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Sensuous Caning
by Conrad Hodson © 1997, 1998
INTRODUCTION
Canes have a deserved reputation as The Victorian Terror
Weapon. To most submissives, they mean severe punishment; to
sensation-seeking S/M bottoms, overload. If we have care and patience,
however, canes can be used in a loving and sensuous way. The very
stiffness of a good cane, that makes a hard stroke so intense, allows the
lightest taps to be given with perfect control. And a light canestroke is
easy to aim, unlike a flexible whip that sags and flops at low power. In
the kind of sensuous play I'm describing here, light strokes are far more
prevalent and important than heavy ones.
This style is a matter of trust, patience, and finesse.
If you can't gain, maintain, and deserve the bottom's trust, the whole thing is
probably going to fail, or fall far short of what it could be. As for
patience, don't even start a scene like this unless you have at least an hour
available, and two is better. Finesse? Well, on two occasions
bottoms have gone to sleep while I was caning them. They woke up black and
blue, and giggling. That's finesse.
I'm not bragging, and I'm not saying I'm some kind of
Caning God. It's learnable. That's why I'm writing this.
CANING TECHNIQUE
A single cane can deliver an entire symphony of sensation.
A snappy blow that is pulled back a bit just before impact will emphasize
surface sting. The same sort of blow carried past the moment of impact, with
follow-through, will have much more thud and penetration.
The greatest intensity is delivered by the outer third or
so of the cane's length. This is the portion that leaves marks, in a hard
blow. In a light blow, this part of the cane will have a relatively stingy
feel. Closer to the top's hand, the cane moves much more slowly, and the
sensation will be more thuddy or even massage-like. This allows a good way
of maintaining rhythm and atmosphere while giving some relief to a bottom who is
showing signs of overload.
The very tip of a cane can be used on many targets that a
full-length blow might harm, or be unable to even reach. Tip shots can
work the inside of the sweet spot, the bottoms of the feet, the muscles between
the spine and the shoulder blades. A traditional cane stroke in any of
these areas would cross bony areas, causing bone bruises and pain that is not at
all erotic; a hard one might chip bones or crush nerves, and cause truly harmful
damage. DON'T try for these with any force until you are utterly sure of
your aim! Lighter tip shots are much safer, and feel much like percussion
massage.
SETUP
I prefer to have the bottom lying flat. When a person
goes as deeply into bottom space as I hope to send them, the mere act of keeping
their balance will be a distraction. Having them lie on a table is easiest
on the top's back in these long scenes; massage tables are ideal, and
cafeteria-type tables are sturdy and about the right height. Arrange
padding if the table doesn't already have it; I usually bring a single-bed sheet
and a roll of foam to parties and demos.
Second choice is ground level; on a mattress or futon, or
the foam pad. Here the bottom will be laying prone and the top will sit or kneel
beside them. On table or floor, it's nice to have three or four feet clear
on either side of the bottom, so that you can switch sides. Since the tip
of the cane always hits the hardest, switching sides will help to keep the
caning symmetrical. Also, it allows the top's other hand to rove over a
different part of the bottom's body. From one side, you can stroke,
massage, caress, and collect feedback from feet, legs, and buttocks, and play
with their crotch if it's that kind of scene. From the other, you caress
their face, massage their back, grab hair or the back of their neck, play trust
games with your finger between their teeth as you cane them...
A caning can be an awkward thing to deliver when the bottom
is standing, especially if the top is taller. There is a strong tendency
for strokes to land too high, on the bony upper half of the butt, when the
bottom is standing up. Also, the sweet spot is hard to reach from this
position. Going to one knee may help. Occasionally a play space may have a
stage or platform of some kind, with bondage facilities near the edge of it.
If you have the gear and knowhow to do it safely, suspension may also offer a
way to get the bottom a foot or two higher.
I try to avoid the traditional bent positions for caning,
where the recipient crouches or bends over a chair. For one thing, this
stretched skin is much more sensitive. Victorian punishers wanted
overload; for a sensuous caning we want to avoid it. For another, the
tailbone comes up into harm's way when one bends over, and a hard canestroke is
quite capable of chipping it and inflicting a painful lifetime disability.
Damaged tailbones don't heal! There is a lot of perfectly good buttock
area that is hard to work safely from these positions; when the bottom's body is
straight, much more of the tailbone is protected. When in doubt, run your
finger down the spine, all the way into the crack of their ass; you can feel how
far the tailbone goes. Check this each time; the length varies
surprisingly among different people.
WARMUP TECHNIQUE
The best precondition for a trip to Endorphin Heaven is for
the bottom to be deeply relaxed, trusting, not anticipating the next stroke but
rather accepting. Going too hard or too fast will drop them out of their
bottom space (that warm, accepting state of trust) at just the time when you
should be building it up. Their hindbrain will take charge, and its
ancient survival reflexes will start screaming "We're taking damage! Get us
the hell out of here!" A good bottom wants the scene to go well, and
will be working to control panic and nervousness. For this particular
style of scene, the top must build the intensity so smoothly that the bottom is
supported rather than challenged in their efforts to stay centered and
accepting.
Of course, some people warm up much faster than others.
"Smooth" is one thing; boring is quite another. In initial
negotiations, I mention this, and if we are using the "traffic light"
safewords I point out that "green" is also a color, and that they can
always call for a speedup if they want one.
As we begin, I like to promise that I will escalate the
intensity very gradually - something like "no stroke will be more than a
third harder than I've already given you". This helps them relax.
You need to keep this promise, too; surprises will tense them up for a long
while afterwards. Resist the temptation to tease them or fake them out,
for the same reason.
I often begin with an ordinary massage. I explore the
muscles of the back, buttocks, and legs, checking for tense spots and taking
whatever time is needed to relax them and establish an expectation of pleasure
from my touch. Massage is itself an endorphin releaser, and very
non-threatening. When a bottom is new to this technique, their delighted
surprise can relax them, build a lot of trust early on, and give them confidence
that there are rewards to be had in exploring with you.
After achieving relaxation of any tense spots, do a little
fingertip percussion on the muscled areas of the bottom's body. (Fingertip
percussion is what a pianist does to strike several close keys all at once.)
The fingers of one or both hands are crooked, and struck down in to the target
area. Work the upper back, to either side of the spine, this way for a
while. Do the same to the lower part of the buttocks, and
down the backs of the legs. This sort of sensation is a perfect bridge
between massage and flagellation; it's especially good for introducing
beginners.
Now begin with the cane, tapping very lightly over the
areas that had the percussion warmup. Don't tap any bony areas; this is a
good time to develop the habit of avoiding them. Use the cane tip to reach
areas that have bone close alongside. The blows should have less force
than your fingertips did; the cane is hard and stingy, and the idea is to
introduce the cane without breaking the relaxed and trusting glow of your warmup.
Along with ordinary light taps, mix in a few that are
feather-light; with practice you can deliver a flutter as light as the landing
of a flock of butterflies. This is a wonderful contrast to harder strokes;
as endorphins build up such a light flutter will often bring on a fit of
giggles.
As you work, do single taps, double taps, quick flutters of
various intensities. Your goal here is twofold. You are trying to
teach the bottom that they cannot predict your strokes, but that it doesn't
matter because they won't be harmed. It is a non-verbal trust-building
exercise.. Done with care, you can give the bottom that wonderful open
acceptance of whatever happens, the key to the very best bottom space.
Another key to good bottom space is breathing. Deep,
careful breathing controls panic, and this is vital as intensity builds.
Panic is really the unpleasant portion of pain; take panic away and what's left
is just strong sensations. All kinds of wonderful things can be done with
strong sensations...
If your bottom has ever done yoga, meditation, natural
childbirth training, or anything like that, remind them that deep, slow
breathing is important here, too. If they have never had such training,
coach them as you go. If their breathing becomes short and choppy, ease up
and remind them to relax and breathe deeply (unless they're coming, of course;
that's to be encouraged, not interrupted with good advice!)
If your other hand keeps up a steady contact with caresses
and massage, not only will it relax and comfort the bottom but you will be able
to detect twitches, tension, or relaxation. Especially with bottoms who
aren't very verbal or vocal, this is the best feedback you can have.
If they are vocalizing, watch out for a sharp edge to their
tone. It warns of gradually building tension - if you continue to hear it,
something isn't working, the bottom space is eroding. The muscles under
your other hand should be more and more relaxed as the caning proceeds; if not,
it's also a sign that your buildup is not succeeding. This sign is
apparent even in a silent bottom.
As you gradually build the intensity, one useful trick is
to follow a harder blow with a quick light rain of flutter strokes, right into
the same area. These will distract the bottom from any overload (within
reason) and take them back to the bottom space that has just been successfully
processing light stuff. However, the harder blow will have done its work
of moving the whole scene to a slightly higher level.
FURTHER CANING TECHNIQUE
If your warmup has opened the way for more powerful
strokes, care must be taken. Canes may seem stiff, but a hard stroke can
bend them ninety degrees and more, and a wraparound with a cane can be downright
dangerous. Wraps are most common when a top goes to full power, after a
well-aimed series of warmup or measuring strokes. The problem is in the
top's body dynamics: the momentum of the arm goes up exponentially with
increased speed, so the whole body is pulled forward as a heavier stroke is
delivered. The full-power stroke automatically reaches several inches
further than the lighter stroke that was supposed to "gauge the
distance".
It's physics; you can't keep it from happening, any more
than you can walk on the ceiling. What you can do is allow for it, and train
yourself to compensate. You can ease your feet back a bit, or pull your
elbow or shoulder back as part of the swing. Or you can do as Mistress Nan
Burrows recommends, and take your aiming stroke so that the cane tip lands in
the middle of the far cheek, no further. This aiming point will land a
full-power stroke that safely spans the full width of the buttocks and no
further.
If you do wish to play with harder strokes, practice!
Learn to pay close attention to where your cane is landing; this is how you
learn to correct your aim. Mistress Nan advises a lot of practice on a
cushion. There is a certain kind of upholstery that shows the stroke, but
each blow shakes the surface and erases the trace of the preceding blow.
Perfect feedback! The upholstery looks to be a kind of heavy-duty velvet; check
thrift stores.
When you are ready to try powerful strokes on a human
partner, try putting a cushion or blanket roll on the far side of them.
This will catch a wraparound harmlessly. Be sure to confine hard strokes
to the buttocks below the tailbone and the upper half of the thighs.
CANING AND OTHER PLEASURES
Sexual connections: perhaps a quarter of women, and a very
few men, can actually get orgasms from the cane. I think this is
incredibly hot, and it makes me very jealous! There will be others who may
not actually climax, but get extremely turned on, which can offer a pleasant
answer to the question of "what do we do next?"
The shock waves made by a cane are directional - they tend
to continue through the target in the general direction the cane was moving when
it hit. In fact, if you slide a hand under your partner's thigh or belly,
you can feel the shock of a medium cane stroke go right through them. The
"sweet spot" in the lower butt, to either side of the crack, is sweet
for this reason; blows here can send waves up into a whole complex of muscles,
nerves, and engorged tissue that is directly involved with sexual excitement.
Many bottoms will enjoy a steady rhythm of light or medium blows on the sweet
spot - especially if they are angled to send their shock waves up and forward.
At least one lady I know has called the effect a "rattan vibrator".
One good sign of this sexual connection is a face-down
bottom whose hips begin to rise and fall in a steady rhythm. You might try
matching that rhythm, with light or medium strokes. Or use your other hand
to massage the nerve points around the pelvic dimples and to either side of the
last few inches of the spine.
POWER AND ROLEPLAY
Often when I do this, the scene is "pure S/M",
sensation for sensation's sake. No roleplay, and no more power exchange
than a massage. The concern for smoothness, the bottom's comfort and
welfare, and cooperation is difficult to reconcile with many of the traditional
roles and scenarios, where the top and bottom play as adversaries.
However, there are a few roles possible wherein the person who hits you is not
an enemy!
Mentor/Ritualist: The top is a trainer, preparing and
coaching the bottom for some ritual ordeal. Or passing on the secrets of
mind control, wherein pain becomes ecstasy. Or trying to send the bottom
on an astral observation of whatever, or a spirit journey, etc.
Comrade: Who is preparing an agent, or coaching a fellow
prisoner, to resist/survive an interrogation. (Of course, the
interrogation can follow later, with the top moving into a new role, or new tops
coming in for that part.)
Science Fiction: The aliens whose ship crashed think they
can recharge the damaged drive crystals, but only by tapping the energy
mobilized in what turns out to be this scene.
Some of these may sound hokey, but roleplay always sounds
hokey to anyone who is not motivated toward that particular scenario. Find
a script that works for you, and suspension of disbelief will come much more
easily.
Also, endorphins can lead many bottoms into a profound
submissive space. If you enjoy serious D/S or role play, you may find this
endorphin-oriented warmup offers a startlingly good beginning to a more
psychological sort of scene.
MAKING YOUR OWN TOYS
Traditional canes are made of rattan, a woody reed from the
East Indies. It has a jointed stem that resembles bamboo, but is not hollow.
Rattan is very tough and strong, and makes the most durable natural canes I
know. Like bamboo, it comes in all sorts of diameters; traditional canes are
about 8mm, but thicker and thinner ones are also useful.
Rattan can sometimes be found at craft stores or Oriental
basketwork shops. It is used to make wicker furniture, so a repairer of
that might have a stock of it as well. Unfortunately, most of the
cane-sized rattan that comes into this country has been bent into coils, which
warps and sometimes cracks it.
If you must deal with the coiled stuff, it should first be
cut to length with a fine-toothed saw. Coping saws and hacksaws work well.
A dressmaker's tape is a handy way to measure along the coils. Obviously,
you should not include cracked places in your layout.
Less obviously, your canes will be much more durable if the
tip includes one of the joints of the stem. The convoluted grain in each
joint resists splitting, as opposed to the very straight grain that runs for the
foot or so between joints. A lot of the coiled rattan has been peeled and
sanded, but the joints are still noticeable if you look and feel carefully.
Cut the stem about a stem diameter to one side of the joint; this will become
the tip of the cane. (The ends without joints included are fine for
handles - the tips are what take the shock and strain.)
You can make the canes any length you like; I prefer 20-30
inches (50-80cm) as they are easier to aim and more convenient in close
quarters. Long ones have more power, but can be awkward. The natural
variations in your coil will probably give you several choices.
Each tip needs to be rounded off; any kind of edge here
will break skin far too easily. Coarse sandpaper works well, especially in
a power sander of some kind. Hand sanding will also do, as will a fairly
coarse metal file. Whatever you use, try for a smoothly rounded end.
Now hand-sand the whole length of each cane with medium paper; try to remove the
stray fibers you find sticking up from the wood. They are a nuisance
during varnishing.
The cut pieces will have to be soaked and steamed to
straighten them without breaking. I soak mind in the bathtub for a day or
two, but any water will do. Don't let them dry out. After soaking
comes steaming and straightening. You will need some way of keeping the
canes straight as they dry; I lay them in a series of grooves I routed into a
plank, and then clamp another plank on top of them. You can also try
shoving each one down a length of pipe; plastic water pipe won't rust and stain
the canes.
When you have your straightening rig set up, boil a big
kettle of water. Wrap the canes in a towel or two, lay them in the (drained) tub
and pour some boiling water over them. Dose them every minute or so for a
few minutes, and then unwrap them; the scalding will make them limp and easy to
uncurl. (Dishwashing gloves help keep your fingers from scalding, too.)
Quickly, before they can cool, bend them straight and put them in the jig.
Put the jig in a dry place with good ventilation for five days (10 if you're
metric). :-)
Remove the canes and hang them up for air drying; I use
clothespins on cords. After one day of air drying, brush them thoroughly
with a coat of spar varnish; Varathane works well. Give each cane at least
three coats; let each coat dry enough that you can sand off any lumps.
Some newspapers on the floor under them will be a good ideas, since at least one
of them will drip no matter how careful you are.
The handle end of each cane can be left as is, or a grip
can be added for comfort or appearance. You can dip the handle ends in
plastic tool dip - it will take several coats, and you can hang them from the
same setup you used in the varnishing. The fumes of this stuff are truly
nasty; be sure you have good ventilation. Less toxically, you can wrap the
grips with cord or leather lacing, sew a scrap of leather or cloth around them,
or cover them with tape. Bicycle handlebar tape makes a fine grip.
You can of course prepare other kinds of wooden rods this
way - and avoid all the straightening hassle by picking ones that are straight
to begin with. Bamboo is cheap and widely available, and also stiffer than
rattan, which makes aiming easier. Bamboo, of course, is hollow and the
tip must be made at a joint, just as described for rattan. Bamboo works
fine for light to medium blows; heavy blows with it can be dangerous.
Bamboo can split without warning, and the splits have edges like razors!
Hardwood dowels from the hardware store can have the same problems. Avoid
either of these materials for heavy canings.
Many other plants have canelike shoots. Forsythia is
a very popular ornamental, and the older branches from the inside of the bush
can make quite a reasonable cane. Prepare as you would rattan. They
aren't as durable, but the price is right, especially if rattan is hard to buy
where you live. Apple trees develop suckers each year, especially upward
from the top branches. These grow straight, to about the right length, and
are pruned off in great numbers every year. They are quite tough and
durable. The buds make rough little bumps along the shoot; they can be
sanded off if they seem too harsh.
Some twigs, such as birch or willow, are fine for scenes
but far too flexible to be considered or used as canes. Handling them is a
whole different topic.
There are also synthetic canes, mostly plastics.
Plastics are much denser than wood, so they hit harder and the stroke is more
penetrating. They are very easy to clean, which is a good thing because
the thinner ones break skin quite easily.
There are shops in most large and medium cities that sell
plastic supplies. There can be a confusing variety of materials there:
Delrin, Lexan, and fiberglass are three kinds of rod that are tough enough to
make good canes. Acrylic is not tough enough; I have broken several. If
the clear look appeals to you, get Lexan. Sora, from San Francisco, makes
some very nice Lexan canes, if you want to buy ready-made. If you prepare
your own, you won't need to varnish them, but be sure to remember to round and
smooth the tip!
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