*Trigger warning* This article contains images of people being suspended by hooks, if you have a sensitivity to this please be advised before scrolling down - Fetish.com Magazine Editor.
Body modification, as a concept has been around for a long, long time. Even though elaborate, visible tattoos, and piercings of almost any part of the body, now seem commonplace, there are still extremes to be found, if you know where to look. One of the more advanced-level kink practice that still can startle even the more jaded is body suspension. This is a matter of lifting a person off the ground using sterile metal hooks inserted into the skin and attached to ropes or cords, which are in turn connected to a frame or pulley of some kind.
The origins of the practice are vague, with conflicting accounts to be found, but it appears to have been practised in many different countries over many centuries. There’s some evidence of a ritual called Okapi, practised by the Mandan tribe of Native Americans, and the Sun Dance rituals of Plains tribes also featured skin hooks and piercings, as does the Thaipusam festival for Tamil Hindus, among others.
Prep for body suspension. Image: Thierry Ehrmann via via Flickr.com CC BY 2.0 license
Body suspension seems to have grown in popularity among fetish fans and other thrill-seekers after the publication of the notorious Modern Primitives book at the end of the 1980s. People undergoing hook suspension also tends to be one of the features of Burning Man and other alternative-culture events.
There’s certainly a substantial community who enjoy the practice – a feature on body suspension, published in The Guardian in 2013, listed rock guitarist Dave Navarro (Jane’s Addiction) as a fan. Enthusiasts talk of reaching a transcendent state while hanging in suspension though it is, apparently, a different experience if the suspendee is doing it as part of a performance and not as part of a ritual – or a private kink session.
I spoke to Scott, who first tried skin hooks at a session conducted by Fakir Musafa around ten years ago. Musafa is widely regarded as the founder of modern primitivism and has done a great deal of work on body modification, piercings, hook pulls, and the rest. Scott told me the event was ‘very tribal and ritualistic’, with a drum circle taking place as well as facial piercing and skin hooks.
Body suspension has grown in popularity. Image: Thierry Ehrmann via via Flickr.com CC BY 2.0 license
There is a massive endorphin rush which comes with doing this and a feeling of plugging into something very primal. According to Scott, the last few moments before his first body suspension were intense and nerve-wracking and he felt close to backing out, he says 'it’s a case of just, take a deep breath and the next thing you know, you are flying!'
'Pain, being an involuntary response, the fact that you have chosen this experience means that what you are feeling is not pain.' - Fakir Musafa
Overall, if approached sensibly, body suspension would appear to be no more dangerous than many other kink activities. Viewing some footage of suspendees may also show you that, as with all the best high-intensity fun, there is room for a particular type of silliness as well as profoundly altered states. There is also a lot to be said for finding out just how much the human body is capable of enduring – and enjoying.
Madame Z is a veteran pervert, writer of erotica, top/dominant, fond of rope, impact play and experimentation.
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