"Wall."
Who knew such a mundane word could be so thrilling. I heard it yesterday in response to being just a teeny tiny bit cheeky.
And ended up with a whip mark running down my back. That reminded me all day of what happens when you're just a teeny tiny bit cheeky.
It was later, much later, I heard it again. And even though I knew I was going to be whipped, I had no idea how much, what with or even what I could take.
So I stood in front of the wall, grey painted brick and I composed myself, readied myself. Sensei cracked the whip nowhere near me and I squeaked. The adrenaline and fear exploding from me as what I was expecting with all my being didn't happen.
Then it did. yobi strike after yobi strike, slow to start, building up to a constant rhythm that had me flinching. The slapping burn becoming more and more painful until I contemplated shouting up but I didn't and it stopped and the relief was immense, the gentle burning on my shoulders and back felt like I was leaning against a radiator on a winter's day. It was good, mellow, warming.
The first strike with the first of a series of paracord whips of different lengths was a relief of sharp sting against the burning throbbing backdrop of pain. The relief didn't last long as more and more stripes of sting decorated my back. I'd been freestanding but I ended up leaning my hands against the wall by this point, the cold hard brick helping me to focus, to ground myself against the pain.
I was aware of so much yet floating free. I could hear the voices in the background, the gasps, the appreciative murmurs, but I was focused in on the whip strikes and the bricks of the wall. The whip changed. Each length made the strike heavier, dig deeper.