laureltreedaphne
laureltreedaphne
laureltreedaphne

Yup! The original edition - I still have it in my room at my parent's house.

You beat me to it because I was searching for the cover of the book that I remembered!

So, just a note, the Pretty Little Liars books came before the TV show, and are actually pretty good! Definitely better than Twilight.

NinjaCate's point was that she likely has experienced attacks as a result of being a trans woman. I don't think that's crazy to think, given her statement "as a black, trans woman." If that's true, then being touched by strangers would be triggering - it would make her flashback to the times she's felt her life was in

I genuinely like Dennis Leary's. Specific remembrance rather than just generalized, empty sappiness. Obviously that goes for the Zachary Levi / Kayley Cuoco exchange too.

You're missing the point (in a really weird way.) I sleep with my female friends and my gay male friends because I know they are not sexually attracted to me. I do not sleep with my male friends, platonic or not, because they are sexually attracted to me.

Evening Primrose is actually known to react with many anti-depressants, so if you are on any please be careful and consult with your doctor before you add it to your regimen. Also, there is no proof that it has any effect on pre-menstrual symptoms, so take it with a grain of salt.

Age: 23

How does intermittent fasting work? Is there a way you learned how to do it?

You're talking about something different than what I am talking about. I am talking about couples who make the decision to switch from hormonal birth control / IUD / condoms to the withdrawal method, and then frequently use the withdrawal method incorrectly. You know, we both had too much to drink, we got caught up in

I'm talking about the "don't pull out just this once won't hurt" stuff. I'm not sure where people got the idea that I literally do not understand how sex works. I was trying to point out a trend I have noticed in which couples switch to the withdrawal method and then DELIBERATELY do not use it correctly 100% of the

I guess I worded my original post really badly - I am not questioning whether or not the pull-out method, when used by people who actually do not want to get pregnant, works. I believe it works when used correctly.

I never said anywhere that I don't believe you can make it work. I just believe that a lot of the people using it don't actually want it to work. You're arguing with me over something that I'm not trying to argue.

I just don't agree with you. I'm sorry. The withdrawal method is making an active choice not to use birth control. That's not the same as your condom failing because you left it in a hot car.

I guess I don't just get this. If you've decided that you're OK with having a baby, then you're not ambivalent. You're OK with having a baby. And if you're a woman who is still ovulating, with a partner producing healthy sperm, and you decide to forgo birth control, you're making a decision that you're OK with

It's one thing if you withdraw every single time well before ejaculation. But in my experience (and admittedly, this is personal experience) people using the withdrawal method aren't doing that. They're going off birth control, switching to the withdrawal method, and then having a lot of "well one time won't hurt"

I guess I feel like there is a big difference between "we had sex and the condom broke, and I got pregnant" and "we had sex and were planning on using the pull-out method, but he'd had a bit to drink and we decided that just this once wouldn't hurt." The latter is a refrain I have heard from at least 5 or 6 of my

I'm totally for that, but I think that's different from what I'm talking about. It's one thing to stop using birth control and have a "if it happens, it happens" philosophy. It's another to tell everyone around that you've stopped using birth control because of acne, hormones, weight gain, whatever, and that you're

If you're using the pullout method and you get pregnant, is that really an accidental pregnancy? This argument drives me crazy, and as my friends and I have shifted into our late 20s / early 30s I see it happening all the time. If you and your partner choose to forgo birth control and then get pregnant, I don't really