I voted other
but was thinking wrong
I was thinking naked
then read first post
so will go with knows when to be each of the other 3 choices
Lol, anytime I post something a little controversial I always get a handful of appointment requests. I'm sure I've lost a few because of my opinions but we likely would not have gotten along anyway.
If a client wants a silent, meek woman he knows not to message me. Originally Posted by Luxie
I've learned so much from talking to my favorite Ladies.
I enjoy the insight given from posts on any medium, whether here Twitter or blog posts. I think the more you can learn from and about each other will just make the experiences you have with them that much more fulfilling.
So I definitely prefer to hear their thoughts and opinions. Originally Posted by DasAmebas
Well sir, it seems like we have to get me to Indiana or you to New Orleans at some point in the future.. Originally Posted by Lena DuvallLena, I see in your signature that you're in Chicago in the middle of this month. That's well within my travel radius. As it happens, though, I already have a Chicago appointment for mid-July with another lady who's traveling. Sooooo ... maybe New Orleans. I'm thinking maybe I can come up with a plausible opportunity, come early November. If I can, you'll be the first to know!
^^^^^ How exactly is quote-unquote bitchiness defined? Earlier in this thread, some gents shared that they are not at all put off if a companion expresses her perspectives or if those perspectives don't (always) align with their own."Bitchiness" is a complicated word. I think it is applied to what I'd call "gratuitous unpleasantness," but can also be used to denote sassiness, or something closely related to that, or might also be applied to female self-interest, frankly expressed, or to a certain dynamism of personality. Usually, one is left to sort out the possible meanings from context. For that reason, it doesn't seem to me to be a very useful sort of word. I have heard my daughter and her contemporaries use the term "bitch" toward each other, seemingly in a rowdy-humor or ironic-sarcastic sort of way. From my lips, I'm pretty sure the word would be perjorative, or would very likely be heard that way, so I don't and won't use it. If women can handle its use, more power to them.
When is a woman opinionated and free-willed and when is she the b-word? How thin is the line?
There seems to be a visceral difference between the type of man who appreciates a companion who is (or maybe pretends to be) intellectually docile and men who love companions with a little more dynamism when it comes to personality. This also intrigues me. Originally Posted by Lena Duvall