I try to treat my boy the way I like to be treated… not with the hitting and the hurting (silly!), but with our normal human interactions. I know that will shock some people *shocker!*, but really it shouldn’t and I hope the shocked are in the minority (I suspect so, I know enough of you to know that you all live in the real world…).
I speak to him honestly, I am clear with my expectations, I keep my word, I mean what I say and say what I mean, I am considerate, I read his moods and treat him accordingly, I support him when he needs it, I give him positive feedback when he does well, I let him know that he is desirable (and sexy and hot and… well you get the gist), I comfort him when he is upset, I celebrate his successes… all of that I do, and I expect the same in return.
Recently I called him to task for being late for a date and not contacting me to let me know that he had a problem. His reason for being late was legitimate, but not letting me know what was going on was unacceptable.
We talked about it, and it turns out I am not as good at being punctual as I thought. I had been late for a couple of dates also and had not contacted him to let him know. The consequence of my behaviour is that he thought being late wasn’t such a big deal because, well, I did it, so it obviously wasn’t all that important… I find it difficult to argue with that. Punctuality and communicating if there is a problem is not something we have explicitly discussed; I expect it, it is one of those things that goes without saying, but I also thought that I practiced it. I don’t, not as diligently as I should.
So, the outcome… he was not punished, I explicitly stated my expectations about punctuality, and about being in touch if he is running late, I apologised for my own tardiness in the past.
Leading by example. I try. Sometimes, I get it wrong.
6 comments
What a wonderfully practical and honest post.
Your blog is quite refreshing and well written. Thank you for sharing :)
I enjoyed this post because although the play aspects of a D/s relationship are interesting (and fun to read about!) it is the every day interaction between hearts and minds that is far more important. It is obvious that you put a great deal of effort, passion, and interest into relating to your boy. It is no wonder that he willingly submits to you
This post reminded me of my mom. Only you admit you made a mistake.
Lady Julia: “What a wonderfully practical and honest post.”
Thank you… I stuff up enough times to make quite a few blog posts out of those incidents… stay tuned!
Ferns
slapshot: “I enjoyed this post because although the play aspects of a D/s relationship are interesting (and fun to read about!) it is the every day interaction between hearts and minds that is far more important.”
You are right, it *is* far more important – that's the foundation, and thank you for your encouragement in my posting about those everyday things.
“…It is no wonder that he willingly submits to you.”
Oh, that's a lovely thing to say, it did make me smile.
Ferns
Brids: “This post reminded me of my mom.”
~looks at watch… taps toe… wags finger~ Isn't it past your bedtime young man?!
Ferns