Largo's magic lips
Largo and Editt
Any time. Any place
When we're eating in a restaurant but I'm frustrated and you tell me to use you
Are you an obedient girl? đ§
@dailyhot69
Gimmie
Hereâs the most important thing I can say about dating as a submissive:
You are 100% entitled to maintain your boundaries right up until the point where you agree to give control to a partner. Anyone who says otherwise can fuck right off.
With that said, Iâve compiled a set of red flags Iâve come across in dating.
When a submissive calmly raise a concern with a Dominant and they respond passive aggressively, this is a very bad sign. For D/s to work well, I firmly believe that both parties must be able to communicate honestly and openly. This is particularly important for submissives early in a relationship. Submissives who are not comfortable with something have to be able to speak up, or the dynamic is doomed from the start.
The passive aggressive Dominant shuts down this open communication. They arenât interested in your comfort or your trust; they just want you to shut up and do as youâre told. âFine, I wonât say it ever again.â No, thatâs not what I said. But I was uncomfortable, and you didnât care. Passive aggressive behavior makes no attempt to understand feelings or care for them. It puts earplugs in and does whatever it wants anyways. A person like this is dangerous, on either side of the slash.
If someone goes from being incredibly excited to see you to lashing out in anger in the span of 20 minutes (and you did not, say, kill their dog), this is not a stable person. Rapid mood swings are a red flag in general, but in a Dominant, they can be terrifying. Submissives put so much trust in their Dominants to be a reliable, solid source of support. Rapid mood swings can destroy that trust. Again, this one is true on both sides of the slash. To be clear, itâs one thing to experience volatile emotions and quite another to lash out at oneâs partner over them. Dominants who do this are incapable of controlling themselves, and for that reason, they should never be trusted to lead a D/s dynamic.
One of the most important traits in a Dominant is respect for boundaries. The things we do require so much trust that a submissive must know their boundaries are respected. Guilt trips try to needle you away from your boundaries into a space where you have not freely consented to give yourself.
âIf you really loved me, you wouldâŚ"âOh? If you really loved me, you wouldnât ask me to do something after Iâve said no. Repeatedly. And given you reasons.
âYouâre keeping me from being myself if you donât let me do this.ââAll I said was that Iâm not ready yet. If your identity involves taking control from people who arenât ready, then go be yourself with someone else.
âIâm the worst Dom ever and donât deserve you.ââI call this one the crocodile tear guilt trip. Itâs designed to get you to say, âNo, youâre wonderful.â And then they say, âThen why wonât you do x for me?â This faux self-pity nonsense is both weak and manipulative.
If you feel uncomfortable or unhappy or not ready for something, you are 100% entitled to feel that way. Now, a good submissive (or relationship partner in general) will try to understand those feelings and share the reasons for them to help their Dominant lead more effectively. And a good Dominant will listen and try to understand. But if a Dominant says you shouldnât feel what you feel, thatâs a red flag. If a Dominant brushes your feelings off as a sign of inexperience or lack of knowledge or any other thing, thatâs a red flag. If you are uncomfortable, you are uncomfortable. Full stop. Maybe you will be more comfortable with talking and research and so on. But that does not invalidate your feelings in this moment. And any Dominant who tries to invalidated your feelings like that is not someone you can trust to take care of you.
Itâs not unusual to give control in some areas before others. In fact, this is basically how it should happen. Gradually, submissives and Dominants build trust, and submissives offer more and more control to their Dominants. Itâs a beautiful thing.
Many Dominants try to take too much control too early. They get twitchy sometimes because they know how to fix all the things if we would just let them have control omg now please. But good Dominants will recognize when theyâve overstepped and will step back. Itâs a red flag when they don'tâwhen they assume that control in one area entitles them to control everywhere.
Dominants do not have control unless you give it to them. Freely and enthusiastically. Period. Control in the bedroom, for example, doesnât give a Dominant the authority to create new rules unilaterally. Especially early on. Itâs a red flag when a Dominant demands new rules without first discussing them and understanding the submissiveâs feelings. And itâs a flaming red flag when they get angry when you push back or say youâre not ready.
I donât universally hate the phrase âtopping from the bottomâ as some people do. But I will say that 80% of the time I see it, itâs being used to manipulate an uncomfortable submissive into silence and obedience. This phrase is especially alarming when there is no committed D/s dynamic. In the early stages of dating, submission is more-or-less ad hoc. You choose to obey (or not) in every moment, as you feel comfortable. And you make that part of your ongoing dialogue about what youâre ready to give and what youâre not.
When a Dominant pushes your boundaries, you are entitled to say no. And if they say this is topping from the bottom, they can fuck off. Maintaining boundaries in areas you have not given control is not topping from the bottom. Maintaining boundaries when you are not in a committed dynamic is not topping from the bottom.
You cannot top from the bottom in areas where you have not consented to be bottom.
âI pretty much figured out you arenât really submissive about a week ago.â This came after a Dominant repeatedly stepped over my boundaries. This Dominant tried to unilaterally set a rule 2 weeks into us dating and got angry when I said I was willing to do a task but not have an established rule. Then a week later, this Dominant demanded more of my time. When I gave very specific, good reasons about my life being incredibly stressful for the next month or so, this Dominant told me Iâm not a real submissive.
If a Dominant is going to insult your identity because you donât follow rules you never agreed to, they can 100% fuck right off. Being a submissive is not about letting anyone with a D by their name walk all over you from the first moment they meet you. Anyone who expects that does not give a shit about who you are or what you need. They do not respect you. They will not take care of you.
Submissives have a right to boundaries, right up to the point that they freely and enthusiastically give control of those boundaries to their Dominants. Anger, instability, manipulation, and repeated overstepping are huge red flags in a Dominant. I wonât give my submission to just anyone, and I wonât give it to anyone who shows such entitlement and disregard for my boundaries. Especially early on. I know who I am. No one is going to make me question my submissive heart. Especially not someone so domineering and undeserving of my trust.
Iâm sure this list is only the beginning. Please feel free to add to these with your own red flags.
has anyone noticed that working for a living sucks ass
Been here many times, mostly as yourdarkdom or variations of that. Missed all my old friends so I came back. Trying to be a good boy this time so I donât get deleted yet again. Will see how long this one lasts. Iâm a late 40âs guy from Melbourne Australia. A love of hedonistic pleasures. My likes are many and varied, so feel free to say hi. Check my likes for the fun stuff
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