The reason that several people, including Master Thorns, the owner of the club, disagreed with the "sub has all the power" statement, is that it's important to make people understand a need for caution. In fact the ultimate conclusion that the room could agree on, was "TRUST has all the power." I am on board with that.
I mean, think about the thousands on fetlife who don't ever go to events or clubs or community things, but just hook up with people and go to their houses. The Top or Dom(me) COULD be an abuser or a predator. Or not. Once you put the power in their hands, you have put the power in their hands. They have the ball. I know a woman who has been involved in Leather and kink for over a decade, and she just realized that her D/s relationship is abusive and is getting out of it...with great pain and difficulty...she was really into this man, but he was controlling her, trying to keep her from talking to other people in the community and even her family, isolating her. Doing other things that are part of an emotionally abusive relationship, kink or no kink. And she took his word for it, that this was within his rights to control her, because
he's the Dom and he makes the rules. That shit happens to people who SHOULD know better.
We are trying to be careful in making sure that subs know that yeah, you do give over your power to the Dom and you have to be careful about that.
As for trust...I'm known as being kind of "brave" for a willingness to bottom for people I don't even necessarily know, if I see them demonstrate interesting technique. Other bottoms have told me "Oh, I have to really trust someone to play with them." Well, I can do this...at parties, at the club, not because I don't need to have any trust established, but because it's fine that I don't have that bond with the Top, I have trust in the club itself, in the DMs and staff, that if I "red" then the scene WILL stop.
And we are coming in this conversation to a conclusion I believe, which is that everyone needs to be part of the solution to this issue between men and women. Women need to find the courage to defend our boundaries, even though it's uncomfortable. Men need to pay attention and respect them. We all need to support, and when necessary, correct one another when we're seeing shit that is out of line, whenever we can.
As for men being able or not able to read nonverbal stuff. While I can accept that certain conditions like those of the Autism Spectrum can cause individuals difficulty in reading nonverbal cues, I do believe that most men are capable of it. Whether they WILL or not, depends on a lot of what has gone into their makeup, their character development in their lifetime.
It was a conversation I had with Zen the other day, that I asked him to consider in his mind, a friend we have who is frankly a great big ugly dude. And next to him, Jersey guy (the puppy I've been fussing about.) Hold a mental image of those two. Which one would seem more obviously threatening to women, or to anyone? Ugly guy. He's huge. He's scary looking. Jersey guy is like this:
http://cdn3-www.dogtime.com/assets/...est-highland-white-terrier-dogs-puppies-2.jpg
About that threatening. He's small, short, older, with a sweet soft buzzy Jewish Jersey accented voice. Everything about his outward appearance says, "pet me, I'm cute!"
Which of these two men, though, is more likely to push boundaries? Ah ha. The big ugly bear of a man has gone through life responding to how others perceive and react to him. He's probably been hurt by social rejection more times than anyone can count, because of how he comes off. And how he's shaped his inner self to respond to that, is to be a human who lives to serve. He's got a female friend whose kids' father is a deadbeat jerk, and he's the one over there fixing their bikes and giving them Dad-time. No obligation, just who he is. There for everyone. Great big marshmallow teddy bear on the inside. And he's let it be known he finds me attractive, without me feeling like he's pursuing me in the slightest. He's got, in interactions with others and especially women, a gentle touch and damn good respectful behavior.
Jersey guy on the other hand? Used to not being seen as threatening, so he never had to develop any of that. His life's circumstances have shaped him. I find this totally fascinating, and this is why I don't see him as a manipulative jerk. He didn't learn to look for people stiffening up and trying to deflect him, because he is accustomed to being who he is, and living in his skin. And pushing boundaries for him, has probably been met with success and in instances of failure, with forgiveness and friendship. Not defensiveness or anger. He's probably gotten laid a LOT by just being persistently affectionate in his lifetime. So...he does what works.
Does it mean it's ok? Well, no, and as much as I need to grow by managing my boundaries, he needs to grow by understanding that especially in our community, he needs to get clearer consent, not just push things just a little further and a little further. In a community that readily recognizes even when women are being predatory or abusive, being a cute guy won't get you off the hook past a certain point. I forgive him somewhat only because he is new. And because I do try to see what background people come from in life, why they do what they do, and be compassionate to that.
Even if I'm personally annoyed, I am not without compassion or understanding. If that makes any sense?
I've been saying all along that in these situations of the "metoo" movement and all this, someone who has trespassed due to ignorance should not be demonized and destroyed, because ignorance is a curable condition. Very few people are in fact really BAD people...generally those so dug into their bad behaviors that they defend them and refuse to acknowledge any need to change anything they're doing.