PPMT is celebrating Leather and Latex in March!

By Teeebone

Come join us on March 9th and dress to the “L”s in Leather and Latex! While not a requirement to attend the party, we highly encourage our attendees to adorn themselves in said fetish wear. At PPMT, we whip sensuality and BDSM all under the same roof!

Power Play Mixed-Tape makes having a fantastic fucking time easy. Dress to impress and surround yourself with sensual sex and bass-pounding BDSM. Best yet—the music will be HOT. Throbbing beats from 8-10 pm with DJ ObliqueBanter and sizzling sexiness by DJ Boneman from 10 pm-midnight! Surge and doof with us! (The basement will ride a noticeably lower decibel level for your pleasure! Earplugs are available at the registration desk.)

FOMO is a thing, but we have time to sling! Take your time to play hard at PPMT! (Know all levels and types of play are welcome!) Let the music groove your body or be suspended from one of our hard points. Make someone dance on the rack or turn them over a spanking bench. Any play sanctioned by the CSPC is allowed at PPMT so review the CSPC's Essential House Rules. Expect sex anywhere and everywhere (except the bathroom, aftercare room, or stairs)! If it's going to be bloody, please bring your own plastic/tarp and linens.

PPMT ran from 2012 up until the closure of Interbay in 9/2016. PPMT was selected as 2012 Party of the Year as well as March 2014 Party of the Month. It is the first of the 2.0 parties to return to the CSPC to “Reignite Our Fires!”

One-Year CSPC Testimonial

By Rena

I can’t believe an entire year has already flown by since I’ve joined the CSPC! Let me give you the rundown of how I came to learn about the CSPC and how it has affected my life. 

Like most horny folx on the internet, I love to consume NSFW content, like smutty manga. After I came across a certain tale of a hedonistic social club, I began to complain to my wife about how these web pages were fiction, that there was no such place where I could find a group of like-minded, kinky, LGBTQ+, sex-positive people…

“You mean, like the CSPC?” she asked.

HUH?! I was floored. Not only was this fantasy place real, but in my state! (Given, as a lifetime Washingtonian, I should have known that there was something like this, but forgive my rural/small-town upbringing.) I rushed to my computer, registered for my first online discussion group (shoutout to the Queer DG!) and attended the virtual New Member Orientation. Speaking with people online made me realize how much I had been missing, how many people had similar interests as me (in and out of kink), how diverse of a community we have accumulated, and that I was adding myself to the never-ending supply of submissive bottoms. 

But my excitement to join quickly shifted to fear. Confidence was not my strong suit when you took me away from my computer. Like most, I have body image issues, gender identity crises, and the overall intrusive thought of “oh god, everyone is going to be leagues hotter than me, I’m going to be the awkward wall potato.” So, I did the most sensible thing and decided to go to PPMT in February 2023. I made a haphazard post in the CSPC Discord that I would be attending and I immediately felt the love and support of the community. People reacted with cute emojis, replied with words of encouragement, and some offered social anchorage, if I so desired. I’d never seen such a display of courtesy and kindness, especially toward an outsider like myself. 

Even though I didn’t play at PPMT, I soaked in all of the sounds, the sights, and the people. I remember standing in frozen awe, admiring as someone was flogged across the room while their moans of intense pleasure filled the atmosphere. I was stunned and was brought back to the present moment when a friendly face asked how I was acclimating. I honestly don’t even remember exactly what I said, but the friend and others in earshot began erupting in laughter. And then, it hit me. 

This wasn’t just a place to have safe, hot, kinky sex. This was an environment for joy, pleasure, laughter, and compassion. We aren’t just a space to “hookup,” but we give people the space to grow, evolve, and learn together. After a year with the CSPC, I have made wonderful connections, had exciting new experiences, joined the volunteer team, and found my place spreading laughter to all I meet. 

Betwixt and Between

By Turtle

TW: depression/loneliness 

I learned a long time ago that I'm the type of person who needs to overlap projects so that nothing completely starts or ends at the same time. I cannot allow a project to end with no plans to begin waiting for me. It's easy for me to get depressed following the excess energy that is the culmination of any large project, especially a successful one!

That depression occurred to me last year. I was stuck betwixt and between my inner and outer world. I had a large project that I was increasingly isolated from during the planning stage. The other people had other priorities pulling attention in their lives. That happens.

Due to a certain set of personal circumstances, I didn't ask for help. I was scared to ask for help. I didn't want anyone to see me as incapable. One of my greatest fears is failure. I learned that broaching that fear by pushing forward is the technique I use to work through it. At some point, in pushing my body and my mind to complete more work, I overwhelmed my logical thought and I forgot.

I felt like people had let me down and that so many things had gone wrong that didn't need to fail. It was an intense disappointment because I erroneously blamed the failures on myself and whether or not people wanted to work with me. Not whether or not they prioritized their work on the project. Ultimately, none of the successes or failures had anything to do with me. The successes and failures were those of the team working together. They worked hard to be flexible when there were issues. They deserved the event’s success! Everyone's excitement and passion for the project is what creates synergy.

So the project ends, a few people seem to step right over me in my leadership position without speaking to me, and I'm feeling very alone. Everyone else seemed to have a transformative experience. Created new community and friends. I did not. I went home alone to a busy partner. 

I received only a few short messages about other topics. It was as if the project had not happened at all. All the people I thought I'd made friends with were gone; gone home to recover, go back to work, reassimilated into the borg. Everyone I thought cared about me suddenly weren't there.

I readjusted, coming down from the high of what was a fairly successful project. Then I became completely deflated with no contact. No other project. I dropped into a deep depression. The loneliness was intense. I considered changing my life focus completely.

I was consumed with circling negative thoughts. Thoughts like, “If no one cares to contact me or even say hi, I guess I don't matter. No one values me. I suck. Guess I'll eat some worms.” 

Those thoughts don't do anybody any good. I'm neurodivergent with autism, among other diagnoses. I struggled from intense loneliness growing up. We moved a lot, and making new friends when you don't talk is an extraordinarily exhausting experience.

I eventually was given social skills training. Most of the time, I do well. But in this situation, it was as if I couldn't pick up the phone. I couldn't text anyone. I couldn't get on Discord without crying and seeing everyone else's joy. 

I had to rewrite my inner dialogue. I knew those voices weren't right, they weren't truthful. They were just old negative reels of thoughts that would spiral me down deeper and deeper. I called my doctors and got some help. I was lucky.

I also understood a universal concept when I spoke to other people later. They said, “Well, I would have been happy to talk to you if you would have called me but I was really busy,” or “I didn't know that was happening to you.”

And they do care. It's just life is frantically busy and, if our attention is scattered across a multitude of directions, it's hard to keep track of people. 

It's easy for people to get lost. Our community’s efforts toward extreme privacy and giving people room to do whatever they need to do without someone bugging the crap out of them…that is the antithesis of what people need at times. We are a community and a family.

If we reach out to each other when we haven't seen each other, just a check in when someone we enjoy has disappeared for a while, it can make a huge difference in feeling valued.

I'm NOT saying any of what happened during my depression is anyone else’s fault or responsibility. I wasn't expecting it and forgot to use all the tools in my toolbox.

I want to remind the community that we all have tools to help each other out.

  1. I wrote down a list of three people who are my closest support system. The deal now is that I tell them when I'm struggling. “Hey, I'm having a hard time,” kind of a contract. An informal, you're my “friends and family” contract. I'm much more likely to follow through on something I feel is a requirement to my belief system and how I live my life.

  2. Next, I wrote down a list of people who are on my friend list. And people I would like to be my friends. I made a commitment to myself to try to say hi or check in with them, whether it's once a week or once a month. This can be modified for whatever works for you, is comfortable for you, and enhances how you fit into the world socially.

  3. If I know someone's phone number and I know they are super busy, I put it on my calendar to text them with something funny or lighthearted. I tell them that I do not expect a reply. Just want to know in my head that I made them smile.

  4. I have no plans to post my personal drama on Discord. It often seems full of the occasional over-the-top emotional drama. I have a hard enough time handling it myself without other people “trying to help” en masse. Some of the Discord drama is just too much for me, even if well-meaning.

  5. I made a deal with a long-distance friend. I addressed a bunch of envelopes and put stamps on them. We take turns handwriting a letter to each other. We try to use unusual products as paper like an ad from a magazine or a piece of tree bark. It's a true pleasure to receive a handwritten note.

  6. I have a journal in which I write down all the good things that happen to me. I made a commitment to myself that if I wrote down something good that someone else did, I would share that with them. Or if I hear someone did something great, I will seek them out and share that with them, if I know them. I like spreading good gossip. That is the kind of gossip that brings people “up.” Good gossip doesn't put them down or make them less than. 

  7. It might be that you make plans to have coffee with somebody once a week. Or you meet up with someone who really wants to do something like karaoke but is afraid to go by themselves. 

Any of these options can help draw you out of your own depression. Help you find value for yourself in the community again. They will all increase community, strengthen the bond between members, and alleviate loneliness. These habits help keep people from falling off the radar. Pick one, just one, and commit to it. See what happens in both your life and the lives that surround you.

**If you or someone you know is in crisis, call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 (para ayuda en español, llame al 988). The Lifeline provides 24-hour, confidential support to anyone in suicidal crisis or emotional distress. Call 911 in life-threatening situations.

Consent Corner 24.04

BY Emma Atkinson 

Hello, super hot and sassy readers! It’s February and you know what that means? Please let me know if you do, because I don’t. 

The 2023 edition of Bumbershoot featured posters with the word “Consent” in large, easy-to-read letters. The word was turned into an acrostic (great word!), meaning that each letter of the word began a short phrase relating to the topic. Plus, having the word “Consent” easily visible everywhere you looked helped keep the concept front and center in attendees’ minds. Pretty great, no? Please look through recent Consent Corners to see all the delicious details. 

We’re so fortunate to live in a time when the concept of consent is being given its proper place of prominence. We have the right to give or withhold our consent as we see fit. “No” is a complete sentence and you can find support for maintaining your boundaries when you need it. 

There was a time when party hosts would encourage guests to have one more alcohol-based drink “for the road.” Yeesh! Today, we’re more aware of the risks of drinking and driving, and no self-respecting host would say anything of the sort. 

As with drinking and driving, there’s far more awareness today about the risks involved and the importance of consent and personal autonomy. Yay, right? 

Homework: Have you had a memorable experience with saying no? We’d love to hear about it at: info@thecspc.org.

“Be excellent to each other.” —Bill and Ted

“Be sexcellent to each other.” —Emma

Frolic Volunteer Opportunity!

Have you come upon the end of a CSPC event wishing that you had more time? Do you ever think about what it would be like to spend days exploring sex-positivity in a guided space?

Let us introduce you to the annual CSPC Frolic event! It’s a six-day kinky camping event hosted at a private venue towards the end of summer! We’re looking for members like you to volunteer and help make this event one for the memory books!

Join Turtle and Mina, 2024 Frolic Co-Directors, at the next monthly virtual meeting on February 15th at 7:15 p.m.! 

The CSPC is a volunteer-based organization and we wouldn't be able to do all these fun events without our members donating their time to help create this space for their community. We're looking for folx with active CSPC memberships that may be interested in becoming a Frolic volunteer for leadership positions, web designers, presenters, marketers, setup & strike, etc.  

Interested but have questions? Please join us! You do not need to register in advance, just click the Zoom link below when it's time for the meeting. 

The Frolic Team meets virtually every third Thursday at 7:15 p.m. As we get closer to the event, we'll add on additional meeting times.

Hope to see you there!

P.S. Volunteers are required to complete our self-service “Volunteer Orientation.” Click here to start the process!

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Frolic Directors are inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/84807638157

Meeting ID: 848 0763 8157

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The Future!

by the CSPC Building Committee 

We've all heard the talk about how someday we want to buy our own building or at least lease one. We want you to know that we have looked at over 3,000 buildings online and visited quite a few in person over the past several years. Much of what complicates the process of finding a building is our extensive list of requirements, as well as the rules and guidelines of cities and counties.

The adult business requirements have been difficult to get around. Many cities have specific adult business areas where we “could” be located, plus we must be a certain distance away from churches, schools, and other businesses/places where children gather. Most also require an adult business to be a certain distance from other adult businesses. 

What makes things increasingly difficult? Our list of requirements includes an elevator for accessibility. But elevators are expensive and are not usually available in buildings we can afford. We will have to adjust our expectations to find a place that has a majority of our prerequisites met. For example: being near a bus stop and food as well as easy highway access and adequate free parking. There are also requirements for the construction of the building itself.

There's a long list of things that we must do before we can take on a new location. We need to make sure we have the funds to expand and that may require fundraising. (Email info@thecspc.org to donate funds, as well as new or gently used items.) 

We need to make sure that we have a detailed list of expectations of upgrades that we plan to do and how much those may cost. Having it on some sort of spreadsheet is a bonus! Research is imperative and time intensive.

Once that plan is in place, we can get started on finding a location that fits the majority of our needs. This has been a multiyear endeavor with many eyes and ears helping to find something that will work, as our building unicorn home. We’ve even considered building from the ground up!

We need to think about the donation of labor as well. We will need many volunteer hours to get our new home ready in a short amount of time. We are including installation of a sound system, plumbing, office area, décor lighting, storage, moving existing and building new play equipment. All of this is in addition to fixing any preexisting issues the building needs. For example: adding a sprinkler system, shower, washer/dryer, kitchenette, etc.

We will be reaching out to prior members in addition to current members to help with this endeavor. These are people who have previously dedicated their time to the CSPC. They volunteered with us over the wider 25 years of our existence as an organization. Everyone has been waiting for a new building that is wider and taller, addressing the need to be able to play more extensively. These members are highly likely to renew and help assist in the process of opening a new community center! This means that the old community from Interbay and the new community that we have built at Gallery Erato will integrate and become an even more amazing membership. 

We hope to bring back the idea that we are a community center where all the different organizations can find a place to meet safely and be supported.

It would be extremely helpful to know what skills everyone has to bring to the building process. If you have special skills in interior design, electrical, plumbing, carpet/flooring or carpentry, please contact us so we can build a plan for getting a new expanded CSPC up and running quickly. Even just a general, “I can build stuff and hold up a wall. Let me help!” Please let us know.


Our building committee lead is Larry, CSPC Board Member. You can reach him at facilitiescoordinator@thecspc.org.

Consent Corner 24.03

By Emma Atkinson 

Hello, lovely and sunny readers! I hope 2024 is rocking your world. 

We’ve been considering the Bumbershoot consent model and here we are at the final letter and final concept. That means that the letter “T” is up. It reminds you: Take care of yourself and others, and we’re better together. 

What a wonderful reminder to all of us that we need to look out for one another, in all ways and at all times. And, what a privilege we have to continue to create and shape the welcoming community at the CSPC that we want. 

It’s always a good time to remember your self-care. And, it can be helpful to have a variety of options, since different situations might need different solutions. Think of it as a tool kit that’s available to help you take the best possible care of yourself. 

Homework: What’s your favorite self-care practice? What are your top three practices? What didn’t work quite so well? We’d love to hear about it at: info@thecspc.org. You’ll be glad you did.

“Be excellent to each other.” —Bill and Ted

“Be sexcellent to each other.” —Emma

Negotiation Tactics for the Neurodiverse

By Turtle

Neurodiverse folx have no issue communicating within our community. The difficulties come when we attempt communications with people who refuse to acknowledge other languages exist and insist everyone else conform to their understanding of the world. As humans, it behooves us to create openings to make straight line communication accessible to all.

I suggest that we set aside assumptions, insinuations, and innuendo. State how you feel, what you want, and specific expectations to the person you are interacting with. At times, this needs to start with yourself. How can you negotiate with anyone effectively if you've never taken adequate time to effectuate what you'd like, hate, love, or want to try? What are your pet peeves? What intimidates you? Write it all down. 

Often, the neurodiverse experience extreme discomfort with eye-to-eye contact. If you aren't comfortable speaking the information face-to-face, you can share your document. Other techniques are sitting back-to-back for the conversation, talking in the dark, or over the phone. Even messaging can work if you agree to not assume emotional subtext and to ask clear, concise questions. I've even seen folx have highly effective discussions while both work on hobbies in the same space.

We as a group tend to be direct and specific, using dictionary definitions for words. Otherwise, I personally find myself asking, “What do you mean by that?” “Error 404!” “More input please.” “BEEP boop. Explain.” Yes, I tend to use humor to break down communication barriers. But I'm still not going to know you are interested in me unless you say, “Hey, I like you. Want to hang out?” Which I will follow up with, “What do you mean by that?” Followed by your explanation of, “I enjoy your company,” “I want to scene with you,” “I want to fuck you silly,” or a billion other possibilities. 

For enthusiastic consent from a neurodivergent:

  • Know when someone is capable of giving consent.

  • Tell us very specifically what you want using actual names for body parts.

  • Point to where we can touch and what we can take off.

  • Tell us what the end of the scene looks like.

  • Show us how to please you.

  • Be open to let us show you exactly what pleases us. Be open to hearing exactly what we want to touch, lick, kiss, fuck, hit, punch, etc.

  • Be on time.

  • Follow up afterward.

  • Honor our boundaries.

  • Ask, “Is this ok?” whenever you need to or when we get that fearful look in our eyes.

Successful negotiation comes down to two people who are motivated to be direct about their wants and needs regardless of identifying features in order to reach an enthusiastic YES!


The ND/DG (Neurodivergent discussion group) meets first Sundays from 5-7 p.m. and third Mondays from 7-9 p.m. Find us on thecspc.org/events

Parties from the Past: The Grind

By Teeebone

Back in the Interbay days, one of the first parties I went to was called the Grind. It was held weekly on Thursday nights. The Grind was a dark-themed, BDSM-focused party with dancing that featured Goth, Industrial, and EBM music primarily from the 90s and 00s, and it was very popular. I had fun on the dance floor and in the back room and so did many others. Certain music tracks remain “Grind Classics” in my library. “Non-Stop Violence” by Apoptygma Berzerk, “Military Fashion Show” by And One, “Megalomaniac” by KMFDM, and “The Ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove” by Dead Can Dance to name a few. Any time I had a free Thursday evening was an opportunity to dance the night away to cool music, watch or participate in a scene, or just simply hang out with folx, all of us dressed in black and getting into the Grind state of mind.

The Grind had its origins in the industrial club scene of the late 1990s, being inspired by Seattle nightclubs like the Catwalk, the Vogue, and Machinewerks. While the music, dancing, and fetish themes were present, BDSM play was limited. Shortly after the Center was opened, the folx who would become the founders of the Grind were approached to create a club night. Keep in mind that they were building this party from the ground up, raising funds, drafting the floor plan, forming a team, and installing the sound and lighting systems in the building. The founders selected Thursday night to hold this party as a weekly event in order to allow for dedicated men’s and women’s parties to be on Fridays. On May 18, 2000 the Grind debuted at the CSPC with an attendance of 48. Such humble beginnings, eh?

After the first year though, the attendance had doubled. By the time of my first attendance to the Grind, (2004-05) the head count was typically breaking 150. The Center was full of energetic dancers and players and the loud music was in a class all its own. As somebody who DJs, I was struck by how unique and one of a kind it was, and it was perfectly fine to dance by yourself! It was an amazing thing to behold. The Grind had cemented its reputation as one of the Center’s go-to parties, especially because orientation was held right before it started, resulting in some new members attending it afterward. 

The days of “peak Grind” would continue until the summer of 2007, when the Center had to raise admission costs, though three months later there would be an early-bird discount implemented. Also in late 2007, the Center acquired the Annex and a new party, the Chill was scheduled opposite the Grind to act as a space to allow attendees to step away from the loud music and have easier conversation. This diluted the party’s crowd even though you only needed one admission to have access to both parties. In early 2008, the Center’s yearly membership rate was increased, which peeled away some more attendees. Staff attrition also took its toll, though the Grind team held together quite well considering its long run. By 2013, the music played by the DJs began to branch out into more contemporary and dance-pop-oriented stuff. At this point, the Grind was more than ten years old and a large chunk of the original audience of members who attended week after week had left because of various “life in general” reasons. Many of the new members were not into Goth, Industrial, or EBM music as much as the older members were.

In May of 2015, the Grind stopped being a weekly party and switched to an irregular schedule, eventually settling on fifth Fridays of the month in January of 2016 and then to fourth Fridays in June. The last Grind at the Interbay location was held on August 26, 2016 and had a packed house. The Grind was the Center’s longest running party, lasting more than eighteen years. Considering that this was a weekly party for most of its existence, that’s a lot a hardcore dedication in volunteer work. I will always be grateful for the Grind team’s effort because I always had fun at that party. There were four more Grinds held at the Gallery, with the last one taking place in March of 2019. At that point, the team decided to shut things down and step away.

Which brings us to the present. This year, the Center will be celebrating its 25th Anniversary and part of that celebration will include bringing back some of the classic parties from the past, like the Grind! A new team is being formed to reboot this party and volunteers will be needed! If this sort of thing fascinates you, then click on this link and join us!

https://thecspc.org/volunteering