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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 4, 2026

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BDSM relationships are rational and adaptive for (some? many?) modern women

[Epimistic Status: Might just be the girls I date]

Oh boy! Another post on gender and romantic dynamics. Discussions on this topic here tend to go in a few predictable ways, and unfortunately there's a frequent vibe of posters here just not liking women. Leaving aside the whole hypergamy bit, there's frequent sneers about girls being attracted to partners that will mistreat them. This attraction is attributed to two evo psych explanations:

  1. Men with aggressive and dark triad traits are more likely to succeed in gathering resources and accruing power. This makes them valuable mates, but also makes them high risks for physical abuse, infidelity, etc. There's something good correlated with something bad.

  2. Females evolutionarily were frequently coerced by mates. They often didn't get to even choose their mates at all. This goes back all the way to chimps and monkeys. The ones that tolerated the abuse better were more likely to survive and reproduce. One of the pathways to tolerate abuse better is to enjoy it at some level. If you can't really control whether you get hit or not, it's more adaptive to get off on it than have a mental breakdown. The same goes for submissive behavior. Once you're wired deep down to enjoy something, you're going to start seeking it out.

I broadly think these two points are true, and I still like women. I think given submissive and masochistic impulses are wired in, the rational move is satify them while minimizing damage. BDSM relationships (which I'm using here as a catchall for everything from hard power dynamics to good 'ole slapping and choking in bed) are a social technology that fills that role.

Women want things in a partner. They also have different reproductive strategies that don't always neatly coincide. Pretty boys will make pretty daughters. Kind and caring partners are more likely to invest in you and your offspring. Dark triad partners are more likely to be disproportionately successful, but they might hurt you in the process. Straight up abusive partners just need to be survived, and some level of massochism helps.

Some of these reproductive strategies clearly work out a lot better than others. It's much better to end up with a pretty boy than an abusive one, but instincts were evolved when mate choice was much more constrained. Leaving a bad partner is much more of an option now, rendering some of the survival instincts counter produtive. So what's a gal to do with that masochistic drive? Get with a decent partner than have them do BDSM. Much better to be choked by the pretty boy that loves you than the dark triad guy that will actually kill you.

Backdoor on Feminism?

So here's my fringe, underdeveloped thought. Feminism and "womens liberation" broadly decreased the amount women had to submit to their partners. A lot of women liked that change. Some more reactionary ones didn't and explicitly volunteer for more trad lifestyles. I think a lot of women have mixed feelings. They really value the practical gains in freedom in some areas. But in others they didn't really want to stop being submissive. Western blue tribe women are seeped in the idea that feminism is good, and wanting to roll things back is bad. BDSM offers a figleaf for that. It's culture is soaked in the language of consent, so it doesn't contradict feminism. Yep, wearing a collar and being your man's slave is empowering. BDSM offers a framework for picking and choosing what bits of power to keep and return. You can still have your own job, but do everything you husband says at home.

My anecdotes

I had an ex who I was keeping on a leash. She really liked being given orders. One day I asked her to fetch me food a few too many times and she said "I wanted to be your girlfriend, not your servant!" I learned then when girls want to be submissive it's more like they want to be your pet than your maid.

I had two separate exes who ran away from abusive partners and then ended up with me. They were sensible enough to flee at the first sign of trouble. They liked me a fair amount at first, but when I introduced them to BDSM they became enthralled with me. I think early in the relationship were satisfying the Pretty/Caring strategy. Once BDSM hit the mix they felt like they were satisfying Pretty/Caring/Dominant. I think the BDSM community downplays the relationship with domestic violence for PR reasons. There's definitely something there.

There's a substack article by (sorry!) Aella in which she groups people into tendersexuals and bdsmexuals powersexuals. Sorry, her name for it is stupid. Of course, it's a spectrum, but the idea is solid: some people like their sex romantic, some people like their sex with a clearly established power imbalance.

Which is not exactly a novel proposition, but there's another tidbit that I think is important. She has a hypothesis (supported by her massive survey, IIRC) that the share of powersexual women is larger than that of men. There are simply not enough pretty boys willing to choke the girl they love. Or rather, they are unwilling to do this because they find the practice off-putting and would prefer to cuddle instead.

It's a pretty good thing that is the case. Most of BDSM is fine. Spank, use whips all you want but choking is legitimately dangerous and can cause permanent brain damage.

I don't understand out of all the fetishes, how is this one so normalised.

https://www.bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s275

I don't understand out of all the fetishes, how is this one so normalised.

The answer apparently is, as with so many niche practices that got normalised into the mainstream, porn. Young guys watch porn, see the actress being choked and loving it, think that's what girls want in bed. Girls get asked (or not even asked) by their boyfriends to let them choke them, agree because he'll leave me if I don't keep him happy in bed and besides all the guys are asking for it/I see it in porn so this must be normal and I'm a repressed prude if I refuse.

Some people genuinely do want to indulge in breathplay, but yeah you need to know what the hell you're doing or else there is real risk.

My experience is the reverse (she asked for it first), although we stopped after concerns about cognitive impact in the long term.