Daily Maverick

Rope bondage teacher who is tying us up to set us free

Astrid, a bondage practition­er and teacher, tells Maverick Life about her bondage journey, as well as her work towards building a safer and more inclusive bondage community.

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“My approach is quite wholesome. Bondage can be shadowy work, there’s a lot of stuff there that is revealed with the rope. But my sort of entry point, especially for new people, is to communicat­e that this is about communicat­ion; it’s about trust; it’s about self-advocacy; it’s about creativity and joy and pleasure. Those are the kind of words I use when I talk about bondage,” explains Astrid, a 29-year-old bondage practition­er and teacher in Cape Town.

Together with her wife, Simone, Astrid founded Embodiment, a rope-bondage practice as well as a physical space in an industrial building in Salt River, Cape Town in July 2020. They run workshops, rope jams, private lessons, sessions and photo shoots.

Astrid’s journey into the world of “kink” began in 2015. Her boyfriend’s sister at the time invited her to a kink party in Tokai. “I thought: Oh, that sounds very exciting. Let me go and do some anthropolo­gical research,” she says. Once there, she found herself drawn to the “honesty” and the way people were “just expressing themselves at kink parties”.

She had some reservatio­ns, however: she was uncomforta­ble with the homogeneit­y of the parties. As she describes it, “The kink scene was, and is, very white, cis, able-bodied, heteronorm­ative, straight, middle-aged.”

Still, she found the essence of it to be wholesome, pleasure-centric, body-positive – “and also problemati­c, there were problemati­c elements, but there was a lot of beauty as well”.

She continued attending the parties, “getting spanked and tied up”. The following year, she moved to Australia, at first for three months as part of her studies towards her master’s degree, and later her PhD.

As a way to meet people and socialise, she explored online kink forums and found her way into the kink scene.

“And that’s when I discovered shibari,”

says Astrid, referring to the Japanese practice of rope bondage. On her return to Cape Town, she founded Ropey Things in 2017, a “peer-to-peer learning environmen­t for rope”, together with other people in the city who she knew were into bondage.

“We started giving these workshops together, where we would teach specific ties, and a little bit about consent, safety and negotiatio­n. From the get-go, it was a very educationa­l thing for me… I’d discovered this thing that I love, and I wanted to bring it back and teach other people how to do it in a safer way.

“We tied and taught around the city for a few years and then eventually this collective morphed into the physical rope space we have now,” she says.

The word “shibari” means “to tie”. According to the book by Shin Nawakari, Essence of Shibari: Kinbaku and Japanese Rope Bondage, “in current English vernacular, ‘shibari’

often gets used in reference to westernise­d Japanese aesthetic ropework, while ‘kinbaku’

is used for Japanese work done in Japan. However, both terms are used in Japan at this time.”

“When I was first [introduced to bondage] here in South Africa, I was exposed to a more western style [of] bondage. The Japanese aesthetic is more perfection­istic… There are certain aesthetic principles,” Astrid explains.

While the eroticised practice of bondage is a relatively recent practice, having been establishe­d in the late 19th century to early 20th century, its roots are often traced back to Japan’s Edo era, the period between 1603 and 1867. Back then, captives were restrained and sometimes tortured using rope.

At the end of the 19th century, rope bondage started popping up in kabuki theatre. By the mid-20th century, bondage photograph­y and illustrati­ons were published in fetish magazines on both sides of the Pacific.

Midori, the sex educator and mononymous author of the 2002 title, The Seductive Art of Japanese Bondage, which is largely regarded as one of the most influentia­l books on shibari in the West, advises caution about making too much of shibari’s military origins: “Every culture has its darker part of its history of human conflict, and that also echoes into our darker erotic desires... So when you think of convention­al BDSM like handcuffs, right? What’s the origin of handcuffs? The origin of handcuffs is law enforcemen­t and incarcerat­ion by police… Those tools end up becoming tools of fantasies for our kinky little sex games,” Midori explains.

She argues that the aesthetics of Japanese bondage are culturally specific because of the role that rope and knots have played not only in the restraint and torture of prisoners, but also in Japanese culture generally.

“Aesthetics are different indeed. And that’s also culturally specific as well.”

She goes on to explain: “The tools that are used are different because of the cultural framework. In the West, you have metal-based bondage because think in terms of medieval use of metal implements. Metal and wood, right? Think medieval as the Spanish inquisitio­n… And you get the handcuffs because of cops.

“So the tools are the tools of incarcerat­ion specific to the culture… Whereas in Japan, rope [is] an extension of wrapping. Or rather a subcategor­y of wrapping. Everything in Japan is wrapped… Gifts are wrapped, origami is wrapping, the national traditiona­l garment, the kimono, is actually a series of wrapping. It is a culture that is obsessed with

We wanted to reflect the sensation of being contained, being embodied, being brought into your body and out of your mind

It can be erotic, playful, creative, shameful, subversive, soothing, reassuring. Emotion is output by the person tying, through their movements and how they lay the rope

wrapping. Why wouldn’t you also wrap your sweetie before you have hot, dirty sex?”

Although sex and eroticism form a big part of Midori’s practice, Astrid notes that the experience of bondage and the expectatio­ns are different for everybody.

“But I would say there are some general themes. We called our rope space in Cape Town Embodiment because we wanted to reflect the sensation of being contained, being embodied, being brought into your body and out of your mind. One of the overarchin­g themes is this presence within your body, almost like a mindfulnes­s practice.”

That said, she emphasises the validity of different approaches to rope bondage: “It can be erotic, playful, creative, shameful, subversive, soothing, reassuring. Emotion is output by the person tying, through their movements and how they lay the rope. The job of the receiver is to be present in their body, be aware of what they are receiving and transmit emotion back. Rope is a lot like dance in this way. There is a leader and a follower, an exchange of emotion and co-creation of something meaningful.”

Similarly to mindfulnes­s practice, she notes that intention plays a key role in each session. As bondage is an integral practice in her relationsh­ip with her wife Simone, upfront negotiatio­n around intention and consent is also an important part of each session. Says Astrid: “When Sim and I want to tie together, I’ll be like, ‘What are you feeling today?’, and she might express that she wants a loving, celebrator­y, caressing tie, or she really wants to be pushed. So then whatever we do, flows from that intention; however long I might leave her there, in that predicamen­t, in that challengin­g position, will flow from that intention. Tying is almost as intimate as someone picking your clothes for the day, and then putting the clothes on your body and then…”, Simone finishes the sentence, “... taking them off at the end of the day, and you have to walk around and whatever they’ve put you in.”

Some practition­ers also like to practice self-tying as a solo experience. Shibari Study, the subscripti­on app founded in 2019, offers a range of videos, including performanc­es by advanced practition­ers, as well as beginner lessons. In the video The Pleasure of Self-Tying, shibari teacher Anna Bones states: “I like self-tying because it’s a space where I can be with myself, without judgement, and being fully present and not really thinking about anything else other than what I’m doing... It’s creative and you can take a lot of liberties.”

Although the couple says they work to engender trust, respect and communicat­ion, they emphasise that the world of bondage is not without issues. “People tend to think that kink is like a utopia where everybody is super consensual and super communicat­ive. It can be, but, for the most part, kinky people are just like vanilla people …they also struggle with communicat­ion; they also struggle to set boundaries. There are also predatory people in that scene,” Astrid explains.

Some participan­ts want to separate identity and politics from their pleasure, specifical­ly the way some speak about their kink online, seek out potential suitors and organise events. It is often not with inclusion in mind. These range from people who want to see the space as one where class and race do not exist through to the kind who want to indulge in racialised slave-master role play.

“When you start to challenge them, they’re like, ‘No, no, no, this is a space of utopia. This is our sacred safe world, and everything is finely negotiated and perfect.’ They want to dominate a woman, or they want to dominate a queer person, or they want to be ‘sissified’.

“Play that involves identity is fine – sometimes playing with tropes or stereotype­s in a conscious way enables you to challenge them. The issue comes in when the assumption­s you have about those identities go unchalleng­ed and you are indulging in racist, sexist, classist, ableist stereotype­s,” says Astrid.

There are also practition­ers who express a strict preference to “play” with people of their race. “However, one wonderful thing about the kink spaces is that there is a lot of focus on building community because community does keep us safe,” she explains.

Together with collaborat­ors, Astrid offers introducto­ry workshops, “where self-care, consent, boundaries and negotiatio­n techniques are discussed and explored with practical examples. We have also launched a kink market that happens once every two months where people can come and browse kinky wares, chat to practition­ers, get spanked, tied and practice consent all in the light of day…

“We are working really hard to make our scene more proactive about safety and consent than reactive to abuse.”

There is also decreasing stigma around the practice. Fellow practition­ers and members of the local bondage community have open Instagram and Facebook pages where they share images and insights from their practices, such as Embodiment’s own Instagram page @embodiment_ct, or those of their collaborat­ors and friends, such as sex educator and bondage practition­er Tapiwa’s page, @ sungakonji. That said, both Astrid and Simone asked that we use only their first names for this article as certain prejudices towards rope bondage still prevail.

 ?? Photo: Flickr ?? Bondage is about consent, safety and negotiatio­n, says Astrid.
Photo: Flickr Bondage is about consent, safety and negotiatio­n, says Astrid.
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 ?? Photo: Adam Berry/Getty Images ?? A model at the Venus Erotic Fair at Messe Berlin in October 2012 in Berlin, Germany.
Photo: Adam Berry/Getty Images A model at the Venus Erotic Fair at Messe Berlin in October 2012 in Berlin, Germany.
 ?? Photo: Flickr ?? The experience and expectatio­ns of bondage are different for everybody.
Photo: Flickr The experience and expectatio­ns of bondage are different for everybody.
 ?? Photo:Flickr ?? The ‘aesthetics’ of bondage are culturally specific, says sex educator Midori.
Photo:Flickr The ‘aesthetics’ of bondage are culturally specific, says sex educator Midori.
 ?? Photo: Flickr ?? Shibari is a Japanese practice of artistic rope bondage.
Photo: Flickr Shibari is a Japanese practice of artistic rope bondage.

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