2014/10/07

Fifty Shades of Grey, BDSM, and Abuse


I found this at http://theladyinblack13.tumblr.com/image/94277426686; it appears to actually be a copy of a reddit post at http://www.reddit.com/r/TwoXChromosomes/comments/2byz2l/many_women_do_not_agree_with_me_on_this_subject.
With Fifty Shades of Grey being made into a movie, I've tried to raise awareness how this book is not about BDSM, but rather domestic and sexual abuse. Many women argue that the relationship in the book is BDSM, but that paints BDSM in a bad light.

BDSM is a community that believes in safety & comfort. Consent is always necessary, and partners take care of each other. After acts and roleplays, partners comfort each other to help transition out of that zone. FSOG does not include any of this. Mr. Grey gives Anastasia (a then-virgin) an ultimatum; to sign a contract or leave. She is sexually inexperienced (being a virgin) and he manipulates that to push her boundaries to make it seem like the sexually violent things he is doing to her are okay. There are instances where after an act, he is mad at her for being upset, but does not comfort her. He uses alcohol to sway her consent - this is by law rape. There is also an instance where she uses the safe word, yet he continues. That is consent being retracted, and Christian ignores the retraction of consent. That is sexual assault.

Those are not the only problematic instances. Anastasia begins to hide things in fear of Christian's anger. He becomes jealous and easily angered. Anastasia fears for her safety. Experts have even matched her behavior with that of abused women, in accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's description of partner violence.

This book completely throws people who participate in BDSM completely under the bus by misrepresenting BDSM as a whole. Bad people do sneak into BDSM to find a way to escape persecution for their violent ways, but the majority of those in BDSM are not abusive, like this book would have you believe.

This book romanticizes and fetishizes abuse, and painting abuse in a 'sexy' and 'fun' light is really dangerous for women. 1 in 5 women will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime, that's why this book should not be defended. Making this behavior seem okay to accept from a man is dangerous, and people will be influenced to dabble in 'BDSM,' but not have an actual idea of what it is, and they will get hurt.

It is up to every individual what they read, never anyone else. The point of this post is to point out how FSOG isproblematic, not to police anyone's reading habits. I know many women (and men) defend this book and don't understand how it can be seen as abuse, but it is. And I hope more awareness will be raised so this does not influence others
I've unfortunately dealt with specific accusations of abuse in the past - a friend of my sub who found out what we were doing and called the police. It was - thankfully! - dealt with without any trouble, but it had the potential to be serious - and to be on my permanent record. The problem is, nothing illegal was happening... But that's not the standard by which most people respond to it. People see BDSM, see consensual play between adults who are enjoying themselves, and sometimes their first reaction is to panic at the terrible things being done. And Fifty Shades somehow managed to flip that on its head.

Fifty Shades takes a twisted version of BDSM and presents it as something erotic. It makes me sick that to so much of the world, BDSM is popularized by what's essentially an ass hole who doesn't get it. Who's doing a good job of fucking up his sub.

When you're introducing someone new to BDSM, the biggest thing - in my experience - that you have to guard against is preconceptions and assumptions. Having exposure to BDSM in general, having positive attention pointed at it, is good; having attention that seems positive but gives people such a terrible set of assumptions to work from is making it worse for those of us who already have an uphill fight to not be seen as monsters.

I feel sometimes like I'm harping on this, but I can't say it enough; check your assumptions. "Knowing" how BDSM works is almost invariably wrong - because, just like every other relationship, everyone is different. It doesn't matter what's "right" or "wrong", because those don't exist in this context. It only matters what works for you and your partner.

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