I wanted to take a moment before getting into the material to thank everyone for the lovely encouraging comments. I am a total ham at heart, and I do tend to eat them up. Thank you!
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We're probably getting on towards the material that some of you were waiting for, now. I wanted to get at least a basic survey of the approaches and philosophies that I advocate out there before approaching this topic. Most sorts of play, like bondage or discipline/obedience or impact play, can be fairly intuitive in terms of coming up with a way to experiment. Most intelligent people, when they understand to start out slowly and carefully, and take one step at a time, can come up with some fairly reasonable way to begin experimenting.
But humiliation and objectification play is different. Let me define my terms quickly, first. They're closely related and often overlapping.
Humiliation play is what you always see vanilla people who write about BDSM sprinkle heavily into the stories. It generally involves insulting, shaming, or demeaning the submissive in some way.
Some see objectification play as a sub category of humiliation, but I prefer regarding them as distinct. And contrary to popular misconception, it does not simply involve treating submissives like inanimate objects, like tables. Rather, it involves modifying a person's role or sense of identity to solely suit their utility to a dominant. In other words, their value is based less on being human and more on how pleasing they are to him. Most Master/slave play involves elements of objectification, as does pet play, like you see with ponygirls.
Both of these tend operate in apparent contradiction to explanation about power exchange functioning with the dominant providing a security structure to the submissive. It certainly doesn't usually look like the dominant is very concerned with her safety or emotional security.
That's because the dynamic at play is a little bit more complex. In play that doesn't involve these, the dominant is providing security directly, in a caregiver sort of way. In instances where a submissive is affected by this dynamic, she tends to have an existing security structure that somehow impedes her experience of intimacy. Therefore, the dominant has to sort of dramatically contradict and supplant that structure with his own through their play. That's why this style of play also tends to mix with so much taboo.
In other words, by proving that in play the dominant can be scarier or appear more powerful than these other emotionally charged fixtures, usually religious or cultural, and involving guilt of some sort, they become a source of safety from those other less personified influences that are sources of anxiety. This is why you see many taking pseudo-satanic imagery in their style of dress and such. By doing so, in play, they are usurping the emotional potency of all of the submissive's religious and cultural indoctrination, and freeing them to behave or feel in ways that would normally be emotionally constricted via their conditioning.
This is also a style of play that has a bad taste left in many kinksters' mouths based on all too frequent negative experiences. Dominants, especially inexperienced ones, tend to be extremely heavy handed with this sort of thing. They tend to think of this as a default modus operandi, rather than an element of play to be used selectively. In fact many seem to regard abuse of this sort of thing as a direct indicator of their potency as a dominant.