PunchMyBallsDC
12-08-2004, 07:42 AM
As victim, I like to beg/plead for her/him (hopefully her...) to stop, and protest that it hurts too much, etc., but still have her/him not stop anyway. That leads to a discussion about safe words. Given the area we are talking about hurting here, it makes sense to have a safe word (eg., "red") that the victim can stay if he REALLY does need it to stop for health reasons. For example, once I got a very sharp terrible leg cramp during a ballbusting, and needed to move around immediately. Of course, you don't want the safe word to be anything the victim might actually say in trying to get relief (eg., the safe word should NOT be "stop"); it has to be a word the victim can remember in a moment of agony, but still off-topic enough that it won't be said accidentally. That's why I like "red".
Safe words are also a good idea in allowing the victim to be subjected to MORE (not less) pain, because with a safe word agreed to in advance the torturer does not have to worry about whether the victim REALLY needs it to stop, and the victim can yell "stop", "it's too much," "please don't do that again", "let me go now!", etc., as much as he wants, to no avail. In fact, the torturer might even want to punish such pathetic begging! If the torturer doesn't hear the safe word ("red" in my case), it's the victim's tough luck.
On the subject of safe words, a 2-layer can work well (eg., "yellow" and "red", where yellow means just let up or back off a little for a minute, and red means you need out of the situation; full-stop). Now, having said that, if you make it TOO easy for the victim to control the intensity, that kind of defeats the purpose. Therefore, once, I came up with the idea of a penalty for use of the safe word. That is, if I say red, yes it stops as promised. But then, after a rest or whatever I need to "recover", I have to take a penalty shot as nasty as the torturer wants to make it. This makes it a pretty interesting psychological dilemma for the victim, because yes you can get relief, but you know that ultimately you are going to make it that much worse for yourself.
Thoughts?
Safe words are also a good idea in allowing the victim to be subjected to MORE (not less) pain, because with a safe word agreed to in advance the torturer does not have to worry about whether the victim REALLY needs it to stop, and the victim can yell "stop", "it's too much," "please don't do that again", "let me go now!", etc., as much as he wants, to no avail. In fact, the torturer might even want to punish such pathetic begging! If the torturer doesn't hear the safe word ("red" in my case), it's the victim's tough luck.
On the subject of safe words, a 2-layer can work well (eg., "yellow" and "red", where yellow means just let up or back off a little for a minute, and red means you need out of the situation; full-stop). Now, having said that, if you make it TOO easy for the victim to control the intensity, that kind of defeats the purpose. Therefore, once, I came up with the idea of a penalty for use of the safe word. That is, if I say red, yes it stops as promised. But then, after a rest or whatever I need to "recover", I have to take a penalty shot as nasty as the torturer wants to make it. This makes it a pretty interesting psychological dilemma for the victim, because yes you can get relief, but you know that ultimately you are going to make it that much worse for yourself.
Thoughts?