jeudi 9 mai 2019

Move aside Furries. It's Pup Play!

Inside the kinky world of 'pup play' in San Francisco where men act like young dogs while donning masks and are 'collared' by their handlers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daily Mail
They romp, growl, nuzzle, whimper, bark and wag their tails. Sometimes on all fours, tongue out or playing with toys such as balls and Frisbees. Other moments, they are flat on their backs, cuddling.

Welcome to the kinky world of 'pup play': A subculture of BDSM in which mostly men act like young dogs decked out in gear that includes a colorful array of masks, hoods, muzzles, collars, leashes, mitts and tails, and sometimes coupled with brightly-hued knee socks stamped with paw prints.

Unlike, perhaps, other relationships of dominance and submission, there is no one way to engage in pup play. It can be sexual or nonsexual, one can sport the gear or not, and a pup may or may not have a handler, someone who can give commands, such as speak and rollover, or sexual orders. Some also choose a pup identity, complete with names like Threat, Rotten Dog, Dirty, Deuce and Binky.

But almost all pups wear a collar, explained Dr Phillip Hammack, one of the founders of the Fog City Pack in San Francisco and who goes by the pup name Turbo.

'The collar is really important symbolically and that is something that most of us tend to wear almost all the time, at least when we're in non-work settings,' Hammack, 43, told DailyMail dot com. 'The collar signals our pup identity. It has our tag on it.

'Some pups are "locked," meaning that they have a kind of owner or - we tend not to use the word master - an owner or a handler or an alpha whose collared them, we'd say.'

Hammack, who has lived in San Francisco for about 12 years, said that the mainstream visibility of the puppy play community has dramatically increased in the city since around 2014.

'I will say in San Francisco, I just feel like people barely bat an eye. I mean if they do see us in gear, I think San Francisco is just a place where people are accustomed to seeing diverse subcultures, to seeing interesting outfits and looks.'...

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...oung-dogs.html

Attached Images
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via International Skeptics Forum http://bit.ly/2WAr2Qv

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