Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
179
It is excellent for a woman's psychology to learn discipline.
It is excellent for a woman's psychology to learn discipline.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 9, Sentence #179)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
9
176
It is not difficult to correct such misapprehensions in a woman.
9
177
They now knelt well, frightened, their knees spread as those of slaves.
9
178
The treatment they had received, of course, had been good for them.
9
179
It is excellent for a woman's psychology to learn discipline.
9
180
It improves her considerably.
9
181
Too, their treatment might, in some trivial ways, perhaps smooth, or make a bit less traumatic, the transition to bondage, which was a likely, as well as suitable, disposition for them.
9
182
To be sure, there is probably no fully adequate way for one to anticipate, or prepare for, psychologically, the actual transition to bondage, even if one eagerly seeks it, even if one welcomes it joyously, for with it comes a new and profoundly different understanding of one's self and nature; by it, you see, a categorical and radical transformation of one's realities is effected; in it one realizes, suddenly, that one is now no longer what one was before, that one is now something absolutely different, that one is now no longer a free person, but a property, subject to buying and selling, an animal, a slave.
It is not difficult to correct such misapprehensions in a woman.
They now knelt well, frightened, their knees spread as those of slaves.
The treatment they had received, of course, had been good for them.
It is excellent for a woman's psychology to learn discipline.
It improves her considerably.
Too, their treatment might, in some trivial ways, perhaps smooth, or make a bit less traumatic, the transition to bondage, which was a likely, as well as suitable, disposition for them.
To be sure, there is probably no fully adequate way for one to anticipate, or prepare for, psychologically, the actual transition to bondage, even if one eagerly seeks it, even if one welcomes it joyously, for with it comes a new and profoundly different understanding of one's self and nature; by it, you see, a categorical and radical transformation of one's realities is effected; in it one realizes, suddenly, that one is now no longer what one was before, that one is now something absolutely different, that one is now no longer a free person, but a property, subject to buying and selling, an animal, a slave.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 9)