Stop the forced dominance. True mastery isn’t about being an “Alpha”—it’s about the courage to be yourself. Don’t feel ashamed of your submissive nature; embrace the relief of surrender. MasterMarc reveals a more honest path to freedom, far beyond the hollow scripts of modern life coaches. Leave the crown at the door. Find yourself in the Dungeon.
A few years ago, the conversation was all about the pressure social media placed on young women – the obsession with being thin, the craze for “perfection.” Back then, men were mostly shielded from that digital weight. But the tides have turned, and they have turned radically.
The “Alpha” Trap: Why Mandatory Dominance is a Burden
Today, a new breed of influencers, high-performance gurus, and alpha coaches – the likes of Andrew Tate, David Goggins, and Chris Williamson – are driving an entire generation of young men into a corner. They hold up a mirror, tell men how inadequate they are, and sell them expensive blueprints for self-optimization. They prey on the natural identity-crisis of young men lost in a world without clear role-models. They offer cookie-cutter solutions: “Do this, buy that, be loud, be hard.”
But these shallow concepts only mask a deeper problem: they try to heal insecurity with even more conditioned dominance. The truth is, this “mandatory dominance” isn’t the cure – it’s the burden.
Technically, it’s always been this way; only the intensity is new. Our society socializes men to be dominant. A man must be strong, successful, and driven; he must exert total self-control. Yet, reality looks different. Most people are not dominant by nature; they carry a profound need for surrender and guidance. This artificial education toward dominance is a war against one’s own nature and needs.
Thank God for that. How would a society function if everyone wanted to be the “Great Leader”? A world made only of Alphas would be in permanent conflict, if not outright war. Stability doesn’t come from universal dominance; it comes from the harmonious interplay of leadership and surrender.
This doesn’t mean there is only one leader and everyone else is unconditionally submissive. That’s too simplistic. Every one of us has our strengths, our talents, and our own “little garden” where we are king – be it in our profession, in art, or within the family. That is good and necessary.
The problem of our time is that we are forced to pretend our entire life is that garden. We are under pressure to be the master of the situation every second, in every area of life. We’ve forgotten how to leave the fences of our own garden and entrust ourselves to someone who leads.
True mastery of life means knowing when to be the king in your garden – and when to enjoy the relief of simply being a servant at the Master’s gates. In the “Mastering Your Life” campaign, we celebrate exactly that: the courage to leave the crown at the door to find the freedom in the Dungeon that was lost in daily life under the weight of responsibility.
I see it as a strength, not a weakness, to know yourself and to live that truth consistently. When a dominant man like me says this, everyone nods. So why should it be different when a submissive man says the same? Why is self-knowledge suddenly devalued when it ends in surrender?
It’s time to strip the moral judgment from the terms “dominant” and “submissive.” They are merely different personality traits – like colors. No one would judge “Red” or “Blue.” Personally, I don’t want to live in a monochrome world.
This is the essence of human dynamics: we all need each other to truly live our authentic selves. The Master needs the Slave just as much as the Slave needs the Master to experience their own nature in its full completion. Only in this interplay does the whole picture emerge.
Today’s life-coaches aren’t reinventing the wheel. When David Goggins says, “The comfort zone is where dreams go to die,” he’s just selling a modern version of what our great-grandfathers already knew: “As you sow, so shall you reap.” If you don’t work, you won’t succeed.
The only difference is the aesthetic. It used to be called “hardening”; today it’s “mental fortitude.” It used to be “discipline”; today it’s “high-performance.” But the natural law remains the same: without resistance, there is no growth. Without friction, there is no energy.
Coaches use phrases like “Pain is your compass” to drive young men into the gym. They want them to lift until their muscles burn to become “hard.” And indeed, many of my slaves are gym-regulars. They seek the resistance. But let’s be honest: the gym is often just a compromise. It’s the socially-accepted way to feel yourself. The Dungeon is the more honest place.
It’s almost amusing how modern coaches label “being led” as a dangerous “victim-mentality.” They warn their followers against giving up control, yet they simultaneously cast themselves as the ultimate leaders whose word is law.
Behind the scenes, they seem to recognize exactly what I openly state: that the majority of society has a deep, natural need for guidance. They profit massively from the submissive nature of their fans while judging them for it. That is the rot in the system: they sell “freedom” while psychically enslaving their audience.
We Masters are simply more honest. We call things by their real names.
True Mastery: Knowing When to Lead and When to Serve
A good Master doesn’t lead for the sake of power. If you’re really the boss, you don’t have to play the part. Our dominance isn’t an ego-trip; it’s a tool. We lead because we want to foster, challenge, and develop those under us.
Of course, we Masters have our fun too – we benefit from this dynamic. But we do it knowing full well that our counterpart wants exactly this. A slave finds fulfillment and joy in surrender. It is an eye-level exchange of needs: one needs leadership, the other provides it. The “fun” just looks different for both sides because we have different needs.
You don’t need toxic masculinity to be satisfied and happy. You become happy by living your truth. As a slave, you don’t just surrender to a Master; you surrender to your own needs. Toxicity only arises when you deny yourself and become unfaithful to your nature – because that, in the long run, will destroy your satisfaction and your self-worth.
Be a real man, be a strong man, be a confident man – and stand by YOUR needs. Even if those needs are submissive in nature, seeking pain, guidance, and security. Find the environment where you can live your truth. That is how we bring all our strengths and tools together, turning our individual “gardens” into a vast park of freedom and satisfaction – a park that can also be found within the Dungeon.
Man is not a lone-wolf; he is a team-player, whether dominant or submissive. Only through this synergy does something truly great emerge.
Welcome to Mastering Your Life. At the very least, we Masters are the HONESTER life-coaches!

