ViviDreamz
Posts: 42
Joined: 12/9/2007 Status: offline
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Hello Ragin. I will be the first to tell you that I am new to this rabbit-hole; however, I can empathize. I have been where you are. I have been a control freak my entire life yet at the same time looking back I was always seeking for a person stronger and more willed than I that I could entrust myself too. I want and wanted that control taken from me, held in trust for me, and know that I would be taken care of. Unfortunately, there was a great deal of fear involved. I was scared. What would happen if I let go? What would happen if I didn’t control the situation? Where would I go? The thousands upon thousands of questions and what if statements would go whizzing and whirling like a cyclone in my mind until the very anxiety would have me in a tizzy. This became especially true in reference to orgasm. I was afraid of it. I fought it. I’d rail against it. I’d struggle to avoid it and if given even a split second of free headspace I would shut myself away from it mentally and effectively turn it off as easily as a light switch. Now I do not know if you do this, but I did. Why? Because I would have to let go to experience it and I was afraid of proverbially falling on my keester. I was afraid there would be no one there to catch me because of all the emotions that get tied into orgasm. I was afraid to be vulnerable. This hurdle also froze me from exploration of my nature because of the inherent truth being, how can I let go? How will I know it will be okay? I do not have asthma but I am acutely anemic and as such can lose my breath quickly, even more so if I allow myself to start huffing and puffing without really trying to bring in real air. I have been on the verge of full panic attacks to where I could not breathe. So what did it take? I forced myself to jump. I spoke to a friend who just happened to be Dominant several times. He encouraged me and even promised to help me by allowing me to try whatever would be most comfortable for me but most of all he made me feel safe. When it came time to do those things, he didn’t allow me to shut him out. He didn’t allow me to panic. He kept deliberately focusing me upon him again and again until I was able to click into that “I am okay” headspace. If I began to pull out of that headspace and become nervous, he eased me back into it once again. He made the first step a comfortable and easy one so I have been given the confidence to know I can do these things on my own without running into that fearful wall because I have gotten past it once. I do not know if this helps you but if you would like to speak about it more, I would not be opposed from doing so by memo. As always, a vivid dreamer, kitten
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As always, a vivid dreamer, Kitten There is nothing like looking, if you want to find something. You certainly usually find something, if you look, but it is not always quite the something you were after.-Tolkien
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