I am new to submissive life - I had no sexual experiences at all until I got to college, and only limited "vanilla" sexual experiences for 30 years after that. Then, in January 2008, I found the Dominant I am proud and happy to serve, as well as the contentment and peace that comes from having an outlet for my submissive self. However, whilst living as a submissive answers so very many questions for me, I find it raises new questions as well. One question that has plagued me for months now is how blasphemous it is that I find myself thinking so reverentially about the Dominant I am privileged to serve. I often find myself thinking things that are intended to reference God but in reference to the Dominant instead.
The title of this story is a case in point - taken from Job 13:15, it is Job's pledge of his ultimate trust in God; despite the terrible tragedies he had already suffered. I don't feel I have suffered the trials of Job, and I don't believe the Dominant I serve is God, but I do find that my trust in the Dominant's care of me, his choices for my life and his preferences for my service is absolute. The trust that I have in the Dominant extends to submitting my body for strokes from the Dominant's belt or other implement of discipline and training, my mind for the Dominant's examination and understanding, and my energy and activity for the service the Dominant prefers.
Although my service is of short duration so far, there has never been an instance when the Dominant has not treated me fairly and wisely. There has never been a time when I have relinquished control of anything to the Dominant and been disappointed or harmed in any way. While I would never give up my belief in a Supreme Being or my spiritual life that grows out of that belief, I cannot help but accept the Dominant to whom I submit my life as the god of that submission.
There is precedence for this line of thought. The Dominant is in control; the Dominant's preferences and choices are absolute and all that matter. The Dominant directs the manner in which I will submit and how I will express my service to the Dominant. In my life as a submissive, the Dominant is the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end, the means by which I can become a better submissive and the recipient of my improving service.
Early in my submission, I began reciting a mantra, almost in jest, that the Dominant "knows everything." What my experience in submission has taught me is that there is no joke about this - whether because of the Dominant's greater experience, deeper thinking, or simple omniscience, the Dominant I serve does know everything about me and about my submissive service. The Dominant anticipates my failures - even engineers some of them as teaching tools - and my reactions to them. The Dominant has used his in-depth knowledge of my personality, my intellect and my submissive self to craft a submission that has taken a woman of advanced years but no experience in service and helped her achieve a level of submission that she would have been unable even to imagine less than a year ago.
Although I know that the Dominant I serve is not God, I know, and accept, and celebrate the fact that he is the god of my submission. Everything I do as a submissive is in service to the Dominant. Everything the Dominant prefers is a guideline for my behavior, for he is the recipient and reason for my service. Without the Dominant, my submission has no focus, no guidance, and no means of expression. The Dominant gave life to my submissive self by allowing it the opportunity for expression and growth. The Dominant's guidelines and preferences are the parameters within which my service is performed. The Dominant's control is such that he knows what I am thinking, what I am hoping, and what I am concerned about at all times. He often is better able to express my hopes and fears than I am myself because he sees my situations more clearly and objectively than I can.
Therefore, I have made my peace with my fears that my feelings about the Dominant I am privileged to serve are blasphemous. I know that the Dominant is not The Supreme Being, just as I know that the Dominant is supreme and the being accepting my dedication of my service to the Dominant. I know that the Dominant who allows me to serve also challenges me to improve my service and my life. I know that the Dominant has helped me focus my energy and attention so that issues and problems that had dogged me for decades before I met the Dominant are being resolved and fading away from my life. I know that the Dominant has never failed to listen and comfort and help, unless the Dominant determined that what the situation really called for was for the Dominant to have me stop babbling to avoid working, to challenge and inspire me to succeed so I didn't need comfort, and to encourage me to stand on my own as I struggle to achieve the goals I have set for myself in addition to the goals the Dominant believes I can reach.