WEBMAZE Community
Gorean Roleplay => Tuchuk Wagon Camp => MTC Discussion and Learning Center => Topic started by: kiahMTC on August 22, 2015, 06:32:08 AM
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kiah has wrestled with this question as it provokes quite an emotional response within her. please forgive her if this is too personal a question to ask or if it is simply not her place to understand.
Have you ever witnessed a Master submit? If so, what was the reason for him doing so?
I suppose there is the rare time when he finds himself a karjius within.
Might a Master submit to save the life or another or himself or as a Warrior is there always another/better way?
A collared woman is a slave regardless of her acceptance of such. Can a man still be a Master even with steel around his neck?
Could it be a most honorable strength to make such a sacrifice or would he forever be seen as a thrall, even if he was freed?
she appreciates you listening and considering to share your thoughts with her.
kiah{MTC}
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Tal sister, what good questions you ask, it's funny I've been rereading some of the books and in Tribesmen of Gor there is just such an answer written . Where not one but three Masters had been placed in collars yet they still continued to be Masters bringing female slaves to where they were ment to be ..... As I am but a slave my words may not answer your questions I did think it a good idea to share this thought with you....but still good questions Kiki keep them coming...grins...
chanz.....
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thank you sis, for your reply and the gentle push to rereading the books. :)
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The measure of a man is not the steel he may or may not carry or wear but by those choices he makes in the life he leads. To be a Master, he must first master himself and that is an arduous journey of trials and tribulations as he experiences life. Whether he wears a collar or is a free without ever knowing the burden of steel about his neck, he can still be a Master, of himself. A master or warrior may choose to submit for a variety of reasons, reasons maybe only known to him or forced to submit as a tribute or casualty of war or for a variety of reasons, but how he leads that life will determine what honor he holds in his duties. I can say, should he live past that enslavement, he will have a new experience to learn from and better himself and vice versa. The opinions of others will matter very little to a man who has bettered himself in his duties and garner a more profound respect for such. Those that may disregard him as less of a man for being a slave knows little of mastery.
Raz
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thank you for sharing, Master.
kiah{MTC}