Safe, sane and consensual  

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-'''Roland Loomis''' (born [[August 10]], [[1930]] in [[Aberdeen, South Dakota]]), better known as '''Fakir Musafar''' is considered the father of the [[modern primitive]] movement. He has experimented on his own body with [[body modification]] techniques such as [[body piercing]], [[tightlacing|tight corseting]], [[scarification|branding]], [[tattooing]], [[flesh hook suspension|suspension]] and temporary [[infibulation]], and has documented, shared and taught others as part of his life's work making him an underground icon in [[BDSM]], [[kink]] and [[fetish]] communities. + 
-== See also ==+In the [[BDSM]] community, '''safe, sane and consensual''' ('''SSC''') are common principles guiding relationships and activities.
-* [[Domination & submission (BDSM)]]+ 
-* [[Risk-aware consensual kink]]+The principles are that BDSM activities should be:
-* [[Sadomasochism]]+* ''safe'': attempts should be made to identify and prevent risks to health
-* [[Safe, sane and consensual]]+* ''sane'': activities should be undertaken in a sane and sensible frame of mind
-* [[Sexual Fetishism]]+* ''consensual'': all activities should involve the full [[consent]] of all parties involved. Note, though, that [[consent (criminal)|legal consent]] may not create a defence to [[criminal liability]] for any [[injury|injuries]] caused and, for these purposes, non-physical injuries are included in the definition of [[grievous bodily harm]] in [[English law]].
 + 
 +Other people in the BDSM community do not consider SSC to be an accurate term for these relationships or activities. The term [[Risk Aware Consensual Kink]] (RACK) is sometimes used as a substitute description. Disagreements generally arise from the subjective nature of each term in SSC when using the term as a yardstick to evaluate activities. It can be argued that the terms in RACK are equally subjective. "How safe is safe enough?" is a legitimate question, as is "How aware is aware enough?".
 + 
 +Most attribute the term SSC to David Stein, who coined it in August 1983 for [http://www.gmsma.org/GMSMA]{{dead link|date=September 2014}}. In his essay entitled ''[http://boybear.us/ssc.pdf Safe Sane Consensual: The Evolution of a Shibboleth]'', Stein states that the term was created "to distinguish the kind of [[S/M]] I wanted to do from the criminally abusive or [[neurotic|neurotically]] [[self-destructive behaviour]] popularly associated with the term '[[sadomasochism]]'."
 + 
 +==See also==
 +* [[Limits (BDSM)]]
 +* [[Negotiation (BDSM)]]
 +* [[Risk Aware Consensual Kink]]
 +* [[Scene (BDSM)|Scene]]
 +* [[Total power exchange]]
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In the BDSM community, safe, sane and consensual (SSC) are common principles guiding relationships and activities.

The principles are that BDSM activities should be:

  • safe: attempts should be made to identify and prevent risks to health
  • sane: activities should be undertaken in a sane and sensible frame of mind
  • consensual: all activities should involve the full consent of all parties involved. Note, though, that legal consent may not create a defence to criminal liability for any injuries caused and, for these purposes, non-physical injuries are included in the definition of grievous bodily harm in English law.

Other people in the BDSM community do not consider SSC to be an accurate term for these relationships or activities. The term Risk Aware Consensual Kink (RACK) is sometimes used as a substitute description. Disagreements generally arise from the subjective nature of each term in SSC when using the term as a yardstick to evaluate activities. It can be argued that the terms in RACK are equally subjective. "How safe is safe enough?" is a legitimate question, as is "How aware is aware enough?".

Most attribute the term SSC to David Stein, who coined it in August 1983 for [1]Template:Dead link. In his essay entitled Safe Sane Consensual: The Evolution of a Shibboleth, Stein states that the term was created "to distinguish the kind of S/M I wanted to do from the criminally abusive or neurotically self-destructive behaviour popularly associated with the term 'sadomasochism'."

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Safe, sane and consensual" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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