of my "political" opinions here, you are given leadership roles in some elements based on service, you do a decent job of following orders in 2 to 3 years, you go to PLDC and you make sergeant.  You may not go much further without education and leadership"training" but a sergeant leads. Now based on what's going on around the world I won't say that they are good leaders but you get the idea :)

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 6:27:39 PM   
Rover


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I stand corrected, though I'm having a hard time wondering why we don't have an army comprised of sargeants if everyone is required to proceed as you stated. 
 
And I would also note that, as you stated, the armed forces have an element of "necessity" associated with basic leadership training.  In that anyone may be required to lead based upon battlefield conditions.  Necessity would obviously trump planned allocation of resources.
 
John

_____________________________

"Man's mind stretched to a new idea never goes back to its original dimensions."

Sri da Avabhas

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Profile   Post #: 97
RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/18/2007 6:33:38 PM   
Wildfleurs


Posts: 1650
Joined: 9/24/2004
From: Connecticut
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

The capacity for dominance is then what is at issue rather than can it be taught at all.
Within a reasonably normal bell curve of personality you can certainly teach the skills it takes to be a leader.
Almost everyone in the military becomes an NCO Non commissioned officer leading a small group of younger less experienced members within a couple years. Fire team leader Squad leader Section Leader etc.

You cannot give somone the experience of what it is like and thus seperate the theory from the practice in most clasroom settings. This seems to apply across all disciplines. (I've lost count of the engineers who design things that a field tech knows won't flippin work in the real world) I also found much of the theoretical aspects of management classes to be dull and lack real world feasibility, but when the lessons can be applied, and tested against various situations the value is often found but rarely where they say it will be. Leadership reaction courses (likely 40 hrs total time) in the military taught me as much if not more than all the classroom hours combined.


I know didly squat about the military, but I can say with a bit of surity that I didn't find that management and/or leadership classes  actually prepare someone to be a leader or a manager (being a manager is vastly different than being a leader).  Like I said earlier, I think through walking through the fire you discover you are or you aren't.  And I think the same is true for dominance.  You can have things trigger it or catalysts for self-discovery, but if its not there its not there. 

C~


_____________________________

"Just because you've always done it that way doesn't mean it's not incredibly stupid." -despair.com

~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
The heart of it all - http://www.wildfleurs.com
~~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/19/2007 1:20:40 AM   
Evlgryn


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Wildfleurs

I know didly squat about the military, but I can say with a bit of surity that I didn't find that management and/or leadership classes  actually prepare someone to be a leader or a manager (being a manager is vastly different than being a leader).  Like I said earlier, I think through walking through the fire you discover you are or you aren't.  And I think the same is true for dominance.  You can have things trigger it or catalysts for self-discovery, but if its not there its not there. 

C~

!!  A military officer is not the ultimate example of personal dominance. An officer in the military, wears a grocery list of fetishes and talismans incorporated into his uniform to signify his position in the food chain. He has in his corner the power of the military and the government behind it. He gives an order to an individual thouroughly indoctrinated to follow his orders blindly. His orders are enforced by numerous subordinate officers and  noncoms whose main purpose is to enforce his will. He has the power to punish those subordinates who fail to follow orders with all manner of penalties , jail and sometimes death. There are men who wear the uniform and bring honor to it, becoming the embodiment of a leader. There are men who maintain a sharp crease while wearing military trousers, but themselves are not worth a bucket of warm piss. A dominant personality is not always preferable. The model is by definition an "autocratic" personality, filtering every interaction, by hierarchical status. "Kiss up and Piss down". Careers are made or broken on the ability to sit on ones hand and watch quietly as bad decisions cost lives, as long as the orders come from up high. Open a newspaper, if you don't believe me. Start a head count of all the generals who shut up until they retired, then published about IRAQ.

As Fleursss' owner I can tell you she knows of Jack Rinella, speaks well of him, and certainly has read more of his writings than me, and I have read more than many. She knows who was mentioned in the thread, but thinking one step ahead and knowing all the players, mentioned Wiseman as a second authority  with a body of work likely to be quoted with data and footnotes.

But look at what has been said. Lets all agree that the ACTS of dominance in the BDSM scene, (binding and flogging and programming "OH MY"); are a learnable skill set.  If this was not the case, it would not be possible for prodommes who are submissive in their private life, to earn a dime in their chosen profession....and yet there they are.  As has been mentioned, many of us make sacrifices to make a living at jobs that are not vocations. Quod Erat Demonstrandum.

But (assuming he was correctly quoted) can Rinella's years of experience prove that one can learn to be a "Dominant Personality" if it is against your nature ?   I just don't think so. Some people expect to be in charge..seek it out...will fight for it. For some it is a very uncomfortable experience. And in the scene, unlike the workplace, why would you do it if it wasn't fun???


_____________________________

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- Dark Helmet, "Space Balls, the Motion Picture"

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RE: Can you "learn" to be a Dom.... - 7/19/2007 2:23:46 AM   
ExSteelAgain


Posts: 1803
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From: Georgia
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I've read some great opinions here and pretty much agree. Still if you want to change his mindset to thinking in a more dominant way, it is going to have to come from within him. I suggest lots of reading. I know you said he read the basic books, but expose him to much more. Show him books with lots of BDSM and D/s. All types, fiction and nonfiction. PLUS, HAVE HIM START READING THIS BOARD.

_____________________________

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(in reply to GhitaAmati)
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