This idea that all Black guys fear pegging is absolutely ridiculous. My name is Cassandra Farmingdale and I'm a young woman living in the City of Toronto, Ontario. I was born in the City of Mississauga, to a Jamaican immigrant father, Frank Farmingdale, and a white Canadian mother, Jessica Tremblay. I stand five-foot-nine, curvy and sexy, with light brown skin, curly Black hair and golden brown eyes. People say I look like Lauren London, that actress from the movie ATL. That bitch looks like me, I don't look like her!
These days, I attend the University of Toronto, where I study business administration on an academic scholarship. I love the City of Toronto, there's so much to do in this vast metropolis. Lots of funky shit for me to get into, and believe me, I do get into it. And when I'm not in class, working or singing in my church choir, I'm out there with my trusty strap-on, hunting down man booty. Make that Black male booty, to be specific.
Why Black men, you may ask? Simply because, after trying my hand at BDSM, I found white males too wimpy and eager to bow down before my authority as a strong and beautiful, willful woman of color. They're weak and naturally submissive, hiding their insecurities behind job titles, degrees and bank accounts. All flash and no substance. I wanted to find a worthy challenge for my skills as a fledgling dominatrix. And let's face it, when you think of masculine power, passion and aggression, you're visualizing a BLACK man.
In my business ethics class, I met a tall, good-looking brother named Abdi Suleiman. The dude is a newcomer from the City of Mogadishu, Somalia, and having been raised in a Muslim country, he's got some real sexist views when it comes to the rights of women. Where Abdi comes from, women are considered secondary to men, and the deeply patriarchal laws of Islam have kept things this way in the nation of Somalia for over a thousand years. I went after this brother with everything I've got.
Western males were brainwashed by feminist dogma and they've lost a portion of their manhood, not physically but psychologically. Males from Islamic countries think of women as inferior to men, and they've got their holy book to back them up. I find such males a worthy challenge, that's why I specifically targeted Abdi. At first, we clashed in classroom debates because of Abdi's truly backwards views on women and gender relations. The dude refused to budge on his stance, and for some reason, I couldn't get him out of my head.