KaluzaKlein
KaluzaKlein
KaluzaKlein

I think "moist" is so universally disliked because of the juxtaposition of positive and negative connotations. "Moist" conjures visions of germy kitchen sponges and wet dirt full of worms and spiders and that really gross spot under the sink. It also describes tasty, skillfully cooked food and aroused vaginas. The

Fun, orgasms, experience?

I enjoy the show and I read a whole lot of fantasy novels so I grabbed the book for a long flight. In my personal opinion, the book is terrible, hackneyed, poorly characterized and clichéd in a way the show just isn't.

I got made fun of for wearing plain white sports bras. A real one would have saved me some grief.

I think the lesson here is that boobs are different. I've heard similar complaints from a whole bunch of people but all my bras are VS and I haven't experienced any of the things people complain about.

THIS.

Their bras are decent. When I first started wearing bras they were one of the only reasonably priced places that stocked my size at all. They still are, to some extent. I've hated every bra I've ever bought anywhere else.

Feminists: yeah, objectification and oversexualization are legit issues. But watch the fuck out, because while fighting those things it is VERY easy to fall into the trap of reinforcing the virgin/whore dichotomy you were trying to fight and ending up with some unsavory bedfellows.

Not every kid is interested in sex, either, and not all kids are able to have sex in high school. We still teach them sex ed because they eventually grow up to be adults.

All the awesome health classes I've read about in this thread just make me madder at my middle school, which is the lat place I ever had an actual health class.

Two options here, that between them probably describe the vast majority of all sex doll owners.

Ugh, yes, LBGT issues really need to be covered in schools. Something like that could really help out students who are questioning their sexuality and have no idea what it means to be gay or trans.

Why one and not the other?

We should do that too. But there's a reason we offer sex ed in most schools, and a lot of those reasons apply here.

I'm also an atheist who went to Catholic HS and I don't remember getting anything like that.

None of that at my Catholic high school.

Yeah, I know, hence pipe dream. (Although less than I thought, since a bunch of people say they got something like this.)

That's awesome! I wish my high school had invited something like that, but they were too Catholic.

A tragic amount of people never see raped framed as "here is a thing rapists do" so much as "here is a thing that happens to women sometimes, especially when they drink or dress slutty."

Wow. I am impressed. I had a semester-long health class that covered nothing except basic human anatomy, don't do drugs, don't have sex, don't smoke. What a waste.