C B T + tease & denial with my Shibari bound slut @subboy4al..
C B T + tease & denial with my Shibari bound slut @subboy4all
2021-08-17 11:31:30 +0000 UTC View PostC B T + tease & denial with my Shibari bound slut @subboy4all
2021-08-17 11:31:30 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Monday 16th August #SlaveTask
2021-08-16 07:33:03 +0000 UTC View PostOur two recent 2nd place poll winners going head to head for next weeks first upload!
2021-08-14 15:09:06 +0000 UTC View PostI’d like to know - what’s your favourite thing to see me wear? The winning style will be featured in a live stream
2021-08-13 18:42:31 +0000 UTC View Post♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Arundhati Roy Arundhati Roy is one of the world’s great observers. In her writing is a raging activism that takes on unpopular, underwritten causes and is unafraid to challenge the ruling elite. Born in northeast India, Roy was the daughter of a tea plantation manager and a women’s rights activist. When aged two, her parents divorced and Roy’s mother took her you ng children back to her hometown of Kerala, in south India. At 16, she left the south for Delhi where she lived in a small tin-roofed hut and sold empty beer bottles. Her first novel was published in 1997. The God of Small Things tells the devastating story of twins Rahel and Estha and in doing so, examines India’s caste system, its history and social mores. It explores the ways in which the ‘Untouchable’ caste is derogated and ostracised from society, and the consequences of breaching the caste’s longstanding codes. The narrative deftly illustrates how the personal is indeed political, and her writing style is searing in its beauty, delivering weighty truths about neglected societies. Roy has written polemic and campaigned against inequality throughout her career. In an essay for Outlook magazine in 1998, she wrote of the terrible consequences of nuclear fall-out: “If there is a nuclear war, our foes will not be China or America or even each other. Our foe will be the earth herself. The very elements – the sky, the air, the land, the wind and water – will all turn against us. Their wrath will be terrible. Our cities and forests, our fields and villages will burn for days. Rivers will turn to poison. The air will become fire.” Her political campaigning has caused clashes with the state on a number of occasions. In 2002, she served a “symbolic imprisonment” of one day due to her opposition to the contentious Narmada dam project, the largest river development scheme in India which was set to potentially displace 1.5 million people at great environmental cost. In 2010, she faced threat of arrest, and charges of sedition, after she remarked that Kashmir, a disputed territory, was not an integral part of India. In 2015, she received a contempt notice from the Bombay High Court on writing an article in support of Professor Saibaba, a severely disabled academic at Delhi University, imprisoned for ‘anti-national activities’. Roy has written a wealth of fiction and non-fiction throughout her career. When stripped down, she considers that her body of work is all concerned with a study of power and powerlessness. She is resolute in her quest for a more just world, yet maintains an understanding of her place in it – that she is searching and learning, but can benefit a campaign by her connection with it.
2021-08-13 14:01:56 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Friday 13th August #SlaveTask
2021-08-13 07:31:54 +0000 UTC View PostThe fun never stops in a FemDom lifestyle! I
2021-08-12 13:33:16 +0000 UTC View PostEdging, “coerced” orgasm and CEI
2021-08-12 09:32:10 +0000 UTC View PostFor Halloween this year it would be wrong for me to dress up as anyone other than Lady Dimitrescu. Who would like to contribute to the outfit?
2021-08-11 14:55:27 +0000 UTC View PostMy day! Have a good one, all 💋
2021-08-11 12:23:13 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Monday 9th August #SlaveTask
2021-08-09 07:32:24 +0000 UTC View PostIf you are on a slave training course, remember to message me EVERY MORNING so I know you are still taking part!
2021-08-07 09:40:27 +0000 UTC View PostThe poll winner! Giving @subboy4all a good seeing to
2021-08-07 09:36:36 +0000 UTC View Post♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Edith Wharton Edith Wharton (1862-1937) was born into a tightly controlled society at a time when women were discouraged from achieving anything beyond a proper marriage. Wharton broke through these strictures to become one of America’s greatest writers. Author of The Age of Innocence, Ethan Frome, and The House of Mirth, she wrote over 40 books in 40 years, including authoritative works on architecture, gardens, interior design, and travel. She was the first woman awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, an honorary Doctorate of Letters from Yale University, and a full membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters. At age 17, Edith Jones “came out” into society, making the rounds of dances and parties in Newport and New York, observing the rituals of her privileged world, a world she would later gleefully skewer in her fiction. Her childhood ended with the death of her father in March of 1882, followed by two romantic disappointments. Still unmarried at the age of 23, Edith was rapidly approaching “old maid” status. In 1885 she married Edward Robbins (Teddy) Wharton. Though imperfectly suited for each other, the couple filled their early married years with travel, houses, and dogs. While living in Newport, Wharton honed her design skills, co-authoring (with Ogden Codman, Jr.) her first major book, a surprisingly successful non-fiction work on design and architecture, The Decoration of Houses (1897). In 1901, eager to escape Newport, Wharton bought 113-acres in Lenox, then designed and built The Mount, a home that would mee t her needs as designer, gardener, hostess, and above all, writer. Every aspect of the estate—including its gardens, architecture, and interior design—evokes the spirit of its creator. In 1914, when World War I broke out, Edith Wharton was wealthy, famous, recently divorced, and living in her favorite city, Paris. Instead of withdrawing to the safety of England or returning to the United States, Wharton chose to stay and devote herself to creating a complex network of charitable and humanitarian organizations. Wharton established workrooms for unemployed seamstresses, convalescent homes for tuberculosis sufferers, hostels for refugees, and schools for children fleeing war-torn Belgium. As a writer, Wharton was intent on witnessing the realities of war and was one of a handful of journalists and writers allowed on the front lines. In 1916, Wharton received the French Legion of Honor for her war work. At the end of the war, Wharton moved out of Paris to Pavillon Colombe, a suburban villa in the village of St.Brice-sous-Forêt. In 1921, her novel of old New York, The Age of Innocence, won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. In 1920 she acquired Château Ste.-Claire, a restored convent in the south of France. For the rest of her life, she divided her time between these two homes, devoted to her friends and dogs, writing prolifically, traveling, and gardening. She only returned to the United States twice after her move to France, the final time in 1923 to receive her Honorary Doctorate from Yale. She died on August 11, 1937, age 75 at Pavillon Colombe. She is buried, in the Cimetière des Gonards in Versailles, close to her good friend Walter Berry.
2021-08-06 14:02:29 +0000 UTC View PostYour slave task for Friday 6th August #SlaveTask
2021-08-06 07:33:45 +0000 UTC View PostWhat clip would you like to see uploaded first?
2021-08-05 14:56:25 +0000 UTC View PostSome fun from this week! Edging in hog tie.
2021-08-04 07:51:05 +0000 UTC View PostDid someone call for something mesmerising?
2021-08-03 15:55:18 +0000 UTC View Post