
Then I guess I didn't really make it clear how it works for me. It's always been a touchy subject on these boards though so I've kind of stopped trying to explain this, but I'll see if I can have another go at it.
It's not that I want him to take care of me. It's not that I expect it. It's not that I go 'you may take care of me now'. I'm perfectly capable and adequate to take care of myself, though I'll admit - it's harder for me. It's that IF he wants to do that stuff, I let him. Coz I trust him - and cos it provides me with a golden opportunity to use the breathing space as a learning moment and be inspired by how he handles things, to take notes and actually get better at it myself instead of feeling overloaded and stressed non-stop. Other people don't get that clearance coz they'd get access to all the frailty, vulnerability and secrets that go with that clearance. If I actually denied him that shit while expecting him to take care of me as well, yeah, then it becomes what you described. However, not vetting someone who you trust with those things is kind of naive, ime.
I don't trade my body. All I said was that I need a pretty high level of trust to put it in someone else's hands. What I do try to create is a mental space where we can both be ourselves without the social mask. As much as I understand the need to be on our best behaviour in large groups to keep things manageable and respectful to everyone there, it also means you're reigned in. Compare it to riding your horse and making it work versus letting them go nuts in a meadow and be free. I personally prefer seeing that stallion rear up and buck about in a meadow over riding it. I like to see it free to stretch, get rid of all that pent up tension - they're gorgeous when they truly let go like that, without anyone being at risk of harm. Yet bucking and rearing is dangerous and undesirable in the arena and can interfere with the work you want to accomplish during riding.
My point is - if I know what he is capable of and what kind of man he is, I can calculate the risks, and buffer the rough edges so he can be himself - and see what he can take from me, vice versa. That goes far beyond just sexually - I just kept it in that realm coz that was the question asked. But honestly, it's not about the body - it's about the emotional sync up for me. The body is just one of the many tools of expression in that regard.
Is it fantasy? Not really, I'm living it. But I also put in a shit ton of work to make that fantasy a reality
As for wanting an excuse to behave badly - I like raw emotional honesty, as long as it is safe for everyone involved. And I don't mind being the one to orchestrate the entire thing and monitor the potential hazards involved so everyone can for once just relax and be flawed, be relaxed and just...not worry about how they'll impact the other person or behaving. It's not about deliberately having your cake and eating it. It's just about not having to be 'ON' for one moment and take off that gorram corset. I don't see the big deal - it's not like we don't all have undesirable behaviour, wants and unreasonable moments. And often giving them a place to be takes the edge off and makes that mask so much easier to tolerate. Put a stallion in a meadow and he'll go nuts for 10 minutes, but after that he's happily grazing. It's no different here.
Are there people would turn this into a form of entitlement for bad behaviour, wanting to normalise it and have their cake and eat it? Absolutely - but then those people aren't blowing off steam, they're just taking a shortcut through life. And that's the first thing I vet for and boot out - one of my main reasons actually. A safe haven is just that - safe and a haven. It's a way to get a breather from the world - not a place to hide out and act like the rules don't apply to you *ever*.
Is that a 4 sx thing? I dunno, it sure sounds like it. It's a way to allow myself to be broken without feeling guilty about it and to give someone else a much deserved equal break. A way to explore the dark abyss we all have inside with negative emotions - and to observe such behaviour in others, as well as learning how to deal with all the bullshit we so desperately keep under wraps all the time. To me, it'x preposterous to turn a blind eye to that stuff - I rather have it out where I can see it, learn from it, gain a greater understanding of the other and be understood. Emotions are emotions - the dark ones are equally beautiful, and even more in need of understanding than the ones we so prefer to focus on. And I personally find that exploring that dark abyss in a safe and respectful manner can help a person resolve some of the knee-jerk unwanted behaviour they cannot seem to rid themselves of - because it gets a place to be, it doesn't get vilified and it's done with curiosity and in search of understanding. It often allows them to untangle that knot in their head by getting the information and experiencing the stuff they were denied before which triggered the behaviour in the first place.
Iow, it allows you to unmask your demons and realise they're just a nightmare with nothing to worry about. And that to me is pure gold.
So yes. I'll gladly bend and flex for someone with control issues - provided they're aware, cautious and use the safe space for what it was meant for - to discover themselves and the taboos society puts on them, keeping their own truth from themselves. And vice versa, they'll occasionally provide me with the opportunity to explore my avoidance behaviour and fear of the world so I can face it. Fear is debilitating after all - it stops us from learning and triggers fight or flight. Guilt does the same for me (not for everyone, Ive noticed), so being in a space where I'm allowed to explore those taboos is immensely rewarding as it gives me a chance to approach the issue at my own pace, and circle around it to gain a full understanding instead of being triggered to run scared from it without ever really getting a good look at what it is I'm running from.
And I'll try and point out - for both me and them - when I notice the behaviours we're prone to increasing, nearing the point of being undesirable in consequences. I'll just point it out, observing it, without judgement and see what they think we should do - explore and see if those consequences are that bad, or readjust if preferred. The point is that it is *our* decision without being pressured to acquiesce to anyone. This allows us to figure out our triggers, sensitivities and how to navigate each other without having to avoid, ignore, endure or dismiss parts of one another and grow together - at least, that is the hope. If I'm triggered by something he cannot help doing (or vice versa), we'll together figure out a way to circumvent those moments to keep things from derailing due to those shared sensitivities. We might even have a spat, and repeat it several times, letting it play out completely, no matter how unreasonable we 're both being in order to figure out where the other one is coming from, their drives, needs and motivations so we can actually take the situation apart and recalibrate the responses that way. The spat becomes like a test ground and isn't about the content - it's about the pattern, the triggers, the communication and the understanding gained to together find a way to make it work for both of us, without anyone having to actually curb their meadow time - which means it gets experienced in a non-hurtful way however heated it gets as ultimately, you're in this together and there is no doubt that the other person is in fact on your side and vice versa.
Do I understand that this concept frightens and concerns people who rather not go near things like this deeply? Why yes as it is something that can be abused really easily if not properly executed with the right mindset from either party. So it is totally understandable that you'd never want to put yourself in that situation.
I on the other hand, find it worth the risk - and feel pretty confident in my abilities to protect all parties involved
/ feeble last attempt at this can of worms.