Stripped (Re-Align) is one of the sharpest, shortest edge-pieces in Cycle I.
No setup, no safewords on the page, no negotiation log — just:
- piss,
- choking,
- collapse,
- and a single, brutal claim:
“I look upon what I’ve created —
a new life, with purpose, that will serve me.”
It’s written like a freeze-frame at the exact second everything changes.
The moment of being “stripped”
Structurally, the piece is just a descent:
warm piss → loosened hands → drop → tears → gasping →
powerless / speechless / helpless / Changed.
You never see the beginning of the scene:
- why she trusted me,
- what was negotiated,
- where the limit lines are.
You only see the aftermath:
- loss of bodily control,
- loss of composure,
- loss of words,
- gain of a new internal alignment: “your place.”
That’s intentional.
Cycle I has a few pieces that are basically:
single snapshots of extreme states,
instead of full stories.
Here, the snapshot is:
- the exact breath where someone realizes:
- “I’m not who I was an hour ago,”
- “I can’t pretend this is casual anymore,”
- “Something in me just clicked around this person.”
The language is deliberately possessive and borderline blasphemous:
“a new life, with purpose, that will serve me.”
That’s how it feels inside some high-intensity M/s dynamics:
- identity as offering,
- service as purpose,
- transformation as a kind of rebirth.
The piece doesn’t argue whether that’s healthy — it just shows the feeling at full volume.
Power exchange vs. abuse (the missing pages)
On the page, I never say:
- “This was negotiated,”
- “This is consensual breath play,”
- “We planned for this,”
- “There will be aftercare.”
In my current voice, I’d spell more of that out somewhere around the work, even if I keep this scene itself stripped and brutal.
Because in real life:
- piss play + choking + emotional collapse
without consent, preparation, and aftercare
isn’t “intense kink,” it’s a problem.
This piece is not a how-to.
It’s a mythic snapshot of:
- what surrender can feel like for someone wired for this,
- what control can feel like to someone who’s spent a long time earning a place inside another person’s nervous system.
The “I don’t need to say another word” line is doing double duty:
- In-scene: the moment is loud enough on its own.
- Out-of-scene: the silence invites you to project your own experience / fears / desires into that gap.
If you read this and feel:
- deeply turned on,
- deeply uneasy,
- or both at the same time—
that’s the point.
The commentary is where I want that unease to stay visible, not be hand-waved into “it’s just hot, don’t think about it.”
Transformation as kink
The center of the piece isn’t the piss or the choking.
It’s this:
“For the first time, you understand yourself. Your place.”
That’s the real obsession I keep circling:
- people who feel misaligned in their day-to-day life,
- stepping into a dynamic that suddenly makes everything feel:
- coherent,
- organized,
- right.
For some s-types, that realization doesn’t arrive in a quiet conversation.
It shows up:
- on their knees,
- shaking,
- stripped of performance,
- with their body doing things it doesn’t usually do.
The piece is an extreme metaphor for that:
stripped of clothes,
stripped of composure,
stripped of old “I’m in control of everything” narratives,
and then re-aligned around service.
Ethically, in my head, that only works if:
- they wanted that depth,
- they chose that path soberly,
- and they can un-choose it later without being punished for it.
The piece itself doesn’t say that.
The larger body of work does.
On the companion track: “Re-Align (Acoustic)” – Godsmack
“Re-Align (Acoustic)” under this is about:
- shedding old skins,
- facing the damage,
- dragging yourself back into a version of true.
The acoustic version matters:
- less distortion,
- more raw voice,
- stripped-down, like the scene in the piece.
Paired with this text, the track becomes:
- the sound of the after:
- when the scene is over,
- the bruises are forming,
- the adrenaline is fading,
- and both people have to live with what just happened.
It underscores the real question hiding inside the piece:
“After you’ve been stripped and re-aligned like this,
who are you going to be tomorrow?”
Cycle I – Coming on Strong · 21 · Commentary (v1.00)
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