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Boundaries Aren’t a Bad Attitude — They’re the Price of Admission.

Let’s clear the air immediately: Setting a boundary is not "having an attitude." It is the baseline of professionalism. Yet, the moment a woman draws a line in the sand, the narrative shifts. Suddenly, she’s "difficult," "cold," or "high maintenance."


Here is the reality check: REAL subs and REAL men don't see boundaries as obstacles; they see them as the map. In the world of training and service, clarity is king. Ambiguity is where laziness thrives. When you set a boundary, you aren't being mean; you are filtering out the noise so the serious work can happen. If you can't respect a boundary, you aren't ready for the level of service you claim to want.


The Research Protocol is Simple: If you want to serve me, you start by doing the work. My website has the answers to every question you’re about to ask. Reading the FAQ isn't just a suggestion; it’s the first test of your dedication. Asking questions that are already answered on my site isn't curiosity; it’s laziness. Expecting me to spoon-feed you information you refused to find yourself isn't submission; it’s entitlement.


Do the research. Follow the protocol. Or, don't contact me at all. I don't have time for those who treat my time as disposable. To the ones who get it: Welcome. To the rest: Keep scrolling.

 
 
 

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