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RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 6:32:29 AM   
kalikshama


Posts: 14805
Joined: 8/8/2010
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quote:

Anyone that doesn't understand how emotions can impact their bodies has never been in a car accident where they weren't injured, but had the complete living bejeebus scared out of them. I felt like I had been through a prize fight after such an accident, it only took less than a minute for my entire brain to be completely overloaded with adrenaline to the point where I was completely unable to really function... I think it took me about 5 days for my muscles to completely come back from that one.


Been there! I make sure I get a massage ASAP, preferably same day.

I found a massage student who made house calls and had really great prices and although my sub drop is mostly manageable with food and hydration, would sometimes have massage guy come over the day after a particularly intense Scene.






< Message edited by kalikshama -- 6/24/2011 6:34:50 AM >

(in reply to juliaoceania)
Profile   Post #: 161
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 8:39:33 AM   
juliaoceania


Posts: 21383
Joined: 4/19/2006
From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Status: offline
quote:

Is it well documented that this happens during s&m? I think not. You can choose to *believe* that your theories apply to s&m, but you should be aware that this does not constitute *proof*. Of course, if there are researchers who have carried out work into the hormonal states during and post s&m play, and the observed effects on participants' behaviour then I would love to read their work. But taking one lot of research and claiming as a fact that it applies to other, dissimilar areas is pure speculation, and unscientific.


I am not out to write a scientific paper here, I am not out to get published.

You have several people on this thread who are not mentally ill, drama queens, who are experienced at bottoming, and who have experienced emotional/physical reactions to play. I have presented information about how neurochemicals can impact a person, and hormones also... such as adrenaline and Dopamine... some think endorphins are involved too. You have experienced some physical reactions to play yourself, yet deny that chemicals get dumped in your blood? Now you are just being stubborn to protect your position instead of acknowledging that you might possibly be wrong.

I have so very little respect for people who doggedly hold on to incorrect positions even when someone has pointed out alternative views, and information to support those views. It is true that there has never been a study on subspace... that does not mean there isn't an extant reality that those of us that have played this way get a physical/emotional high from it... brought on by neurochemicals. These chemicals impact different people in differing ways. They stay in the system like any other substance that courses through our bloodstream does.

quote:

you completely fabricated it, it couldn't have been more of a misquote. I stated:


Let me define the world "seemed" for you, maybe you do not know what it means
1. Give the impression or sensation of being something or having a particular quality: "Dawn seemed annoyed".
2. Used to make a statement or description of one's thoughts, feelings, or actions less assertive or forceful. More »



You gave me the personal impression... now you can make it sound as though I "lied" about you, but most people who understand English know what a personal impression is.


quote:

Constant crying, feeling worthless, useless, feeling absolutely unable to carry out vital daily activities such as feeding, bathing, working, caring for one's children, etc.


That is not the clinical definition of depression...such a person may be depressed, but they may have some sort of psychosis going on as well. Having difficulty living life for a few days because of feeling blue and down is different than "will not get out of bed". I think you may need to familiarize yourself with depression, and what it is and how it manifests itself... which is a continuum.

If you know a bunch of subs that will not leave their room for 2 weeks because of play, I would be very surprised and wonder what social circles you run in. How do you know they cannot function at all? Do they tell you they can't? Or do you assume that when they say "I get depressed for a few days" you make the assumption that they are hiding in their rooms crying constantly?

quote:

Actually it is *you* who is lumping a large range of reactions together, which makes your opinion irrelevant, defensive and emotional. You seem unable to focus on the fact that what I am describing are *serious* negative reactions to play. To suggest that I have some issue with people feeling sore or tired afterwards is just another fabrication on your part.


Actually I was extending the symptoms to include some of the ones I have felt for less than a week following not only sub drop, but the car accident I was in. They are also the symptoms my former dom would exhibit when we was teaching self defense classes a lot, because he would get a lot of adrenaline in his system that he could not dissipate in blood stream... they are also some of the symptoms of depression... I was not trying to trip you up, what I was trying to do was to elicit some sort of baseline to judge where you are coming from, because you do not seem to understand sub drop very well, nor the human response to stress...

quote:

If they are already raw feelings, then this proves my point that what is being reacted to is a relationship issue, rather than a biological reaction to play.



You really believe that human beings run around with these completely separate states of being... our emotions, mental states, and our bodies are completely disconnected in your mind... they aren't. Being out of whack in one area can cause a person to perceive the world differently than they might otherwise do.

As in the dopamine study, the young man had no previous history of mental illness, and yet, when his brain was stimulated to dump lots of dopamine, he had a reaction to that...I know you reject dopamine drop as a part of sub drop, but that is not why I am bringing it up. I am bringing it up because it is an example of the FACT that human beings are impacted emotionally by their hormonal and chemical states. We cannot be separated into neat categories.

quote:

If it's a normal mental state that anyone can experience, then it's not sub-drop is it? I am talking about a noticeable reaction to the physical stresses of play. If you are talking about fluctuating mental states that anyone can go through then we are not even on the same page.


I cannot believe you even stated this. There are many mental states that are similar to each other, they are brought on by different stimuli. When we talk about sub drop we could be talking about adrenaline drop, or dopamine drop, or endorphin drop. It could be a soup of a bunch of neurochemicals and hormones. We do not know. We we can say from experience is that many people get high and fly from BDSM activities (some from pain, some from fear, and some from intense stimuli). I can tell you my experiences varied depending on the activity..and this suggested to me that different neurochemicals maybe involved causing different physical states.

quote:


I have no idea what that even is since it isn't something we do at school here, and I actually have no interest. I can tell that you are unskilled in doing and analysing qualitative research since you keep misquoting me and then getting reactionary and defensive about my opinion, but I'm not really interested in what you have and haven't studied because it isn't relevant to the debate about whether sub drop has gotten out of hand as a BDSM phenomena.


I am not defensive... I am just not going to let it pass when people get all judgmental on others (and btw, I am not talking about me since my sub drop experiences are in my mind fairly mild) just because you witnessed people at a few play parties reacting in ways you think make them mentally ill or attention seeking.

I also will reiterate, someone who has no background in psych labeling others has mentally ill based on being down for a few days tells me you do not know your ass from a hole in the ground and you should be seeking to judge who can and who cannot play on your very limited experience with depression... you did not even define it properly.


quote:

If people engage in play that is not safe and not sane then I have the right to be concerned about that. If people have such a severe reaction to s&m that they consider taking their own life, then I think we should *all* be concerned about that, and not just brushing it aside saying 'it's just sub-drop, it's consensual, it's none of my business...'


Are you talking about NV on this thread being suicidal? Or do you know other submissives that are suicidal? How many suicidal submissives do you know? I just wanted to understand where this is coming from, because I think you should be concerned about anyone expressing suicide ideation.... especially if they do it every time they play.

On the other hand, many people have suicide ideation that never do a thing about it, it is rather common. I went to a psych workshop where we answered questions and discussed suicide (I was paid by the university to take part in this research) and was shocked by the amount of suicide ideation there is out there. I had no idea that people contemplated offing themselves quite regularly in college.


quote:

You are posting on a BDSM forum which kinksters, vanillas, lawmakers and vulnerable newbies have access to. You speak as if from a position of knowledge and the advice you give has ramifications if vulnerable people choose to take heed of it. You *are* part of the scene, from our viewpoint and from theirs. I can't change what you do, but I can certainly call you out as giving advice which violates SSC, and hopefully other newbies will take heed of that.


I will repeat what mental health professionals say... if you have thoughts of self harm, depression that lasts longer than two weeks, and this depression interferes with things you enjoy, your functioning (desire to function) please seek professional help. Everyone experiences the blues on occasion, especially under physical stress, but if thoughts of suicide become excessive, obsessive, and pervasive, you shouldn't even wait two weeks. If the above fits you, it does not matter if you are a top, a bottom, a submissive, or switch... get help.

And OFF, you should read up on this stuff before posting it... if you think you represent some sort of scene and that people are going to be heeding your words, you should read about the facts of depression, what it is, how it presents itself, and when people should be worrying about being down as a symptom of a chemical imbalance.

quote:

I also find your posts rude and aggressive, there is no need to constantly swear and patronisingly call me dear and honey. I don't think that you have any good arguments to make, and I am going to stop responding to your illogical rants.

I find your posts the same, to be honest... I think the entire concept behind this thread is patronizing and condescending... and i am not the only one.



< Message edited by juliaoceania -- 6/24/2011 9:00:05 AM >


_____________________________

Once you label me, you negate me ~ Soren Kierkegaard

Reality has a well known Liberal Bias ~ Stephen Colbert

Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people. Eleanor Roosevelt

(in reply to OwnedFemaleFlesh)
Profile   Post #: 162
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 8:43:48 AM   
juliaoceania


Posts: 21383
Joined: 4/19/2006
From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: kalikshama

quote:

Anyone that doesn't understand how emotions can impact their bodies has never been in a car accident where they weren't injured, but had the complete living bejeebus scared out of them. I felt like I had been through a prize fight after such an accident, it only took less than a minute for my entire brain to be completely overloaded with adrenaline to the point where I was completely unable to really function... I think it took me about 5 days for my muscles to completely come back from that one.


Been there! I make sure I get a massage ASAP, preferably same day.

I found a massage student who made house calls and had really great prices and although my sub drop is mostly manageable with food and hydration, would sometimes have massage guy come over the day after a particularly intense Scene.







Fruit, water, rest, someone to listen to you if you are feeling down... the last one can be extremely important. I am really lucky I have a very close friend that I can call that has a psych background when I had my one "bad drop".... and I took her advice and I was much improved. She told me to call my former dom, and tell him how I was feeling, and it made me feel significantly better, but I resisted doing it because I did not want to seem 'whiny'.. which I think the premise of this thread could easily give submissives the feeling that if they needed to talk to someone, they are being "needy" and they should just suck it up and deal with it... which i think is much more damaging than expressing how one feels.


_____________________________

Once you label me, you negate me ~ Soren Kierkegaard

Reality has a well known Liberal Bias ~ Stephen Colbert

Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people. Eleanor Roosevelt

(in reply to kalikshama)
Profile   Post #: 163
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 10:12:51 AM   
kdsub


Posts: 12180
Joined: 8/16/2007
Status: offline
quote:

I am bringing it up because it is an example of the FACT that human beings are impacted emotionally by their hormonal and chemical states. We cannot be separated into neat categories.


I would venture to say that in the years to come we will find that all mental illness and criminal tendencies turn out to be psychological manifestations of physical chemical imbalances and or the result of brain damage or faulty brain development.

These faults and imbalances will just be deviations from the norm that we live by as a society...not always or necessarily bad or destructive just different.

Otherwise I think we tend to overlook the effects of chemical imbalances in the body and their long term affects on behavior.

Butch

Sorry I meant this to be directed to juliaoceania

< Message edited by kdsub -- 6/24/2011 10:15:16 AM >


_____________________________

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I don't see any use in having a uniform and arbitrary way of spelling words. We might as well make all clothes alike and cook all dishes alike. Sameness is tiresome; variety is pleasing

(in reply to kalikshama)
Profile   Post #: 164
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 10:46:14 AM   
juliaoceania


Posts: 21383
Joined: 4/19/2006
From: Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Status: offline
I would agree with that...

We are whole people, after all.

I have seen loved ones suffer from depression because of pain, for example...and they were not crying constantly, unable to leave bed... they were just down, negative, easily moved to tears where they usually don't cry.

As far as the crying thing, I was very emotional when I was pregnant. I wasn't depressed, but I cried over Hallmark commercials. I was hyper sentimental

_____________________________

Once you label me, you negate me ~ Soren Kierkegaard

Reality has a well known Liberal Bias ~ Stephen Colbert

Great minds discuss ideas; Average minds discuss events; Small minds discuss people. Eleanor Roosevelt

(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 165
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 11:14:06 AM   
LadyPact


Posts: 32566
Status: offline
This is something of a fast reply.

It's threads like this/questions on whether sub drop exists that make Me wonder what kind of demos or research that folks do in regard to the types of play that they participate in.  Some of the very research on the study of endorphins have been based on practices such as acupuncture and fire cupping.  Those studies don't just prove the increase of chemicals in the brain.  They also detail the results of drop.  Sure, we kinky folks ripped these ideas off from Chinese medicine, but the reason we did was because of the way we can twist the results to our advantage.  We did the same thing with electrical play.  When that comes down to it, all we're really doing is fooling the nervous system and stole the idea from a medical practice.

Kinky people don't have to do independent research on these things.  Plenty has been done in the field of medicine.  Heck, it's big business for pharmaceutical companies.  Why do you think synthesized drugs work?  Read the studies on anti-depressants.  It's all about how to induce chemicals to get the brain to do what it should be doing naturally and what chemicals we can introduce to promote that.  Even that, we ripped off from nature.  Go take a look at why chocolate is such a good cure for drop, for women especially.

Just because we're not drawing blood or hooking folks up to read their activity in their brains in the dungeon doesn't mean the same test results don't apply to similar circumstances.  We were doing these things long before the science caught up with it to prove it.  Don't take My word for it.  Read what's already available.  I'm not smart enough to make this stuff up.

If I wasn't clear enough in My prior comments, no, I wouldn't be engaging in play with somebody who was using "drop" as an excuse for bad behavior two weeks after the last scene we enjoyed.  Threats of suicide and such should always be taken seriously and if BDSM is being used as the cause of such things, any top in their right mind wouldn't be playing with that person. 


_____________________________

The crowned Diva of Destruction. ~ ExT

Beach Ball Sized Lady Nuts. ~ TWD

Happily dating a new submissive. It's official. I've named him engie.

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(in reply to kdsub)
Profile   Post #: 166
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 5:06:05 PM   
kalikshama


Posts: 14805
Joined: 8/8/2010
Status: offline
quote:

Some of the very research on the study of endorphins have been based on practices such as acupuncture and fire cupping.  Those studies don't just prove the increase of chemicals in the brain.  They also detail the results of drop.  Sure, we kinky folks ripped these ideas off from Chinese medicine, but the reason we did was because of the way we can twist the results to our advantage.  We did the same thing with electrical play.


I've had needles and electricity in and out of a doctor's office. Here's another way to frame the different ways people experience sub drop - perhaps feeling good after having acupuncture and TENS at therapeutic levels at an acupuncture office is like having one drink while feeling amazing and then crashing after BDSM use of needles and TENS is the hangover that follows after having way too many drinks.

Some people skip the hangover, some are hungover for a few hours and some a few days.

(in reply to LadyPact)
Profile   Post #: 167
RE: Does 'sub drop' actually exist? - 6/24/2011 7:03:32 PM   
NuevaVida


Posts: 6707
Joined: 8/5/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyPact

It's threads like this/questions on whether sub drop exists that make Me wonder what kind of demos or research that folks do in regard to the types of play that they participate in.  Some of the very research on the study of endorphins have been based on practices such as acupuncture and fire cupping.  Those studies don't just prove the increase of chemicals in the brain.  They also detail the results of drop.  Sure, we kinky folks ripped these ideas off from Chinese medicine, but the reason we did was because of the way we can twist the results to our advantage.  We did the same thing with electrical play.  When that comes down to it, all we're really doing is fooling the nervous system and stole the idea from a medical practice.



What a great point.  I've had acupuncture treatments that have sent me off into la la land.  I didn't "drop" from them but wow, where they intense.


_____________________________

Live Simply. Love Generously. Care Deeply. Speak Kindly.



(in reply to LadyPact)
Profile   Post #: 168
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