Aylee -> RE: Do You ever have thoughts You shouldn't? (3/23/2009 1:08:04 AM)
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ORIGINAL: IndigoMystry No, never had such thoughts. The mutual trust and respect goes with the territory. Why would you even fantasize about doing something beyond their limits to someone you care about? Because the key word there, to me, is FANTASY. That means that it is not real. You might want to invest in a dictionary. In a fantasy anything than happen. The laws of nature need not apply. There are no consequences. It does not even have to be practical or possible. Nobody actually gets hurt. Things do not get messy. It is all in the fantasizer's mind. An example. . . You are having dinner in a Chinese restaurant with your s-type. It passes through your mind that it could be fun to take two sets of chopsticks and attach them to your s-types nipples while at the table. That is a fantasy. Do you even have rubber bands with you? Would it really be a good idea to have your s-type remove their shirt in a restauant? Would you likely end up with some sort of legal problem? Those are realities. So, you have just had a fantasy about doing something to some one you care about that would violate their trust and their hard limits. (Legal trouble is typically a hard limit.) Has the world come to an end? Have you endangered your relationship? Has anyone been harmed? NO. For goodness sake, when I was a freshman in high school I had fantasies about a romantic relationship with on of the crew members of the Starship Enterprise. If you are unaware, it does not even exist. What does that say about me? Well, for one I am a geek. Other than that, it was a nice bit of escapism. Likely says something about my feelings of being an outsider in school. Big whoopty-doo! To sum up, I am not sure why you felt that my answer was so horrible. I also think that it was a much more honest answer than claiming never to have had any fantasies. Now. . . If you were upset over the idea that I might do something to make my s-type psychologically uncomfortable. . . Well, tough. It happens. More than once I have mentioned something that I have been thinking about or might like to try. I then watch him mentally and psycholgically squirm over the entire idea. Everytime, he has later came to me to say that he has changed his mind and would like to try it as well. Typically he gets more enthusiastic about it than I am. Again, I do not see the horror. I have watched scenes in movies, read passages in both fiction and non-fiction, heard jokes, and seen museums that have made me psychologically uncomfortable. I am completely missing the reason behind what I see from you as a visceral reaction.
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