Kink (at) Pride - Why LGBTQIA+ needs BDSM

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As June approaches, it’s time again for that perennial social media debate: should the BDSM/Kink community be included at Pride?

Some say no; Pride Month celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community and that should not be diluted or distracted by other communities. Others point out that this initialism itself has been expanded many times over the years to include other marginalized sexual communities. LGB was first used in the early ’80s, to be more inclusive than simply saying “gay.” By the 1990s, our Trans siblings were represented and the term evolved to LGBT. Representation for Queer, Intersex, and Asexual/Aromantic identities has been added over the last two decades, until finally folks started including a + sign, to indicate support for an expansive acceptance of marginalized identities within a shorthand that was rapidly becoming almost comedically cumbersome. And yet, for many, the + does not include kink.

This is surprising, considering the parallel paths of oppression, self-advocacy, and empowerment that both communities have followed. In the earliest days of psychology, homosexuality and sadomasochism were lumped together under the same overarching umbrella of “sexual deviancy.” This was eventually parsed out into a set of distinct diagnoses, each of which was considered a form of unnatural and degenerate behavior: homosexuality, sadism, masochism, transvestism, etc. In the 1970s, the Gay Liberation movement took on the American Psychological Association and lobbied hard to have homosexuality removed from the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Illness (DSM) , the guidebook used by nearly every mental health provider in the United States to diagnose psychological concerns in their patients.


Today, the DSM still includes diagnostic criteria under paraphilic disorders for sadism, masochism, fetishism, and “transvestism” (what we might today more accurately refer to as cross-dressing). While it offers some general guidance about assessing for clinical distress before applying these labels, voices both within the mental health community and the world of BDSM strenuously object to the practice of safe and consensual power and sensation exchange being categorized alongside intrinsically problematic non-consensual behaviors such as pedophilia and frotteurism.


This battlefront extends beyond the world of mental health. While many states have taken steps to enact protections for discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation, sexual practice is not a protected class. This means that while a landlord in my home state might not be able to evict me for being gay, or trans, they have the legal right to evict me for engaging in consensual BDSM play in my apartment . Likewise, Kinksters are not protected against employment discrimination, zoning exclusion, censorship, and other forms of bias. The National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, which provides incident response and tracking for members of the BDSM and consensual nonmonogamy communities, tracks dozens of such incidents each month. Consider that that only counts the folks who knew to report their experience to NCSF at all. And that’s to say nothing of state and local laws that constrain or criminalize consensual BDSM play.


Quino Al/Upsplash

Kinksters have always been present at Pride.
Source: Quino Al/Upsplash

Evidence shows that when a parent’s BDSM identity is brought up in custody cases in court, that parent typically loses, regardless of whether there has been an allegation of inappropriate exposure to sexual materials or behavior or not. Researchers who track these cases state they have yet to see a kinky parent retain custody once the issue of their sexual identity is raised (Klein, Moser). And for many, BDSM is a core component of their sexual identity. Approximately 2% of people state that being kinky is their primary sexual orientation. Many, if not most, of the people interviewed report being aware that they were kinky before age 12, whether or not they had the word for kink in their vocabulary (Goerlich). That sounds a lot like a sexual orientation to me. This is a population roughly comparable to the number of left-handed people in America, or redheads, or Jews. It is a small, but not insignificant community that faces stigma on a daily basis. And that doesn’t include the 10-12% of people who state that they enjoy power exchange dynamics, but do not necessarily consider kink to be a key element of their sexuality. Or the 50% of Americans who report experimenting with some form of BDSM with their partners.

Marsha P. Johnson said, "No pride for some of us without liberation for all of us.” The work of liberation is far from done, and the battle to preserve the gains made since Stonewall seems never-ending. The BDSM/Kink community shares this struggle, both because many LGBTQIA+ folks are themselves kinky, and also because kinksters have historically faced the same social, medical, and criminal barriers that their queer comrades have fought so hard to overcome. There will always be room to debate just how sexualized the environment at any given Pride event should be. And we can have a debate over whether children belong at Folsom or if nudity belongs at NYC Pride. But there should be no doubt that those carrying the black-and-blue striped flag with a small red heart in the corner deserve their place underneath the rainbow.
 
I remember hearing a gay guy summing this up: pride parades should be a fun time for the whole family; it should be a day to celebrate and meet people and break down barriers, like any parade or community gathering. If you want to run around naked, shock people with your depravity and otherwise dance around like go-go boys in public, do it anywhere else.

I thought that summed up my thoughts on fag parades pretty concisely. Parades are awesome! Don't ruin them.
 
My fetish is beating the fuck out of gays and trannies

can i join in?

i'm joking, i don't care what people do, as long as they don't do it near me
 
Isn't that the sort of nasty shit that already shows up at these sorts of parades? Do they feel a sudden need to pretend they're not sexual deviants by getting the BDSM crowd in as a smokescreen?
 
Pride parades/Pride month is stupid anyway, might as well make it die as fast as possible by pushing the envelope more and more until people get sick of it.
 
Who said a fetish has to be "purely sexual?"
I'm sure bronies legitimately enjoy the show for non sexual reasons. Does that mean wanting to fuck a cartoon pony isn't a fetish?
Paraphilias are very specific in nature. Having a general attraction to people of the same sex doesn't fit the overall concept of what a fetish is.
 
I liked gay people a lot more when I thought that they were simply born with an attraction to the opposite sex but otherwise were just like everyone else. They wanted to get married and have families and be like every other couple who was allowed to hold hands walking down the street. I was all for that. I laughed at the idea of a slippery slope.

Pride ruins that image. Kink should be private. And sex, while lots of fun, is not the only thing that matters in life. If you can't have a personality that doesn't involve an obsession with your genitals and what you like to do with them, you are a shitty human being.

This kind of stuff (plus troons and all the other made up letters of the rainbow alphabet) makes me want to shove them all back in the closet. I know that is unfair, but I've come to despise anything LGBQT these days.
 
Paraphilias are very specific in nature. Having a general attraction to people of the same sex doesn't fit the overall concept of what a fetish is.
Paraphilias are a fairly specific concept. Fetishes are, however, very very broad.
 
View attachment 2187601
Stefani Goerlich, LMSW, is an expert on the edges and a bridge builder between the margins and the mainstream. She is an award-winning author, most recently of The Leather Couch: Clinical Practice with Kinky Clients. With her private practice, Bound Together Counselling, she specializes in working with individuals and couples who identify as kinky, polyamorous, open/swinging, or other alternative relationship models. As a Clinical Social Worker licensed in several states, Stefani works with sexually diverse people to build better relationships with their bodies, their partners, and themselves.
Sorry, I know it's bad form to emptyquote a post and say "lol", but I can't think of anything to add to this one that isn't already in it.
 
View attachment 2187601
Stefani Goerlich, LMSW, is an expert on the edges and a bridge builder between the margins and the mainstream. She is an award-winning author, most recently of The Leather Couch: Clinical Practice with Kinky Clients. With her private practice, Bound Together Counselling, she specializes in working with individuals and couples who identify as kinky, polyamorous, open/swinging, or other alternative relationship models. As a Clinical Social Worker licensed in several states, Stefani works with sexually diverse people to build better relationships with their bodies, their partners, and themselves.
Stefani Elizabeth Barner/Stefani Elizabeth Goerlich/Stefani Elizabeth Head
17 January 1979
Voter ID #: 34497765
Her site / (a)
LinkedIn / (a)
3020 Franklin Park Dr.
Sterling Heights, MI. 48310

313-937-3998
586-465-6617
586-859-7061
 
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