Anybody notice this thread just passed 10,000 posts?
No, I don't.
TPBM has been with at least 40 people. (Not at once...)
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
Name a movie without an E.
Planting my flag on this mountain (again)
Snow sports expert at a sporting goods store
Existence isn't proven by theory.
Usually guilty. I missed this morning and, I think, yesterday, but I'm still pretty good about it.
You have masturbated outside and gotten caught.
-Take a nice middday jog around the neighborhood.
-Go to the Children's Museum. (Or any museum, for that matter.)
-Go get fast food.
-Go to the grocery store.
-Get the mail/newspaper.
-Go to a sporting event.
-Pick your kids up from school.
Honestly? Birthday suit.
I don't really pay attention to what I wear too much, just as long as it fits.
Agreed.
The reason we make mistakes is so we can learn from them.
I had a thought earlier today that is relevant to this thread. In the fall of 2006, I took a fiction workshop class with a teacher who strongly believed that there were two types of writers. The most common writers write the most common material--genre fiction like science fiction, fantasy, Westerns, mystery, etc.--weren't as good as those who tried to be original and create "literary" fiction. She didn't say that writers of genre fiction weren't "real" writers necessarily, but the attitude she (and several of my classmates) had appeared to coincide with this sentiment. A lot of them seemed to think that genre fiction was more "juvenile."
I strongly disagreed with their positions; after all, one could apply literary principles to genre fiction and create truly unique stories. On the other hand, the elements that make literary fiction unique, in my opinion, make literary fiction its own genre The stories I wrote for this class were easily the worst stories I'd ever written, simply because I tend to create my own worlds instead of trying to recreate a real-world locale. (I've never been to New York, for example, so I wouldn't feel comfortable writing the details of New York as much.) The main point of my argument was well-illustrated in the teacher's own novel, which she listed as a required text for her class. Her story didn't appeal to me as a reader, and I never finished the novel. I simply didn't see why her book was better than Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide, or any of the Sherlock Holmes stories.
-Sex with a man, including oral, anal and manual (with me as the bottom and the top).
-Threesome with two other men, including fucking one while the other fucks me.
-Threesome with a man and a woman, including double penetration.
-Threesome with two women.
These here aren't necessarily with anyone of a particular gender.
-Sex in public. (i.e. beach, forest, driveway)
-Sex outside. (Not necessarily in public. i.e. backyard)
-Sex outside the bedroom. (i.e. kitchen, bathroom)
-Mile-high club.
-Sex while in a moving vehicle, preferably without my partner(s) driving.
-Sex party or swing club.
-Sex on a stage (There's a stage in Louisiana, apparently, where people can go to have sex in front of an audience.)
-Sex in space. (After all, space tourism appears to be growing; eventually, it'll be the new mile-high club, I bet.)
-Couples resort. (Read: a clothing-optional place where couples can have sex in public with other couples who are having sex.)
-24 hours of sex.
-Sex on a boat or ship.
-Sex on a train.
I'm sure there are others, but I can't think of any others right now.
A whole lot, actually.
TPBM is dating or married to someone of the same sex.