If you’ve read Great Expectations…, you’ve basically watched me take one of the most chaotic parts of kink:
“I want something… I think… from someone… I think…”
and try to hand it a clipboard.
The whole piece is built around this slide:
concept → urge → reality → nightmare
and me going, “Okay, how do we interrupt that before you’re crying on a bathroom floor because you picked the wrong sadist to ‘teach’ you?”
Concept → Urge → Reality → Nightmare
The opening is simple on purpose:
Sometimes… a concept can become an urge.
That urge can lead into a reality.
That reality can become a nightmare.
That’s kink math:
- You get a fantasy in your head.
- Your body signs off on it.
- You find someone willing.
- Nobody asked, “Is this the right person for this role?”
This piece is my way of saying:
“Before you chase the vibe, figure out what chair you’re actually trying to sit someone in.”
Hence:
- Role Analysis
- Measured Expectations
Boring titles on purpose. It’s like putting hi-vis tape on a tripwire.
Role Analysis = “What do I actually need?”
This section is me gently bullying you toward clarity.
Instead of:
- “I want a Dom,”
- “I want a sub,”
I push it into:
- Do you actually need:
- a friend?
- a mentor?
- a partner?
- a sadist?
- a stalker? (please no, but if you’re fantasizing it, at least name it)
The cannibalism → “maybe you just want a hamburger” line is a joke, but it hides a real point:
Are you craving the fantasy version of someone…
when what you really want is something simpler, safer, more human?
Then there’s the example:
“If you are a younger individual with no background in the lifestyle,
and you need a more personal one-on-one,
you may want to be seeking a mentor instead of a lifelong sadist.”
That’s the heart of it:
- Most people don’t ruin their lives because they had a desire.
- They ruin their lives because they cast the wrong person in the wrong role at the wrong time.
The “buttholes don’t always tighten back up” line is deliberately crude:
- It gets a laugh.
- It also makes a very real point: some consequences don’t fully rewind.
The pun:
“not always what hole you want to have filled the fastest. Sorry, role.”
is the thesis in one sentence:
Slow down. Choose the role first. Then the body. Then the scene.
Measured Expectations = “Can this person actually pull it off?”
Once you know the role you’re looking for, the piece shifts into:
“When you are connecting with someone that seems to fit your role type,
it’s helpful to have a clear, realistic perspective of whether this person can actually meet your expectations of them and vice versa.”
This is the part nobody wants to do because it’s not sexy:
- vetting
- clarity
- asking questions
- saying what you actually want
You get lines like:
“Since everybody (yes, everybody) lies or hides something…”
Not “everyone is evil,” just:
- everyone curates,
- everyone presents,
- everyone hides the parts they’re scared will scare you.
So I push:
- be upfront, be clear, don’t interrogate, unless interrogation is the kink
- let people know:
- what you’re wanting
- what you’re not available for
That keeps it in my lane:
- consent-first,
- still horny,
- still playful,
- not suddenly a HR manual.
The ending: classifieds, “fun-time slaves,” Alienism
The last section flips everything on its head:
“Now that that’s out of the way, time to find the perfect role-mate for myself…”
Then I drop:
- “feminine, fun-time slaves”
- “closed, one-sided poly relationships”
- “must be open to Alienism”
It’s half-joke, half-confession:
- I’m not above this system.
- I also have very specific wants.
- I’m doing exactly what I just told you to do: naming the role and the expectations out loud.
“Alienism” is a deliberately weird ask:
- It signals: my world is not vanilla.
- It’s also a subtle filter: if that word makes you curious instead of scared, you’re likely “my people.”
So the piece doesn’t end as a sermon. It ends as:
“See? I’m in this marketplace with you.
I just want you to stop walking in blindfolded.”
How this fits the larger body of work
This post is an early skeleton key for a lot of what comes later:
- I keep coming back to:
- devotion,
- House roles,
- subs / littles / slaves,
- responsibility,
- long-form power exchange.
- Here, I’m laying foundational rules:
- Know what role you’re actually shopping for.
- Don’t confuse fantasy intensity with actual capacity.
- Expectations are a shared contract, not a secret wish list.
If you felt:
- a little called out by the “what hole vs what role” line, and
- a little seen by the idea that you’re allowed to want something specific
—then this piece did its job.
I’m not trying to stop you from wanting intense, wild, or fucked-up things.
I’m trying to keep those wants from turning into nightmares
just because you never stopped to ask:
“What do I actually need them to be in my life?”
Cycle I – Coming on Strong · 03 · Commentary (v1.00)
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