04/06/2026
To Sir, With Love
People outside leather often misunderstand what “Sir” means.
They hear the word and immediately imagine hierarchy, control, authority, someone giving orders across a dungeon floor. Popular culture doesn’t help much either. Leather is usually reduced to aggression, hypers*xuality, or power stripped of tenderness.
But I don’t think that’s why many of us are drawn to Sirs in the first place.
For a lot of q***r men, like me who grew up feeling disconnected from masculinity, the idea of a Sir often represents something far more complicated:
Guidance.
Recognition.
Structure.
Care.
I grew up learning masculinity from a distance. Watching it, imitating it, negotiating with it. Sometimes fearing it. Sometimes desiring it.
So when we enter leather spaces, something unusual happens.
We meet men who perform masculinity differently.
Not louder, not crueler, not necessarily more dominant. Just more intentional.
A good Sir doesn’t simply command a room. He settles it.
You notice it in small ways.
The calmness in how he speaks, the restraint in how he touches, the way he reads people before acting. The quiet confidence of someone who no longer needs to prove himself every second.
That kind of presence can feel deeply disarming when you’ve spent most of your life around masculinity that only knew how to intimidate. And maybe that’s why the dynamic resonates emotionally for so many people, even outside explicit power exchange.
Because sometimes “Sir” is not really about authority. It’s about feeling safe enough to soften your guard for the first time.
I think about small moments in leather spaces a lot.
A Sir checking if a nervous newcomer is alright.
Teaching someone how to care for their first pair of boots.
Offering correction without humiliation.
Giving structure without taking away dignity.
None of these moments look dramatic from the outside. But, they can stay with someone for years.
Leather has always been full of these quiet forms of inheritance.
We pass down jackets and gear, language, rituals and ways of carrying ourselves. Sometimes we even pass down versions of masculinity that feel survivable.
And perhaps that’s why “Sir” carries emotional weight beyond the title itself. Not because it implies perfection or authority, but because, at its best, it describes someone capable of holding power carefully. Someone who understands that control without care is just performance.
Maybe that’s the strange tenderness underneath leather culture.
For some of us, becoming a leatherman was never about becoming “more masculine.”
It was about finally encountering a version of masculinity that made room for us inside it.
📸 by Tyler Tippett Photography
The views shared here are my own, you might see things differently, and that’s perfectly okay. I’d love to hear your thoughts. Feel free to DM me or come find me at The Laird on Thursdays.