No Safeword - TickOLing - Catherine Foxx
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7 months ago
Title:
No Safeword - TickOLing - Catherine Foxx
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Neurophysiological and psychological correlates of consensual bondage and sensory stimulation in bdsm practitioners “bound states: a multimodal investigation of altered consciousness, neurochemical response, and interpersonal dynamics during consensual foot-centric bondage in bdsm dyads” abstract this interdisciplinary study investigates the neurobiological, psychological, and interpersonal mechanisms underlying consensual bdsm practices, focusing on a common yet understudied configuration: intense bondage with targeted foot tickling. utilizing physiological monitoring, neuroendocrine assays, and qualitative behavioral analysis, we examine how controlled sensory stimulation, physical restraint, and power exchange modulate autonomic arousal, reward circuitry activation, and subjective states of euphoria or subspace. the no safeword protocol setup chosen represents a canonical scenario within the bdsm community — a submissive individual suspended in a restrained position while undergoing focused tactile stimulation (feet) by a dominant partner. this study aims to demystify the science behind such experiences, validating them as complex psychophysiological phenomena rooted in consent, trust, and neurochemical reward. 1. introduction bdsm is increasingly recognized as a legitimate form of consensual adult sexual expression, with growing evidence suggesting its psychological benefits when practiced safely and ethically (wismeijer & van assen, 2013). despite cultural stigma, empirical research shows that bdsm practitioners often exhibit lower levels of psychopathology and higher levels of psychological well-being compared to non-practitioners. this specific scenario — full-body immobilized with focus on foot-based sensory input — engages multiple systems: proprioceptive disruption from encasement tactile hypersensitivity due to restraint-induced sensory amplification dopaminergic reward from anticipation and control dynamics oxytocin-mediated bonding from intimate touch and trust this study focuses on the intersection of bondage, tickling/foot play, and neurological response, offering the first integrated model of what we term the “bound arousal state” (bas). 2. research objectives to quantify physiological changes (hrv, cortisol, oxytocin, dopamine metabolites) during consensual foot-focused bondage. to map subjective experience (subspace, arousal, surrender) using validated psychological scales. to analyze neural activation patterns during foot stimulation under restraint via fmri-compatible simulation. to explore interpersonal communication patterns and consent dynamics in dominant-submissive dyads. 3. methodology 3.1 participants 2 adult bdsm-identified dyads; catherine foxx, female, highly experienced bdsm practitioner with a personal attraction to switch and submissive tickling. confirmed during intake to have the ability to reach climax through tickling alone. second subject is derek, founder and lead experimenter at fettishlabs. wide range of bdsm experience to include: did fantasy, rope, leather, tape, paracord, zip tie bondage. full encasement, gagging methods and materials, toe bondage, experimental tool creation, and psychological play. balanced for gender, orientation, and experience level all participants must have prior experience with full-body restraint informed consent obtained; irb approval secured 3.2 experimental design: multi-phase protocol phase 1: baseline assessment pre-session surveys: bdsm motivation inventory (dmi), dissociative experiences scale (des), perceived stress scale (pss) salivary baseline: cortisol, oxytocin, amylase (proxy for dopamine activity) phase 2: in-session monitoring participants engage in a 30-minute consensual bondage scene matching the described image: scene parameters: submissive wrapped in a full leather sheath, covering neck to ankles. secured by multiple array of buckling leather straps. her mouth shall be wrapped closed, ensuring cessation of speech or free expression. her ankles shall be clamped in steel stocks held in place via large lynchpin. her toes shall be bound back to the t bar ratcheting system, pulling them fully flexed to avoid all movement as to not interrupt testing. feet exposed and tested by tester using: traditional finger tickling (digital stimulation) new vibratickle device shrieker 3.0 - rechargeable shocker (single and dual applications) terrorizer v1 gloves new stickle device tgun (using cone brush only) audio recorded for vocal affect analysis video recorded for behavioral coding, bondage effectiveness during post testing forensic review physiological monitoring: continuous ecg and skin conductance (eda) heart rate variability (hrv) analysis wearable fnirs (functional near-infrared spectroscopy) for prefrontal cortex activity post-scene salivary re-assessment phase 3: neuroimaging substudy (n=16) simulated restraint inside mri scanner (non-metallic straps) functional mri during controlled foot stimulation (brush, vibration, air puff) contrast: restrained vs. pre-recorded unrestrained touch regions of interest: insula, anterior cingulate cortex (acc), somatosensory cortex (s1/s2), nucleus accumbens phase 4: qualitative interviews semi-structured interviews post-session: “describe your mental state during the peak of the scene.” “how did power exchange influence your perception of sensation?” “did time, self, or body awareness shift? how?” 4. key hypotheses | hypothesis | predicted outcome | |----------|------------------| | h1 | submissives will show increased oxytocin and decreased cortisol, indicating bonding and stress reduction | | h2 | dominants will exhibit elevated dopamine metabolites, reflecting reward from control and caregiving | | h3 | foot stimulation under restraint will elicit hyperactivation in s1/s2 and insula, suggesting sensory amplification | | h4 | high des scorers will report more intense subspace and show reduced prefrontal activity, indicating transient hypofrontality | | h5 | dyads with longer history will show synchronized hrv coherence, reflecting emotional attunement | 5. preliminary findings (simulated data based on existing literature) hrv analysis: submissive showed increased parasympathetic tone after 15 mins of restraint — paradoxical relaxation despite physical stress, elevated arousal cortisol drop: average 28% decrease in submissive cortisol post-scene; dominant levels unchanged oxytocin spike: + 39 % in both partners post-interaction — strongest in dyads reporting aftercare fmri simulation: foot touch under imagined restraint activated s1 42% more than in neutral condition subjective reports: submissive described euphoric dissociation, “floating,” or “melting” — consistent with subspace 6. discussion this study demonstrates that scenes like the one depicted are not necessarily sexual acts, but regulated psychophysiological rituals that induce altered states of consciousness through: sensory paradox (pain/pleasure ambiguity in foot nerves) proprioceptive confusion (suspension disrupts body schema) social neurochemistry (oxytocin release reinforces trust) dopaminergic reward loops (anticipation, control, novelty) the feet, rich in nerve endings and culturally taboo, serve as a potent erogenous vector when combined with power dynamics. tickling — often dismissed as frivolous — emerges here as a tool of intense sensory domination, capable of inducing breathlessness, laughter, struggling, and surrender. furthermore, the ring on the dominant’s finger may act as a tactile intensifier— cold metal against sensitive soles creates contrast that heightens perceptual salience, engaging the somatosensory cortex more robustly than soft touch alone. 7. ethical considerations all procedures emphasize: informed, ongoing consent (safe words monitored via wearable clicker) aftercare protocols standardized across sessions right to withdraw at any time without penalty, in the event of a medical/psychological issue data anonymization (real names not to be revealed) study framed as human resilience and intimacy research, not pathology. 8. implications validates bdsm as a safe, consensual exploration of consciousness informs therapy for trauma survivors using controlled sensory exposure guides design of intimate wearable tech for long-distance bonding challenges medical models that pathologize non-normative arousal 9. conclusion the experiment is not a moment of submission — it is a co-created neurochemical dance. the specimens expression of surrender reflects not helplessness, but peak presence — a brain awash in endorphins, oxytocin, and dopamine. her body, bound and stimulated, is not infringed upon — it is tuned, like an instrument, to the precise frequency of consensual ecstasy. this study reframes the scene from spectacle to science — proving that pleasure, pain, trust, and transcendence are all measurable, mappable, and deeply human.