Home Fetish “You’re So Brave!”: Pro Sub Stigma And Its Discontents

“You’re So Brave!”: Pro Sub Stigma And Its Discontents

(Image by CarpesTreasures via Flickr)
(Image by CarpesTreasures via Flickr)

Working as a professional submissive often makes you feel like an outsider.

Pro-subs and pro-switches are a relatively rare breed of service provider, which makes our work feel pretty esoteric from the get go. For every one of us, there are many more vanilla, in-person, indoor workers. In part, this could be because the need for resources like fetish equipment and dungeon access means that subbing isn’t an accessible entry point into sex work. However, there is undoubtedly greater stigma and misinformation surrounding the work which deters many people from working as subs. Because we offer services such as restrictive bondage, sensory deprivation, corporal punishment, and erotic masochism, subbing is frequently thought of as intrinsically unsafe. Far too often, we are perceived as having knowingly “put ourselves in harm’s way”, and into the path of sexual violence as an inevitable consequence. I’ve lost track of the appalled responses from both sex workers and civilians when I tell them I let men tie me up and hit me for a living. They fail to grasp that there is a fundamental difference between consensual, pre-agreed upon pain and abuse.

The consequences of this stigma became apparent very quickly when I first started working as a pro-sub in a professional dungeon. The management created an environment in which clients paid for the privilege of foregoing boundary negotiation with subs, and we in turn were paid to ignore these boundaries. By treating us subs as if we had minimal agency, both our clients and we came to believe this was the natural order of things. In my 6 months at my first dungeon—and in the previous years when friends also worked there—none of us could recall a single client being blacklisted for sexual violence, despite the fact that colleagues experienced numerous incidents of assault.

As pro-subs, our work is affected by stigma from within and outside the community. As sex workers, our labor is more stigmatized than other types of work, and as pro-subs, our job is often dismissed by those working in other parts of the sex industry. But why is pro-subbing so marginalized, and what effect does this have on us and our work?

At my first dungeon, the effect was extremely negative. Ostensibly, the setup appeared professional. For a total newbie with no savings, it seemed ideal. Unfortunately, it was a deeply unpleasant place to work. The management bullied and coerced workers, and kept us all isolated and competitive with one another in order to maximize profit. They also went out of their way to appease clients. A key component of this was issuing explicit statements that we subs would willingly take any punishment they wanted to dispense. It was here that I first encountered the attitude that submission is an inherently high-risk service, in which subs are paid to tolerate the non-consensual violence presented as an unavoidable part of the job.

As a skittish baby hooker, I quickly internalized the view that my job was essentially an exercise in mute endurance. If something scared me or hurt me in a way I was not comfortable with, or even if I changed my mind about a scene halfway through, that was my problem.

Japanese bondage toy sold with soda. (Photo by Ward Broughton via Flickr)
(Photo by Ward Broughton via Flickr)

At my first dungeon, a nuanced understanding of consent didn’t exist. If we consented to one form or level of pain, we were understood to have consented to them all by default. This was made clear in the dungeon’s pricing structure. There was an hourly base rate for sessions, which included sexual services, role-play, and “unlimited hand spanking” (their phrasing—they disagreed with me when I suggested it sounded like a phone bundle). After that, particular submissive services were charged as an extra, with each service ascribed (an often very arbitrary) fee. Blindfolding, gagging, bondage, watersports, and nipple clamps were extras, but with no financial variation to reflect the different intensities of these services.

The lack of distinction between each act meant that a client would pay the same to use a small plastic ball gag as a large metal ring gag. Or the same rate to use light nipple clamps as weighted ones. The charge to tie someone in loose cuffs was the same as for putting them in painful mummification bondage. At the time, I thought this pricing approach was demonstrative of the management’s attempt to monetize as much as possible. However, if they’d actually been seeking to maximize income, it would have stood them in good stead to acknowledge the variation between these services and price them accordingly. Their approach reflected a common, entrenched attitude towards professional submission: That we had limited say over how we were dominated, and therefore, over our own safety.

This was also evident in the total lack of training or advice available to me when I first started at the dungeon. Unlike the opportunities offered to many new house dommes, there was no opportunity to assist or shadow in sessions. Management evidently didn’t believe that subbing required any skills beyond acquiescence. Industry-wide, in fact, our skill set is routinely dismissed, whereas pro-dommes are lauded for their technical abilities and immersive scene building. But pro-subbing does demand extensive expertise, both practical and interpersonal, as we habitually manage our sessions “from the bottom.” We advise, demonstrate, steer, and correct, all the while remaining in character and nudging scenes forward. In many respects, running a scene as a pro-sub can often be even more tricky than doing so as a domme, as the power dynamics at play allow dommes to lead sessions explicitly. But despite this, our job is almost always characterized as just having to lie still and take it.

(Photo by Chris Marchant via Flickr)
(Photo by Chris Marchant via Flickr)

This difficulty learning the ropes as a beginner pro-sub is exacerbated by the fact that while representations of the pro-domme have become more common in mainstream media, the pro-sub remains almost culturally invisible. There is a real dearth of online information about working as a pro-sub. Any resources one does find tend to be rose-tinted promotional interviews with people’s work personas, rather than nuts and bolts analyses of selling submissive services. As a result, what pro-subbing actually entails is often shrouded in mystery before one actually enters the business and hires on with a dungeon.

Some notable things have already been written on this blog about poor labor conditions in commercial dungeons and the prevalence of abusive management there. I agree with Serpent Libertine’s observation that “a lot of pro-BDSM people have controlling, volatile personalities and running a dungeon gives them a license to dominate their staff.”And yes, management at the subs dungeon where I first worked was undoubtedly bullying and manipulative. But more so than anything, their exploitative labor practices and management style were propped up by the belief that pain, discomfort and boundary transgression were all acceptable and expected components of professional submission.

Often, the arguments used to justify the idea of pro-subbing as inherently treacherous are reminiscent of those used by prohibitionists to marginalize all those within the sex industry. SWERF rhetoric claims that no sex worker can ever truly consent to transactional sex, and that even when we do, our work is so fundamentally risky that we are implicitly at fault when a client violates our boundaries. In the context of escorting and other “vanilla” services, we can see that this is a clearly flawed argument. Yet when it comes to kink, many people seem less willing to acknowledge that while we may consent to certain forms of erotic masochism within a scene, that does not mean that we should expect to be hurt in any other un-negotiated way.

(Photo by Gaelx via Flickr)
(Photo by Gaelx via Flickr)

It’s no coincidence that fetish and kink work is so widely misunderstood as inevitably violent when BDSM practitioners are still routinely pathologized as either abusers or damaged victims. This interpretation lends further credence to the notion that submissives place themselves in the firing line. This isn’t to say that abuse doesn’t occur within the kink community, or that, for some, kinks aren’t related to or born of trauma. People practice BDSM for myriad reasons, and I’m not seeking to perpetuate some homogenous “kink positive” ideology. However, when it comes to harm reduction for pro-subs, it’s crucial that we resist the urge to typify all transactional BDSM as abusive, and recognize the multifaceted negotiations that inform our work. Perpetuating the discourse that all kink is pathological informs and worsens working conditions for pro-subs.

It was only after leaving the dungeon to work independently that I realized quite how much of this harmful ideology I’d internalized. It took me a long time to reassert the confidence to speak up in sessions when my boundaries were violated, and to reject the idea that those violations were an inevitable part of pro-subbing. To this day, I often hesitate for a moment before using safe words, for fear of seeming “whiny” and losing clients.

When other sex workers shudder and tell me I must be brave to do what I do, it’s a further reinforcement of dangerous conditions for pro-subs. I am neither “brave” nor “lucky” to do my work unharmed. The notion that pro-subbing is inherently high-risk is ultimately far more dangerous to us subs than the work itself. Suggesting that submissive services are all violent legitimizes non-consensual violence against us, and limits our ability to negotiate the nuances of a scene.

Yes, some pro-subs experience traumatic experiences at work, but unfortunately, so do all other types of sex workers. In these instances, the onus of responsibility rests entirely on clients and bad managers, and that responsibility should not be erased through the suggestion that kink is fundamentally dangerous. The stigma we experience both from within and outside the community makes us subs feel that we are marginal and at risk in an already highly stigmatized demographic. By looking more critically at our work, we could go a significant way to making pro-subs safer.

15 COMMENTS

  1. I’m so sorry to hear that professional subs feel marginalized 🙁 I am what you would call a “vanilla” provider but I view all sex workers as my sisters and it saddens me to hear of any of them being mistreated. I can relate to the part about agencies looking out for the needs of the clients first and just wanting the provider to make the client happy even at the cost of her own comfort or dignity. There are some good agencies out there but many of them are exploitive and if you start your escorting career at a bad place like that it will distort your beliefs about how you’re supposed to be treated in this industry. I could also relate to the part about someone pushing your boundaries in a session and not wanting to say anything for fear of losing clients (or getting bad reviews). The more we let them push boundaries, and do things that are against our rules, the more we normalize that behavior in the mind of the client which makes him more likely to go and treat the next girl poorly too. Some days I’m able to be very assertive and some days I can’t find my voice but it’s nice to know that other ladies feel the se way!

  2. This is why I am so glad I started as an indy…your description of working in a pro-dungeon infuriates me. As a switch, I am very clear about my boundaries with both bottoms and Tops and when I do sub for someone, I make very clear that if my boundaries are crossed, I will have no trouble escorting them out the door, no matter what role I am playing as their sub.

    I encourage you to not hesitate in taking a stand for your boundaries. Consent for one thing does not equal consent for all things and as you become known for being an ethical player, the right clients will find you 🙂

    And as far as getting bad reviews is concerned, fuck them. The entire review system is a flawed piece of shit that puts men in control of what IS a woman’s business. Most “hobbyists” I have met are full of expectations and assumptions that are fed by reviews that may or may not be truth (more and bullshit seems to be what I see) and frankly I would prefer to not have anything to do with them.

    Keep on being an awesome sub, honey, and take care of yourself, subbing can be hard work (especially keeping your wits about you in scene) and I applaud you for doing something you reay enjoy 🙂

    K

  3. Just want to say thanks for writing this!

    Also, to any non-pro sub or independent-only commenters: If you have helpful advice for the poster about ‘just state your boundaries, it’s eeeeeeaaaaaasy!’ – then maybe, like, don’t? The whole crux of the article is about constraints on a workers ability to negotiate, and how that impacts our experiences as pro subs, and as employees in a black market. How arrogant do you have to be to think that the OP is only in need of a little ‘stand your ground’ pep talk, jeez.

  4. This is both sad and terrifying. Bottoming takes as much skill as topping does, and much greater risk. It takes a while to learn how to physically manage pain, to learn how much you can take, when to push your boundries and how far. And making sure to stay in control of yourself and of what is done to you while bottoming and not ruining the fantasy for (or worse, insulting) your customer.
    Not to mention the emotional resilience it takes to be play-abused repeatedly. No matter how much it was agreed upon, you have to have a very strong ego to take it. And a very creative mind to be able to keep a roleplay scene going. Negotiation in kink is a delicate balance, and adding money to the ecuation just makes it that much more complicated. Selling a submissive fantasy while being assertive and making your limits clear takes a lot of careful wordplay. And expressing those in a session without killing the entire mood is diffciult, but you also have to be able to tell when you absolutely must kill your customers mood, lest he gets too into the fantasy.
    It is a very specific skillset that is also very difficult to obtain. Even outside the industry, in the kink community, most workshops and material are aimed for tops. For example, there are heaps of resources available that provide technical knowledge for riggers, but very little for bottoms.
    Learning is a trial and error process, where you have to be very self aware and very responsible for yourself.

    • This post brought up so many memories, issues, fears, thoughts. Thank you for writing it.

      And Mariana, your comment is the perfect distillation of all the labor that pro-subbing entails! There definitely need to be more BDSM classes for bottoms.

    • Thanks for reading Mariana, and absolutely, there’s just so much emotional labour involved in running a scene as a sub, maintaining a role and also navigating your boundaries and trying to keep yourself safe. And yeah, I completely agree that there’s a total dearth of learning resources for subs. I feel like it’s a further insinuation that the work is less skilled that topping.

  5. “Back in my day, there was NEVER any abuse in the bdsm community!” I’m gonna go ahead and call bullshit on that and also request that you shut the fuck up.

  6. What’s with the quotation marks? Pro-sub is a real thing.
    It never ceases to amaze me how the meanest reactions to prosubbing come from within the kink community itself. I’ve heard lyfestylers say pros are giving away, wasting and corrupting the gift of their submission. That they don’t value themselves, that they just never found the right dom. Or that they’ll do anything for the money, as if extra-money wound somehow blur their limits into oblivion.

  7. What’s with the quotation marks? Pro-sub is a real thing.
    It never ceases to amaze me how the meanest reactions to prosubbing come from within the kink community itself. I’ve heard lyfestylers say pros are giving away, wasting and corrupting the gift of their submission. That they don’t value themselves, that they just never found the right dom. Or that they’ll do anything for the money, as if extra-money would somehow blur their limits into oblivion.

  8. Please know I’ve always felt submissive/slave role my calling. In recent years l have come a long way in my journey but have so much more to learn. I’ve want to do this professionally but never dreamed it was possible
    So I must ask is there a place for male pro-subs. If so your advice and guidance would be greatfully welcome

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