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QuietDom -> RE: Mastery... active or passive? (8/24/2006 2:10:48 PM)
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Sometimes, I look back at one of my old posts, discover that someone responded to it, and that I would really like to refute whatever idiocy was flung at me. But these posts tend to be on threads that have died, and deserved to die, and should not be resurrected for the sake of my vanity. This thread, I think, is safe to resurrect. So, puella, my long-delayed response. I agree that the real King Mongkut would have had responsibilities that Yul Brynner did not. But that's a question of necessities, rather than the essence of Kinginess. If King Mongkut just sat on his throne and concerned himself with nothing while Siam sank into ruin, he would still be a king. Not a good king, of course, but no a less a king. If, however, all his subjects revolted against him, there's good grounds for saying that he's no longer a king. It's the same for a Master. As long as there's a slave who calls him Master, then he is one, whether he's particularly good, bad, or indifferent at it. It's part of the consensuality we prize: he's a Master by (passively) receiving submission and service, rather than by (actively) compelling obedience. Now, a Master might want to practice his skills, he might want to ensure that the relationship retains a solid footing, he might want to ensure that the slave's needs are addressed; there's any number of good and useful things that he'd be well-advised to do. But until his slave takes off that collar and walks away, he's a Master even if he does none of them. Because he is being a Master, not doing Mastery. Hope that makes my views clear.
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