Consensual genital torment, gender-inclusive — cock-and-ball (CBT) and clit-and-vulva (CPT) as the same principles, built on Clips & Clamps. The torment families and the safety spine: testicular torsion as a surgical emergency, circulation and duration limits, the vasovagal and cardiac trigger, and strangulation and priapism. Breath play combined with genital torture, genital needles, and urethral work are excluded and cross-referenced out.
Off The Traxx · Deeper Cuts
Genital Torment: CBT & CPT
The same dials, two bodies, no default — pressure and stretch and clamps and heat on the most nerve-rich, most delicate tissue there is.
This is edge play. It is also, at heart, a set of principles — pressure, stretching, torsion, impact, clamps, temperature, stinging — aimed at the most sensitive and most fragile tissue on the body. The principles are the same whether the target is cock-and-balls or clit-and-vulva, which is why this class teaches both side by side, and why the line that governs it has to lead before anything else does.
This is edge play built on top of clamp work, and it carries the hardest stops in the catalogue.
• Testicular torsion is a SURGICAL EMERGENCY. Twisting or torquing the balls — or even a too-tight ball stretcher worn while asleep — can twist the spermatic cord and cut off the blood supply to a testicle. Sudden severe testicular or scrotal pain with swelling means the emergency room within hours, or the testicle is lost.
• Circulation and duration are watched on EVERY clamp, weight, ring, and stretcher. Color change, coldness, or numbness is a stop — take it off now. There is no safe fixed duration.
• Severe genital pain can faint a person or stress a heart. Go slow, build up, and do all heavy work with the bottom seated or lying down so a faint cannot become a fall.
• Breath play combined with genital torment is an OTT do-not. Named here so it is unmistakable; not taught (§ IX).
This class assumes Clips & Clamps as its prerequisite, and it does not re-teach what that class owns: clamp mechanics, the circulation-and-duration physiology, the color-watch rule, removal craft, the intensity levers, and the chain as a control. It takes all of that as known and applies it to the genitals, then adds the genital-specific layer on top. Clips & Clamps already names the genitals as the shortest-leash sites on the body and already says never weight a genital clamp — this class extends those rules, it never contradicts them. If the clamp fundamentals feel hazy, go back to the prerequisite before this one.
Genital torment is a set of principles, not a male activity. CBT is cock-and-ball torment, CPT is clit-and-vulva torment, and the same dials apply to both bodies, authored here with no male default. You will see that frame struck once and then carried as a callback — the families below all work on both bodies, and where one does not transfer, the class says so plainly rather than inventing a false equivalent.
The backbone source for the cock-and-ball half is male-centric — and its own foreword notes the techniques translate to other genital anatomy, describing workshop tops adapting them for female partners. The CPT material here is real anatomy, grounded in homology, not analogy. The glans clitoris maps to the glans penis, the vestibular bulbs to the bulb of the penis, the labia majora to the scrotum, the labia minora to the ventral shaft — all built from the same embryonic genital tubercle and labioscrotal folds. Same nerve density, same erectile engorgement, same delicacy. That homology is why the dials carry over.
Negotiate a safeword — an agreed word that means “stop now” — before any toy touches the genitals. Use a running scene voice that doubles as the safeword (a partner answering in character means all is well, a partner using your name means stop and listen), and tops need safewords too. Because intense genital play drops people deep and fast, also agree a nonverbal signal — a dropped object, a repeated tap, a hand squeeze — for when speech is gone. Negotiate good-pain versus bad-pain in advance, name the genital-specific fear, and never surprise anyone with genital pain (§ IX).
Genital torment can surface buried emotional material with no warning — a primal castration or mutilation fear sits close to the surface here. That is normal, not a failure, and you have permission to stop, skip, or come back another night. § IX covers how to land it.
One honesty note on scope. This is educational material for vetted adults that supports real-world judgment and hands-on mentorship and replaces neither — and it is not therapy. A few things are flagged here as advanced and deliberately not taught: genital needles, urethral work, and the breath-play combination. Read about them so you recognise the boundary, and learn the gated and medical material in person, from the classes that own it.
What you’ll be able to do
By the end of this lesson, you’ll be able to…
- Map the safety-relevant anatomy of both bodies — including the spermatic cord and the off-limits vestibule — and explain the homology that makes the dials transfer.
- Apply the torment families — crushing, stretching, torsion, light impact, clamps-and-weights, temperature, and stinging — to cock-and-balls and to clit-and-vulva with no male default.
- Recognise testicular torsion as a surgical emergency and respond with the absolute hard stop and the right cross-ref.
- Govern every clamp, weight, ring, and stretcher by color and sensation rather than the clock, and release on a color change, coldness, or numbness.
- Pace a build-back around the vasovagal risk — warm up first, seat or lay the bottom down for heavy work, and bring weight only after warm-up.
- State the hard exclusions — breath-play combination, genital needles, urethral sounding — and cross-reference each to where it lives.
- Land intense genital play with tissue-specific aftercare and the right hand-off for the rest of the comedown and any crisis response.
Here is the shape of what follows. We open with the anatomy and the safety map for both bodies, then walk the torment families one at a time — crushing, stretching, the torsion family carried with its surgical-emergency caution, light impact, the clamps-and-weights application layer, and the temperature-and-stinging games. From there: the gender-neutral implement kit, the safety spine as its own prominent section, the hard exclusions stated and cross-referenced out, and finally negotiation, the build-back, and the aftercare this class owns.
In this lesson: anatomy and the safety map (§ I) · crushing and pressure (§ II) · stretching and distention (§ III) · torsion and twisting (§ IV) · light impact (§ V) · clamps, clothespins, and weights (§ VI) · temperature and stinging games (§ VII) · the implement family (§ VIII) · the safety spine (§ IX) · hard exclusions (§ X) · negotiation, build-back, and aftercare (§ XI).
I.Anatomy & the Safety Map for Both Bodies
Know the terrain before you touch it — including the one structure the whole safety spine is built around.
You cannot torment tissue safely that you cannot name. So before any dial gets turned, here is the map for each body, with the safety hazards flagged where they live.
The CBT body
The penis has its surface landmarks — shaft, glans, corona, the sensitive frenum on the underside, and the urethral meatus — over the erectile tissue (the corpus cavernosum and corpus spongiosum) that fills with blood for an erection. The testicles are semi-firm, oval bodies that are designed to move freely in the scrotum: that mobility is a protective feature that helps them slip away from a squeeze or a strike, not a target to defeat. The scrotum is very elastic, loose skin. And inside sit the fragile structures — the epididymis and the vas deferens — which are easily injured by crushing or twisting.
Each testicle hangs from a spermatic cord — a bundle of the artery, vein, and nerve running up to the inguinal ring. Twisting that cord is torsion, and torsion is the surgical emergency this whole class is paced around (§ IV, § IX). The torsion family is taught as something to recognise, not a technique to chase.
The CPT body
The vulva is the whole external structure, not a single spot. It includes the mons pubis (a fatty cushion over the pubic bone), the labia majora (loose outer folds — the scrotum-homologue, which engorge with blood when aroused), the labia minora (thin, delicate inner folds that encircle the clitoral hood), and the clitoris. The glans clitoris is the only externally visible part, it is erectile, its glans is the glans-penis homologue, and it is innervated by roughly eight thousand nerve endings — the most nerve-rich and most fragile target on either body. Around it sit the clitoral hood and frenulum, and beneath the surface the erectile vestibular bulbs.
The urethral opening and the vaginal opening sit in the vestibule — the smooth area between the inner labia — and they are not torment targets. Insertion of anything is Medical Play 201, cross-referenced out (§ X). The vestibule is also a no-go for the stinging-cream family (§ VII): those rubs must never touch the urethral or vaginal opening.
Arousal engorges both bodies with blood, and that engorgement MASKS edema and swelling. Tissue that looks merely aroused can already be in trouble. This is the through-line the circulation rules in the safety spine make absolute: when a read is ambiguous, you take the toy off. And the shortest-leash principle from the prerequisite holds — genitals get the closest color-watch and the shortest time limit of any tissue, they can dusky-out and read worse in dim play light, so the scene is lit and checked every few minutes.
The homology, at a glance
Glans clitoris ↔ glans penis. Vestibular bulbs ↔ bulb of the penis. Labia majora ↔ scrotum. Labia minora ↔ ventral shaft. The fatty, forgiving outer tissue (mons, outer labia, scrotum) is the warm-up zone on both bodies; the nerve-dense core organ (clitoris, testicle) never is.
What transfers, what doesn’t
Pressure, stretch, impact, clamps, weights, temperature, and stinging transfer directly. Torsion does not — there is no cord or testicle on the vulva, so that family is CBT-specific and the class says so rather than faking a match.
II.Crushing, Pressure & Compression
Squeeze the forgiving flesh that surrounds the engine — never the engine itself.
This family is pinching, squeezing, and mashing — small areas or whole structures. The governing rule is one sentence: pressure goes on the surrounding, forgiving flesh, never directly on the delicate core organ. Crushing the testicles directly, or the clitoris directly, is the hard never of this family. Compression is fine; crushing the core organ causes permanent damage.
CBT technique
A graduated testicle squeeze, done by hand with extreme care, is the gentlest form — and hands, used with care, are the most controllable tool you have. From there the gear includes the ball vise or twitch (the “ball crusher,” a veterinary tool repurposed) and tit-press-style bar clamps. A useful trick makes whole-structure compression both safer and more controllable: wind an elastic or ACE bandage around the balls first to immobilize them so they cannot roll out from under the pressure, then apply the press on top.
The twitch seats above the testicles and is clamped so it cannot slip down over them. The weight of the twitch — and anything hung from it — does the crushing, NOT its jaws. The jaws are never tightened down onto the testicles themselves; doing so causes serious damage. Mis-taught, this device injures; understood, it is a controllable weight-fixture (§ VI).
CPT transfer
Graduated finger pressure on the mons and the outer labia majora — the forgiving, fatty, scrotum-equivalent surface — is the natural warm-up zone, alongside gentle whole-fold compression of the labia majora. The fatty, loose tissue takes pressure the way the scrotum does. The clitoris does not.
Surrounding flesh, yes. Core organ, no. The testicle and the clitoris are the engine, not the brake pad — you press what cushions them, never what is them.
III.Stretching & Distention
Both bodies carry very elastic skin — which takes stretch dramatically, and tears more easily for it.
The scrotum and the labia majora are both very elastic, both engorge under arousal, and both take stretch dramatically — stretched skin goes shiny and smooth.
CBT implements
Ball stretchers — leather, rubber, or steel straps that push the testes away from the body — are the core tool; start small and work up. The body is not used to having the testes held far from the base, so the sensation carries a pseudo-castration charge that is part of the appeal — negotiated in advance, never sprung. Beyond them sit ball stocks, rope ball-stretchers (a smooth nylon cord wrapped to the same effect), and parachutes — a conical collar fastened at the top of the scrotum, built to hang weight, which bridges straight into the clamps-and-weights family (§ VI).
CPT transfer
Gentle traction on the labia majora and minora, and a light clamp-and-pull on the labial folds — the same push-and-stretch idea applied to the scrotum-homologue and the thin inner folds. Kept gentle, because the labia minora are delicate.
The key safety crossover, true for both bodies: stretched skin punctures and tears far more easily than relaxed skin. Anything with a point or an edge near stretched tissue — a skewer, an alligator tooth, a Wartenberg wheel — is now a skin-break risk it would not be on slack skin. Be extra careful, and if skin breaks, treat it as a bloodborne exposure (§ VIII, § X).
Never leave a stretcher on long, and never let a bottom fall asleep in one. Prolonged wear breaks down scrotal (and labial) tissue toward permanent distention — and a too-tight stretcher worn while asleep is one of the documented routes to torsion, which hands straight to the next family.
IV.Torsion & Twisting
The most dangerous family in the class — taught to recognise and avoid, not to chase.
This family carries the single worst outcome in the catalogue, so it is taught mostly as the thing to recognise and avoid. A little goes a very long way, and the lesson here is restraint.
The CBT physiology: twisting tends to apply to the balls, bending to the penis — and a hard cock bends and breaks far more easily than a soft one (penile fracture lives in the impact family, § V). Everything down there is attached, and you want it to stay that way. Twisting the balls torques the spermatic cord, the structure flagged in the anatomy map (§ I).
Torquing the balls — or even a too-tight ball stretcher worn while asleep — can twist the cord and cut off the testicle’s blood supply. This is torsion, a surgical emergency. The recognition signs and the full response live in the safety spine (§ IX), and the crisis protocol cross-refs out to Scene Emergencies & Response. Here it is enough to know: this family is where you teach a partner to stop early, not to discover the limit.
The CPT side
There is no testicle and no cord on the vulva, so torsion is a CBT-specific family. The transferable principle for the vulva is gentle twisting or torquing of the outer labial folds only, never the clitoris.
Because the worst case here is the loss of an organ, this is the family where the craft is knowing when to not. Read the cord, stop early, and never go hunting for the edge.
V.Light Impact
Light only — the striking craft belongs to Impact 201; this class owns the gauge.
Light impact only — slapping, tapping, light flogging of cock and balls, or of vulva and clitoral hood. The actual striking craft — stance, arc, aim, throw — is owned by Impact 201 and is cross-referenced out. This class teaches only what is genital-specific.
The implements, gender-neutral: small soft doeskin floggers (too soft to do damage), rubber bungee whips (they sting like bee stings — start slow), and bamboo skewers or slim knitting needles used as slappers on the shaft or fold side, never as a point.
Hold the bottom’s genitals in your own free hand and strike your hand at the same instant you strike them. You feel through your own hand exactly how hard you are hitting, and that calibration is what makes light impact stay light. Combine the feel in your hand with the bottom’s reactions and you build a precise sense of how to land each blow.
Risks for both bodies: bruising, welts, edema, and thrombosed surface veins (superficial phlebitis) — manageable but real. A hard blow to an erect penis can cause penile fracture — an emergency room problem; recognise it by an audible crack, immediate pain, and loss of erection (§ IX). Any thrombosed vein or new hard painful lump gets watched and assessed. The striking craft and the full injury picture are Impact 201.
VI.Clamps, Clothespins & Weights
The application layer — everything Clips & Clamps taught you, now placed on genitals.
Clamp mechanics, the five intensity levers, the chain as a control, the zipper, the removal-hurts physiology, and the color-watch rule all belong to Clips & Clamps and are taken as known; here they go on the genitals.
Placement, both bodies
Clothespins on scrotum and foreskin, on labia and clitoral hood; commercial clamps; clovers that self-tighten when pulled. The fold rule and the weight discipline are Clips & Clamps’ — here, applied to genitals: a partner gets a real intensity dial from placement alone, without reaching for tighter gear.
Weights, done right
Hang weights from a twitch, a ball stretcher, or a parachute. The prerequisite’s weight rules apply unchanged here: start tiny and add incrementally, never weight a genital clamp directly, and lift the weight off before you unclip the clamp so the clamp never takes the full drop. For CPT, the same idea: small weights from labial clamps, same start-tiny, same lift-before-unclip discipline.
A metal twitch is a better weight-fixture than a parachute, because under load a parachute can stretch and let a testicle slip through — an effect described as feeling like being kicked in the groin. When you are hanging weight, choose the fixture that cannot fail open.
Never weight a genital clamp directly. Color and sensation govern, not the clock; genitals get the shortest leash of any site — minutes, not the loose-clamp backstop (see Clips & Clamps). Watch the color the whole time, and let nothing binding stay on overnight or while asleep (§ IX).
VII.Temperature & Stinging Games
Two transferable sub-families — and one chemical hazard that means you cannot abruptly stop.
Two gender-neutral sub-families live here. One: temperature. Cool steel or cloth-wrapped ice for contrast, and warm — never hot — wax to the genitals via the Wax Play cross-ref, which owns hot wax on the body. Ice always goes in cloth and comes off the moment the area numbs — frostbite is the risk.
Two: stinging creams and menthol games. Mentholated or icy-hot rubs give a cool tingle; capsaicin or cinnamon hot rubs give a burn. The appeal is a slow-building heat the bottom cannot escape — which is also exactly the danger.
These creams are oil-based, do not wash off easily, and can cause genuine chemical burns. They must NEVER touch mucous membranes, the vestibule, the urethral or vaginal opening, the eyes, or broken skin. They are not a lube and are not condom-safe.
The safe procedure: wear gloves to apply, then remove the gloves before touching anything else — you forget what is on your hands and rub an eye. And because oil-based rubs cannot be washed off fast (even soap and hot water struggle), this is a scene you cannot abruptly stop — so you start small and commit slowly.
For a water-soluble form on either body, toothpaste or a menthol-only rub gives the cool tingle and washes off easily — the gentle entry to the stinging game. Hot-wax intensity itself stays in Wax Play.
VIII.The Implement Family
Hands first, gear second — and shears and pliers always within reach.
Hands first, and not as a platitude: hands are the cheapest and most effective tool of all. Pressure, squeeze, twist, slap, and stroke need no gear, and a partner should be fluent with hands before reaching for hardware.
The kit, synthesized gender-neutrally: clothespins; alligator and commercial clamps (cover or pad the teeth); ball stretchers and labial-traction gear; the twitch (ball crusher); parachutes; cock rings, cages, and labial or clit-hood rings (constriction — see the strangulation and priapism caution in § IX); rope for genital bondage (thin, smooth nylon); elastic and ACE bandages; soft doeskin and rubber bungee whips; bamboo skewers; Wartenberg wheels and Velcro for sensation; and blindfolds.
Spiked or Kali’s-teeth-style rings are advanced and caution-only, never a beginner toy. Pervertibles — small C-clamps, dog collars repurposed as genital bondage — appear in the community kit, but they carry the same skin-break and circulation rules as everything else, and a C-clamp is never tightened fully closed.
Any implement with teeth or points — alligator clamps, Wartenberg wheels, Velcro, spiked rings — is treated as a skin-break risk on delicate genital tissue. Pad the teeth, or keep them off the genitals entirely. If skin breaks, that is a bloodborne exposure and cross-refs to Bloodborne & Aseptic — not an invitation to do needle play (§ X).
Keep heavy-duty EMT or bandage shears AND pliers within arm’s reach for fast emergency release of rings, cords, and clamps. And the duration rule that governs the whole family: color and sensation govern, not the clock — genitals get the shortest leash of any site, and nothing binding stays on overnight or while asleep.
| Device | Family | Both bodies? | Watch for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ball stretcher | Stretching | CBT | Start small; never long, never asleep — a route to torsion. |
| Twitch (ball crusher) | Crushing / weight-fixture | CBT | Weight crushes, not the jaws; seats above the testicles. |
| Parachute | Stretching / weights | CBT | Can let a testicle slip through under load — prefer a twitch for weight. |
| Clamps / clothespins | Clamps | Both | Never weighted directly; shortest leash; closest color watch. |
| Labial / clit-hood traction | Stretching | CPT | Inner folds are delicate — keep it gentle. |
| Cock ring / cage / labial ring | Constriction | Both | Stuck-ring and priapism risk; size up when between sizes; keep shears and pliers near. |
| Spiked / Kali’s-teeth ring | Constriction | Advanced | Caution-only; never a beginner toy. |
| Bungee whip / doeskin flogger | Light impact | Both | Stings hard — start slow; use the hand-gauge. |
IX.The Safety Spine
Four danger families that every torment family above bends back to.
Recognition: sudden, severe testicular or scrotal pain with swelling, usually with nausea or vomiting, is torsion until proven otherwise. Response: the emergency room within hours — the testicle is lost if the cord is not untwisted in time. Do not wait it out. Do not assume infection — torsion is often misdiagnosed as epididymitis, and antibiotics do nothing for it — and be frank with the doctor. Related CBT emergencies to recognise: penile fracture (audible crack, immediate pain — emergency room) and any new hard painful lump in the scrotum (a hematocele — get it assessed). The crisis protocol cross-refs out to Scene Emergencies & Response.
State it absolutely: there is NO safe fixed duration; color and sensation govern, not the clock. Skin that stays white, or turns blue, grey, or dusky, or that will not pink back when pressed and released (poor capillary refill) means circulation is cut off — release now. Coldness, numbness, or pins-and-needles in the bound part — release now. Genitals dusky-out faster and read worse in dim light — this lesson’s own dark aesthetic works against you here — so light the scene, check every few minutes, keep genitals on the shortest leash of any site, never weight a genital clamp, and never let a bottom sleep in a stretcher or ring. Arousal-engorgement masks edema — when in doubt, take it off. (The physiology is owned by Clips & Clamps.)
Severe genital pain — this is extremely nerve-rich tissue — can provoke a vasovagal response (fainting, a sudden blood-pressure and heart-rate drop) and in rare cases can stress or stop a heart. Go slow, build incrementally, and do heavy genital work with the bottom seated or supine and well-supported so a faint cannot cause a fall onto rigging. Watch the warning signs — lightheadedness, pallor, sweating, nausea, grey-out. This is why the build-back is paced (§ XI) and heavy weights come only after warm-up, never cold.
Constriction-device emergencies. A cock ring or cage, or a tight labial or clit-hood ring, can swell shut into a stuck ring — treat this as an emergency, not a home project. Use shears or pliers to cut it off if you safely can. If it will not come off quickly, go to the emergency room; while arranging that you can lie down and cool the area with an ice pack wrapped in a towel to ease swelling, but do not keep struggling with it and do not let constriction continue. Priapism — a painful, unwanted erection that will not subside, especially one lasting four hours or more — is a medical emergency with a permanent-damage risk: recognise it, do not self-manage, go to the emergency room. Do not wait it out past four hours. Keep shears and pliers within reach, and choose a ring a size up when between sizes — too tight is far worse than slightly loose.
Every torment family above bends back to these four. Torsion governs § IV and § III. Circulation governs § VI and any bondage. Vasovagal governs pacing and seated-for-heavy-work in § XI. Entrapment and priapism govern every constriction device in § VIII.
X.Hard Exclusions
Naming the line is part of competent practice — here is exactly where the gated material lives.
Stacking breath play or asphyxiation on top of genital pain multiplies the vasovagal, cardiac, and loss-of-consciousness risk, and it is outside OTT’s hard line. Cross-referenced out to the do-not list; no technique is described.
Do not teach play piercing of the scrotum or labia (butterflying), needle work on the genitals, or injection into the testicles. This is a hard boundary, cross-referenced out to Needle & Play Piercing and Medical Play 201, gated as beyond this class. If a clamp or implement accidentally breaks skin or draws blood, that is a bloodborne exposure handled via Bloodborne & Aseptic — not a doorway into needle play.
Do not teach insertion of anything into the urethra (sounds, catheters) or saline infusion. The urethra is extremely delicate, easily torn or scarred, and a route to bladder and kidney infection; the vestibule’s urethral and vaginal openings are not torment targets (§ I). Cross-ref Medical Play 201 out. Cutting and blood go to Trace & Blood Play.
And the bridge between the kit and these exclusions, restated: anything with teeth or points on delicate genital tissue is a skin-break risk — pad it or keep it off. An accidental break is an exposure to manage, never a license to escalate into excluded play. The cross-refs tell a vetted member exactly where the gated, advanced, and medical material lives.
XI.Negotiation, the Build-Back & Aftercare
The primal charge, the paced build, and the genital-tissue landing this class owns.
Genital torment carries a primal castration or mutilation fear — a piquant spice in small doses that can tip into genuine panic in larger ones. Negotiate it explicitly and in advance: the context (play, punishment, ordeal, or reward), the pain levels, and the genital-specific fear itself. Never surprise someone with genital pain, and never bring a knife or blade anywhere near the genitals without it having been negotiated first.
During the scene, keep a running dialogue — scene voice doubling as the safeword, a nonverbal backup for when speech is gone, and a reminder that tops need safewords too. Read good-pain versus bad-pain: good pain is painful-and-positive, like scratching a sunburn; bad pain registers as harm and needs to stop. Watch the nonverbal cues — winces, breath-holding, clenching, pallor, the grey-out.
The build-back — tied to the vasovagal rule
Pace it. Warm up the forgiving tissue first — mons and outer labia, scrotum — build incrementally, and bring the heavy weights and intense compression only after warm-up, never cold. And do the heavy work seated or supine so a faint cannot become a fall (§ IX).
Call a time-out immediately. Remove bondage and toys gently, ground and reassure, and do not push or problem-solve in the moment — intense play can surface buried material, and the response is nurturing, not analysis. Have them sit or lie down, sit with them, and let it be what it is.
Keep the bottom warm — cold ends the scene and slows tissue recovery. Offer water, hold quietly, and watch the tender tissue as it comes down. Carry any post-scene numbness or tingling that does not fade into a watch-and-follow-up flag — it can signal a circulation or nerve problem, and if it does not settle, it gets looked at.
The full drop, sub-drop, top-drop, and next-day check-in toolkit is owned by Aftercare 101. The crisis-response procedures for torsion, priapism, the vasovagal drop, and a stuck ring are owned by Scene Emergencies & Response. This class teaches recognition, the hard stop, and the genital-tissue and emotional-material landing — and hands the rest to those classes.
XII.Where Next
Where this class points — the prerequisite, the cross-refs, and the gated material.
- Prerequisite — Clips & Clamps: clamp mechanics, the circulation-and-duration physiology, the color-watch rule, and removal craft. Everything in this class builds on it.
- For the striking craft — Impact 201: the impact technique beyond the genital hand-gauge.
- For temperature and wax — Wax Play: hot wax on the body.
- For the crisis response — Scene Emergencies & Response: the actual procedures for torsion, priapism, the vasovagal drop, and a stuck ring.
- For the comedown — Aftercare 101: the full drop, sub-drop, top-drop, and next-day check-in toolkit.
- If skin breaks — Bloodborne & Aseptic: the exposure steps for any clamp or implement that draws blood.
- Gated, beyond this class — Needle & Play Piercing and Medical Play 201: genital needles, injection, urethral sounding, and saline.
And when you are ready to play, remember the spine: color and sensation govern, torsion is the emergency, and the dials are the same for both bodies. Warm up the forgiving flesh, build slowly and seated, and when a read is ambiguous — take it off.