Sometimes used in Petplay, with a tail attached. They come in a variety of sizes some can vibrate.
BDSM: Bondage/Discipline, Dominance/Submission, Sadism/Masochism: a combined acronym often used as a catchall for anything in the kink scene.Auctioned off: Dominant auctions off the slave to the highest bidder (usually supervised and for temporary use).Aftercare: The time after a BDSM scene or play session in which the participants calm down, discuss the previous events and their personal reactions to them, and slowly come back in touch with reality.
Whilst these two paraphilias are distinct, it is common that a person who enjoys one will also enjoy the other to some degree. Diaper lovers receive gratification from the wearing and often using of diapers. This can involve submission on the adult baby's part, often to a designated "caregiver", e.g. Adult Baby/Diaper Lover (ABDL): Adult babies receive gratification from role-playing an infant (known as paraphilic infantilism, a form of ageplay).Abrasion: Using something rough (such as sandpaper).24/7: A relationship in which protocols are in place continuously.Rope bondage in an uncomfortable bondage position at BoundCon, 2013. Others are highly dismissive of this "slashy speak". Some extend this to honorifics and capitalization: for example Master Rob's slave, linda, may refer to him as Sir and herself as i (or as "this slave", restricted from referring to themselves in the first person). Some people in the BDSM community begin dominant terms with an upper case, for example: Top, Master, Dom, Domme, etc., as well as to begin submissive terms with a lower case, even where normally incorrect, chiefly in acronyms and abbreviations, such as D/s for Dom/sub. Dominance and submission ( D & S or D/s) (including "master and slave" role-playing scenarios and ongoing relationship structures).The term BDSM is a portmanteau of initialisms intended to encompass all of the following activities: BDSM abbreviations have their origins in classified personal advertisements, where euphemisms for paraphilic and socially-disapproved practices were required by periodical editors to circumvent censorship and obscenity law.