Water Torture Bondage

Water Torture Bondage




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Water Torture Bondage

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The video features a slim, dark-haired woman who is totally naked, her ankles, wrists and neck bound by thick rope. A burly man subjects her to garden-variety BDSM torture — light flogging, bondage, forced orgasm — before tying her to a large wooden plank.
He starts to drip water onto a thick grey cloth over the woman’s mouth from a wide-mouthed water bottle. Her body starts convulsing, her extremities flopping wildly. When the man removes her cloth, her shrieks and grunts turn into sobs.
For even the most seasoned kink connoisseur, the clip can be disturbing to watch. For a brief moment, it appears to cross the already-blurry line between pain and pleasure, into genuinely terrifying, life-threatening territory.
That’s because the clip is a depiction of waterboarding, a highly controversial interrogation tactic that is banned by the Geneva Convention and classified as a form of torture by the United Nations.
Waterboarding involves dripping water over a person’s face while a piece of cloth covers their mouth, effectively preventing them from breathing.
“You’ve got restricted air flow, and when you try and breathe in, you breathe in water. Your carbon dioxide levels fall and that makes you want to breathe faster,” says Coral Dando, PhD, a professor of psychology at the University of Westminster who studies the efficacy and psychology of torture.
“You get the perception of drowning when you’re not.”
Although waterboarding has its roots in the fourteenth century and was used during the Spanish Inquisition , it is perhaps best known as an interrogation tactic used on al-Qaeda suspects during President George W. Bush’s administration.
In 2009, President Obama signed an executive order banning all forms of torture by US government officials, and it has also been banned for use among military trainees since 2007.
When Elise Graves, the dark-haired woman in the clip and a Bay Area bondage enthusiast, first agreed to be waterboarded for the Kink.com clip, she was aware of its history as a torture method. But she didn’t find it terrifying. For the most part, she says, she found it a turn-on.
“ I find the combination of adrenaline and some anxiety or fear, plus exhibitionism, to be sexy, so that whole combination of things worked for me in an arousing way for sure,” she tells Rolling Stone .
She compares it to “something that’s scary but fun, like rock-climbing or skiing.”
In the BDSM and kink community, consensual waterboarding is alive and well.
“I would say it’s more commonly requested and more popular than one would expect,” says Mistress Couple, a New York-based dominatrix and House Mistress of La Domaine Esemar dungeon.
For some, the fact that it is a well-known form of torture and a hot-button political issue is almost icing on the cake. In BDSM, says Couple, “things that exist in the public consciousness and are talked about in politics show up in people’s fantasies all the time.”
That’s not to say, however, that waterboarding is uncontroversial. Within the BDSM community, which highly prioritizes consent and safety, it’s considered a form of “edge play” — or an activity at the riskier end of the spectrum that could potentially result in serious injury.
When done improperly (for instance, if someone is not properly elevated) or for an extended period of time, waterboarding can result in vomit aspiration or oxygen deprivation, which can result in brain damage or death.
“It is incredibly dangerous and there are many, many things that can go wrong,” says Couple, who does not practice waterboarding but has seen it being done at supervised play parties.
There are also many psychological consequences of waterboarding, ranging from long-term memory issues to depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, says Dando. But it’s unclear whether someone consenting to being waterboarded would be vulnerable to such consequences.
“Torture is a process whereby I’m in control of what you can and can’t do, and I’m going to use that control to make you do something you don’t want to do,” she says.
“If people are consenting to it for their own excitement and joy, then I’m not sure those conditions would be in place.”
In the context of shooting a BDSM porn scene, production companies will establish various safeguards to reduce the intensity of the experience.
“Since the goal is the feeling of helplessness in the context of a BDSM scene, not the actual inherent danger of making the submissive inhale water, vomit, or suffer traumatic stress, the techniques are necessarily less extreme,” says Alison Boden, CEO of Kink.com.
“The feeling of pouring water down a wet cloth on the face can be very intense by itself and doesn’t necessarily require the [subordinate]’s body to be inclined in a way that would cause it to go up their nose or in their mouth, for example.”
Performers frequently check in with each other before, during, and after the act, and additionally, there is always a signal or safe word established to indicate when a performer has reached their limits. (In Graves’s case, for instance, she held a metal pipe in her hand, which she dropped whenever things got too intense during the shoot.)
“A lot of people aren’t aware of the care going into shooting these scenes,” says Tommy Pistol, who has shot a handful of waterboarding scenes for Kink.com.
“We know what we’re walking into, and we don’t want anyone to walk away hurt [or to] put their lives at risk. Everything we do is to a point. It’s a fantasy.”
But the fact that these conversations may be edited out of the final cut can pose a problem for kinksters interested in trying this type of risky play at home (despite the presence of strongly worded disclaimers from Kink urging viewers against doing so).
Legally speaking, activities like consensual waterboarding occupy somewhat of a grey area.
While the law varies state by state, “if a serious bodily injury was suffered, it doesn’t matter whether you consented. You can’t consent to an injury,” says Dick Cunningham, legal counsel for the National Coalition of Sexual Freedom.
While Kink.com requires performers to sign releases before shoots, thus largely absolving them of legal responsibility. However, a spokesperson for Kink also said that the company is no longer producing waterboarding scenes.
The legalities of waterboarding in one’s private life are more complicated.
If something goes wrong, and two parties do not have a written contract on hand, “it’s hard to say whether the person did consent, or whether they understood the risks involved, so it’s all very complex legal stuff,” says Couple.
For this reason, Couple advises that those who are interested in waterboarding do so “with partners that you have established a great deal of trust with and are very experienced with — not only with the activity, but with you and your flight and fight response in particular,” she says.
“It’s very important when you’re engaging in these types of activities that your partner knows what your trauma response is going to be.”
But this is not always possible, particularly on porn sets, where actors may be meeting their scene partners for the first time on the day of the shoot.
Pistol says that while performers always agree on what acts they are and aren’t willing to perform long before they come to set, it’s not unusual to be asked to engage in an act like waterboarding with someone you’ve never met before.
He also says that, unlike at supervised BDSM play parties, where there is often a medic on site, there usually isn’t a trained medical professional to supervise the action on porn sets.
Graves, who has been on both the giving and receiving end of waterboarding multiple times, says her experience shooting waterboarding scenes has been uniformly positive, and that she has always had nothing but the utmost trust in her scene partners.
When asked if she believes waterboarding is a form of torture in a military context, her answer is unambiguous.
“For sure it is,” she says. “I honestly cannot imagine how scary it would be in even a remotely more out-of-control environment. It’s scary within the best context ever.”
But in consensual and supervised conditions, Graves views the act not just as a turn-on, but as an expression of trust and intimacy.
“For me, that’s ultimately the real appeal: a scenario in which I or another person is made vulnerable and trusts another person to take care of them, and they do,” she says.
“So that circle is complete, where one person trusts another and the other person is trustable. So it’s a very bonding experience.”

By Jason Candanedo May 7, 2014 Updated: February 18, 2016 8 Comments 11 Mins Read
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Water, with all of its life-affirming and throat-quenching qualities, is seemingly quite benign. But in the wrong hands, water can bring death upon any poor soul who is subjected to its deadly power . Our humble race has found many a way to use water against each other, for the purpose of causing as much pain as possible. Here are some of the worst.
Strongly associated with the Bush and Cheney years , waterboarding has actually been around since 16th century Europe. We heard the term so much in recent years, yet many never really knew what it entailed. Far too many, in fact, dismissed it as a possible form of torture by scoffing, “it’s just water.”
It’s so much more though. Waterboarding involves strapping somebody to a table on their back, causing them to become immobile. Afterwards, a cloth is placed over their eyes, nose and mouth. When they are nice and secure, the torturer proceeds to pour water directly onto the face, in intervals. This gives the poor victim the unpleasant sensation of being underwater and drowning ever so slowly.
The worst part though, is the in-between moments of alleviation for the victim, when the water stops pouring. This momentary relief is just a mirage, meant to break them psychologically, as they go right back to drowning again. This process is repeated until the victim completely submits.
“Chinese water torture” is actually something of a misnomer, since the practice actually has nothing to do with China . In actuality, the origins of its name can be traced back to magician Harry Houdini’s stunt, the “Chinese Water Torture Cell.” In this stunt, Houdini entered a tank filled with water, upside down and bound, and had to make an escape before he died.
As a form of torture, this practice came about in 15th century Italy, by a lawyer (of course it would be a lawyer) named Hippolytus de Marsili . Marsili created the torture after witnessing a constant drip of water impacting a stone. And in that lawyer mind of his, the first thing he thought of was how this could be used on a human to torture a confession out of them.
The way the process works is to strap someone by their head and body, and on their back. Then, a simple drop of water would proceed to drip on the victim’s forehead. Sounds harmless, right? Well, it doesn’t seem so harmless when the victim is strapped for days at a time, with that drip of water never stopping. The torture is as psychological as it is physical, as the victim starts to see every drop coming, with the feeling magnified after every drip. It is even said that, after a long enough duration, the water starts to penetrate the skin. Now we know where the phrase “water on the brain” comes from.
The Salem Witch trials were an infamous time in early American colonial history, and came complete with its own form of torture . The inhumane practice known as dunking was used often against those accused of being witches. But the goal wasn’t to inflict pain, but rather to test, hence the term “ ordeal by water .”
The test went like this: a person accused of being a witch was tied to a chair and dunked into the water. If the victim floated, they were witches, as it was believed back then that all witches floated. Of course, virtually nobody could pass this test, since human bodies naturally float and all. The victim was never acquitted, thus prolonging the torture and ultimately condemning the victim.
In rare cases, the person would simply drown before they could be brought back up, which acquitted them of all charges or something. Water was the main judge here, as it was viewed as the ultimate holy purifier. In addition, if the torturers were not satisfied with the result, they would repeatedly dunk the victim, even strapping them to devices to accomplish this awful task.
A couple drips of boiling hot water on your skin sure is painful, right? Well, take that pain, and amplify it by about a million times. Welcome to being boiled alive . Brought to you by the sadistic minds of the Middle Ages, this torture was quite simple in its effectiveness. When it was time to boil somebody, a large cauldron was filled with cold or tepid water. After it was filled to the executioner’s heart’s content, the victim was inserted into the cauldron. Then, either a low flame was set for prolonged agony, or a higher flame for quicker torture gratification.
So why was the water cold or tepid to begin with? This was to ensure that the victim undergoes every stage of being cooked alive. In some circumstances, a small amount of water was placed in the cauldron. This gave the added effect of frying the victim. Fourth degree burns would occur, with deterioration of the skin and its layers. Then, the fat in the tissue would cook. After, the muscle underneath would start to show. Finally, the veins and arteries would pop, due to the heat.
Henry VIII made boiling to death an official punishment in England , and one of its earliest victims — the Bishop of Rochester’s murderer, Richard Rice — suffered so graphic an execution that pregnant women fainted at the sight and had to be carried away from the scene.
Talk about a misnomer, since about the only thing this torture cures is the disease of a long, fruitful life. The water cure method is somewhat similar to waterboarding in posture, as the victim is rendered immobile and on their back. But while waterboarding involves pouring water all over the victim’s face, the water cure involves pouring water straight down their throat. Over and over again, endlessly.
See, drinking too much water is in actuality a very, very bad thing, and can cause death. This is called “water intoxication,” the end game of the water cure. The mouth of the victim is pried open, and a funneling device is thrust into the throat. Water is then poured into the funnel and directly into the victim’s stomach. This is done until either the victim either dies from water intoxication or hemorrhages to death due to an eruption in the stomach.
Sometimes, the torturer would be creative and make the victim vomit all of the previously ingested water, so that the torture could be done ad infinitum. Think about that the next time you wax nostalgic about how much nicer people were back in the day.
During World War II, the Hungarian Nazi Party turned a regular 19th century villa in Budapest into something much more nefarious. Their administrative building is now referred to as “ the House of Terror ,” which sounds like a cheap thrill ride at a haunted theme park, but was unfortunately very real.
The House of Terror was replete with all kinds of tortures , including the water chamber. This was not an intricate or complicated method, but that doesn’t lessen its horror any. It was little more than large hole filled with ice cold water, with a small platform in the middle where the sleep-deprived victim was forced to stand. If the person became weak or fell asleep, they would fall, directly into the frozen water.
And this would be repeated time and again. To make matters worse, after Hungary was “liberated” by the Soviets, the Communists moved right into the House of Terror, taking over the lease from the Nazis, and resuming much of the torturous procedures from the previous regime.
Located deep within the isolated confines of Japanese-occupied Manchuria, China, Unit 731 was the brain child of evil genius Ishii Shiro. Shiro was a doctor by profession and, by all accounts, a nice guy and family man. But when it came time to ply his trade in Unit 731 , his Mr. Hyde was unleashed upon the World War II POWs and natives who he considered “logs,” to be used, burned and discarded.
Unit 731 was created to obtain vital medical data in a scientific environment. But when one examines the list of procedures, they read more like a madman’s to-do list, one that would make some medieval torture methods tame in comparison. One of the worst methods was the frostbite test . Manchuria gets very, very cold during the winter, and this did not escape Shiro at all. Taking advantage, he forced men and women to stand naked in the freezing cold, as soldiers doused the victim’s limbs with cold water, to speed up the onset of frostbite. This was done until the limbs were hard enough to elicit a ringing sound when they were hit with sticks. Afterwards, they would either have their limbs and fingers smashed off or immediately defrosted by hot water, which caused all of the flesh on the limbs to just slide off.
Post-war, Unit 731 went under, with any surviving subjects killed off. While some serving in the unit were executed, Shiro died from natural causes in Japan, after giving the US all of his data.
The more we learn about hazing, it seems less and less like innocent pranking, and far more like sadistic torture. Some of the tactics utilized in hazing have included physical beatings, sexual abuse, and deprivations.
But one case stands out in that it involved the usage of water. The Chi Tau fraternity in Chico State University, California, was described by police as something like a medieval castle dungeon, with the words, “In the basement, no one can hear you scream” scrawled all over the basement walls. This was the stage for the “initiation” of 21-year-old Matthew Carrington , on February 2nd, 2005. Carrington was forced to go into the basement and engage in rigorous calisthenics, surrounded by raw sewage that accumulated
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