My gratitude for yesterday was about civil discourse, and how it's got me paying attention to some of my core beliefs, including doing positive things to create change, not negative things.

Here's a fantastic example.  Last year a New York culinary student, Bettina Banayan baked a cake then frosted it on the subway, and offered it to people.  It's a funny, quirky sort of performance art piece, but also a profound illustration of how one can inculcate change in the world just by being kind, and doing nice things.  Watch the reactions of the people on the subway around her, as they change. 

What a great thing.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

I had this great interaction with someone on twitter yesterday.

What we were discussing was another twitter user's campaign to convince other people that adult babies are okay.  (I think that adult babies and anyone else for that matter don't require anyone else's okay but that's not the important part.)

The great thing was that we disagreed in a civil way.  We were able to state our dissenting opinions, and not savage one another.  How refreshing!

Lately, I've had some interactions that were not civil discourse.  They've been painful for me.  I also own that part of that incivility was my own doing.

It's really, really easy for disagreements to descend into outright argument.  Which is a waste of time, because everyone is actually right. (Link to one of my most favorite zen stories.  Some would say it's the best one I know.  They're right, of course. ;-) )  

But it's so great when it doesn't. 

I listened to, and felt educated by the other guy's perspective, too.  I learned something from it - which is that often discussions go off the rails and become arguments because of how sloppy language can be.  It's so easy to misconstrue what someone else is saying, or be misunderstood by another.

Disagreement has been on my mind a lot lately.   It's really okay to have a fundamental disagreement with someone about something.  I've certainly had a few big ones going on.  In some ways, those moments of disagreement are helping me to know myself even better.  

 In that same twitter-discussion I shared my love for the book/film Cloud Atlas (which the other guy now wants to read.)  It's got me thinking.

Two big things have come out of this tumult, for me.  These are things I've known for a while, but their practice has just spoken to me really loudly lately amidst the disagreements I've been having.

1) I'm for kindness, and positive action.  
Shouting someone down for things they shouldn't do, ways they shouldn't think is a waste of energy.  The energy you spend telling someone off, complaining, shaming, expressing outrage - it doesn't do anything.  But doing something positive, and kind for someone else, that always does.  There's a direct causal effect to helping someone else.  It changes the paradigm from confrontation and opposition to collaboration.  

2) Those I disagree with are one with the whole, too.  It's not my place to change them.
There's this quote from Cloud Atlas I love.  “My life amounts to no more than one drop in a limitless ocean. Yet what is any ocean, but a multitude of drops?” I can (and do) live my life with a passionate devotion to the things I believe. There's room in that ocean for everyone else to do so, too.  The truth is that the world is in a constant state of change.  Tides come and go.  We help make the ocean what it is with our one little drop.  That's enough.

I'm grateful for civil discourse about differing opinions.  I actually need it to know myself.

 

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

I stumbled across this interesting Tumblr blog the other day, http://submissiveguycomics.tumblr.com. (High chance of NSFW, you've been warned.)  I started following it with Flipboard, and even flipped a thing or two into a Flipboard magazine for myself. This morning, I had a good close look at one of the images, and had to do a double-take, because there was just SO MUCH THERE that spoke to me.

Here's the image.

A dominant woman plays video games on her couch, resting her feet on her mostly undressed submissive guy, who is playing the game with her.

A dominant woman plays video games on her couch, resting her feet on her mostly undressed submissive guy, who is playing the game with her.

OK, it's adorable.  But, let's do a little close analysis, shall we?

Five things really jumped out at me in this picture.

  1. Submissive guy is sitting on the floor, and is in his underwear. This is something I do a lot.  At home, I vastly prefer to sit on the floor when I sit doing stuff with Missy, and I like being in a t-shirt and diaper or undies, sometimes without the t-shirt at all.  I think I've got a mild case of CFNM fetish (nudity behind the link, duh!).
  2. Note that upon careful inspection you can see that our friend here has just recently got a spanking.  It might have been for fun, or punishment.  Both are great.
  3. Submissive guy's mistress/mommy is sitting above him, and resting her feet and legs on him.  This is one of my major buttons.  I love being held down, love touch as a love-language of affection, too. I'm always laying all over Missy, and others I care for, and love when they do it to me, too.  Especially people I feel submissive to.  
  4. This is not a sex scene.  It's aftercare, after the spanking.  They're playing video games.  (Which Missy and I LOVE TO DO.) BUT....the key thing in this particular interaction is that the fact she's resting on him/holding him down is not the primary focus of what they're doing, it's just part of the deal, organic, intrinsic to what they're doing.  That, for me, ratchets this up from mildly arousing to HOLY MOLEY I'M ON FIRE.  It smacks of authenticity, another big fetish of mine.
  5. Check out what submissive guy is doing with his tongue.  He's got it poking out of the corner of his mouth, because he's focused, paying attention to the game.  This is something I do all the time when I'm little, and concentrating hard on something.  That's what caught my attention in the first place.

I'm just beside myself with glee at this picture.  I can't wait to go show it to Missy.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

So yesterday I spent a good chunk of the morning working on a new Concerning Littleton short story, called Gear Shift.  (I'm about 75% done with it, hoping to actually finish it today.)  I was sharing it with some test readers of mine, showing them chunks of it as I wrote, getting their responses, and editing-on-the-fly.  

I love doing that.  It's like taking a short vacation with a friend to a world to the world of my writing.  

So my friend Marie Furie was reading the latest section, and the two main characters Adam and Christina, get into a discussion about her new safe word.  We had a little discussion about what I thought would turn out to be a pretty powerful scene, if you've already read Concerning Littleton.

Here's how the conversation went.

Marie: "What is the word.  I need to know."

Me: ****REDACTED****

Marie: ***REPEATS WHAT I TOLD HER***

Marie: "Hmmm."

Me: "Think about Concerning Littleton."

Marie: "Oh god. Noooooooooooo. Noooooooooooooooooooooooo. OMG."

Me: "Heh. Yeah. I won't ever publicly say so, though." 

I want the reader to be able to figure it out from context and clues, and have a reaction.  I think that's the reaction I'm pretty much going for.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude

In our shared chat with our friend Marie Furie, I found this cuteness from my brother today:

I'm just gonna leave this picture here for mako:

I love it, and him.  (The original picture, The Great Wave Off Kanagawa is my favorite piece of art.)

Thanks brother!  I love you, too.

Posted
AuthorMako Allen
Categories365 Gratitude