You speak about hard-core and being “way into” but the impression that comes across to me is that you reject the notion of obedience and submission from the wife entirely. Again, to merely speak of abuses or what you don’t like about it would leave that impression.
I think that obedience is always a limited concept, for whatever authority we are dealing with (parents, husband, civil authorities). Anybody who talks about obedience to authority needs to be prepared to talk about the abuses of authority and how they plan to deal with those abuses.
Also, bear in mind that Jesus said (quoting Genesis), “For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?” Or ideal is not a master-slave relationship, but
unity.
Here’s a nice piece by Sheila Wray Gregoire. She describes a disagreement she and her husband had and how they solved it:
“We stopped trying to figure out which of us would win, and we started brainstorming ideas so both of us got what we needed. Eventually Keith closed his office one afternoon a week so that he could care for the kids while I wrote–and he still got a night out with his friends.”
“If we had followed some traditional Christian teaching, though, we may have given up too early. Sometimes our teaching on submission insinuates that God actually sees marriage as a “him vs. her” relationship where one of you is supposed to win–and that person is your husband.”
"Unity is to be the hallmark of a Christian relationship [she quotes 1 Corinthians and St. Paul’s plea to ““be perfectly united in mind and thought.”], so God clearly wants us to pray, wrestle through, and seek His will together. By assuming that a wife will always defer to her husband, though, we’re not necessarily even seeking God’s will. After all, if the couple is in disagreement and they do it the husband’s way, there are only two possibilities: either one of them is not hearing God, or both of them are not hearing God.”
ibelieve.com/relationships/what-we-often-get-wrong-about-submission.html
I believe in submission in the sense of love and unity and always seeking the welfare of the family, but not in the sense of doing exactly what I’m told–particularly as that may conflict with love, unity, and family welfare.
**Bear in mind, I tried to do it your way for many years, and I was a terrible, awful failure at it. ** I tried to be a submissive wife and hop to and fulfill my husbands requests (which was how I thought of wifely submission), but it made me extremely angry with my husband (for example, he’d tell me not to go to bed, and I’d stay up, even though I was virtually seeing double with exhaustion and I’d be SO angry with him for having so little concern for my well-being). And, funnily enough, he didn’t even realize that I was doing that I was trying to be submissive or that he was asking for things that were harmful/didn’t make sense–because I wasn’t telling him because I was trying to be submissive. Ever since I stopped believing in wifely submission as being primarily about obedience and started thinking of it in terms of service to my family and unity, I have actually become a much kinder, pleasanter and much less volatile wife–in fact, I’ve finally got my temper 98% under control.

I think that’s not too far from what St. Paul meant when he asked wives to be submissive.
When I say “way into” and “hard core” submission, what I’m talking about people (who you can see on CAF on any submission thread) who have turned wifely submission into the end all be all of the Christian life. You can see this in action by the way that a handful of submission verses are held to be superior to the entire New Testament, as opposed to the entire New Testament interpreting and fleshing out those verses. (As you’ve probably noticed, I get a lot of mileage out of “Do unto others,” which I feel like has a much more solid case for being the ethical key to the NT, being the Golden Rule and all.)