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BDSM mistress sets up business to dominate men with PVC, bondage and role-play (Madame C)

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 03:59:01

Source: Dailystar.co.uk.

UK – SURREY – Madame C, from Surrey, England, is a fetish practitioner and BDSM mistress who is on a mission to give people everything they need to fulfil their wildest dreams and fantasies

See more and larger photo’s on: Dailystar.co.uk

A fetish practitioner and BDSM mistress is helping people explore their deepest, darkest desires.

Madame C, from Surrey, England, has decades of experience as a professional mistress and as a cross-dressing studio owner.

The highly-skilled dominatrix shares her skills with others so that they “can have the pleasure you deserve”.

She achieves this through a variety of ways, such as medical examination, heavy bondage and role-play.

“I am on a mission to give you everything you want to fulfil your wildest dreams and live the one life you have been given and deserve,” she has written on her website.

“I am so excited to teach you the skills to reframe outdated and dysfunctional cultural and social beliefs of fantasy, sex, self-exploration and relationships.

“I will teach you to unlock your innate capabilities to let go and travel even deeper within your mind reaching your ultimate pleasure zones, and then, slip even deeper into a place of absolute bliss.

“The world I have created for you is a playground for the physical and a limitless space for your mind to explore.”

Madame C works in playrooms with bondage equipment and accessories, such as penis pumps, male milking machines, strap ons, chastity devices and exploration toys.

There is also a whole range of outfits for Madame C to wear, such as rubber mistress, headmistress, policewoman, judge, governess and nurse.

Clients can choose a variety of her services, such as heavy bondage in the dungeon, a rubber doll experience, the medical clinic and cross-dressing.

If customers want to experience role-play, Mistress C will help them explore a variety of different scenarios.

“What Studio Kink offers is a platform on which to explore and enact these experiences through role-play,” she explained.

“I devise creative, spontaneous and realistic play in a setting with props and outfits that will trigger past experience feelings.

“I take the dominant role and guide you through your fantasy using role-play.”

Some of the role-play scenarios she offers are The boy who has been sent to the therapist for sissy training, the naughty nephew caught peeking at auntie as she changes and the underperforming male employee in the female-run office.

Over the years Madame C has met individuals who are all on a quest for the ultimate experience of alternative kinky play.

She has said that every single one of them has been different and unique and has helped widen her knowledge about the world of sexual fantasies.

“My passion, experience, and personal exploration of kink, psychology and exploring fantasy play over three decades has been the building blocks for creating Studio Kink,” she shared.https://get-latest.convrse.media/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dailystar.co.uk%2Flove-sex%2Fbdsm-mistress-sets-up-business-27180333&cre=bottom&cip=28&view=web

“I have created a space where you can safely discuss and explore thoughts, feelings and fantasies in a specially designed and equipped environment.

“Your time with me will allow you to close the door on your daily routine and the person you are.

“You will enter a safe space where you can explore and share your deepest fantasies in a non-judgmental empathetic environment.”



Dutch BDSM media News

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 03:50:00
View the Dutch BDSM Media News in Dutch or Use your translate

The Dutch BDSM Media News update in Dutch:

-In de Nieuwe Massad BDSM Magazine nummer 312
-Puurse auteur A. Lilou wil taboes rond BDSM doorbreken met ‘Verborgen verlangens’: “Seks is niet slecht of des duivels”
-Geïnfecteerde gevallen van apenpokken gelinkt aan het Fetish Festival in Antwerpen, meldt de organisatie
-Zijn jouw seksfantasieën normaal? De wetenschap geeft antwoord



Netflix to Premiere ‘How To Build A (BDSM) Sex Room’ Home Makeover Show

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 03:47:55

Source: Breitbart.com.

USA – Netflix is set to premiere a home makeover show, titled, How To Build A Sex Room, on July 8. The show will be about renovating “sumptuous” spaces that are all about intimacy.

See larger photo and Youtube video on: Breitbart.com

“When people hear the words ‘sex rooms,’ they concentrate on the word ‘sex,’ and that connotes ‘dirty,’ ‘disgusting’ — no, sex rooms are not disgusting,” interior designer Melanie Rose, the host of the upcoming show, says in the Netflix trailer.

“A sex room can be anything from a sumptuous bedroom to a dungeon under the stairs,” Rose added. “But when I design them, they can be beautiful. They can be works of art. They can be fantasies. They can be anything my client desires.”

Throughout the trailer, images of Rose’s elaborate sex room designs are displayed, showing viewers various different styles, from a dungeon with chains and bondage devices, to a bathroom featuring a black freestanding tub surrounded by candles, in front of a wall adorned with sex toys.

Another room included a balloon chair with handcuffs at the top, and another featured a mannequin clad in pink Shibari. The walls of several rooms featured sex toys hanging on hooks, and images of women in bondage.

Rose is an interior designer who has “devoted her career to fulfilling couples’ fantasies via home design,” and has been dubbed the “Mary Poppins” of sex rooms by her clients,” according to a report by PEOPLE.

Netlix’s How To Build A Sex Room arrives on the heels of consumers dumping their subscriptions for the streaming platform in droves, as well as a wave of show cancelations, and mass employee layoffs.

You can follow Alana Mastrangelo on Facebook and Twitter at @ARmastrangelo, and on Instagram.



Swindon dominatrix reveals the reality of sex work in the town

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 03:27:17

Source: Swindonadvertiser.co.uk.

UK – SWINDON – A sex worker based in Swindon has spoken about what it’s like being a dominatrix in the town. 

See more and larger photo’s on: Swindonadvertiser.co.uk

The 47-year-old who goes by the stage name ‘Kaz B’ revealed she makes around £35,000 by visiting clients all over the South West as well as through her own Onlyfans page. 

“I’ve done all sorts of things. Some people might have a fetish for spanking or extreme bondage, some have a foot fetish and like to massage the feet.

“There’s corporal punishment, whips, paddles and ties. Some men like to be treated like women and crossdress, some like to be humiliated.”

The dominatrix, who recently moved back in with her mother in Central Swindon, was keen to stress that while a lot of people get uncomfortable when it comes to fetishes and sex work, there’s a “real, beautiful, human element” to it that often gets overlooked.

“When I first got into it most of my clients were quite well-to-do men over 50, but more and more it’s opening up and I’m seeing a lot of younger clients from all different kinds of backgrounds – everyone has their own kinks and fetishes which they might not be able to express,” she said.

“Seeing me is therapy for a lot of people. I’ve started a podcast where myself and other sex workers talked about the stigma of having a fetish, and how men often face a lot of shame in their lives.”

She explained that a lot of her clients lacked confidence and thought less of themselves because of their kinks.

“Years and years ago another dominatrix and I were domming a young man who wanted to be humilated but it was too much for him and he ended up telling us he needed to stop and started bawling his eyes out.

“We ended up just getting a Chinese and watching a movie with him.”

Asked what her friends and family thought about it, Kaz B said they ‘didn’t mind’ and that while they ask her to share stories she keeps shtum about what her clients get up to.

Kaz B added that she has got to know a lot of her clients at a deep level and has seen them grow as people as a result. She said this positivity doesn’t get acknowledged enough in the industry.

But being a sex worker has also helped her overcome a troubled upbringing and mental hangups of her own and improved her confidence as well. 

“I have always been really shy,” she said. “I was bullied at school and I was in an abusive relationship when I was younger. 

“Sex work has really helped because it’s fulfilling and rewarding to help somebody be who they should be. You get this private bond with someone which helps them but it also helps you. 

“It has helped me work through my own issues and anxiety.”

Kaz B is also an aspiring filmmaker, a novelist and is currently in the process of making a documentary to further break down the stigma attached to sex work and what she does.

Links:

Website: UK-fetish.co.uk

Twitter: Twitter.com/kazbxx

Instagram: Instagram.com/fetishdomme



Inside the Rise of Fetish Fashion in India

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 03:08:42

Source: Vice.com.

INDIA – From using the traditional Indian saree for bondage to experimenting with anklets and toe rings, this is what kink fashion means in India. 

See more and larger photo’s on: Vice.com.

Fashion is considered one of the finest forms of self-expression, a medium that lets you use clothing, accessories, makeup and other related vehicles to communicate a message you want to take to the world. So, what does it mean when we see leather harnesses, latex bodysuits, rubber boots, O-ring chokers, and autoerotic asphyxiation-inspired necklines take over runways and red carpets? Probably that a form of fashion formerly relegated to sex dungeons, underground parties and bedroom play is now marching right on to the streets. 

Fetish fashion is defined as any kind of clothing or accessory designed to be extreme or provocative in a kinky way. Over the last year, we’ve seen celebrities like Kim Kardashian, Dua Lipa, Zoë Kravitz and Julia Fox embrace BDSM-inspired looks. In fact, forecasters at shopping search engine Lyst noted in March that “fetishcore” is fast emerging as a trend, with searches for “harness” on the platform increasing by 132 percent month-on-month, and queries for leather choker on the site also growing 100 percent since the start of 2022. 

Fetishcore also isn’t a new trend. Experts trace its origins back to sexual liberation movements in the 1960s and 70s, where openly wearing provocative looks, especially at pride protests, became a way to openly express sexuality. Today, the movement has melded into the mainstream, with fetish fashion emerging as a trend that lets us embrace a more experimental look. 

All these factors point to BDSM-adjacent styles gaining global acceptance. But in India, a country where it is still considered taboo to openly discuss your deepest, darkest kinks – or, heck, even sex for that matter – the rising trend of fetish fashion is subverting societal pressures and expectations, and fuelling mainstream conversations on a niche subculture for probably the first time ever.

“[Kink fashion] has always been there, but it was limited to underground spaces or confined to bedrooms,” Randhir Singh, the founder of India’s first homegrown fetish fashion label Subculture, told VICE. “Historically, we have always been a culturally open society, but that changed with colonisation. Now, we’re picking up those conversations and talking about sex more liberally, which is what has also led to the rise of fetish fashion in India.”

Singh is a fashion designer trained in the art of crafting leather. He launched Subculture in 2021 to raise awareness around kinks and normalise them. 

“People think chokers and corsets are just fashion statements,” he said. “You can make it fashion, but it’s also a lifestyle for many. Now, even [mainstream] brands like H&M and Zara are producing harnesses and corsets because they’re trendy, but I want to use my brand as a platform to educate people about the backstory behind fetish fashion.”

Singh added that he has noticed a spike in interest after the lifting of lockdown restrictions, something he believes nudged people to embrace fetish fashion. In fact, fetish fashion has historically peaked during times of political upheaval, with experts attributing the desire to take back a sense of control as a massive factor that fuels its popularity. 

“During the lockdown, people spent more time on the internet and got more into online shopping, which in turn led to more people experimenting with fetish fashion,” he said. “That’s when my sales were the highest.” 

Subculture is currently the only homegrown brand offering harnesses, floggers, handcuffs and other bondage-inspired accessories made by rural leather artisans in the Indian state of Rajasthan. But even before brands were openly selling leather harnesses and latex corsets, members of the kink community found creative ways to overcome the lack of options. 

“In the Indian space, there are various things that people have been using as part of their kinky experiences,” Aili Seghetti, an intimacy coach and dominatrix based in the Indian city of Mumbai, told VICE. “People use saree pallus (the loose end of a saree) to tie their partner up, or the metal parts of payals (anklets) or even traditional toe rings to scratch their partners.” 

Seghetti’s introduction to fetish fashion was through sex parties she attended in London in the 90s, where it was an unspoken mandate for attendees to spend a minimum of 10,000 Indian rupees ($130) on kinky lingerie and accessories just to gain entry into these clubs. 

“In India, our understanding of kink has come in from the West, which is why even its representation in fashion is more Western. For me, kink wear is latex, but the weather in India makes it difficult to wear such materials,” she said. 

While India still has a long way to go in terms of localising fetishwear, she said that the current trend is an important stepping stone in opening up conversations around kink. 

“If you are kinky, your [aim] is to have more people understand that it’s OK to be kinky,” she said. “So, if someone buys a collar and then finds out what the collar is used for, it automatically spreads awareness.” 

She added that while many Indians discovered kink through the movie Fifty Shades of Grey, fashion is another way to bring the discourse into the mainstream. 

“Kink fashion can take these conversations into the mainstream the same way athleisure has done for fitness,” she said. “It may be changing at a very slow pace, but for now, it is a good conversation starter.” 

While India is still in the nascent stage of understanding fetish fashion in all its glory, kinky clothes remain an empowering and liberating medium for people to express themselves. 

“I feel sexually confident, unapologetic and strong, and even get a sense of rage when I wear kink fashion,” Sanky Evrus, a celebrity hair stylist and nude model, told VICE. “It’s a very different high, almost like a power to take control of everything around me. Kink fashion is nothing short of liberation to me. To be able to celebrate something that is only meant to be behind closed doors is quite empowering.” 

For some like Evrus, kink fashion is a way to amplify their sexual desires and attract other like-minded people in a subtle yet explicit fashion. For others, it is a way to appreciate aesthetics. 

“For me, sex is as much about the aesthetic aspect, as it is about the physical aspect,” a Bengaluru-based lawyer, who requested anonymity over concerns of professional backlash, told VICE. “When my partner and I have sex, we experiment with different kinds of lighting or use mirrors, which change the way we see ourselves, and are as much of a turn-on as the physical act. That’s why kink fashion can be extremely empowering.”

This lawyer’s kinks include voyeurism and autoerotic asphyxiation, and fetish fashion has become a way to express his deepest, darkest desires. 

“In a society such as ours, sex is something typically restricted to the bedroom, but it has underlying power implications,” he said. “[Kink fashion] brings the entire conversation pushed to the dogmas in our bedroom to the public sphere, and is a small step that marks this paradigm shift.”

Follow Shamani on Instagram and Twitter.



Sexual (BDSM) aftercare tips and why it is important

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 02:54:19

Source: Medicalnewstoday.com.

USA – Sexual aftercare is the time people spend caring for each other after having sex. This can involve things such as cuddling, talking, or massage. Sexual aftercare can be important for individuals of any gender.

See more and larger photo’s on: Medicalnewstoday.com.

Sex is an intimate activity that causes a person to feel various emotions. After sex, some people may wish to spend time caring for each other. This can help strengthen bonds and help individuals feel safe and secure.

Some people may find they enjoy or require sexual aftercare following sex.

Read on to learn more about sexual aftercare, why it is important, and how individuals can benefit from it.

What is sexual aftercare?

Sexual aftercare is the act of caring for a person’s partner or partners after they have sex. It can be a way for individuals to strengthen the bond between them and their sexual partners.

An older study from 2014 found that affectionate behavior after sex had associations with higher sexual and relationship satisfaction.

Sexual aftercare can include activities such as:

  • cuddling
  • shared intimacy
  • talking about what a person liked and what they did not enjoy during sex
  • massaging each other
  • bathing together
  • sensual touching

Sexual aftercare may be important after people engage in BDSM, which stands for bondage and discipline, domination and submission, sadism, and masochism.

Sexual aftercare

The following are sexual aftercare tips.

Cuddling

An investigation from 2019 noted that married people who cuddled more frequently reported increased levels of relationship satisfaction.

With this in mind, cuddling after sex may help a person feel closer to their partner or partners. It may also help them feel safe and relaxed.

Additionally, BDSM may involve humiliating and degrading acts. Therefore, cuddling after BDSM activities may help remind a person that they are loved and cared for.

Communicating

Research from 2018 looked into the number of males who felt postcoital dysphoria (PCD). PCD is when a person feels tearful, sad, or irritable after sex.

The researchers found that 41% of males surveyed had experienced PCD at some point in their lives and that 3–4% of people experienced PCD on a regular basis.

People can engage in sexual aftercare to discuss how they are feeling after sex. A study from 2016 found that individuals experience increased emotion and intimacy following sex. This can lead to bonding behaviors, such as discussing feelings and emotions with each other.

Treating any injuries

Certain BDSM activities can result in a person becoming injured, which may be intentional or unintentional.

If a person receives a wound during sex, a partner may help treat them. This may help someone feel like someone is looking after them.

Bathing or showering together

Spending time washing together, or washing each other, can be an intimate experience. A person may enjoy being naked with their partner or partners in a nonsexual scenario.

Hygiene after sex is also important — washing the penis after sex can help prevent infections. The advocacy group Planned Parenthood suggests that uncircumcised males should clean underneath their foreskin every day and after sex.

Unwinding

After sex, people may wish to spend time doing nonsexual activities with their partner or partners. This might involve:

  • napping
  • watching a film or TV show
  • having a snack or beverage
  • playing a computer game together

Spending nonsexual time together may help build a stronger relationship.

Why is it important after BDSM?

BDSM is a group of consensual sexual practices and interests. BDSM comprisesTrusted Source physical, physiological, and sexual elements.

Power play is at the core of BDSM activities. This can mean that one person is dominant while another is submissive. Someone may also switch between being dominant and submissive.

BDSM can involve certain activities during, before, or after sex, while certain BDSM activities may not involve any sex acts at all.

BDSM activities can include:

  • being tied up, or tying someone up, during sex
  • being whipped, tickled, spanked, or performing these actions
  • humiliation
  • punishment
  • degrading acts, such as licking their partner’s shoe
  • ordering another person to do certain acts
  • sensory deprivation, such as blindfolding

People use BDSM for sexual fulfillment and fantasy. However, certain elements of BDSM can involve pain or humiliation. A person may feel a sense of shame or sadness after they engage in BDSM activities.

study from 2016Trusted Source noted that people who engaged in BDSM may experience stigma-related shame and guilt. This could lead to feelings of loneliness or feeling like a burden.

By engaging in sexual aftercare, a person can reassure and comfort their partner if they have any negative feelings after sex. They can also receive treatment for any wounds or cuts resulting from BDSM activities.

Why is it important after non-BDSM sex?

Following any kind of sexual activity, a person may feel frustrated or detached from their partner. Sexual aftercare aims to ensure that everyone involved feels secure and acknowledged.

Sharing nonsexual intimate time together may help a person reconnect with a partner. It may be beneficial to use this time to talk about things they might not typically discuss.

Additionally, doing activities together after sex may reassure a person that they are not just a sexual object. It is important for everyone in a relationship to feel valued and respected.

Summary

Sexual aftercare is when a person cares for their partner or partners following sex. It can help strengthen relationships through communication and nonsexual activities.

People who engage in BDSM activities may find sexual aftercare important to their relationship. Although consensual, BDSM can involve painful or humiliating activities. Therefore a person may find it comforting to cuddle or discuss things with their partner or partners after these types of sexual activities.

Sexual aftercare can be important after any kind of sex, as some people can feel upset or frustrated after sexual acts. It can also serve as a suitable outlet for discussing certain feelings.

There are various kinds of sexual aftercare that individuals may benefit from. A person can speak with their partner or partners about the right kind of sexual aftercare for them.



‘I ditched teaching to become a financial dominatrix – men send me money for nothing’

Worldwide BDSM News From The Media Posted on Sat, June 18, 2022 02:37:58

Source: Mirror.co.uk.

UK – Lana Michaels claims she makes around £100k a year through her Loser Club, which helps men get on track in aspects of their life while fulfilling their sexual fantasies

See more and larger photo’s on: Mirror.co.uk.

A woman who used to discipline students for a living has revealed how she swapped teaching for an unorthodox new career as a financial dominatrix.

Lana Michaels, who calls herself the Loser Life Coach, earns up to £100k every year for “absolutely nothing.”Ads by 

After moving from the UK to Murcia, Spain, three years ago, Lana looked for alternative work due to the pandemic – and discovered adult streaming platform Fansly.

After joining the platform and experimenting with different types of content, she found subscribers started sending her money for no apparent reason.

“I would receive messages saying that they sent it because I am a goddess and they are worthless losers,” she said.

“Some asked me to be mean to them or for certain things in return but it was always simple things like a couple of photos or a voice/video call tipping much more than I would usually charge.”

As these unusual requests grew, Lana realised she had found a niche.

She said: “I began researching the niche and I started to understand it more and more. I joined self help groups for recovering finsubs (what they call the person who is being financially dominated).

“I asked many questions about how it made them feel to keep sending money over and over until they regretted it.

“I found that they often lacked self esteem, were virgins, had humiliation kinks, had controlling parents, gambling, drink or drug addictions and many more things.”

However, after she realised many of the men sending her money were suffering from poor mental health, Lana realised she needed to change her approach to financial domination in order to protect them.

She founded the Loser Club, where she took on clients who needed to make changes in their lives – but who also wanted to pay for her steamy content.

“I could use their sexual urges to help them make some changes and also satisfy their sexual needs and fetishes all in one with my content,” she explained.

She added clients now pay her to take control of certain aspects of their lives – which could include personal training, improving their social skills, being their agony aunt or even training so they can last longer in sex.https://get-latest.convrse.media/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.mirror.co.uk%2Fnews%2Fweird-news%2Fi-ditched-teaching-become-financial-26997207&cre=center&cip=21&view=web

Lana said she gives the coaching in the form of sexual roleplay – so she’ll assume the position of a dominatrix by talking down to her client until he shows progress (at which point she’ll praise him).

She explained: “The subscriber receives new daily tasks and has to send back video evidence for sexual content rewards or attention. The ‘loser’ has to call me Mistress Lana.

“Most of my clients make real improvements over time in many aspects of their lives for example holding down their jobs better, physical appearance, meeting the love of their life, overcoming addictions and some have even claimed to have cut down or given up antidepressants altogether.”

After ditching a career that she claims brought in £21,000 a year, Lana is now raking in the cash and has spent tens of thousands on cosmetic surgery.



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