The Control Book
4.3. Ritual
OED. Ritual. n. A prescribed order of performing religious or
other devotional service.
Rituals are about symbols. Some rituals are completely
symbolic--such as when a submissive bows their head as their
dominant enters the room, or when they kneel at the feet of their
dominant--or they can add flavour to useful duties and tasks--such
as how a submissive addresses their dominant or how they serve
food or drinks to their dominant.
While tasks and duties have, almost by definition, a certain
amount of usefulness involved, rituals or the ritualistic
components of tasks and duties are not particularly useful at
all... at least, not in a physical sense. Kneeling and grovelling,
while possibly psychologically rewarding for both the submissive
who performs it, and for the dominant at whose feet the submissive
grovels, is not of any physical benefit. On the contrary, possibly
the submissive might even get the dominant's shoes dirty or leave
lip marks on them.
The work involved in cleaning the dominant's house is also not
inherently ritualistic but can have ritualistic components, eg.
kneeling at the foot of the dominant's bed for a moment before
changing the sheets. Some things are hard to add ritual to;
mopping the floor might be an example of one such.
One of the characteristics of a ritual is that it is usually
performed more than once and that it has a well-defined (or prescribed)
way of being done.
Ritual is a vital part of the relationship between a dominant and
their submissive. One of the roles that rituals play is that they
allow the nature of the submissive's relationship to the dominant
to be expressed(70).
Just standing around knowing that they are submissive is usually
not enough to satisfy any need or desire the submissive might
have. Being able to feel it and being able to express it both to
themselves and to their dominant can be very satisfying indeed. A
ritual can directly satisfy the need for a submissive to express
their submissive nature(71).
A submissive will create their own rituals as part of the way they
naturally express their feelings towards their dominant. Exactly
what form these self-created rituals will have will vary from
submissive to submissive. They will still be--as all rituals
are--actions performed the same way each time and could be things
like attitudes or postures adopted in relation to the dominant,
devotional or respectful behaviour towards objects belonging to
the dominant or certain ways of performing regular tasks given by
the dominant.
Rituals mandated by the dominant are different to rituals created
by the submissive themselves. Physically they might look like
something the submissive could have created for themselves but
because they are given to the submissive by the dominant they have
extra potency:
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They are a gift from the dominant to the submissive in that they
give the submissive an extra way of feeling satisfied or rewarded
for their behaviour. Just by giving the submissive a ritual to
perform the dominant has, at the same time, created a new way for
the submissive to express themselves,
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Because the rituals come from the dominant the submissive knows
and feels first-hand that performing these rituals will be
pleasing to the dominant. As distinct from self-created rituals,
rituals from the dominant have an aspect of direct service
involved in them.
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A ritual imposed by the dominant is also a form of control imposed
by the dominant.
Feedback
Many rituals have an important feedback component. What I
mean here is that part of the reward or satisfaction which the
submissive gets from a ritual comes from the dominant's reaction
to the ritual. For example, the reward for kneeling at the
dominant's feet might include, as well as the inner feeling coming
from the submissive's own expression of rank, that of getting the
"ownership smile" from the dominant or stroking of the
submissive's hair. The dominant's reaction also reinforces the
awareness of the submissive's station.
There isn't always such direct feedback from the dominant, or
indeed any at all. Kneeling at the foot of the dominant's bed
before changing the sheets is likely to be purely an internal
experience for the submissive. The reward here comes purely from
the devotional and expressive nature of the ritual and nothing
else.
Context
Doing the same sequence of actions doesn't mean that each time it
is a ritual; there is also the context in which the actions are
performed to consider. Bowing the head when serving one particular
individual might be a ritual while for other people it is a simply
a sign of measured respect. Certain actions might also be rituals
at certain times of day or in certain places, but then at other
times are just actions. For example, some religious rituals
include a washing of hands. This doesn't mean that every time
someone washes their hands that they are partaking in a religious
ritual.
Conclusion
You can't be doing dominant things to your submissive all the
time, nor can they be doing submissive things all the time.
Rituals give you and your submissive ways to express and even
reinforce the relationship between you both by means of symbolic
acts or symbolic ways of doing ordinary tasks. Feedback, or
reacting to the rituals the submissive performs, can be an
important way of feeding the submissive's needs.
Lastly, rituals dictated by the dominant are symbols of control.
Things to think about
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What rituals do dominants have in general? What rituals do you, as
a dominant, have?
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What rituals does your submissive have or perform? Which ones came
from you? Which ones did your submissive create themselves? In
what contexts are they rituals, and in what contexts are they just
actions?
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From a control point of view, what sort of rituals do you think
your submissive should be allowed to create for themselves? Is
control over this something you feel it is appropriate for you to
have or assert? Is creating their own rituals a way for a
submissive to express control over themselves?
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A ritual can also become a comfortable rut. Should a submissive
experience a ritual as something comfortable? Or should a ritual
always be at least a little bit of a burden? Does being
comfortable affect how well a ritual works?
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