I think the OP means that men who can't handle women swearing (definitely if they throw in the word "unladylike") tend to be shitbags.
I think the OP means that men who can't handle women swearing (definitely if they throw in the word "unladylike") tend to be shitbags.
As long as you have safe sex it really doesn't matter how many people you have sex with.
I hit 3 before I was 16. That does feel a bit weird to write... That aside, if a boyfriend were to judge me for that I'd dump his sorry ass.
1 and 2 seem acceptable reasons, 3 is an awesome one, but WTH is up with the others though... *pukes*
Improvised ranged weapons only deal 1d4.
I watched Divergent before TFIOS, and I just kept getting an incesty vibe because of it, which prevented me from fully enjoying the movie. Unfortunate...
I have actually seen this happen in real life. Twice, to the same person, within 10 minutes.
"Helps with household chores" Just no. It's not helping, it's called doing their share. Helping implies that they shouldn't have to do it and OMG aren't they heroes for doing it. If I ever hear someone say that to my face I will punch them.
Basically, in our culture it's always the woman who is thought of as crazy...
This reminds me of the guy I thought was a friend (because I was 14 and not ready for any romantic feelings yet; plus he was 8 years older and it kinda creeped me out how often he hinted at sex), until I got a relationship (with someone my age) and he got all mad at me for "leading him on". The best part is, I had…
I was thinking of that point too. Which will be a pain in the ass for me because my boyfriend hasn't read the books, and he'll have to wait a whole year to see how it goes on, while I won't be allowed to tell him...
Honestly, I thought that one was going to escalate into him getting physical. Glad it didn't, but damn...
That side of the street is horrible; now we just take the other half and those people seem to be a lot nicer.
I've read somewhere that women's biggest fear when meeting up with men they met online is that they'll be killed, whereas men's biggest fear in that situation is that their date would be fat. This shows this nicely... Poor woman :(
A couple of years ago I went trick or treating with some friends (I was 16, so a bit on the older side, but we'd lived in a very poor neighbourhood for some years and most people there simply couldn't afford it, so when we moved to a more affluent town we thought we'd try our luck again; also: nostalgia) and one lady…
What's your stance on wanting him to communicate what he's going to do? I mean, I don't mind my boyfriend touching me, but I don't want him to sneak up on me because I might get a panic attack if he does. It's happened before: he wanted to be sweet and surprise me with a hug from behind, and I got so scared and got…
But what if, for whatever reason, she wouldn't feel like being touched once?
Agreed, and not one I feel comfortable reading on a site like this, where I always put my trust in in regards to victim-blaming (meaning they wouldn't do it) - here it's kind of like a slap in the face, if that makes any sense?
However, if Elle W doesn't like it, for whatever reason, then her partner should accept it instead of getting huffy about it.
It also kind of bothered me. It is a form of victim-blaming, is it not?