dink22 -> RE: The reason the life style needs to be keep hidden is what (5/9/2014 6:36:07 PM)
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Good question. I think to start, it's a relatively new thing as far as being a sane lifestyle. Back in the 1950s, many people didn't even know about BDSM or that people actually did this stuff. If they did, they would have thought those people were sick and probably needed to be charged with some moral crime and put in a mental hospital. It wasn't much better in the 60s, though we started to see subtle hints in movies and TV shows like "The Avengers." It started coming out of the closet in the 1970s. I remember Tom Snyder on the Tomorrow show had a whole show on it and interviewed a couple of pro dommes. This was prompted by several seemingly minor but highly publicized incidents that begged the question was S&M coming out of the closet. It got a huge audience. People were fascinated. We started seeing it pop up in movies, such as HARDCORE with George C. Scott in 1979. It was portrayed as perverted, but a regular part of the commercial sex world. In the 1980s, it made more progress. When it was in movies, it was more often seen as funny. Weird, but harmless. In music videos, women were often dressed in catsuits and other dominatrix attire and presented as sexy, though there was rarely any overt BDSM activity. In the 1990s it really surged forward because on the World Wide Web. People could suddenly access lots of D/s web sites anonymously and so many who would have never gone to an adult book store or an adult movie theater or order magazines by mail would go to these sites. This is where more women started getting into it. Previously, many people had thought only men were interested in BDSM. The problem is that in the last sic or seven years in has kind of stagnated. I believe this is because there is still a legacy stigma attached to it. It's nothing like it was in the 1950s, but that stigma has slowed down the progress. Finally, I think the reason there is a stigma is because BDSM and D/s relationships cover such a broad spectrum that some of the stuff included really is sick. Eating shit, for example. Extreme sadism or masochism. And then there are things like blood, which is an understandable fetish for people into a sort of vampire fetish, but that might not be totally clear to vanilla people. So I think that's a problem. Most BDSM scenes are just common fetishes, but many are bizarre (though harmless) and a few are downright psychotic. I think it will continue to get better as far as being out of the closet, just much more slowly than the progress from 1980-2005.
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