Suleiman
Posts: 543
Joined: 9/9/2004 Status: offline
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Well, like anything else in your sexual life, it's kind of a matter of priorities, isn't it? If you are extremely switchy (prone to go from one mode to the other on a frequent basis) and also extremely monogamous, then you're gonna need a switch partner or else you're gonna be frustrated and unhappy. The same thing applies to any need. If your partner dosen't do everything you need to be done, you either gotta prioritize the needs and figure if you can live without it, or else you gotta find another partner who fills in the blank spots. It can be really difficult. I frequently wind up comparing switch with bisexuality, largely because I know a lot of bi folks and I know a lot of folks who know bi folks, so it's an easy analogy to understand. People are more open minded about being bi than they were, even ten or fifteen years ago. Even so, you get the HNGs and their RL counterparts who think, as one friend succinctly put it "Bi means you want to do it with them and another girl". You also get the folks who think you're just confused and going through a phase - so they try to help you along by converting you to their "side". Just so, in the leather community, there are folks who think that being a switch means you want to sub for them while you top their lover, and you get the folks who say that you're a pushy bottom who needs to learn their place, or that you're too domly to be a sub and should give up and just call yourself a dom. There are also folks who say I should stay out of the kitchen and leave the cooking to the missus. Hah! As if I'd let her near my pots and pans! Ambiguity seems to be a little threatening to a lot of people, and there is a basic human need to pigeonhole anything that is unfamilliar. There's straight folks who'll ask a gay couple "which one is the man?" and there's folks who see a woman in the office and ask her to fetch a cup of coffee. These attitudes are slowly diminishing (not quickly enough, but they are), but the underlying instinct remains. We run into the same basic issues as switches, because some folks are unfamiliar with the idea or are uncomfortable with the ambiguity that it represents. It makes finding a decent relationship fairly difficult, since (IMHO) all relationships revolve around a certian level of roleplay, and a switch is a person who changes roles - some times during the first act while everyone is still on stage.
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