Cape Argus

Lessons from a dominatrix

- Alice Hines

“SO YOU like breaking rules, do you?” Kasia Urbaniak said to the man seated before her.

“Or do you like getting in trouble? That’s pretty greedy of you, to come here and do something right away to warrant punishment. I haven’t even had a chance to assess what kind of punishment you need.”

She paced across the bright stage in her platform leather boots. An audience of 130 profession­al women − bankers, marketing directors − were observing this demonstrat­ion.

They took careful notes and when prompted, shot their hands in the air to volunteer to role-play.

Urbaniak, 39, worked as a dominatrix for 17 years, independen­tly and in dungeons in New York City. Now, in something she calls the “Academy”, she teaches women what she has learnt about men.

In a moment of cultural reckoning around gender and harassment, the Academy is one of the new unconventi­onal entities emerging to fight harassment. So the point is not her leather-riding crop. Her mission is to teach women how to employ a dominatrix’s rhetorical tools in any scenario when there’s a power imbalance with a man, whether or not it’s about sex.

The scenarios happen everywhere. Sometimes, it’s at a cocktail party. “A guy asks, ‘Where are you from?’” said Sophia Li, 26, a consultant and former Vogue editor. “People who are racially ambiguous know that’s the worst question.”

When faced with an uncomforta­ble question, “there’s a moment of speechless­ness, of neuro-muscular lock down in women”.

She discovered, back when she began training dominatrix­es that the fix was this: instead of answering or refusing to answer the question, ask the client a question back about why he asked the question in the first place.

When he responds, dig in with more probing. Students practised the technique with real-world examples.

Urbaniak and a cadre of male volunteers facilitate­d, playing the parts of a nosy date or film executive who had lost his bathrobe strap. (The name of this workshop: Cornering Harvey.)

He asks: “Do your children all have the same father?” She asks: “Are you fantasisin­g about me having sex with multiple men?”

He asks: “Can we review your presentati­on in my hotel room?”

She asks: “Where did you get that shirt?”Comebacks can be pointed or off-topic, sweet or biting.

Not everyone catches on right away. “I don’t even know what my uncomforta­ble question is,” one student said. “Do you feel embarrasse­d that you freeze all the time?” Urbaniak asked. “Yeah!” the student said. “No… don’t answer! See?” The student had missed her cue. − The New York Times

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