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Resources
| On
Dignity, Appearance, Simplicity and Submission
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great deal of our community’s focus is on healthful choices,
dietary discipline, wardrobe, fitness and other aspects of appearance and
behavior as they relate to the sexual and spiritual lives of our members. The
Project directs us to seek ways for these values each to be reflected
accurately in the way we present ourselves to others. To see these things as
superficialities is to misunderstand the reasons for our emphases. For example,
for us, submission is dignified in every meaning of the word. A well-instructed
woman who has been serious about her own formation carries herself with confidence,
behaves with grace, shows her worth in the way she grooms and dresses
and demonstrates the pleasure she finds in pleasing others in the way
she acts toward them. These are gestures not only of a woman well-acquainted
with our understanding of submission but also one who finds elegance in the
simplicity of her surrender.
That does not mean we are
aloof or unappreciative of a very wide variety of sexual experiences. However understanding the importance of self-worth is important to
us for a very obvious reason: If we are to give ourselves as gifts to those
whom we trust with our surrender, then the value of that gift must first be
seen in the esteem we have for ourselves. If we think we are worth
little, then what can the gift of our submission be worth? A gift that is
worthless to the giver is not a gift at all, no matter how much value the
recipient may place on it. Submission in itself is not an act of
self-abasement, no more than submission in itself is an act of subservience.
The higher the value we place on ourselves, the more meaningful our submission
becomes no matter how it is expressed—even if it’s expressed by a wish to be
humiliated. Our constant goal is to become a priceless gem given in full
recognition of our worth but always given without limits.
Our community
is based on the respect we have for
each other as sisters in submission. But it’s also based on a respect we have
for ourselves. Even attempting this formation in its fullest sense demands that
we respect who and what we are—women attempting to live in submission. Not in
subservience or in weakness, but in a full confidence that our internal
strengths are sufficient to allow us to find purpose and happiness in giving to
others. For many of us, as monitored members especially, it’s the hardest thing
we will ever do.
Not every
community member seeks the benefits of disciplines of course, but for those who
seek formation as monitored members, the dress requirements we obey, the
grooming habits we embrace, the opportunities we are given for reflection, the corrections
we are offered for improvement, the efforts we make to maintain good health and
physical beauty, the way we are taught to sit, to speak, to reveal ourselves
with dignity and courage—all of these have been part of our instruction and
guidance. They reflect the value we place on our submission because they
reflect the way we are instructed to see ourselves—as intelligent, capable
women fully aware of the profound meaningfulness our surrender implies.
Moreover, we possess a certainty that by doing these things well we make
ourselves more becoming to others—while investing our own lives with
watchfulness and balance.
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et your demeanor, your dress,
your walking, your sitting down, the nature of your food, the quality of your
being, your house and what it contains, aim at simplicity. And let your speech,
your singing, your manner with your neighbor, let these things also be in
accord with humility rather than with vanity. In your words let there be no
empty pretence, in your singing no excess sweetness, in conversation be not
ponderous or overbearing…Be a help to your friends, kind to the ones with whom
you live…patient with those who are troublesome, loving towards the lowly,
comforting those in trouble, visiting those in affliction, never despising
anyone, gracious in friendship, cheerful in answering others, courteous and
approachable to everyone…’
—St Basil the Great, Homily on Humility, V.
Resources:
The health and
beauty discussion areas in the
community forums (registered members only).
A separate monitored members’ resource page on dress.
This
is a modified version of a private page made available only to participants who
require this information. It is not to be distributed or copied.
Some
links lead to password-protected pages intended for participants only.

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Last
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