so-much-to-play-with: There’s something peculiar with how we interact in situations usually seen as
so-much-to-play-with: There’s something peculiar with how we interact in situations usually seen as “power exchange”: there’s no power needed. Last weekend was the first of the year we could spend on the countryside, so I told her we’d go in the woods to make some ropes. Not only did she agree, but she seemed thrilled! She prepared everything she could: food, drinks, blankets… while I just wandered around for few details… Even once we entered the forest, she just went straight and walked ahead of me. Not taking the lead. Just eager to reach the yet unknown point where we would enjoy our time. We walked for a while, not knowing where, pointing to each other possible spots, her following my direction, until we just acknowledged, within seconds, that we just found it. And her excitement grew again. “Here we could do an hashira! And there, you can do spider webbing? And this three would do a perfect suspension point, no? And…” Each sentence was just an open door for me to cross at will. No need for power. Just possibilities. But her eagerness quickly escalated. Nature does this to her… Her eyes were sparkling and her moves, ones I know well… Did she remember the pathways weren’t that far? “Yes, I know, but…” As I stood to put away the leftovers of our picnic, she grabbed my belt and opened my pants to engulfed me all, ravenous. I told her that doing such think without asking could lead her to have only that. “I very much could live with that…” she said, biting her lip and resuming. But she heard a hiker whistling not far away and she froze. She loves nature because she can’t be caught. Me? I didn’t care much, at the moment. I grabbed her ponytail and forced my way down her throat. No, power isn’t needed… but is also pleasant to use. She didn’t stop anymore. Ropes waited a bit. -- source link