LadyPact -> RE: When a sub doesn't flinch.... (11/29/2007 1:19:50 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: DesFIP quote:
ORIGINAL: LadyPact Funny thing about this. I'm rather the opposite. If My boy sees Me reach out to make a move toward him, and he flinches, I raise My brow and specifically ask him if he flinched. If he says yes, he knows he's getting whatever I intended, plus a little extra as playful punishment. My boy knows that he is expected to submit. That means he doesn't get the option of pulling back. Flinching to Me is something much different than being reactionary. Flinching is something that one does before. Reactionary is what happens afterwards. So if there's a wasp zooming in on you, you won't try to avoid it? You'll just moan about the sting afterwards? Flinching is an autonomic response to avoiding pain. The first time you stumble into nettles you won't flinch. The next time you look down and see them you will. There's a difference. My boy didn't agree to submit to a wasp, or to stubbing his toe, or any others of hundreds of situations that are unintentional pain. Intentional pain, is something he rather enjoys, and generally doesn't flinch when he's about to receive it. That is pain that I control, and he's well aware of it. Truthfully, when I wrote the response, it was more focused on tickle torture, which is when he will flinch.
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