How talk to someone in Femdom and know the terminolgy
help with some basic Femdom terms…(also see Dictionary of terms)
Erotic power exchange or Femdom practices are full of its own special lingo. We’ll try to avoid it as much as we possibly can here but there are some basics you need to know.
The partner in charge is usually called dominant, Dom, Domme, top or master and sometimes the active partner. The other partner is usually either called submissive, sub, bottom or slave and sometimes the passive partner. People who like to play both ways are usually simply referred to as switches. We’ll have a lot more to say about all these roles later, but this will give you a basic foundation for our discussions here.
Top/bottom come from the gay and lesbian world; master/slave – although very often used today – mostly have their roots in early pornography. You can just about ignore the terms sadist and masochist since they are seldom used by those actually in the Lifestyle, although some subs may say they are masochistic as well, meaning that they (predominantly) enjoy pain impulses.
The classic shorthand for erotic power exchange is either S and M (sadomasochism) or BDSM, the latter being short for Bondage, Discipline, Sadism and Masochism. Other abbreviations in popular use are D and S or D/s (dominance and submission) and B and D (either bondage and dominance or bondage and discipline). Of course the BDSM acronym has now been expanded to also include D/s (Dominance and submission).
The words sadism and masochism were invented by Austrian psychiatrist R. Krafft-Ebing over a century ago, based on the names of two writers: De Sade and von Sacher-Masoch. Krafft-Ebing was not publishing about erotic power exchange but about mental diseases. And that, ever since, has created the confusion, the stereotyping and the prejudice. Just like de Sade was never a Marquis (French nobleman) but the son of a rich landowner, sadism and masochism as Krafft-Ebing used them, have virtually nothing to do with erotic power exchange. In an effort to avoid terms like S and M some people use the word algolagnia, which is again the wrong word. It comes from a combination of the Greek words algos (pain) and lagnia (lust). The problem here is that this is another misused term from the psychiatric world. Not everybody who is into erotic power exchange is also into pain.
Below are a few more terms in pretty common usage today (we’ll be adding more expansive writings about several of these later):
24/7 – Full time erotic power exchange relationship (24 hours/7 days)
Gorean – Erotic Power Exchange, based on the (SF) Gor novels of John Norman
Gothic – reference towards Medieval, Vampire or mystical style EPE
LDR – Long Distance Relationship (usually a euphemism for an Internet based – online – relationship)
Ligotage – The French (stylish) word for bondage
PE – Power Exchange
RL – Real Life (relationship)
SSC – Safe, Sane and Consensual (the basic tenants of EPE)
Torquemadian – Reference to Medieval style EPE, based on Torquemada, the infamous Spanish Inquisitor
TPE – Total Power Exchange
VICSS – Voluntary, Informed Consensual, Safe and Sane
Article by MissBonnie © collarncuffs.com
Related Articles:
Dictionary of terms – Talk like the lifestylers all the terms you need to know.