Kree -> RE: what was it like (8/19/2006 10:13:43 AM)
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mons, I do not know where or how you found BDSM, but I do not think I have ever seen anything related to BDSM that involved knocking down doors and forced rape. That is not BDSM, that is a violent assault. I certainly hope that you haven't confused criminal activities with WIITWD. I was not raised in a BDSM situation, but I am a single parent. Because of that, when my son began to ask questions about my visitors and what we did, I was truthful with him. Not to an extreme of describing each act, but with an overview of the relationships. Instead of curiousity, he made a joke of it and called it "that D/s Bs". I think it is a question of the maturity of the unmentionables and their ages, PLUS how close the parents are to them. Had I not shared a very close relationship with him, I likely would not have felt so comfortable in discussing that situation and others that arose. An example: When he found a g- spot vibrator in a box in a drawer (no, he was not supposed to be in the drawer or the box) his curiousity got the better of him. He asked me who bent it. My two choises were to scold him for opening the box, or to educate him about the G-spot. During the little class, he ran across the word clitoris and was curious. We went to a medical type web site and he leaned about thatthe same day. Maybe I have just encountered people in the Bible Belt that prefer to tell their unmentionables NO instead of educationg them, but I have found that educating unmentionables is one solution to help prevent things like snooping through drawers, peeking through windows and doors, and not to mention the obvious, but teen age pregnancy and disease control. We should never force our lifestyle on them, but it is surprising how a well adjusted and mature unmentionable can understand and accept that there are things that some adults do that should be respected and kept at home. The main thing is knowing who that little critter in your home is and understanding their maturity.
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