Is BDSM (bondage, discipline, dominance, submission, sadism, and masochism) a taboo practice? Is it an off-limits topic of conversation?
Granted, it’s probably not something you want to openly discuss with say, your boss or your grandparents but [insert inevitable mention about the success of the Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy] the rise of ‘kink’ has meant that BDSM is increasingly becoming more socially acceptable.
News network ABC (in America) report that between 15 to 20 percent of the American public have “done something kinky in the bedroom” with a rise in professionals teaching “regular people how to engage in non-standard sexual practices called ‘kink'”.
Kink or kinky sex refers to the umbrella term to describe BDSM practices and the community.
Bondage encompasses the practice of tying, binding, or restraining of a person for the sexual, aesthetic, and/or psychological pleasure of the parties involved. According to Wikipedia, BDSM represents “a continuum of practices and expressions, both erotic and non-erotic, involving restraint, sensory stimulation, role-playing, and a variety of interpersonal dynamics”.
So if ‘kink’ is on the rise and on the way to becoming mainstream, is that a good thing?
In the last month the New York Times reported on the rise of the bondage, domination and kink sex communities in America, ABC News (in the US) profiled Mistress Nina Payne, a professional dominatrix in their documentary exploring the world of BDSM and Slate’s William Saletan wrote a controversial piece on the topic outlining what he thinks is “The Trouble With Bondage”.