BDSM the history by Kristina-J Huddersfield Mistress

BDSM the history

Welcome Slaves I get people coming to see me from literally all ages. I saw someone recently who was well into his 90s, whereas another lad had just turned 21. Luckily, he started talking about university or I would have asked him for ID spanked him and sent him home (I did not)

I get clients asking me to perform a vast range of scenarios. The cane, for example, is often requested by the older guys who remember what it felt like when they were young. I pretend to be their tutor. A tutor who isn't happy with them.

Then you have the hairbrush, which tends to accompany a more mothering scenario. I'll take on the scenario of someone who has a caring voice but needs to punish them. These things are mild I get to punish in many ways you know some of them (not always mild)

The History of Sex I first heard about BDSM on the History Channel’s History of sex documentary series just say it was the coolest history video I’d ever seen and still comes highly recommended by me.

Episode 3 of the series discussed Marquis de Sade, whose name would be lent to the term Sadomasochism (see Sade) due to his singular interests. The other guy responsible for the term? An Austrian named Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Let’s talk about these two for a moment.

Marquis de Sade (1740-1814) was a French aristocrat, philosopher, and revolutionary who was most famous for his libertine sexuality.He wrote a variety of novels, short stories, and plays depicting erotic scenes that not only back talked the Catholic Church (a big no-no at the time), but also gasp depicted sexual scenes that were violent and criminal. As you can probably imagine, he was imprisoned for most of his life (32 years of which were spent in an insane asylum). Many of these writings were written in prison. Can you say hello, dungeon fantasy?

Okay, so we got ‘sadism’ and ‘sadist’ from a French guy. But what about the Austrian guy?

Here’s the deal with Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (1836-1895). Mr. von Sacher-Masoch was a journalist and author, famous for his works Legacy of Cain and his most famous Venus in Furs, in which he discusses ideas of female dominance. The main character of this story falls for a woman and tells her he wants her to take him in as her slave and encourages her to treat him measurably more degradingly as time goes by. Even more? Von Sacher-Masoch even encouraged his wife to enact the book with him, taking her all the way to Venice so that no one would know what they were up to! Want more? Check out Venus in Furs.

Really I am a good girl with bad habits I love my bad habits

Mistress K let me lead you astray