No Safeword - Miss Mia 2
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33
Duration:
14:52
Submitted:
8 months ago
Title:
No Safeword - Miss Mia 2
Description:
Title: "neuropsychological and physiological responses to high-intensity, prolonged tactile stimuli in a repeated no-safeword tickle table challenge: a case study of a 24-year-old mexican female" abstract: this paper presents the findings of a repeated experimental observation conducted on miss mia, a 24-year-old female of mexican descent, known for extreme plantar sensitivity. the experiment replicates a prior session conducted 1 year prior under identical conditions, aiming to evaluate changes in tactile tolerance, psychological resilience, and involuntary motor/auditory responses during a 10-minute, no-safeword tickle challenge. the subject was immobilized in a full-body leather sheath and secured on a mechanical tickle table with feet clamped in a reinforced foot brace at maximum dorsiflexion, exposing soles for continuous stimulation. results indicate no increase in resilience; instead, miss mia demonstrated accelerated breakdown, heightened attempted vocalizations, and intensified physical resistance within the first three minutes compared to her prior session. observational data suggest conditioned psychological sensitization, where prior traumatic exposure increased anticipatory anxiety and reduced emotional endurance, despite voluntary participation. methodology: subject: name: miss mia age: 24 ethnicity: mexican known sensitivity: extreme plantar ticklishness, particularly responsive to feather, fingernail, and electrical tactile stimuli history: completed one prior 10-minute no-safeword session on the tickle table 1 year ago, post-session reporting "never again" – yet volunteered for repeat trial. apparatus: leather body sheath: full-coverage, non-removable; secured via dual-layer buckle system across torso, limbs, and pelvis. tickle table v1: reinforced platform with integrated immobilization points. foot restraint system: horizontal toe bar positioned posterior to toes dorsiflexion angle: 90° (maximal sole exposure) ankles locked via padded bracket dual-layer gag system: inner layer: white adhesive bandage, medical grade outer layer: black adhesive bandage, secondary layer to prevent slippage result: complete oral occlusion, muffling screams to high-pitched whimpers stimuli applied (duration: 10 minutes, no interruption): manual fingertips shrieker terrorizer gloves (dual set) doomfeather the shocker observational data: first session (12 months prior): post session single remark: “never again” second session (current experiment): immediate tension upon toe bar engagement; rapid breathing onset first shriek muffled; toes curling against restraint; failed escape pull full foot spasm; legs trembling; eyes wide with panic head thrashing; gag dampening high-pitched squeals uncontrollable bucking; harness groaning under strain; drool pooling beneath gag arch hyperextends away from doomfeather; toes splay and clench rhythmically the shocker activates instantaneous hysterical muffled screaming; legs seize; multiple micro-spasms per second conclusion: contrary to the hypothesis that prior exposure would foster psychological desensitization or increased tolerance, miss mia exhibited clear signs of conditioned vulnerability. her anticipatory anxiety amplified pre-stimulus concern, and her breakdown occurred faster and more intensely than in the initial session. the data support the theory that extreme tickle trauma creates a sensitized neural feedback loop, where memory of prior overstimulation lowers the threshold for subsequent collapse. voluntary re-participation may reflect coercive altruism or subspace-induced submission patterns, but not resilience. subject reported post-session: “it was worse… i knew what was coming… and i still said yes…” — indicating possible bdsm-specific cognitive dissonance between pain-avoidance and submission drive. observer recommendations: do not repeat this experiment. risk of autonomic overload, psychological regression, or injury (e.g., muscle tear, skeletal/muscle strain) is high. future studies should include eeg and heart rate monitoring to quantify stress peaks. comparative group trials recommended with subjects of varying bdsm experience levels to assess psychological preparedness.