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social safety and etiquette

Spenser

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As we are nearing a new season of tickle gatherings and social events, and from what I understand there are quite a few new folks attending some of these gatherings over the last 18 months or so, I thought I'd begin a thread on social etiquette and behavior. I don't want it to sound like I'm getting on any high horse, merely repeating a lot of stuff that I've learned over the years from being in and around social gatherings, events, and conventions of various alternative adult fetishes and lifestyles.

Spenser

This first article is a basic layout of the definition of the "safe - sane - and consensual" code as applied in adult alternative lifestyles/lovestyles. I borrowed this from (changing the original SM community to tickling fetish, but all the same, it still applies:

http://www.queernet.org/deviant/ssethics#Orthodoxy

A Tickling Fetish Ethic

The tickling fetish community is mature enough to have developed its own codes of ethics and conduct, some of which have passed into this “code of conduct”.

Safe Sane and Consensual
The best known and most widely repeated are undoubtedly those that state this form of adult play should be Safe, Sane and Consensual.

Safe – All players have taken the necessary precautions to prevent psychological and physical damage to themselves.

Sane – All players are in full possession of their mental faculties and are fully aware of the risks involved in the play they intend.

Consensual – All players fully understand the potential risks of their intended play and have consented to the activities. This consent can be withdrawn or modified by any player at any time.

We claim the right to decide for ourselves what alternative personal activities we will partake in. As long as no one is harmed, we believe that the government (and everyone else) has no right to proscribe our actions. However, as with most other democratic freedoms, the rights which we claim come with a heavy load of responsibility. One who is not prepared to accept that responsibility should never join into tickling play. We are responsible for the health and safety of our partners and ourselves.
 
socials & civil behavior (rather long !)

Following on that first post on safe - sane - and consensual, I wanted to post a bit on civil behavior in the scene. Here again
I borrowed from a short essay by "Chris M." Chris is a frequent speaker at kinky organizations up and down the East Coast, on all sorts of subject. He does also enjoy tickling among his many "interests". He is a member of our local DC tickling group, and though I did change a very few tiny words in his essay, I know Chris well and I'm sure he wouldn't mind, particularly if it's for the 'greater cause'.

Spenser

http://www.madylarian.com/subnation/lthrethics2.html

[by Chris M.]

Fetish personalities behaving badly; some examples: The Imperial-Imperious confusion

Some individuals in the world of kink and fetish, in an effort to appear imperial (kingly, of high standard, worthy of respect) conduct themselves in a manner that is imperious (overbearing, bossy, judgmental). A surprising number of scene-folk are born to this confusion. Some attain it after a few years in the community, as they assume community leadership positions, or when they decide they should be recognized as authorities, if not superiors. While some clearly feel that imperious behavior demonstrates expertise, importance, and intelligence, in truth it almost never fails to alienate potential friends and play partners, making the offender look bad.

As wonderful as the kinky world can be, we are all exposed to subtle and seldom discussed irritants that contribute to stress, uncertainty, and the sheer cussedness I have described above. Life as a taxpaying worker, parent or citizen can be difficult enough. Compound it with the responsibility of maintaining a secret personal life, and the job of developing and maintaining a whole new set of social ethics that neither mom, dad, or any of your vanilla friends have ever dealt with. And like water over stone, it can wear on you as the years tick by. These “stress factors” set the stage for the anxiety, impatience, loneliness, and the empathy deficit mentioned earlier. I have compiled a list of these factors which surely contribute to the bad behavior we occasionally see:

The tickling scene is a small world, and quarters are close, closer than we might like at times. Because tickling is an interest that selects at random, we often find ourselves spending a lot of time with people we might not otherwise choose as friends.

The tickle scene can be intensely intimate. We express our inner fantasies and fears, sometimes share partners, see each other at our most vulnerable and most expressive. Is it any wonder people are sensitive about how we are treated by others? The tickling scene is a strange place and it takes a while to adjust.

The pressures of closeting: The pressure of maintaining a secret life, of hiding your alternative and tickling interests from friends, colleagues and family adds a constant overlay of tension to daily life. Scene folk have to manage the presence of fetish contraband, literature, and erotica, whose discovery might be catastrophic.

Jealousy, loneliness, and competition for partners are facts of life, in the scene. People without play partners may become unhappy or angry. People seen as getting more than their share can trigger insecurity and resentment. Even people with partners may see threats around every corner. The “tickle scene”, like any fringe group, attracts its share of eccentrics and outcasts, some fascinating and agreeable, others less so.

Newcomer naïveté: New people unacquainted to the scene's protocols occasionally touch, grab or conduct themselves inappropriately out of pure innocence. Although individuals typically learn to deport themselves over time, the constant influx of newcomers means newcomer naiveté is a constant, grating issue.

The realities of the party circuit: It is a hard fact of scene life that most parties are private and their invite lists finite. For every guest invited there are 20 left outside. The guest list is dictated by what the hosts can afford, their circle of friendships, the size of their home and many other factors. But it still stings to hear about a party without getting an invite. And it happens all the time.

Email: Without a friendly face or modulations of human speech, text encounters can be easily misstated / misunderstood. Couple that with the sometimes blunt writing style of email users everywhere, the added gravity of the written word, and the ease of escalating a private remark into public rebuke with a misplaced keystroke, and you've got the makings of an online food fight.

Some of the erotic roles we regularly encounter in the scene are not necessarily archetypes of reason, tolerance, and maturity. Within the magic circle of a scene this is fine. Bravo for you, if you can find partners to share your predilections with and send them away happy. But these roles are less appropriate in pre-scene negotiation, networking, and working with volunteers in tickling social and support groups. It is a crucial necessity for the mature scene person to be able to switch off the attitude and adhere to acceptable adult behavior in dealing with others in the tickling fetish community.

One of the more sobering aspects of this list is that there really are no easy solutions to any of these problems. The scene is small, people are sensitive, invite lists are short, and we really do have some truly eccentric people who will continue to behave eccentrically.

But, there is room for hope. We do a good job of establishing and enforcing play standards to make tickling fetish safe and hot. We are improving all the time as educators of play practices. But, interpersonal conduct, outside of the tickling fetish encounter itself, has not yet been made a priority, and it's probably time it should be. We must recognize incivility (defined in part by the examples in this report) as a threat to the health of our community, and commit ourselves as individuals, to improving our behavior.

THOUGHTS ON FIXING IT: A PROPOSED APPROACH
The first thing we need to do is agree that improving our interpersonal behavior is worth doing. Once we’ve made that decision, we need to start elevating the importance of interpersonal conduct as an attribute of mature and responsible members of our community. Through mentoring and our education programs we need to send the message that incivility defined by the examples in this article is inappropriate behavior for citizens of our kink community.

While "scene etiquette" (a narrow subset of civility), is a staple in the tickling fetish educational cannon, it deals mainly with protocols of deportment and standards of interaction, and doesn't address the deeper issues of cultivating compassion, tolerance and a more attuned awareness of our tickling brethren. Those are tougher ethics-driven issues, often without simple answers.

Nonetheless, improved civility should be presented as causal to the following desirable conditions:
Making the scene a welcoming place for newcomers
Stability of friendships
Respect of peers
Trust of potential play partners (civility generally means stability)
Strengthening ones personal network of contacts
Supporting the position that sane, responsible, well-adjusted people practice tickling.
Establishing fairness and justice (which are eternal) as having greater importance than popularity, and bureaucratic clout (which are fleeting and can vanish at any moment)

Reducing the wasteful and exhausting melodrama that Strengthens the community and makes it healthier
Secondly (to avoid reinventing the wheel) we need only look to our most famous safety maxim. I propose that we all, as scene-folk and organizations extend "safe, sane, and consensual" into the arena of interpersonal conduct. If we turn the laser beam of SSC onto our social interaction we would surely notice the following:

Uncivil behavior is non-consensual
Good manners and general kindness should become the coin of the realm. To do less is to engage someone in a quasi-scene without consent. Gossips and scolds should consider their behavior in terms of the consent of those they are discussing. Subjecting someone to a tongue-lashing or a gossip campaign is really no better than drawing out a flogger and hammering away at them without warning. If being a bastard or a bitch is your thing, and you have people to do that with, hooray for you. But don’t be that way to people who haven’t agreed to it.

Uncivil behavior is not safe
Cruel, thoughtless behavior can hurt people, deeply and for a long time. Just as humiliation can be more traumatic than physical pain, the emotional harm inflicted from incivility may far exceed even what was intended. Acceptance of incivility sets a poor community standard, where interpersonal nastiness becomes normative. Mature, decent people will simply not remain in our midst. Furthermore small acts of rudeness or disregard can balloon up into clique wars. And if the safety of your intended victim means nothing to you, consider this: people have a way of paying you back, for better AND for worse. Be nice and people will reciprocate. Be a jackass and that's how others will see and speak of you. This is a small world: don't hand someone a motive to get you back later. The leather gods have a way of evening things out. The community is close, memory is long, and paybacks are a bitch.

Uncivil behavior is not even all that sane
For years, many of us felt like freaks before finding this community. To reinforce feelings of rejection in our brothers and sisters by deliberately withholding human decency, or subjecting them to deliberate hardship, is just not defensible. Those who find themselves constantly at war with or inflicting imperious behavior on their scene fellows, would do well to begin some serious soul searching and perhaps seeking out the help of a professional. Three years on the couch did a lot of good for me.

Thirdly, we need to recognize that changing our own behavior is the principal goal. Assholes (and we have a fair share of them) are not looking to change. The gossips, scolds, hypocrites, and Macavells are not going to read this piece, at least not with an eye towards cleaning up their own behavior. We will have to change our own behavior first. We must learn to extend kindness, decency, care and concern beyond our personal circle to members of the community at large. We can't force others to change, so we must strive to make the changes in ourselves. We must hold ourselves to a higher standard and ideally establish higher standards. Make incivility part of how we grade our brothers in leather and ourselves. Even when we feel we have been wronged, we must strive to behave honorably. Mathatman Ghandi said, "We must become the change we wish to see in the world."

But for those who are unconvinced, who feel their behavior should not be constricted by what other adults would describe as common decency, consider this: Even at the most crass, selfish level possible, one reason to refrain from meanness, gossip, and other expressions of incivility is that they frankly don't work as long-term tactics. Even those who hate with all the passion in their hearts have no durable long-term means of persecuting others. Incivility is only effective in the way a nightstick is: it definitely helps to win fights, especially against an unarmed foe. But soon, you run into problems. People don't like getting clubbed. They don't even like others getting clubbed, and once you become known as someone who does it, it starts costing you. While the dictators of history silenced their enemies through murder, torture, or war, not even the most domly of dominants or the haughtiest of scene bureaucrats hold any lasting means of oppression. Oh, people can cut you from party lists, speak unkindly of you, warn potential partners against playing with you and attempt to exclude you from their activities and social circles.

But, they can't stop you from speaking out against their unfairness (especially in the age of the internet), from meeting others, starting social circles of your own and throwing your own parties to which they are not invited. National and regional support groups have endured a few genuine tyrant wanna-bes, but none so powerful that they were able to escape their own inevitable decline and diminished reputations. People who steal from the club coffers, ignore safe words, spread malicious lies, violate trust, or attempt to steal the partners of others - invariably wind up with the reputations they deserve. Long story short, if enough people clean up their own behavior, then, in time, the power players, scene cops, abusers, and gossips, will find their bad behavior increasingly visible and increasingly frowned on. Perhaps, then there may be change.

And lastly, something needs to be said for the power and wisdom of accepting the scene as it is. It’s not perfect, nothing in life is. But many situations can be dealt with by calmly deciding to let them rob you of your joy. It isn’t necessarily easy, to forgive, forget and move on, not for me anyway. When I feel wronged my reflex inclination is to strike back, to retaliate, to really point out and dwell on the fact that I’ve been aggrieved. It’s always worked out better when I’ve succeeded in looking past the occasional annoyance, and injustice and made a note to not treat others in ways I haven’t liked being treated myself.

So even with the occasionally ugly interpersonal behavior we find in the scene it still has great people and the potential to make a dramatic contribution in your life. It is still an environment where dreams can ands do come true.
 
:bump:

:bump:

This was on page 2 already. Much too valuable to get lost.

Please read.
 
Thanks Jen for bumping this up, it is indeed to valuable to get lost.
Thanks Spencer for posting this, after what happened to QBWeavers friend, I think a lot of the ladies here got scared and sort of lost trust in people. I hope everyone reads this. 🙂
 
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