The New Topping Book

The New Topping Book Read Free Page A

Book: The New Topping Book Read Free
Author: Dossie Easton
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“nipple tug-of-war,” in which two people both put on nipple clamps with chains running from one person to the other and lean backwards so that both sets of tits get a nice steady pull, is a good example. Some like scenes that involve power struggles, where nobody knows until someone “wins” who the top will be. Still others like to switch in mid-scene.
    It isn’t always easy to tell who’s the top and who’s the bottom even in one-sided scenes. For example, if Janet orders Dossie to tie her up in a specific position and give her an exact number of cane strokes to the lower half of her butt… who’s the top? Who’s the bottom?
    Nonetheless, it does seem to be true that the vast majority of BDSM play involves at least one discernible top and one discernible bottom. Outside a given scene, these two individuals may identify as the opposite role (many tops are excellent bottoms, and many bottoms are excellent tops).
    The important thing to remember is that whether you’re an experienced top or a novice, a bottom who’d like to switch or a bottom who’d never dream of switching, or a novice with a head full of tangled fantasies and some uncertainty about which string to pull to unravel them… there’s something for you in this book. So read on!

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    W HAT I S I T A BOUT T OPPING , A NYWAY ?
     
    I n the so-called “real world,” most of us constantly struggle with power, working to empower ourselves, and to protect ourselves from being overpowered by others. This is serious business.
    But power can be sexy as well as serious. In S/M, we imitate the outward appearance of those grim real-world struggles for power, while building in the safeguards we need to keep us from being genuinely harmed. We believe that one purpose of S/M is to give us a way to enjoy the “upside” of power – its sexiness and drama – without bringing along its “downside.” We’ve heard people say, “S/M is power games for fun instead of profit,” and we agree.
    B UILDING Y OUR H EARTH . But isn’t this desire for power potentially destructive? Good question. We live in a culture of powermongers. We see all around us the ways in which power is misused to abuse those who lack the power to protect themselves. So how can we, as tops, justify wanting to get our rocks off feeling like the most powerful person of all?
    The popular stereotype of an S/M top is of an amoral, irresponsible and destructive person: that’s what you’ll see in the movies. But in our world, we find that playing with power is like playing with fire: yes, there is the possibility of destruction if we are not careful… and there is also enormous potential for constructive heat that warms and heals.
    One way we make it safe to play with fire is to build an adequate fireplace, a container, a hearth. We call it “scene space,” and we’ll tell you about building it later. Another way we make it safe is to become wise in the ways of power (in BDSM, we have lots of opportunity!). An ethical top understands power and wields it constructively, responsibly and safely.
    I S A LL P OWER THE S AME ? From feminist theory we have learned to distinguish between power-over and power-with. Power-over is a behavior pattern in which a person measures personal power by his or her ability to control others – you increase your own power by stealing power from somebody else. You can see this dynamic anywhere you see rigid hierarchies or chains of command, like the military or the corporate ladder.
    In our experience, if your goal is to build yourself a sense of empowerment and solid self-esteem, stealing power doesn’t work very well. You can’t build a solid sense of self-esteem by stealing someone else’s. When people strive to empower themselves this way they behave like addicts, constantly scheming to replenish a supply of power that never was truly theirs.
    On the other hand, there is power-with. Power-with enables us to get more power by sharing our power with others.

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