| by 
                Johnson Grey
   One 
                of the thrills of SM is that it can stretch your limitations. 
                If you enjoy this sort of play, you can naturally find yourself 
                trying more and more new things, accepting greater and greater 
                levels of sensation, doing and feeling more than you've ever done 
                or felt before. 
 But 
                the process is slow and gradual, and people are not telepathic. 
                It may be that you are the bottom in a whipping scene, and your 
                top is whipping you, and suddenly it doesn't feel good anymore!! 
                and you want them to STOP!!! That is what a safeword is: a word 
                that means "This isn't working! This scene is going wrong 
                somehow! Please stop!" A safeword needs to be taken seriously. Sometimes you may be playing 
                with a top you don't know that well, and if they do something 
                to you you don't want, it's important that you have a way to let 
                them know, IMMEDIATELY. Especially if you're tied up or otherwise 
                made helpless.
 
 Everyone 
                has their own favorite safeword. I personally use "Yellow!" 
                to mean "Something's too intense; I need you to lighten up, 
                but I don't want to stop the scene," and I use "Red!" 
                to mean "I'm in trouble and I want everything to stop NOW, 
                no more games, scene over, let me outta here!" Some people 
                just have one flavor of safeword, and use "aardvark" 
                or some other weird word they'd never say in the context of a 
                scene. At many parties, the universal safeword is "Safeword!" 
                It's up to you. All it is is a safety valve for when things get 
                out of control. If your top doesn't respect your safeword, it's 
                a safe bet that they won't respect other limits of yours, and 
                you will need to decide whether you want to play with someone 
                who doesn't acknowledge your boundaries. 
 Using 
                a safeword can be hard to do sometimes. It's important to realize 
                that no one is perfect, and if you as top do something that squicks 
                your bottom (i.e. pushes beyond your bottom's limits--"squick" 
                is a recent bit of s.s.b-b jargon), it doesn't mean you're a bad 
                lover or a bad person. It only means that you ran into a limit 
                you didn't know was there, or you were tired or disconnected and 
                not in tune with your bottom. It happens to everyone from time 
                to time. If you as top feel burned out and want to stop the scene 
                suddenly, or you get a powerful reaction you weren't expecting 
                and aren't sure how to continue, you can use a safeword too; safewords 
                aren't just for bottoms! If you as bottom feel like your top is 
                pushing you, and you don't want to play anymore, it's not fun, 
                that's when you want to use a safeword--your top will be glad 
                you used it to tell them where you were at. 
 A 
                safeword is just a communication tool, nothing more, nothing less. 
                If you're playing intensely, it may feel hard to stop the scene, 
                to come back from the edge via a safeword... but if you need to, 
                that's what they're for. Some tops deliberately push their bottoms 
                until their bottoms call safeword; this way, the bottom gets the 
                experience of using it. A safeword that's never used can seem 
                unusable, which isn't a good property for a safeword. 
 Sometimes 
                a top will want to gag you, whether because you're being too noisy 
                or they want to increase your helplessness or you've been being 
                impertinent or whatever. You may still want a safeword to let 
                the top know when a rope is too tight or the nipple clamps are 
                pinching or whatever. Some people put a handkerchief in the bottom's 
                hand; if they let go and the handkerchief falls, they know there's 
                something up. I personally use the old SOS signal: three loud 
                yells spaced evenly; "Unh! Unh! Unh!" No gag I've ever 
                seen can stop _all_ noise, and that signal works even if my hands 
                are in mittens or a strait-jacket and unable to hold anything 
                at all. 
 Before 
                playing with someone, it's a good idea to negotiate, not only 
                what safeword you want to use, but how you'll handle it if you 
                need to use the safeword. When you're just getting into SM, it's 
                almost inevitable that some scenes will end prematurely or abruptly. 
                If you acknowledge this possibility in advance, and talk about 
                what kinds of comforting or remedy you might like, it'll make 
                recovering from a mishap a lot easier and more pleasant. And because 
                a scene goes wrong is no reason to think that you or your partner 
                is fundamentally bad or untrustworthy--mistakes will happen. (If 
                your partner doesn't want to hear your concerns about the mishap, 
                though, or if they belittle or deride your concerns, you may well 
                be unable to avoid future mishaps. If your relationship doesn't 
                learn from painful experience, it may not be ready to handle doing 
                SM. Of course, this kind of processing is a vital part of _every_ 
                healthy relationship, SM or not.) 
 Not 
                every SM player uses safewords. Some people into SM don't find 
                them useful for the style of play they prefer; more straightforward 
                communication suffices for them. Some partners find their need 
                for a safeword gradually diminishes as they come to know each 
                other better. Some people do SM in which the bottom doesn't _want_ 
                to have a verbal escape route, for the duration of the scene. 
                (This "no-safeword" play is also sometimes called "edge 
                play.") One thing that you will learn about the BDSMLMNOP 
                scene is that styles vary wildly, and peoples' experiences are 
                astonishingly diverse. But for many people beginning their explorations 
                (and many who've explored enormously), safewords have proved very 
                helpful. 
 © 
                Johnson Grey - As seen on http://www.unrealities.com/
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