Daughter Bdsm

Daughter Bdsm




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Daughter Bdsm
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Watch : "Dating #NoFilter" Goes BDSM With a Spanking Class
Dating #NoFilter returns early 2020, only on E!
In this clip from Tuesday's new Dating #No Filter , enthusiastic blind dater Abby dabbles in BDSM for the first time. The problem is, Abby isn't totally sure she's into BDSM. In fact, when her match Jewel reveals their debut date activity—a lesson on "how to give a good old-fashioned spanking," proctored by a professional who informs the pair right away that "one's gonna take it and one's gonna receive it" during the course of their rendezvous—she looks downright terrified.
"Poor Abby, get her outside!" shouts comedian Cara Connors , before co-commentator Nina Parker chimes in. "Abby is like, 'I did not know this is what I was gonna do today when I woke up and put on my little purple t-shirt,'" cracks the Nightly Pop co-host.
And pan back to Abby, who's already admitted she's never really done this before but is moseying on over to the "spank bench" nonetheless, where Jewel (a BDSM fan who's loving this right now) is about to show her how it's done. 
"You will receive 10 on each cheek and you will endure it," she instructs, to which Abby—bent over the apparatus already, t-shirt, denim jacket and all—solemnly says, "OK." They do agree on a safe word though! Per Abby's suggestion, it's "mercy".
"I'm saying 'mercy' for her," Nina interjects, as Jewel counts, "Three, four, five…"
Cara points out that "they haven't even asked each other their favorite color yet," and her partner agrees this is quite the installation of introductory foreplay. "Like, let me at least get an appetizer first!" Nina exclaims.
Think these two make it to dinner? Evaluate the spanks, uh, sparks, for yourself in the full clip above! 
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The love of parents for their child is unparalleled. There is no denying that a parent will do anything to protect their child from harm and try to equip them as best as possible for the challenges of the world. However, subjecting a child to brutality is not a part of that preparation.
But that’s the view a couple who turned their daughter into a ‘sex slave’ seems to hold.
As reported by the DailyMail , the girl was assaulted frequently from December 2016 to March 2017.
She also admitted that she herself was raped when she was 13-years-old and claimed that they were only training their daughter in advance for adult life. The couple believed that it was better for her to lose her virginity with her father than learn about sexual life in other ways.
Her grandmother and great-grandmother also lived in the same flat but denied having any knowledge of the assault. As per latest developments, the parents have now been stripped of their parental rights, which means they will never be allowed to raise a child again. The girl has been put in care.
I can’t imagine the monstrosity of such people who really believe in their twisted minds that they were preparing their daughter by subjecting her to such trauma. We hope they are aptly punished for their horrendous crime.



Follow Storypick on Instagram! Click here to follow @story.pick



Storypick is now on Telegram! Click here to join our channel (@storypick) and never miss another great story.


© 2022 Storypick Media Private Limited
More stories to check out before you go
The love of parents for their child is unparalleled. There is no denying that a parent will do anything to protect their child from harm and try to equip them as best as possible for the challenges of the world. However, subjecting a child to brutality is not a part of that preparation.
But that’s the view a couple who turned their daughter into a ‘sex slave’ seems to hold.
As reported by the DailyMail , the girl was assaulted frequently from December 2016 to March 2017.
She also admitted that she herself was raped when she was 13-years-old and claimed that they were only training their daughter in advance for adult life. The couple believed that it was better for her to lose her virginity with her father than learn about sexual life in other ways.
Her grandmother and great-grandmother also lived in the same flat but denied having any knowledge of the assault. As per latest developments, the parents have now been stripped of their parental rights, which means they will never be allowed to raise a child again. The girl has been put in care.
I can’t imagine the monstrosity of such people who really believe in their twisted minds that they were preparing their daughter by subjecting her to such trauma. We hope they are aptly punished for their horrendous crime.



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She was a straight-A student, a child prodigy attending Harvard Extension courses, on her own at age 16 in Cambridge, Mass., in 1997. Her father, Port Townsend resident Bob Febos, couldn’t have …
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It wasn’t easy for Bob Febos to read “Whip Smart,” written by his daughter Melissa Febos. Now he’s just grateful her story didn’t end with her death.
She was a straight-A student, a child prodigy attending Harvard Extension courses, on her own at age 16 in Cambridge, Mass., in 1997. Her father, Port Townsend resident Bob Febos, couldn’t have been any prouder.
Bob Febos is still immeasurably proud of his daughter. You can see it in his face. But he worries that others will judge her. And that they will judge him as a parent.
Today, Melissa Febos, 29, is the author of the just-released memoir “Whip Smart” (St. Martin’s Press), in which she tells the story of her addiction to heroin and cocaine and her four years working as a dominatrix in a New York City midtown “dungeon.”
It’s a situation a lot of parents face, though perhaps not to this extreme: Learning that your child has done something you never imagined she had the capacity to do. Learning that she has suffered without your knowledge.
Febos discovered Melissa’s untoward private life on two separate occasions. The first revelation came on a day of celebration – Melissa’s 2003 summa cum laude graduation from The New School, a progressive university centered in Greenwich Village in New York City. As a large group of family and friends strolled down the sidewalk headed for a celebratory dinner, Melissa’s brother handed her a card.
The card was an original created by him; he already knew what his sister was up to. On it, he’d drawn a picture of her in a cap and gown holding a whip.
“She opened it up, and closed it really quickly,” said Bob. “I saw a glimpse of a whip and said, ‘What’s this all about?'
“She said, ‘Dad, I have something to tell you.’”
In awkward whispers, Melissa revealed where her income had been coming from. Up until then, Bob had been told she worked in the catering business.
Bob Febos wasn’t completely naive. He had, by coincidence, known a woman who had also been a dominatrix, and he’d run his friend through a host of questions. Febos already knew that dominatrices do not engage in sex with their clients, and he also knew what they did do – everything from role-playing to acts of borderline torture.
Melissa Febos, who had told her mother what she was up to before graduation day, said she wasn’t purposely keeping this information from her dad, a sea captain with the Merchant Marine. At the time, she said, she didn’t see him very often.
“I largely avoided the topic with both of my parents. I didn’t want to invite the opportunity to object to it.
“Also, he’s my father. I really didn’t know how he would react. I knew it could go one of two ways, so I was sort of stalling telling him.”
Did he ask her why she would want to be a dominatrix?
“She’s always been a bit of an explorer,” he said. “I guess my first reaction was, ‘There she is again, always having to push the edge, looking at all sides of life.’”
Neither Febos nor his former wife and good friend, Nancy, learned of Melissa’s drug addiction until the book was in the proofing stage. Shortly before Father’s Day 2009, Melissa sent galley copies to each parent with an email that said there was a lot she hadn’t told them, and that it would be hard for them. Melissa told them to take all the time they needed, and she would understand if they weren’t able to talk to her for a while.
“I read [the book], and I thought, that can’t be true. I was shocked by what I found. I was truly a wreck for three weeks,” said Bob, who flew to New York and talked to Melissa for nine hours straight.
“I told her about how my heart was broken. First of all, my image of myself as a father was completely turned upside down. To find out my daughter was in so much trouble – deep trouble – and I didn’t even know about it. How could I have missed this?
“It’s heartbreaking to find out that you let your children down. That’s how I took it. I think I’m a little beyond that now, but I really felt that at the time.
“I also believed that we had a different relationship. I had no idea there was so much secrecy. I thought we were close – that we had a nice father-daughter relationship – and that was blown out of the water as well."
As a parent, Bob Febos had discussed drugs and sex with his kids; his own father was an abusive and violent alcoholic. He warned Melissa that marijuana took away ambition in developmental years and that she might be genetically predisposed toward addiction with other drugs.
“It was so important to me to live my life differently, to show my kids a much better way, so to then have addiction come back and hit me in the face through my [daughter] – it was stunning,” he said.
Melissa began doing drugs while going to Harvard, and it was a boyfriend who introduced her to intravenous drug use. That same boyfriend appeared uninvited at the book-release party on March 14 in New York City, a “total wreck.”
“That was a surreal experience,” said Melissa. “Intense. And sad.”
In retrospect, of course, Bob Febos questions if he made the right decisions. Sure, it was a little early for a kid to leave home – in Falmouth, Mass. – when they let her go at 16, but Melissa Febos wasn’t just any kid. She wrote her first book at age 8, starred as a solo puppeteer emcee for television at 12, and never gave him or his ex-wife cause to worry beyond normal pre-teen rebellion.
Besides, they might not have been able to hold her back if they’d tried.
“I never asked them what they thought,” said Melissa Febos. “It wasn’t really up for discussion. I had always sort of been that way. Make a big decision and then inform them of it.
“I think my parents did an amazing job, and I can’t think of anything they could have done differently that could have changed my experience.
“I regret the pain I caused them. It was through no fault of theirs."
Bob Febos is still coming to terms with his daughter’s story, yet he is pleased with the reaction thus far to her book. Melissa was recently interviewed by Terry Gross on NPR and is engaged in a multi-city book tour.
He’s also thankful and wants other parents to make note of his experience.
“When your child is excelling, you’re not looking for trouble. But don’t make assumptions.
"While I’m sitting here fretting over what the world may think of my daughter or of myself as a parent, I could just as easily be visiting her grave.
“That could be my reality right now, and I don’t want that to be anyone else’s reality. That’s why I’m doing the interview. I was lucky.”
And so was Melissa. Less than 10 percent of heroin addicts find recovery. Soon, Melissa will celebrate seven years of being clean and sober.


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