MasterDarkSadist
Posts: 60
Joined: 6/17/2008 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Lynnxz quote:
I realize the collar is worn only as an ornament or a stylish gimmick in public to get attention. It's a fashion statement, not limited to the BDSM community. I was wearing collars, and tight necklaces years before I got involved in kink. I wear them now, not to fluff my ego about being owned, but because C has put together some spectacular pieces, including one that has to be riveted on...(sometimes anyway... usually I just thread a ribbon through the holes to save my neck. ) I'm confused as to why people believe that Kinky people "Own" the right to wear chokers and collars. When I say that I believe that collars are to be worn by owned slaves, that is my take on the subject. If I see a girl, in a setting where the likelihood of her being a sub (and I use girl, because I'm not into guys, nothing more) is high, then I assume she is owned. Does it make it so? No. Furthermore, I don't believe we "own" the right to wear chokers/collars at all. If everyone wore a ring on their third finger on their left hand, would married people get up in arms and say that they own the right to wear a ring there? Most likely not. Would it diminish the value placed on the symbolism of doing so, most definitely. I guess that where I am going with this is; you have the right to wear whatever you wish, however in my opinion (read carefully, opinion) you disgrace the meaning of it when you use it for anything other than the symbolic purpose of what it represents. My rules for the girl(s) that I am with is this: you will wear nothing around your neck unless it is a loose hanging necklace, or if you are owned by me, you will wear only the collar I provide. May someone else do something differently, of course. Should you? I would say you should not, as it is disrespectful. But again, that is only my opinion, and how I operate. On the topic of having a more defined unity within the lifestyle; I do believe that more uniformity would provide a general base for everyone to stand on. The way I see it, the whole "we can't even dare to agree on terminology" speaks volumes about why we are so fractured. We are fractured because we see ourselves (and somewhat thrive) on the social incorrectness of our chosen lifestyle, however since we are so "taboo" by vanilla standards, we are trying to be so politically correct within our own little niche that we are forgetting that we are creating our own version of vanilla hell. Hell, even vanilla world can create a dictionary that defines words better than we can, even when we have terms that are generally accepted to mean something, they still can't really mean it. Hence the whole Master/Dom/sub/slave/top/bottom debate. I once suggested that having a generally accepted definition of these terms would allow us to more accurately portray who we are/what we wanted in a discussion (with less diatribe) and I was unanimously beaten to death by the whole "i don't want to categorize myself" crowd. Whether you like it or not, you fit in to a multitude of categories, and your lifestyle identity is one of those categories, no matter if you agree with me on the particular word that is used to describe it. Political correctness strikes again.
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