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Nina_Helllive sex stripping with hd cam

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7 thoughts on “Nina_Helllive sex stripping with hd cam

  1. This is crazy. Your mom doesn’t care? What the hell. Is your biological father around? How about grand parents? Teachers at school? This man is a fucking pedophile in training. Why is he ogling a 14 year old child? Complain about this at school. Tell your teacher and have them alert child protective services. When you turn 18 move to your grandparents or your dads house. Leave these people behind. If it weren’t for this system I would advice you to leave immediately.

  2. It’s been 4 months together, this is his first year living alone/away from home & I moved out at 17 for college (dorm from 17-18 and then had a few apartments with roommates through college) and then graduated at 21 I’ve been working since so pretty much have not lived with my parents since I was 17. His parents didn’t want him to move out so he lived at home. So his mom would cook/clean and do everything for him.

    I’m getting the feeling that I just need to let this relationship go cause even communicating “Hey do you mind not calling your mom when we’re hanging out” is making me so uncomfortable, and it’s not that I’m a bad communicator (I think?) I just feel like he’s gonna be like “Don’t tell me to stop talking to my mom”

    Oh also, I visited his house when his parents were out of town (where I on-line rn is close to where he grew up and he wanted to show me his hometown) and he’s generally pretty clean at his apartment but was such a slob at home (leaving laundry everywhere, dishes on counters, etc.) and was like “my mom likes picking up after me” and we spent the night in his room so I made the bed even though he said to just leave it. Then his mom called and asked him why he made the bed (his mom doesn’t know about me yet cultural thing lol) but he said his mom sounded sad that he made his own bed because he’s always left it for her to make it.

    Lmfaooo ok I’m reading this as I type it and I’m like this is definitely not how someone 24 (almost 25 he’s older than me by a few months) should be acting. It’s just sad we really click and I just hate having to find someone I had my heart broken once by a situationship and I just don’t trust most people anymore

  3. Tell her you're proud of her for what she's accomplished. BE proud of her for what she's accomplished. Take that as inspiration so that you can achieve the success you will also feel proud of internally.

    Insecurity is something we will experience throughout our lives. Don't project that upon others. Communicate it sometimes, sure, bit it seems you've done that and she seems to understand and appreciate it, but you can't let it define who you are to yourself or as a partner in your relationship else you'll find yourself not a partner potentially in time.

    Therapy might be a great help here as well, but even fully embracing that inspiration from her success can set you on a different trajectory, on where you can succeed on your own timetable.

  4. The “spark” can't be affected by frequency or non-frequency of communication. The “spark” is simply, “I'm into him and he's into me as well, holy shit, this is (when you get down to it) the FIRST attraction I've ever had that wasn't unrequited. (I mean, yeah, I've dated other people, been in relationships with them, maybe even married them, but eventually it turned out that they didn't love me.)” And that's either always true, 100% of the time, or always false, 100% of the time.

    If he's into you, he's not going to be deterred by something as minor as, “Boy, we text a lot.” In point of fact, if he's into you, he'll want to text a lot, because he's into you!, he wants to talk to you and get to know you! And if he doesn't want to do those things, well… Is there actually a point in going on a date with him? o_O

    So don't worry about the spark. Just do what feels natural. It'll all shake itself out eventually. Unfortunately, the statistical likelihood is that it'll shake out with one of you losing feelings for the other, because that's how dating is supposed to work. But that's okay, because that's how dating is supposed to work. False starts and dead ends do not constitute dating failure; instead, they are the more frequent — and, obviously, more disappointing — form of dating success.

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