tippihedcase
tippihedcase
tippihedcase

not all stuff

So, let's say a man (not you) did walk out on his wife because he wanted to "play call of duty more this summer." Would you expect her to go through what your wife just went through, alone, and then give up the child? Or perhaps, keep the child, and raise him or her alone and in poverty?

i call bullshit

glamoflage

Something got resolved in those comments?!? Amazed.

I don't think there is any evidence for this claim. Below is a link to an article with a helpful chart:

Are you by any chance petite? I got a lot of that treatment as well. And everyone acted like it was all in good fun. I'm so sorry to hear it happened to you.

This video is utter shit.

or R-A-I-N-B-O-W ?

how do you spell relief?

Sigh. Could you please just delete all the trolls so we can have an intelligent conversation about this? Many thanks.

Could you post a pic of a decoupaged worldly possession?

They should have boxed it up and shipped it to Socal.

I'm not sure if I can respond to this well but I'm going to try. I think you are bringing up a very good point. My cousin also told me about masturbation when we were fairly young—like 9 or 10. I found out much later that she was being shown porn and molested by her biological father. (She was raised by her

I think the main argument here is that many preteen and teenage girls (as well as adult women) have sexual urges that can be quite strong at times. Societally, there is still much shame attached to the notion of masturbation, (especially for girls) so its important for a trusted adult to broach the topic—not as a

I was just going to mention Jocelyn Elders. I remember having such high hopes back then. We have yet to see her equal on capitol hill. Also—thank god for Judy Blume in general—but more specifically, Deenie mentions masturbation in a kind of casual, matter-of-course way that was reassuring to me as a kid. In my

"Simply put, the consumer has to be willing to absorb the cost of improved factory conditions."

I actually liked The Little Friend—not as much as The Secret History, but I still loved her use of language and her character depictions. The author just couldn't decide whether it was another great murder mystery, a ghost story, or a southern gothic novel. It veered unevenly through all three.

The teacher would not have had to go (and indeed should not go) public. When I was in high school, a teacher who was concerned about me approached me first, and asked if he could contact my parents. He suggested to them that we seek counseling for me. I wasn't "labelled" as anything, and no one else knew.

I loathe that she uses the phrase, "right to choose."