Open Up: Kinky Open Relationships
Posted at 2:43 PM May 26, 2008
Long-time Village Voice sex columnist Tristan Taormino has a new book out this month called Opening Up: A Guide to Creating and Sustaining Open Relationships. Here on Naked City, she'll be publishing weekly posts about non-traditional relationships throughout the month of May. These stories won't be found in between the covers of her book, but they should whet your appetite for more.
So many people who are into BDSM are also in some kind of open relationship that it’s difficult to find a monogamous leatherperson these days. (I said difficult, not impossible.) In my experience, people who practice BDSM are more likely to also practice some form of non-monogamy for a lot of different reasons. When someone recognizes his/her BDSM desires, it’s often a process similar to a gay, lesbian, or bisexual person coming out. During their coming out process, kinky folks have confronted their own shame, guilt, and other feelings over being “not normal,” and come to terms with those issues in order to embrace their alternative desires and identities. Because their sexuality is already outside the norm, it seems fitting that they are willing to explore relationship structures outside the norm as well. In addition, many kinky folks see their BDSM as ‘play’ and want to share that play with multiple people. In the context of a BDSM community, playing can be a social activity is some of the same ways that sex is a social activity for swingers: a way to meet someone, connect, and get to know them.
When someone becomes part of a BDSM community, they are exposed to its culture, and non-monogamy is a part of BDSM culture. BDSM newcomers have the opportunity to watch non-monogamy in practice, see how it can work (and how it can’t), and ask questions of people who are actually doing it; this greater level of exposure may increase their willingness to consider it for themselves. There is also a great deal of mentoring that happens in the BDSM world. When someone enters a BDSM community as a novice, she often wants to learn or experience a particular activity. She may play with an experienced kinkster in order to do this but doesn’t want to necessarily have a sexual or love relationship with the more experienced player. Because communication, negotiation, and consent are some of the most important tenets of the BDSM community, kinky folks have an advantage when it comes to creating rules and boundaries for non-monogamy; however, kinky open relationships have their own unique challenges, too.
One of the really cool aspects of kinky open relationships is the idea of “role exclusivity.” Because roles like Dominant, submissive, Top, and bottom are clearly defined, it gives each person a specific set of expectations. When a non-monogamous person structures their relationships around role exclusivity, who everyone is to one another is clear and very distinct. For example, as a Dominant, Jimmy has a boy, Jay. Jimmy may play with other submissives and even other boys, but no one else is his boy. This in turn gives Jay a sense of security about his specific, special place in Jimmy’s life: “I’ve found that by defining the relationships in some way distinct from other relationships, there’s a greater sense of safety and comfort. Jay as my boy is the boy, the only boy. There are times when other people serve me, there are times when other people do any of the things that he does for me, but they aren’t mine. He is the only one that I call mine in the capacity of being my boy. And yes, it is a commitment… that the relationships be life long…I am committed to not having another boy, and he’s committed to not having another Sir.”
--Tristan Taormino
Read more about Tristan Taormino’s new book Opening Up: A Guide to Creating and Sustaining Open Relationships on OpeningUp.net
more: Open Up, Special Series
I disagree that it's difficult, or even unusual, to find monogamous BDSM relationships. Of course, maybe the culture is different in the USA from here in the UK, but most of the kinky folk I know get quite offended by the suggestion that kinky equates to "swinger" or "open relationship".
In my experience, and in terms of what people seeking partners seem to want, the types of relationship described in this piece, while they do exist, are not the majority (although they may be a substantial minority).
Posted by: SnowdropExplodes at May 26, 2008 10:31 PM


