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Anxiety management after a session


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Hi all. I'm not sure if this has been discussed on a thread previously but here I go. I started a D/s relationship with a sub who is quite involved with her role. She had no previous experience and we are going step by step. Confidence and comunication between is constamt and clear but all the times we had a session, during the next couple of days she has a kind of emptyness in the transition between the session and her normal life. We try to do a good after care, the next day we keep communicating but the second day after the session is the hardest for her. Has any sub experienced this kind of feelings? How did you manage? Do you think mindfulness could help her in the transition? Thanks to all

i’ve definitely experienced this as a sub and it’s hard. loneliness also, regardless of aftercare. helps to find things that ground her so she feels more in control of her body and life after. quality time helps me if i’m with my dom, but also just a self care activity to help with the come down. or something creative and fun

Read up on sub drop
It may not be the exact thing but there are some great tips to deal with these emotions

I have a plushie for my subs that they can use for comfort, as they deal with these feelings

Having talks about it, doing reviews of a scene helps too I founds. Writing down stuff that they liked or would want to have more of, so it's not completely gone

And having self compassion. It's easier said than done. But these feelings will happen regardless and dealing with them always takes time and energy

If she has no pervious experience, she may not have many tools to deal with sub drop. I heavily rely on tools I learned in therapy. The best one for me is a RAIN meditation to process my feelings. Sometimes we just need to lean into our feelings and hold them with compassion before they can pass through us.

I agree with the others, especially Bunny. I just discovered sub drop myself and she definitely needs something to ground her. Help her get back to herself after a session. But I just wanted to say it sounds like you are doing great, especially making sure she gets aftercare and looking out for your sub ☺️

Thanks for your replies and your advices. It's gonna be very useful. I also found some websites with detailed explanation about the sub drop and the biochemical processes involved. We will have a look and definitely, try additional ways to have care of her. Many thanks again.

There's a podcast called infinite Devotion with Andrew and Dawn. Best explanation of the true dynamic of a d\s relationship, really just great information for any relationship. This is a relationship of deep intimacy not just a kink played out in the bedroom. When a woman has some kind of reaction it usually comes from *** and not feeling safe. When you learn to read a woman's responses it will point to where you need strength. We directly respond to your energy! So being able to look within yourself will help her let go.

I have tidied up the thread and removed the offending post (others replying to it were removed as they are now without context)

I definitely agree with what others are saying here. It sounds exactly like sub-drop. It’s a very common physiological reaction where the body is essentially processing a chemical hangover as endorphins return to baseline.

Since you mentioned the second day is her wall, here is a proactive Aftercare Extension Plan that I came up with my therapist you might want to try together:

The Day-Two Aftercare Checklist

Treating the second day as a scheduled stage of care can take the pressure off her to feel normal before she is biologically ready.

Schedule a quick 10-minute check-in call or swap a specific safe word text just to stay connected.

Remind her to grab a high-protein meal and plenty of water, since sessions can really wipe you out physically.

Suggest she keep something of yours nearby, like a shirt or a small trinket, to help her feel connected to the dynamic during the day.

If she can, help her avoid making big life decisions or having heavy real-world talks on this specific day.

Grounding & Mindfulness

Mindfulness is a fantastic idea for bridging that gap. You could suggest a few simple tricks for when she feels that emptiness hitting:

The 5-4-3-2-1 Technique: Have her name 5 things she sees, 4 she can touch, 3 she hears, 2 she smells, and 1 she tastes to pull her brain back into the moment.

Splashing cold water on her face or holding an ice cube can provide an immediate reset for the nervous system.

Using a weighted blanket can help her feel physically secure and contained during the drop.

By framing this as an extension of the session's aftercare, it stops being an unexpected period of anxiety and becomes a shared plan for her safety.

I hope this helps.

Gentlemandom47

What you’re describing is actually very common, especially with newer subs who invest deeply in the psychological side of D/s.

 

Many people call this “drop” (often sub-drop, sometimes emotional drop). It isn’t a failure of aftercare or communication — it’s a natural response to intense emotional, hormonal, and psychological engagement followed by a return to everyday life.

 

A few points that may help:

• After a scene, especially one with strong emotional or power exchange elements, the body and mind can feel flat once adrenaline, endorphins, and connection settle. That emptiness often shows up a day or two later, exactly as you’re seeing.

• Good aftercare isn’t just what happens immediately after the session. Some subs benefit from extended aftercare — planned check-ins 24–72 hours later, reassurance of continuity, or gentle reminders that the dynamic still exists even when the scene has ended.

• The transition back to “normal life” can feel jarring for someone who is deeply present in their role. Helping her consciously re-anchor — routines, grounding activities, affirming messages — can reduce that sense of loss.

• Mindfulness can help, but only if framed gently. Things like body awareness, journaling, breathing, or reflecting on what the scene gave her (rather than what she’s missing) can support integration rather than avoidance.

• It’s also important to normalise the feeling for her. Knowing that this experience is shared by many subs can reduce anxiety and self-judgment, which often amplifies the drop.

 

You’re doing the right things by communicating openly and moving step by step. This isn’t something to “fix” so much as something to understand, plan for, and hold space around.

 

With time, experience, and trust, many subs learn how to ride these transitions more smoothly — especially when they feel seen and supported rather than rushed through them.

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