What Do You Call A Female Stud?
I came across the following, which might upset many of you, but make your own judgements…
What Do You Call A Female Stud? by Sabrina Aset
President Clinton got blow-jobs in the Oval Office and was cheered by half the nation. Magic Johnson had sex with scores of women, contracted AIDS and became a national hero. John F. Kennedy turned the White House into a brothel and became the most beloved president in history. His brother Teddy can’t keep it in his pants and the Puritans and devout Catholics of Massachusetts re-elect him by a landslide. As a Pagan and High Priestess of The Goddess of the Egyptian religion I was branded a whore, convicted of prostitution and sentenced to the harshest jail term ever given for a first time offender. To rub salt in my wound, while I languished in jail, I met a woman who was in on her 19th prostitution conviction. She got out, return on her 20th prostitution conviction, got out returned on her 21st prostitution conviction and was released 5 days before I was.
A stud is praised in our society while women who enjoy sex are tramps, strumpets, trollops, hussies, sluts, harlots and whores. My articles are written to put an historical perspective on the antiquated male views of sex and women; and to bring women out of the dark ages of the masculine perception.
So hello lovers, past, present and I hope future. This is my perspective on life, love and sex. Much of the material is compiled from my weekly advice column, Sabrina Says, and my television show, Sabrina On… which is intended for the studs, sluts, lovers, the lovelorn, the wish to be lovelorn, the no chance to be lovelorn, the impatient, the impotent, the inept, the incompetent and the walking wounded of the “Sexual Revolution.” As the High Priestess of the Church of The Most High Goddess, my perspective, that sex is wholesome and Goddess given, is genuinely different from that of the guilt ridden Judaeo-Christian-Moslem religions which believe that pleasure is sinful, or at best ungodly. The sexual repressive attitudes of the trinity religions in America has created a nation of men and women who are sexually illiterate, sexually inept and sexually retarded.
I am a renaissance woman. My interests and experience is varied and extensive. I am a ballet dancer, fine artist, pianist, karate black belt, certified aerobics instructor, lion tamer and trainer, authority on large cats, writer, television talk show host, and a college instructor in chemistry and biology. I graduated high school with a straight A average, graduated the University of Miami, cum laude in chemistry, did graduate work in chemistry at UCLA under Dr. Cram (who later received the Nobel prize) attended the University of Oregon Medical School and received my masters in Environmental Sciences/Chemistry from Portland State University…
In my calling as a priestess, I have sex with men of all sizes, shapes, colors, backgrounds, professions — an infinite variety — every day, several times a day (and even more often would be better). To date I’ve had vaginal sex with over 2,779 different men, oral sex with over 4,000 different men, and being bisexual, I have eaten a couple of hundred pussies along the way. Since I’m a very sexual person, I’ve had sex, not just in the religious rituals, but in a wide variety of places in addition to the usual bedrooms, sofas, chairs and back and front seats of cars - like doctor’s examination tables, college professor’s offices, faculty lounges, dormitories, showers, swimming pools, Jacuzzi, beaches, woods, tents, campers, business offices, back rooms of stores, warehouses, rest rooms, government offices, parking lots, trucks, elevators, on the hood of cars, in adult films–on and off camera. I’ve even sucked cocks through the open window of my car and through a hole in a wall. No! I hadn’t met the men before. Men hit on me everywhere I go and I’m not one to pass up an up-opportunity to enjoy myself sexually. I have the good fortune of being a very sexual person. My body responds to many men — almost every man. I don’t have to be in love with a man, or married to him to enjoy him sexually. But I wasn’t always that way. Developing this sexuality took a lot of self-discipline and practice with a lot of different men. The old cliché’, “practice makes perfect”, definitely applies to sex. The more often I have sex, the more I enjoy it. But most important to you, is that enjoying sex is a learned process…
Great sex is not easy. Sex for the pure pleasure of it takes concentration, effort and stamina - total involvement. I have a great body with lots of stamina and that helps me to enjoy many men — one after another, and it helps the men enjoy me also. Lets face it, good muscle control (a snapping pussy) and great stamina are always more exciting for both the man and woman. Of course, I realize the most women are not as sexual as I am. But many women would like to be, and they can be. They just need to know how to go about it.
sophia
Poster URL
http://verewig.blog-city.com
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
Who Gets Plastic Surgery and Why
By Daniel DeNoon
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
on Tuesday, August 30, 2005
They aren’t who you think they are.
Who gets cosmetic plastic surgery? Forget the stereotype of the over-50 socialite who needs psychiatry more than a zillionth face lift.
An Internet survey shows that most people seriously seeking plastic surgery — 71% — make $60,000 or less. Sixty-four percent are under 50, and 81% haven’t had plastic surgery before.
The findings come from a study commissioned by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. Study leaders Sarah Thorne and Tanya Darisi are with Decision Partners LLC, a Pittsburgh-based research and communications firm.
Darisi, Thorne, and colleagues conducted in-depth interviews with 60 people who had contacted the ASPS referral service to find a plastic surgeon. They distilled the information into a questionnaire. A national polling firm used the questionnaire in an Internet-based survey of 644 adults seriously considering plastic surgery in the next year. The findings appear in the Sept. 1 issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.
“We spoke to people from all racial and ethnic backgrounds, jobs, income levels — there isn’t really a typical person getting plastic surgery,” Darisi tells WebMD.
“The only thing we found that was typical was how thoughtful people were about undergoing plastic surgery,” Thorne tells WebMD. “We talked to moms who just had kids and wanted to have a few things nipped and tucked so they could feel better about themselves. We talked to young guys who had something that had bothered them all their lives and who saved money for an operation since their teens or early 20s. We talked to older women who, now that they had the time and perhaps the ability to have surgery done, wanted something fixed because it had always been important to them.”
Why People Have Plastic Surgery
People who seek plastic surgery obviously want to change their appearance. But that isn’t at the heart of what they want.
“It all starts with people wanting to improve imperfections so they can feel better about themselves,” Thorne says. “Some spoke about improving physical features that had bothered them for some time. They felt they would be happier, that others would respond to them better, that they would have improved social lives. Men in particular thought they would have improved career opportunities.”
Jafar S. Hasan, MD, resident surgeon in the University of Michigan plastic surgery training program, has studied why people seek cosmetic surgery.
“Some older studies suggested that the average plastic-surgery patient is likely to have some psychological disturbance — especially male patients,” Hasan tells WebMD. “But this is old research. I found that on average, the plastic surgery patient does not suffer from any psychiatric disorder. Those older views are outdated.”
One reason this may be true is that the ASPS and the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery stress that board-certified plastic surgeons should conduct extensive consultations before agreeing to operate on a patient. Mark Jewell, MD, is president of the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.
“When people go to a plastic surgeon, we want them to feel listened to rather than sold something,” Jewell tells WebMD. “A consultation can go wrong when you tell someone what they need rather than listen to what they want. What they want may change during the consultation, but most patients are more reasonable than you would believe. We take time, listen, develop rapport. And if a patient doesn’t fit our criteria for safe surgery, we say so.”
Another reason why patients have realistic expectations: They do their homework.
“Not every problem people perceive with their bodies can be fixed with plastic surgery,” Darisi says. “But our interviews with patients showed they did not see surgery as a panacea for everything in their lives. They could foresee changes in relationships, but these were very targeted changes. They did not see plastic surgery as a magic bullet. They had a very realistic idea of what they could expect.”
But can plastic surgery really make a person happier? Yes — within limits, says Harvard psychologist Ted A. Grossbart, PhD. Grossbart has studied the psychosocial issues surrounding plastic surgery.
“If someone is unhappy with their nose and comes out with a nose he or she is happier with, it works,” Grossbart tells WebMD. “If they are not looking to change the fundamental quality of their lives and all their doubts — if they come in with realistic expectations — people can probably get the results they are hoping for.”
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SOURCES: Darisi, T. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Sept. 1, 2005; vol 116: pp 907-916. Tanya Darisi, research leader, Decision Partners LLC, Pittsburgh. Sarah Thorne, partner, Decision Partners LLC, Pittsburgh. Mark Jewell, MD, president, American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. Jafar S. Hasan, MD, resident surgeon, plastic surgery training program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Ted A. Grossbart, PhD, senior associate and clinical supervisor, department of psychiatry, Beth Israel Hospital; assistant clinical professor of psychology, Harvard Medical School.
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
Men hide their feelings
Men are socialized not to say a word about the suffering they go through on a daily basis, since any mention of it around women will kick start their mother mannerisms. This is bad because she’s unconciously marked you as a child and this is why this reaction takes place, to “take care” of the child.
Do you know that most rapes in the U.S. are committed by men against other men?
Do you know more teenage girls contemplate suicide more than teenage boys, though more than 2x teenage boys commit suicide?
Do you know women are just as likely to attack a man as a man would attack a woman?
Do you know the root of the word hero, comes from a word meaning slave? Do you know the gender of most heroes you see on TV? Do you that it’s the same gender that in over 90% of court cases loses custody rights to their children?
The media is MIRED in sexist trash and inaccurate or intentionally lopsided reporting, so this isn’t surprising at all. I hope this encourages you guys and gals out there to talk to your brothers, cousins, husbands and so on since you’ll find that they’re human and they hurt just like women (though they probably don’t vocalize their pain as much).
Rex
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
XGape
Every girl has an asshole and every asshole needs to be fucked. Come inside and watch those asses get spread.
Link to review: http://www.paypornlist.net/reviews/xgape.html
Link to site: http://join.xgape.com/track/NTU5OjI0OjM/
Source: www.paypornlist.net
Appeals Court Gives “Glass Ceiling” Pay Discrimination Lawsuit Okay to Proceed.
Reversing summary judgment in favor of the employer in a pay discrimination case under the Equal Pay Act, a federal appeals court in Cincinnati has held that the plaintiff raised a genuine factual issue warranting a trial over whether she performed substantially equal work for less pay than male co-workers.
Source: www.elinfonet.com
We go from mature to immature as we age.
Our culture does a lot of damage to us all by instilling false and destructive ideals. This is an inescapable fact, and when combined with the reality that life doesn’t have a instruction book, the issue is compounded. This has a trickle down effect to our everyday dealings, such as relationships. Children are blessed with a wisdom & perspective that’s lost because we live in a world that kills love. Judgement, social structure, etc. all help to separate us from the simple truths and nature that children enjoy. Jesus once commented that we should have the faith of a child, a truly profound statement when you think about it. Sure, as we grow older, we gain knowledge, maturity, rationality, and all the other perks of age, but pay the price by gaining ignorance of losing the perspective we once had, the simple wisdom, and purity that we all once had, and suffer with issues that cause undue pain and run our lives because of it. We become conditioned to judge by every other standard except by observing and simply accepting the truth of how a person or situation is and going from there. Just look at all we go through in our lives, not just in relationships. We leave partners, dismiss potential ones, etc. all because of judgement, and most of the time, it’s over something petty. Children truly have an edge over adults in the area of perceiving & giving love, and its cause, acceptance & appreciation. We go from mature to immature in this arena as we age.
Salvador Escobar
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
More costly to miss a reproductive opportunity” than to face rejection
By: Peter Rebhahn
Summary: Why and how men and women often misjudge sexual signals.
Men often misinterpret a woman’s innocent smile or compliment as a sexual come-on–but why? Gender stereotypes imply that men are socialized to oversexualize the world. But research suggests there are real evolutionary reasons that men and women get their signals crossed.
In two studies reported in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Martie G. Haselton, Ph.D., and David M. Buss, Ph.D., both University of Texas-Austin psychology professors, asked over 500 college students to picture themselves on a date. The students then used imagined acts like holding hands or giving compliments to rate their companion’s and their own sexual interest and level of commitment.
The researchers discovered that men tended to overestimate women’s sexual interest, while women underestimated men’s willingness to commit. But interestingly enough, both men and women were more accurate in rating women’s commitment levels, and when asked to imagine that the sexual target was their sister, men rarely misread sexual intent.
So why do men and women misjudge only certain cross-sex signals? They’re adaptive biases, say the researchers. According to the theory of natural selection–in which only the fittest survive–males who falsely inferred a woman’s sexual interest stood to gain descendants, and lost little if the woman was a suitable mate. “For ancestral men, it was more costly to miss a reproductive opportunity” than to face rejection, Haselton explains. But females who were abandoned after consenting to sex suffered far greater consequences: pregnancy, reduction in mate value and having to raise a child alone. “For women, it was more costly to be deceived by men, so selection favored skeptical women,” he says, leading to their continued skepticism about men’s willingness to commit.
Buss, who explores jealousy in a recent book, suggests scientists rethink the notion that human psychological mechanisms are always designed to be logical. “We’re arguing that they’re designed to be biased,” he explains, particularly when it comes to issues of trust.
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
Good Salary Negotiation Skills Do Not Justify Pay Disparities.
On May 15, 2009, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held in Drum v. Leeson Electric Corp., No. 08-1678, that an employer had not satisfied its burden of proving that a wage disparity between a male and a female employee was based on a factor other than sex merely by showing the male employee had negotiated a higher salary, i.e., where the male had benefited from a market-driven pay situation. In reaching its decision, the Eighth Circuit reversed a grant of summary judgment for the employer on the plaintiff’s claims under the Equal Pay Act, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Missouri Human Rights Act.
Source: www.elinfonet.com
Can Your Personality Change?
By Colette Bouchez
Part 1: Is Change Possible? | Part 2: Can You Increase Your Brain Power? | Part 3: Personality traits That Affect Health
Cast in stone. Dyed in the wool. A leopard can’t change his spots. All phrases that, at one time or another, have been used to express the idea that when it comes to personality, we are who we are and nothing can change.
And yet, it’s also not so usual to hear — or speak — phrases like: “This book changed my life,” “You’re not the same person you were when I married you,” or “I didn’t know any better when I was your age, but I’m different now.”
So, is it possible to change our personality — and if so, to what degree? The answer, it seems, has some surprising twists and turns.
“Classic textbooks describe personality as unique and relatively enduring internal and external aspects of a person’s character that influence behavior in certain situations — suggesting that yes, there are genetic traits that influence who we are, or at least lay down the basic blueprint for how we will act in any given situation in life,” says Long Island, N.Y., psychologist Abby Aronowitz, PhD. Aronowitz is director of SelfHelpDirectives.com.
Indeed, says Aronowitz, one only has to look at a neonatal nursery to realize that, right from birth, we are who we are.
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“If you look at a baby, they have had very little influence in their life. And yet some are easily startled, some are not; some can be easily satisfied, others seem inconsolable. There are character traits already starting to emerge right from day one,” Aronowitz tells WebMD.
Psychiatrist Charles Goodstein, MD, agrees: “If you observe newborns in a nursery, right from the get-go you can see differences in how they react, so you could say those traits represent the nuclei that develop into a personality,” he tells WebMD.
Nurture vs. Nature
While this theory once comprised the entire concept of personality, more and more researchers are coming to see that while much of who we are is the result of genetic blueprint, not everything about us is written in indelible ink. Indeed, just how those personality traits unfold is largely the result of our life experiences, particularly during the early years of childhood.
“When we talk about personality today, we talk about the consequences of the interplay between those predispositions and genetic qualities unique to each of us, and our life experiences — the environmental factors and the relationships, especially with our parents, that play out over time and influence just how our personality evolves,” says Goodstein, a professor of psychiatry at NYU Medical Center in New York City.
Indeed, experts say that sometimes, even severe personality disorders can be tempered significantly when the environmental conditions are just right.
“A schizophrenic, for example, may never develop full-blown symptoms if they live a relatively stress-free life,” says Aronowitz.
So while change is clearly possible when our personality is molding, does it hold the same potential when we become an adult? Some believe it does.
In one study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, a group of Stanford University researchers found that certain aspects of our personality do change — gradually but consistently — as the circumstances in our lives change. What’s more, over time many of our less desirable traits seem to fade quite naturally, with more pleasing and social parts of our personality coming forward.
Making Change Possible
How does it happen? Aronowitz believes each personality type holds the potential for a wide range of behaviors. While our innate core traits may not be able to change, over time she says the behaviors that stem from those traits can and often are influenced by many other factors in our lives.
“There are many levels within each personality structure and the level at which your personality is performing at any given time can be sensitive to what is going on around you,” says Aronowitz.
Because of that, she says, it’s also possible to change our personality by willfully changing some of those circumstances believed to be affecting us.
“Situations very much influence what aspects of our personality come forward, so in this respect, sometimes changing jobs, social situations, even altering family dynamics can effect a change in our personality — mostly by allowing certain parts of our innate core that may have been hidden, to come forward and flourish,” says Aronowitz.
The classic example of this can be seen in the 1940s film Now Voyager. Here we watch the transformation of the shy, overly dependent, anxiety-ridden Bette Davis into a self-reliant, confidant social butterfly when she crawls out from under the crushing wing of a dominating mother.
For psychologist Scott Wetzler, PhD, the key to “trading up” on personality traits lies not so much in changing your circumstances as in learning to identify the parts of yourself that you don’t like — and then compensating for those character traits.
“By indulging in or avoiding certain behaviors you can keep certain innate personality reflexes from dominating your life. You can compensate for personality traits you don’t like so that other parts of yourself you do like can take center stage in your life,” says Wetzler, the chief psychologist at Montefiore Medical Center in Bronx, N.Y.
For example, says Wetzler, a shy person can learn the social skills necessary to do things their shyness would otherwise prevent. Likewise, a quick-tempered individual may learn anger management skills that make it easier to move ahead in his or her professional life.
While none of this will change your basic personality traits, says Wetzler, it can help keep certain of those traits from becoming dominant. So, in this sense, your personality does seem to change.
Goodstein agrees: “Despite the fact that we are born with a certain set of predispositions that lead us in specific directions, we also have the capacity for certain amounts of change throughout our lives.”
Making Change Happen
For some, a change in personality can occur abruptly, often the result of a tumultuous event in their lives. Indeed, how we cope with major upsets is part of our personality, and sometimes being forced to do so can lead to the discovery of a new and entirely different side of ourselves.
For most folks, however, change is a lot slower and more subtle — and the process is just a little bit different for everyone. However, the one thing that experts say we must all share before change can begin: the willingness to make it happen. As elementary as this sounds, Goodstein tells us that many folks who say they want change, really don’t!
“When you have been a certain way for most of your life, relinquishing certain aspects of your personality can be a very traumatic experience, and there is often great resistance to do that,” says Goodstein. This, he says, can sometimes be the case when others in our lives are prompting the change.
But if, in fact, you are ready for change, experts say the best place to start is with small adjustments in your thinking and your behavior.
Says Wetzler: “It’s a little bit like sailing a boat. You can’t expect to make radical changes in the steering, but over time, one or two degrees of change can put you on an entirely different course.”
While many folks find they can accomplish at least some of this on their own, if the seas get rough, or especially if you’re not quite sure just how to set sail, experts say don’t be afraid to look to professional help to take you through the process.
“Many of the determinants and manifestations of personality are of an unconscious nature, so you may not even know what it is about yourself that needs to be changed. You may know you are unhappy but you may not really know why,” says Goodstein.
While sometimes traditional psychoanalysis is necessary to produce a major change, experts say that often any form of therapy that helps focus attention on thoughts and behaviors can help.
Next week: As we continue to examine the concept of change, we turn our attention to intelligence. Can cracking the books and concentrating harder make you smarter — or just more tired? And are you bound by that third-grade IQ test — or can you actually get brighter as you age? The answers might surprise you!
Published June 6, 2005.
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SOURCES: Abby Aronowitz, PhD, director, SelfHelpDirectives.com, Long Island, N.Y. Charles Goodstein, MD, professor, NYU School of Medicine; former president of the Psychoanalytic Association of New York. Scott Wetzler, PhD, vice chairman, chief of psychology, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York. Journal of Personal and Social Psychology, May 2003.
Source: relationships.blog-city.com
fat black ass