Kinbaku (緊縛) means 'tight binding' Kinbaku-bi (緊縛美) which literally means 'the beauty of tight binding'. Kinbaku is a Japanese style of bondage or BDSM which involves tying up the bottom using simple yet visually intricate patterns, usually with several pieces of thin rope (often jute, hemp or linen and generally around 6 mm in diameter, but sometimes as small as 4 mm, and between 7 – 8 m long). In Japanese, this natural-fibre rope is known as 'asanawa'; the Japanese vocabulary does not make a distinction between hemp and jute. The allusion is to the use of hemp rope for restraining prisoners, as a symbol of power, in the same way that stocks or manacles are used in a Western BDSM context. The word shibari came into common use in the West at some point in the 1990s to describe the bondage art Kinbaku. Shibari (縛り) is a Japanese word that literally means "Decorativley Tie".
There is much discussion about the distinction between shibari and kinbaku, and whether one term is more appropriate than another.
(Mike on lead, w/ Jian harmonizing)
dont ya tell me what youre putting in my lunch box dont tell me what your
feeding me today, dont fill my head with trouble while im scarfin down a
cheese soufle
i wanna be a new, original creation a cross between a moose a monkey and a
fig im ready Monsanto let me be your guina pig
cuz the seed we sew aint good enough the earth we plow it aint good enough
the food we grow well its never been up to scratch,
the geezer with the beard and all the angels made a few mistakes I dont
know why we dont need him anymore if geneticly modefy
so dont ya tell me what youre puttin in my lunch box i got a crazy
pioneering additude dont bother me with labels gotta get a belly full of
franken-food
gotta geta belly fulla franken-food