willowgirl713:

butchfemdynamic:

Reblog if you agree. šŸ‘ŒšŸ‘Œ

Reblogged bc fuckkk gender stereotypes!! šŸ‘†

Heh.Ā Ā ā€œDaddyā€ is a state of mind.Ā  A kink.Ā  Itā€™s not an age, or orientation, or gender, or sex, or body type, or…

Besides, tell me the OP isnā€™t as awesomely Daddy as it gets!

Things Daddies should do for their Littles

daddystardust:

.Iā€™m really over seeing all of the fake sickos out there labeling themselves as ā€œDaddiesā€. Itā€™s really dangerous and harmful to littles, who make themselves so vulnerable and impressionable.
These are the things REAL daddies do.
-say Goodnight/ Good Morning every single day
-Pick out or help pick out pajamas.
-Order for your little or help them decide and help them tell the server at restaurants.
-Buckle her in when you go for car rides/remind her to do so if youā€™re not there.
-Brush her hair
-Support all of her big space goals/ventures
-Play silly games with her.
– Make, or help her make, her meals when possible.
-Take her on adventures.
-Kiss her owies and her boo boo lip when sheā€™s sad/hurt.
-Tie her shoes.
-Give her a chore chart, and stick to it!
-Turn on her favorite cartoons/Disney Movies.
-Remind her that sheā€™s yours.
-Know all her stuffiesā€™ names.
-Tuck her in at night.
-Read/tell her stories whenever she needs them.
-Open doors for her.
-Reach things stowed in high cabinets/shelves.
-Make sure all expectations and consequences are enumerated in RULES
-Color WITH her. Donā€™t just watch unless thatā€™s what she asks for.
-Let her know when itā€™s naptime/bedtime (and donā€™t fall for the little voice/puppy dog eyes like me when she tries to get out of it).
-Baby her when sheā€™s sick or depressed.
-Use your daddy voice.
-Bring her surprises.
-Help her get into little space when sheā€™s having a hard day.
-Bathe her.
-Hold her hand in public places.
-Make a big deal about all her accomplishments, no matter how small.
-Refill her sippy cup.
-Call her adorable pet names (princess, babygirl, kitten, little one, etc.).
-Protect her against all things big and scary (and adulty).
-Support and encourage her participation in the dd/lg community.
-Administer punishments/provide discipline when necessary and appropriate (or for fun!).
-Give her princess parts special attention.
-Fuck her like no other.
-AFTERCARE AFTERCARE AFTERCARE
**Daddy is NOT just a titleĀ  used in the bedroom. 99% of being a REAL DD lies in taking on the caregiver role!!!**
DISCLAIMER: These apply for Mommies and Little Boys too.

None of us are perfect. Not all of us can achieve our goals. Including me. So I post these things not to hold you accountable but to help me be accountable.

ā€œThe universe is more likely to give you what you want if you ask for it than if you make it try and guessā€ ā€” me.

instructor144:

Feminism

June 7, 2019

Dear Instructor144,

Ā As someone who self-identifies as a feminist and teaches Gender and Womenā€™s Studies, I want to comment on the many posts I see on accounts such as yours that use feminism to support a womanā€™s desire to engage in such ā€œanti-feministā€ practices as submission, masochism, traditional gender roles, etc. This is a long response and I completely understand if you donā€™t post it as you may feel that Iā€™m disrespectful/angry/too political and, well, too long.

As I understand them, these posters define feminism as a womanā€™s ā€œfreedom to make choicesā€ that are right for her. Whether she heads a Fortune 500 company or stays at home with her children, her choices are empowering because she makes them of her own free will and for herself. This, many of your followers argue, is a central tenet of feminism. Yet, scholars and dictionaries define feminism as ā€œthe belief in social, political and economic equality between the sexes. In practice and in history, feminist social movements and academic theories have defined the relationship between the sexes in general and the liberation of women in particular.Ā Feminist movements have attempted to influence politics and social policies through research, education, activism and legislationā€ (Issitt/Flynn 2016). Note that nowhere does this definition mention ā€œchoice.ā€ First-wave feminists fought for the right toĀ vote; second-wave for equal work/educational opportunities; and third-wave for political representation and on behalf of intersectionality (transgender, ethnic, and lesbian women).

While, globally, weā€™ve made many strides in gender parity, thereā€™s still a long way to go. Statistically, for example, women are more likely to live in poverty than any group of men (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2018/02/14/women-poorer-and-hungrier-than-men-across-the-world-u-n-report-says/?utm_term=.f52f23c10adc). In the United States, even married African-American, Hispanic, and Native-American women proportionally experience more poverty than white women (https://nwlc.org/resources/nwlc-resources-on-poverty-income-and-health-insurance-in-2017/). All the ā€œfreedom to chooseā€ in the world would not allow these women to stay home if they wished because neither they nor their partners have the economic resources to do so.

I say all this because Iā€™m bothered that defenses of the lifestyle choices represented here describe feminism as synonymous with ā€œchoiceā€ without acknowledging that only a select few have the means to make these choices. In fact, itā€™s not feminism that enables a woman to stay at home and/or cede financial control to her dominant partner; rather, it is her and her partnerā€™s ethnicity and status (statistically, U.S. lifestyle communities are overwhelmingly white and middle-class; while I realize that not all of you self-identify as such, exceptions are not the norm; https://www.salon.com/2012/01/12/bdsm_its_less_transgressive_than_you_think/). For those who disagree, please understand that your definition of feminism rests on privilege that billions of economically disadvantaged women world-wide do not share. As you engage in your safe, sane, consensual, legal lifestyle choices, please be aware of some potential consequences (such as the dominant partnerā€™s sudden inability to earn a living, for example) and please be aware of how lucky you are that your class and ethnicity allow you to do so.

This brings me to my next point: please stop making feminists ā€“ even a percentage of feminists ā€“ out to be the ones most critical of these choices. First of all, weā€™re not (though I concede that some feminists are anti-porn); secondly, you stereotype feminists as rigid, angry, combative, and man-hating; and, thirdly, you dismiss our very real accomplishments. Right now, feminists are fighting to keep Planned Parenthoods ā€“ often the only places low-income women can get mammograms, birth control, and STDs treatment ā€“ open in far too many states. We are fighting to correct the gender pay gap, which still means that women earn eighty cents for every dollar that men make (https://iwpr.org/issue/employment-education-economic-change/pay-equity-discrimination/). And, globally, we are fighting war-time sexual violence, which is an epidemic in Somalia and Uganda, to name only a few countries (https://www.unicef.org/sowc96pk/sexviol.htm). We are not, quite frankly, taking the time to fight against your lifestyle choices. If you want to resent anyone, resent those who believe they have a right to control your body (https://www.cnn.com/2016/10/09/opinions/the-important-issue-about-women-trump-has-raised-ben-ghiat/index.html). The leap from forced birth (and here, yes, feminism is about choice) to forced heteronormative lifestyles is not a big one given that both deny bodily autonomy.

So, if someone who self-identifies as feminist criticizes your lifestyle, I ask that you please engage with that person as an individual rather than using that exchange to attack feminism on the basis of this one or even relatively few encounters. You would not wish others to make reductive generalizations about your lifestyles based on a few extreme interactions; I ask that you grant feminists the same courtesy.

Thank you for your time and attention.

Sincerely,

Ffeminst3

Iā€™m rehashing a previous response to this because I read it a little differently the second time.

Ffeminist3 has a 100% fair point. Thereā€™s a shit ton more to feminism than ā€œfreedom to make choices,ā€ which in the grand scheme of things is actually pretty low on the overall hierarchy of needs anyway. And from a choice perspective being able to affect relationship dynamics imposed on ~99.981% of men AND women over at least the last 6,500 years and call it ā€œfreedomā€ or ā€œchoiceā€ is about as obliviously privileged as Marie Antoinette and her buddies wearing silk brocade gowns and calling themselves milkmaids.

(And yeah I said men too because you know what kind of pressure and even violence men in some cultures face if they donā€™t police their daughters or beat their wives the way we make Domly/Subby play out of? Indoctrination plays both ways.)

If you bend things around you can construct things like the right to education, right to own property, right not to be used sexually in combat or police-custody situations, or to supervise or represent men in business or law as ā€œchoicesā€ and ā€œfreedom.ā€ But as the old timer said, with enough ifs you can also put Paris in a bottle.

Iā€™m a big, happy, and proud kinkster.

And therefore ā€œfreedom to chooseā€ is right around the bottom of my list of reasons for doing what I do.

Like most actual kinksters I do what I do because itā€™s intentionally transgressive. I mean itā€™s called kink because itā€™s the opposite of what I know is decent and honorable and right. I do it because Iā€™m goddamned terrified of the capital-P Patriarchal capital-S System and I hate it worse than vipers.

And I do it with people who feel the same way about it. If we didnā€™t know it was weird to get off on the shit we do it wouldnā€™t be ā€œkinky!ā€

I do it because itā€™s exactly perverted ā€” a stress reaction to social expectations that treating equal, autonomous human peers like children or thrills or pets or objects is the right thing to do if they have somewhere a penis might get put into.

I do it because Iā€™ve been goddamn kinked!

But hereā€™s the deal: every way Iā€™m ā€œsupposedā€ to treat my partners sexually is also inherited from patriarchal indoctrination ā€” treating women with more deference than I would my male friends of similar weight, size, income, etc., for instance. Going down on her but never imagining sheā€™d ā€œdemeanā€ herself by going down on me. Choosing Harvey Kelloggā€™s ā€œmissionaryā€ position to minimize the risk of arousing her ā€œanimal spirits,ā€ etc.

Itā€™s all perverted. My embrace of kink is an alienated stress reaction to that too.

So one and a half full-throated cheers for Ffeminist3 for calling bullshit on the ā€œfreedom to chooseā€ justification for conformity to the (exaggerated) status quo. And for rightly calling out buttewhispers who accuse feminists of being anti-sex, anti-kink, or anti-fun.

But only one and a half cheers for Ffeminist3 because theyā€™re straw-manning power-exchange kink as well. Not everyone in kink can hold forth on Shulamuth Firestone and Andrea Dworkin, and of those who do not all agree with Mary Daly or Susan Brownmiller. But a hell of a lot actually can and do. And quite a few more have the same deep, dark, and visceral love/hate relationships with their kinky (ie bent, twisted, out-of-true) sexualities I do. And theyā€™re more often than not critically aware of the contradictions between their transgressive modes of sexual expression and their political, cultural, and economic aspirations for all of humanity.

Yeah, maybe some kinksters really think what they do is ā€œfeministā€ strictly and exclusively because they think feminism means only ā€œfreedom to chooseā€ frankly anti-feminist sexual ideologies. But, you know, most of us donā€™t.

Learn more about feminism before you knock it. But also learn more about power-exchange kink before you knock that too.

Kinksters and feminists have better uses of their time than stereotyping and straw-personing each other.

(Hope this makes more sense and has fewer typos than the last time.)

thelittlespanishbaby:

šŸ¤·šŸ»ā€ā™€ļø Soooometimes it happens

bearded-english-gent:

šŸ˜‚šŸŒ¹

I know this isnā€™t how itā€™s meant, but itā€™s a fun, silly, but also pointed reminder that D/Lg ā‰  DD/Lg.Ā  D/Lg and D/S are actually separate kinks.Ā  Yeah, they often overlap – sometimes quite a bit!Ā  But itā€™s not always the Daddy whoā€™s the Dom, is it?

Sigh. If I was more clever and had more time Iā€™d do one of those lawful/neutral/chaotic grids of all the ways D/Lg can happen.Ā  Thereā€™d definitely be a corner where the Daddy is definitely the Dom.Ā  And another where he… um… isnā€™t the Dom at all.

Key point, though: it is notĀ ā€œchaoticā€ orĀ ā€œunlawfulā€ for the Little to be the Dom.Ā  Long as both parties are aware and consenting that can be perfectly fine.Ā Ā ā€œChaotic good,ā€ at least, would be more for where the Little is adorably out of control like a toddler at Disneyland.

thelittlespanishbaby:

bearded-english-gent:

šŸ˜‚šŸŒ¹

šŸ¤·šŸ»ā€ā™€ļø Soooometimes it happens

I know this isnā€™t how itā€™s meant, but itā€™s a fun, silly, but also pointed reminder that D/Lg ā‰  DD/Lg.Ā  D/Lg and D/S are actually separate kinks.Ā  Yeah, they often overlap – sometimes quite a bit!Ā  But itā€™s not always the Daddy whoā€™s the Dom, is it?

Sigh. If I was more clever and had more time Iā€™d do one of those lawful/neutral/chaotic grids of all the ways D/Lg can happen.Ā  Thereā€™d definitely be a corner where the Daddy is definitely the Dom.Ā  And another where he… um… isnā€™t the Dom at all.

Key point, though: it is notĀ ā€œchaoticā€ orĀ ā€œunlawfulā€ for the Little to be the Dom.Ā  Long as both parties are aware and consenting that can be perfectly fine.Ā Ā ā€œChaotic good,ā€ at least, would be more for where the Little is adorably out of control like a toddler at Disneyland.

You donā€™t think this is part of it then you donā€™t know everything about D/Lg…

And for the record itā€™s a good idea not to assume that a Little with their head in their Daddyā€™s lap is being sexual.Ā  D/Lg is also not always about sex.