🐱 What Is Kink-Shaming? (And Why You Should Avoid Doing It)

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CatParty

You’re hooking up with someone for the first time — or the second, the tenth or the hundredth — and you think you know what to expect, but then they ask if you can try something new.

Immediately, you’re a little cautious. What if it’s weird? They blush a little bit. “Well, you see, I’ve always wanted to try this thing … but it’s a little kinky…” You gulp as they lean in and whisper the secret desire into your ear. You want to make them happy because you’re not a jerk, but this fetish is way out there, and not at all something you’re used to.

“Gross,” you say. “You’re really into that?” Your hookup buddy looks embarrassed. “Never mind,” they say, grabbing their clothes from the floor. “I should probably get going.”




What just happened? Well, there’s a name for it: kink-shaming. And even if you don’t think you’re doing it, you probably are.

What Is Kink-Shaming?
“This girl I met on Tinder told me she wanted to try this thing called ‘caking’ — spreading cake batter all over your naked self. I was like, ‘Hmmmm, no.’ Very unsanitary, and I don't like wasting food.” - Miguel, 28
Kink-shaming is basically exactly that — shaming someone for their sexual desires when they don’t line up with what you think is normal.

“Kink-shaming is when you embarrass someone for their sexual preferences and believe something is wrong with them because of their sexual interests,” says Dr. Janet Brito, a sex therapist based in Hawaii.

This could be about a fetish, a kink, a preference, a history of certain behaviors, or even just an openness or willingness to try something that the other person considers unconventional.

“I would define kink-shaming as the negative judgment and criticism of all sexual contact that isn't considered vanilla or ‘mainstream,’” says Jor-El Caraballo, a relationship therapist and co-creator of Viva Wellness.

Brito notes that some common targets of kink-shaming include “fetishes that are uncommon, such as titillagnia (arousal to tickling other people) or urophilia (arousal to urine or urinating on others), dressing up as a furry or a desire to be choked or spanked.”

However, there are some that are gender-focused — men, for instance, often kink-shame “their girlfriend’s/wife's interest in group sex, public sex, threesomes, double penetration, having a rape fantasy, masochist or sadist interestsl,” notes Brito. Or when talking to other men, they might be judgmental toward things like “same-sex attraction, same-sex fantasies, autogynephilia, men attracted to transwomen or non-binary folks.”

This kind of thing can play out in all different ways. It could be as simple as making fun of your friend for a hookup story with an unexpected detail in it, or it could be your long-term significant other trying to make you feel dirty for asking for something new in bed.

While it might not be coming from a place of hurtfulness — it’s as often a sense of surprise or shock rather than outright cruelty — it can still be incredibly demeaning.

How Does Kink-Shaming Negatively Impact People?
“I had a man recoil and tell me he ‘doesn’t do that weird sh*t’ when I placed his hand closer to my neck. It made me feel super uncomfortable for the rest of that interaction.” - Maria, 29
“Kink-shaming really only serves to make people live in silence and fear of judgment,” says Caraballo. “It creates negative internal emotional consequences, leaving the receiver to question the validity of their own desires. This could exacerbate any lingering questions of self-worth, depression or anxiety that the receiver already has about their sexuality and identity. It can negatively impact their ability to have and enjoy sex, and might kill desire altogether.”

It can also have a serious impact on a person’s mental and emotional well-being, ultimately causing psychological harm in the end.

“They may feel invalidated, dismissed, misunderstood,” says Brito. “It can negatively impact their relationship with their significant other, cause someone to withhold information or hide their kink from them. [And] at its worst, kink shaming can be used as a weapon against someone, and can cause someone to lose their job or their family.”

That might sound extreme, but instances of people’s sex lives becoming public knowledge are often weaponized against them in some form; the belief that a certain non-conformist sexual interest is unacceptable or somehow indicative of a person’s core moral character lives on in popular thought.

As a result, it’s worth thinking about how kink-shaming functions on a greater societal level, rather than just instances of one person shaming another. When we normalize kink-shaming and general sex-negative attitudes, people grow up feeling ashamed of desires they cannot control.

How Can You Stop Kink-Shaming?
“When I was in my teens (and probably even into my early 20s), I thought it was really funny to make fun of furries. But at some point, I realized that I was belittling people for sexual desire that I didn’t understand, even though it was being practiced by consenting adults. There was no real justification for it other than that it felt good in a shallow, sh*tty way to mock outsiders and people who don’t conform. I never tried to shame anyone directly, but I definitely carried that prejudice for many years.” - Ian, 30
Considering the widespread societal consequences of kink-shaming attitudes, and the seriously negative consequences it can have on a person’s wellbeing, it’s worth considering how we can move away from kink-shaming in general.

To that end, sex education — not just about the physical ins and outs of sex, but how desire works — can be a huge factor.

“I think that education is the biggest way to combat kink-shame,” says Caraballo. “There are a lot of misconceptions about why people enjoy kink (or certain forms of kink) and getting exposure to accurate information helps combat negative, internalized puritanical views about sex and kink.”

Brito agrees that education is important, but notes that there are lots of ways we can help shift our culture away from its current kink-shaming state.

She suggests “being willing to learn more about the diversity of human sexuality by being exposed to more sex-positive messages, by de-stigmatizing sex and knowing how to distinguish the difference between a sexual fantasy and reality, [and] by speaking up when someone is shaming someone’s kink.”

Brito also notes that some of the most common kink-shaming occurs within the self, meaning people shaming themselves for their own desires. If you struggle with that kind of thing, it’s worth putting in the effort to shift gears “by practicing self-acceptance, since working on embracing one’s interests is the first step toward accepting others.”


Finally, she adds, you can make a difference “by embracing the notion that everyone is different, and that having unique or non-traditional sexual interests does not mean something is wrong with you.”

Experiencing sexual desire is normal, and what exactly turns you on is often largely out of your control. Until you recognize that your desires alone don’t mean there’s anything wrong with you, it’ll likely be a struggle for you to genuinely accept yourself and your sexuality.

But if you commit yourself to working through these issues — with a partner, perhaps, or in therapy — it’s absolutely possible to arrive at a healthier, more confident place where your own comfort with your sexual desires means you’re not looking to ridicule, diminish or shame others for theirs.
 
It's not kink shaming if you don't want to do something weird that your partner wants to do.

Would it be kink shaming if I ask my wife for a threesome and she of course says "fuck no"?
 
That cake batter "kink" was 100% a shit test. The correct answer was to shut it down. Good man for figuring that out.

Why do we call it a "shit test" when the only winning move is to defenestrate the person who thinks so lowly of you that they would readily waste your time with those kinds of pretenses?

That's the quotation that got me too, but I was late.

A man not wanting his woman to get fucked by other dudes is kink-shaming now.

These are the same people that say it's bad to not support your partner coming out as poly.

Communist conditioning.

"Your partner? Don't you mean our partner?"

...shoot, am I on to something?
 
If you want to be a deviant, then it's your responsibility to hunt down other people who are actually interested in being deviant with you and then proceed to keep it to yourself. If you exist in a more-or-less permanent minority then there's no escape from society judging you to some extent, even with things like being gay. It is what it is.
 
Ok, first of all: Disinterest in a kink - even vocal disinterest - is not shaming. Nobody is obligated to share your kinks. Nobody is obligated to participate in your kinks if they don't want to, and stop trying to guilt-trip them into it - that's rape by coercion. They may have a reason they don't want to participate - a person who has been in a physically abusive relationship, for example, may not want to participate in your rape kink - or it may just be a simple "eww, no" thing, but they are not obligated to explain in either case.

Second: Some kinks fucking need to be shamed. Some kinks have a death toll associated with them, for example.
 
Nobody is obligated to share your kinks. Nobody is obligated to participate in your kinks if they don't want to, and stop trying to guilt-trip them into it - that's rape by coercion.

No, it's manipulation, unless your life force is directly tied to not feeling like a crappy person. Coercion requires harmful action or at least credible threat of such.

Other than that, agreed.
 
"Kinkshaming", when progressivism decided it wasn't enough to give everyone a trophy, now everyone gets a pride week with a parade....
 
You’re hooking up with someone for the first time — or the second, the tenth or the hundredth — and you think you know what to expect, but then they ask if you can try something new.

Immediately, you’re a little cautious. What if it’s weird? They blush a little bit. “Well, you see, I’ve always wanted to try this thing … but it’s a little kinky…” You gulp as they lean in and whisper the secret desire into your ear. You want to make them happy because you’re not a jerk, but this fetish is way out there, and not at all something you’re used to.

“Gross,” you say. “You’re really into that?” Your hookup buddy looks embarrassed. “Never mind,” they say, grabbing their clothes from the floor. “I should probably get going.”
whoever wrote this has never had sex, I can guarantee it.


Also fuck your gay kinks, this is how you create degenerates like furfags.
 
So what are you supposed to say or do when you’re grossed out by someone so perversions? Just accept it and have sex? How is that an acceptable thing to say in 2019?

This is telling people that they’re problem and not the person who wants to spread cake batter on themselves.
 
So what are you supposed to say or do when you’re grossed out by someone so perversions? Just accept it and have sex? How is that an acceptable thing to say in 2019?

This is telling people that they’re problem and not the person who wants to spread cake batter on themselves.
To be honest this sounds like rape.
 
So what are you supposed to say or do when you’re grossed out by someone so perversions? Just accept it and have sex? How is that an acceptable thing to say in 2019?

This is telling people that they’re problem and not the person who wants to spread cake batter on themselves.
Having sexual boundaries and not being interested in a certain fetish is a form of rape in the current year
 
Lol, if your kink has a death toll attached to it (ie: choking) or is a public health hazard you deserve any and all kinds of "shaming" for your degeneracy.

What the hell ever happened to "no one has the right to cohere you into sex of any kind if it's not your thing"? I don't care if the person asking you to do XYZ kink is your partner, your right to bodily autonomy will always trump their hurt feelings over not being able to force you into their kink. Telling someone "hey, I don't want to do that because it makes me uncomfortable" isn't even shaming, and if you think it is you really need to grow up.
 
I always found it amusing how the same crowd that is all about asking your partner for consent every 10 seconds before, during and after the act also has this same view about not being able to say no to someone if they bring up a kink you are uncomfortable with. You just have to go along with it because otherwise they might have hurt feelings.
 
We all have degenerate kinks (prove me wrong), only difference is that we on KF are not re-tarded enough to broadcast it to the whole world and "take pride" in being a degenerate faggot. I'll keep my kinks to myself, ya know, like a normal person.
 
Kink shaming is an evolutionary safeguard and should be perpetuated at all costs.
 
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