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Someone who has been employed for a while is giving you strong evidence of submission.

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WillaKissing · 56-60, M
Yes, I submitted to the workplace rules and laws to ease into retirement at age 47 very comfortably regaining my dominance over my life and its direction.

Enjoy working until you can free your submission as well.
Ashleighrox · 31-35, F
I mean it’s true, we submit out time and freedom to conform to someone else’s needs to make them money, we sacrifice for them, wear what they say, do the work they wants. It’s submission without the kinky aspect
Cassieeeee · 31-35, F
I've never fully committed to one place, so where does that put me 🤔😂
WillaKissing · 56-60, M
@Cassieeeee As a Bi-Lateral submitter! Or multitasking submitter.
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
I see the opposite. There's a lot of cultural pressure right now to jump between jobs and grind your way to the top. Always working to make sure you can please the next people you interview with. Giving in to that grindset just sounds so conformist and submissive to me.

To hell with that. I work to live, I don't live to work. A steady, stable job serves me. I may not climb the ladder as fast but I can focus on what I want to outside of work. Those grindset job hoppers seem to just go home to do more work to prepare themselves for more work in the future.
AnotherWeirdo · 41-45, M
I mean in a way, being employed in general is a form of transactional submission
zonavar68 · 56-60, M
@AnotherWeirdo Indeed because the employee is a serf to the employer, and in many jobs the employer is still inter-dependent on the employee to 'do the work' that makes money for the business. So employers need employees, and vice versa.
JohnOlinger81 · 41-45, M
@BabaYaga So what do you think of Jason Momoa. & Would You do Him
SW-User
What does this even mean

 
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