27 août 2020
A Real Hotwife Doesn’t Let Her Husband Watch
Harry’s wife Anne was a staunch feminist. When she learned that Harry wanted her to cuckold him, she was adamant:
“Sure, I’ll cuckold you,” she said. “But I’ll be damned if I’ll let you watch. What do you think I am, your own personal porn star?”
“No, I’m sorry,” Harry replied, chastened. “I get it. I have no right to use you for my own prurient, voyeuristic satisfaction. You absolutely should cuckold me, though, because that’s what I want.”
- My Erotica
17 août 2020
Sun-soaked snapshots - Adventures across Europe in the 1970s and ’80s
Photographer Sergio Purtell spent years travelling the continent at length, capturing a romantic world of motels, cafes, beaches and bars.
- huck
14 août 2020
Your Life Is Full of Porn. Stop Getting Yourself Off
You’re consuming porn daily and you don’t even know it. It’s just not worth being addicted anymore. Porn ruins lives. And you don’t need to be a porno star on viagra to witness its devastating effects.
What is porn? Porn is what I call addictive habits. These habits are like porn because they start off as small and end up curtailing out of control if you let them.
- Medium
Etre un mâle, tu sais, c’est pas si facile
Le pouvoir masculin n’est ni acquis, ni facile à acquérir. Cela demande beaucoup de sacrifices. Dans un ouvrage intitulé “Les coûts de la domination masculine”, plusieurs chercheurs énumèrent ce qu’il en coûte d’être viril…
- Libération
13 août 2020
Show Me How to Say No to This - How drugs today can cure a crushing love
In the 2004 film, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, a heartbroken man played by Jim Carrey undergoes an experimental treatment to erase memories of his ex-girlfriend, played by Kate Winslet, following their painful breakup. When the film came out, using drugs or other technologies to meddle with memory, especially as a way of healing from a traumatic relationship, was not exactly feasible in the real world.
- Nautilus
The Stoic Way to Find More Time in Your Day
“I just didn’t have the time.” That’s one of the most common phrases I hear from my psychotherapy clients who’ve neglected to do the exercises we talked about — things like keeping a record of upsetting thoughts or practicing a mindfulness meditation technique. Over and over again, people call me and apologize uncomfortably for ignoring their homework, as though I’m there to scold them instead of help them.
- Medium