• Battle Masker
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    1115 hours ago

    Non-con stuff. Either end of it.

    Like I know about cnc but I’m not sure if I’d actually want to partake in that cause I’m not 100% sure where the line is for myself even

    • @[email protected]
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      15 hours ago

      I love CNC, but you definitely need to know where the line is, for both yourself and your partner.

      It does force you to become better at understanding consent and communicating limits, so that’s a nice upside.

    • aguyinheat
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      413 hours ago

      yeah same, i was thinking about it the other night, but i was like… even if i found someone into it, i don’t know that i’d be okay afterwards

      • @[email protected]
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        912 hours ago

        It’s doing non-consensual things (e.g., rape) that a person has consented to before the fact. Different people do it different ways, there’s usually some kind of safeword, and it typically involves ‘forced’ bondage and sexual acts. Like, I was dating someone for a while that wanted to be abducted off the street, strangled, tied up, and forcibly sodomized. That was their fantasy; they didn’t want to know when it was going to happen, but they consented to it–and said they were consenting to whatever happened during it–beforehand. (It did not happen due to logistics; that’s a very, very high risk scenario, since at least part of it plays out in public.) This person wanted to be used and abused by me for my own sexual gratification. They was much more of a masochist than I am a sadist.

        CNC gets risky in other ways, because it’s easy to blow right past limits without realizing it, and get into sexual assault territory; part of the ‘game’ is that it’s ‘non-consensual’, so it might be difficult to know when it’s become non-consensually non-consensual.