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The BDSM Logo
The BDSM emblem has no "obvious" symbolism because it was created to be enigmatic. To the vanilla observer who
would be put off by BDSM, it is merely an attractive piece of jewelry. Thus, we can wear it freely as a friendly
salute, nod, and wink to other BDSMers we should happen to pass on the sidewalks and in the hallways of our
daily lives. To the insider, however, the emblem is full of meaning. The three divisions represent the various
threesomes of BDSM.
First of all, the three divisions of BDSM itself: B&D (Bondage and Discipline), D&S (Domination and Submission),
and S&M (Sadism and Masochism).
Secondly, the three-way creed of BDSM behavior: Safe, Sane, and Consentual.
Thirdly, the three divisions of our community: Tops, Bottoms, and Switches.
It is this third symbolism that gives meaning to the holes in each unit. Since BDSM is, at the very least, a
play style and, at its greatest, a love style, the holes represent the incompleteness of any individual within
the BDSM context. However "together" and "whole" individuals may be, there remains a void within them that can
only be filled by a complimentary other. BDSM cannot be done alone.
The resemblance to a three-way variation on the Yin-Yang symbol is not accidental. As the curved outline of Yin
and Yang represent the hazy border between where one ends and the other begins, so do the curved borders here
represent the indistinct divisions between B&D, D&S, and S&M. The curved lines themselves can be seen as a
stylized depiction of a lash as it swings, or even an arm in motion to deliver an erotic spanking. The
all-embracing circle, of course, represents the overlying unity of it all and the oneness of a community that
protects its own.
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